提交 e9681f83 编写于 作者: R Rich Salz

Centralize documentation about config file location

Reviewed-by: NRichard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
(Merged from https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/2569)
上级 4bf73e9f
......@@ -191,18 +191,12 @@ be wrong. In this case the command:
perl -S CA.pl
can be used and the B<OPENSSL_CONF> environment variable changed to point to
the correct path of the configuration file "openssl.cnf".
the correct path of the configuration file.
The script is intended as a simple front end for the B<openssl> program for use
by a beginner. Its behaviour isn't always what is wanted. For more control over the
behaviour of the certificate commands call the B<openssl> command directly.
=head1 ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
The variable B<OPENSSL_CONF> if defined allows an alternative configuration
file location to be specified, it should contain the full path to the
configuration file, not just its directory.
=head1 SEE ALSO
L<x509(1)>, L<ca(1)>, L<req(1)>, L<pkcs12(1)>,
......
......@@ -77,6 +77,8 @@ this prints extra details about the operations being performed.
=item B<-config filename>
specifies the configuration file to use.
Optional; for a description of the default value,
see L<openssl(1)/COMMAND SUMMARY>.
=item B<-name section>
......@@ -633,11 +635,6 @@ The values below reflect the default values.
./demoCA/certs - certificate output file
./demoCA/.rnd - CA random seed information
=head1 ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
B<OPENSSL_CONF> reflects the location of master configuration file it can
be overridden by the B<-config> command line option.
=head1 RESTRICTIONS
The text database index file is a critical part of the process and
......
......@@ -40,6 +40,15 @@ The B<openssl> program provides a rich variety of commands (I<command> in the
SYNOPSIS above), each of which often has a wealth of options and arguments
(I<command_opts> and I<command_args> in the SYNOPSIS).
Many commands use an external configuration file for some or all of their
arguments and have a B<-config> option to specify that file.
The environment variable B<OPENSSL_CONF> can be used to specify
the location of the file.
If the environment variable is not specified, then the file is named
B<openssl.cnf> in the default certificate storage area, whose value
depends on the configuration flags specified when the OpenSSL
was built.
The list parameters B<standard-commands>, B<digest-commands>,
and B<cipher-commands> output a list (one entry per line) of the names
of all standard commands, message digest commands, or cipher commands,
......
......@@ -204,9 +204,9 @@ GOST R 34.11-94 (B<-md_gost94>).
=item B<-config filename>
this allows an alternative configuration file to be specified,
this overrides the compile time filename or any specified in
the B<OPENSSL_CONF> environment variable.
this allows an alternative configuration file to be specified.
Optional; for a description of the default value,
see L<openssl(1)/COMMAND SUMMARY>.
=item B<-subj arg>
......@@ -623,12 +623,6 @@ then the B<SET OF> is missing and the encoding is technically invalid (but
it is tolerated). See the description of the command line option B<-asn1-kludge>
for more information.
=head1 ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
The variable B<OPENSSL_CONF> if defined allows an alternative configuration
file location to be specified, it will be overridden by the B<-config> command
line switch if it is present.
=head1 BUGS
OpenSSL's handling of T61Strings (aka TeletexStrings) is broken: it effectively
......
......@@ -139,9 +139,9 @@ MS-Windows, B<,> for VMS and B<:> for all other platforms. (Optional)
=item B<-config> configfile
The configuration file to use, this option overrides the
B<OPENSSL_CONF> environment variable. Only the OID section
of the config file is used with the B<-query> command. (Optional)
The configuration file to use.
Optional; for a description of the default value,
see L<openssl(1)/COMMAND SUMMARY>.
=item B<-data> file_to_hash
......@@ -216,9 +216,10 @@ otherwise it is a time stamp token (ContentInfo).
=item B<-config> configfile
The configuration file to use, this option overrides the
B<OPENSSL_CONF> environment variable. See B<CONFIGURATION FILE
OPTIONS> for configurable variables. (Optional)
The configuration file to use.
Optional; for a description of the default value,
see L<openssl(1)/COMMAND SUMMARY>.
See B<CONFIGURATION FILE OPTIONS> for configurable variables.
=item B<-section> tsa_section
......@@ -386,8 +387,8 @@ verification. See L<verify(1)>.
=head1 CONFIGURATION FILE OPTIONS
The B<-query> and B<-reply> commands make use of a configuration file
defined by the B<OPENSSL_CONF> environment variable. See L<config(5)>
The B<-query> and B<-reply> commands make use of a configuration file.
See L<config(5)>
for a general description of the syntax of the config file. The
B<-query> command uses only the symbolic OID names section
and it can work without it. However, the B<-reply> command needs the
......@@ -505,11 +506,6 @@ included. Default is no. (Optional)
=back
=head1 ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
B<OPENSSL_CONF> contains the path of the configuration file and can be
overridden by the B<-config> command line option.
=head1 EXAMPLES
All the examples below presume that B<OPENSSL_CONF> is set to a proper
......
Markdown is supported
0% .
You are about to add 0 people to the discussion. Proceed with caution.
先完成此消息的编辑!
想要评论请 注册