x509.pod 26.5 KB
Newer Older
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

=pod

=head1 NAME

x509 - Certificate display and signing utility

=head1 SYNOPSIS

B<openssl> B<x509>
11
[B<-help>]
12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
[B<-inform DER|PEM|NET>]
[B<-outform DER|PEM|NET>]
[B<-keyform DER|PEM>]
[B<-CAform DER|PEM>]
[B<-CAkeyform DER|PEM>]
[B<-in filename>]
[B<-out filename>]
[B<-serial>]
[B<-hash>]
21 22
[B<-subject_hash>]
[B<-issuer_hash>]
23
[B<-ocspid>]
24 25
[B<-subject>]
[B<-issuer>]
D
 
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
26
[B<-nameopt option>]
27
[B<-email>]
28
[B<-ocsp_uri>]
29 30 31 32
[B<-startdate>]
[B<-enddate>]
[B<-purpose>]
[B<-dates>]
33
[B<-checkend num>]
34
[B<-modulus>]
B
Ben Laurie 已提交
35
[B<-pubkey>]
36 37 38 39 40
[B<-fingerprint>]
[B<-alias>]
[B<-noout>]
[B<-trustout>]
[B<-clrtrust>]
41
[B<-clrreject>]
42
[B<-addtrust arg>]
43
[B<-addreject arg>]
44 45
[B<-setalias arg>]
[B<-days arg>]
D
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
46
[B<-set_serial n>]
47
[B<-signkey filename>]
48
[B<-passin arg>]
49 50 51 52 53 54
[B<-x509toreq>]
[B<-req>]
[B<-CA filename>]
[B<-CAkey filename>]
[B<-CAcreateserial>]
[B<-CAserial filename>]
55
[B<-force_pubkey key>]
56
[B<-text>]
57
[B<-certopt option>]
58
[B<-C>]
R
Rich Salz 已提交
59
[B<-[digest]>]
60 61 62
[B<-clrext>]
[B<-extfile filename>]
[B<-extensions section>]
63
[B<-engine id>]
64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74

=head1 DESCRIPTION

The B<x509> command is a multi purpose certificate utility. It can be
used to display certificate information, convert certificates to
various forms, sign certificate requests like a "mini CA" or edit
certificate trust settings.

Since there are a large number of options they will split up into
various sections.

75
=head1 OPTIONS
76

77
=head2 INPUT, OUTPUT AND GENERAL PURPOSE OPTIONS
78 79 80

=over 4

81 82 83 84
=item B<-help>

Print out a usage message.

85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108
=item B<-inform DER|PEM|NET>

This specifies the input format normally the command will expect an X509
certificate but this can change if other options such as B<-req> are
present. The DER format is the DER encoding of the certificate and PEM
is the base64 encoding of the DER encoding with header and footer lines
added. The NET option is an obscure Netscape server format that is now
obsolete.

=item B<-outform DER|PEM|NET>

This specifies the output format, the options have the same meaning as the 
B<-inform> option.

=item B<-in filename>

This specifies the input filename to read a certificate from or standard input
if this option is not specified.

=item B<-out filename>

This specifies the output filename to write to or standard output by
default.

R
Rich Salz 已提交
109
=item B<-[digest]>
110

R
Rich Salz 已提交
111 112 113 114 115 116 117
the digest to use.
This affects any signing or display option that uses a message
digest, such as the B<-fingerprint>, B<-signkey> and B<-CA> options.
Any digest supported by the OpenSSL B<dgst> command can be used.
If not specified then SHA1 is used.
Note that if a DSA key is used for signing, then this flag is ignored
and SHA1 is used.
118

119 120
=item B<-engine id>

D
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
121
specifying an engine (by its unique B<id> string) will cause B<x509>
122 123 124
to attempt to obtain a functional reference to the specified engine,
thus initialising it if needed. The engine will then be set as the default
for all available algorithms.
125

126 127
=back

128
=head2 DISPLAY OPTIONS
129 130

Note: the B<-alias> and B<-purpose> options are also display options
L
Lutz Jänicke 已提交
131
but are described in the B<TRUST SETTINGS> section.
132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140

=over 4

=item B<-text>

prints out the certificate in text form. Full details are output including the
public key, signature algorithms, issuer and subject names, serial number
any extensions present and any trust settings.

D
 
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
141 142
=item B<-certopt option>

143 144 145 146
customise the output format used with B<-text>. The B<option> argument can be
a single option or multiple options separated by commas. The B<-certopt> switch
may be also be used more than once to set multiple options. See the B<TEXT OPTIONS>
section for more information.
D
 
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
147

148 149 150 151
=item B<-noout>

this option prevents output of the encoded version of the request.

B
Ben Laurie 已提交
152 153 154 155
=item B<-pubkey>

outputs the the certificate's SubjectPublicKeyInfo block in PEM format.

156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164
=item B<-modulus>

this option prints out the value of the modulus of the public key
contained in the certificate.

=item B<-serial>

outputs the certificate serial number.

165
=item B<-subject_hash>
166

167 168
outputs the "hash" of the certificate subject name. This is used in OpenSSL to
form an index to allow certificates in a directory to be looked up by subject
169 170
name.

171 172 173 174
=item B<-issuer_hash>

outputs the "hash" of the certificate issuer name.

175 176 177 178
=item B<-ocspid>

outputs the OCSP hash values for the subject name and public key.

179 180
=item B<-hash>

D
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
181
synonym for "-subject_hash" for backward compatibility reasons.
182

D
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192
=item B<-subject_hash_old>

outputs the "hash" of the certificate subject name using the older algorithm
as used by OpenSSL versions before 1.0.0.

=item B<-issuer_hash_old>

outputs the "hash" of the certificate issuer name using the older algorithm
as used by OpenSSL versions before 1.0.0.

193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200
=item B<-subject>

outputs the subject name.

=item B<-issuer>

outputs the issuer name.

D
 
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
201 202
=item B<-nameopt option>

203 204 205
option which determines how the subject or issuer names are displayed. The
B<option> argument can be a single option or multiple options separated by
commas.  Alternatively the B<-nameopt> switch may be used more than once to
206
set multiple options. See the B<NAME OPTIONS> section for more information.
D
 
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
207

208 209 210 211
=item B<-email>

outputs the email address(es) if any.

212 213 214 215
=item B<-ocsp_uri>

outputs the OCSP responder address(es) if any.

216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227
=item B<-startdate>

prints out the start date of the certificate, that is the notBefore date.

=item B<-enddate>

prints out the expiry date of the certificate, that is the notAfter date.

=item B<-dates>

prints out the start and expiry dates of a certificate.

228 229 230 231 232
=item B<-checkend arg>

checks if the certificate expires within the next B<arg> seconds and exits
non-zero if yes it will expire or zero if not.

233 234
=item B<-fingerprint>

235 236
prints out the digest of the DER encoded version of the whole certificate
(see digest options).
237 238 239 240 241 242 243

=item B<-C>

this outputs the certificate in the form of a C source file.

=back

244
=head2 TRUST SETTINGS
245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256

Please note these options are currently experimental and may well change.

A B<trusted certificate> is an ordinary certificate which has several
additional pieces of information attached to it such as the permitted
and prohibited uses of the certificate and an "alias".

Normally when a certificate is being verified at least one certificate
must be "trusted". By default a trusted certificate must be stored
locally and must be a root CA: any certificate chain ending in this CA
is then usable for any purpose.

257 258 259
Trust settings currently are only used with a root CA. They allow a finer
control over the purposes the root CA can be used for. For example a CA
may be trusted for SSL client but not SSL server use.
260 261 262 263

See the description of the B<verify> utility for more information on the
meaning of trust settings.

U
Ulf Möller 已提交
264
Future versions of OpenSSL will recognize trust settings on any
265 266 267
certificate: not just root CAs.


268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280
=over 4

=item B<-trustout>

this causes B<x509> to output a B<trusted> certificate. An ordinary
or trusted certificate can be input but by default an ordinary
certificate is output and any trust settings are discarded. With the
B<-trustout> option a trusted certificate is output. A trusted
certificate is automatically output if any trust settings are modified.

=item B<-setalias arg>

sets the alias of the certificate. This will allow the certificate
281
to be referred to using a nickname for example "Steve's Certificate".
282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290

=item B<-alias>

outputs the certificate alias, if any.

=item B<-clrtrust>

clears all the permitted or trusted uses of the certificate.

291
=item B<-clrreject>
292

293
clears all the prohibited or rejected uses of the certificate.
294 295 296

=item B<-addtrust arg>

297 298 299 300 301 302
adds a trusted certificate use.
Any object name can be used here but currently only B<clientAuth> (SSL client
use), B<serverAuth> (SSL server use), B<emailProtection> (S/MIME email) and
B<anyExtendedKeyUsage> are used.
As of OpenSSL 1.1.0, the last of these blocks all purposes when rejected or
enables all purposes when trusted.
303
Other OpenSSL applications may define additional uses.
304

305
=item B<-addreject arg>
306 307 308 309 310 311 312

adds a prohibited use. It accepts the same values as the B<-addtrust>
option.

=item B<-purpose>

this option performs tests on the certificate extensions and outputs
313 314
the results. For a more complete description see the B<CERTIFICATE
EXTENSIONS> section.
315 316 317

=back

318
=head2 SIGNING OPTIONS
319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334

The B<x509> utility can be used to sign certificates and requests: it
can thus behave like a "mini CA".

=over 4

=item B<-signkey filename>

this option causes the input file to be self signed using the supplied
private key. 

If the input file is a certificate it sets the issuer name to the
subject name (i.e.  makes it self signed) changes the public key to the
supplied value and changes the start and end dates. The start date is
set to the current time and the end date is set to a value determined
by the B<-days> option. Any certificate extensions are retained unless
R
Rich Salz 已提交
335 336
the B<-clrext> option is supplied; this includes, for example, any existing
key identifier extensions.
337 338 339 340 341

If the input is a certificate request then a self signed certificate
is created using the supplied private key using the subject name in
the request.

342 343 344
=item B<-passin arg>

the key password source. For more information about the format of B<arg>
R
Rich Salz 已提交
345
see the B<PASS PHRASE ARGUMENTS> section in L<openssl(1)>.
346

347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373
=item B<-clrext>

delete any extensions from a certificate. This option is used when a
certificate is being created from another certificate (for example with
the B<-signkey> or the B<-CA> options). Normally all extensions are
retained.

=item B<-keyform PEM|DER>

specifies the format (DER or PEM) of the private key file used in the
B<-signkey> option.

=item B<-days arg>

specifies the number of days to make a certificate valid for. The default
is 30 days.

=item B<-x509toreq>

converts a certificate into a certificate request. The B<-signkey> option
is used to pass the required private key.

=item B<-req>

by default a certificate is expected on input. With this option a
certificate request is expected instead.

D
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
374 375 376 377 378 379 380
=item B<-set_serial n>

specifies the serial number to use. This option can be used with either
the B<-signkey> or B<-CA> options. If used in conjunction with the B<-CA>
option the serial number file (as specified by the B<-CAserial> or
B<-CAcreateserial> options) is not used.

R
Rich Salz 已提交
381
The serial number can be decimal or hex (if preceded by B<0x>).
D
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
382

383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411
=item B<-CA filename>

specifies the CA certificate to be used for signing. When this option is
present B<x509> behaves like a "mini CA". The input file is signed by this
CA using this option: that is its issuer name is set to the subject name
of the CA and it is digitally signed using the CAs private key.

This option is normally combined with the B<-req> option. Without the
B<-req> option the input is a certificate which must be self signed.

=item B<-CAkey filename>

sets the CA private key to sign a certificate with. If this option is
not specified then it is assumed that the CA private key is present in
the CA certificate file.

=item B<-CAserial filename>

sets the CA serial number file to use.

When the B<-CA> option is used to sign a certificate it uses a serial
number specified in a file. This file consist of one line containing
an even number of hex digits with the serial number to use. After each
use the serial number is incremented and written out to the file again.

The default filename consists of the CA certificate file base name with
".srl" appended. For example if the CA certificate file is called 
"mycacert.pem" it expects to find a serial number file called "mycacert.srl".

412
=item B<-CAcreateserial>
413 414

with this option the CA serial number file is created if it does not exist:
415
it will contain the serial number "02" and the certificate being signed will
R
Rich Salz 已提交
416 417 418
have the 1 as its serial number. If the B<-CA> option is specified
and the serial number file does not exist a random number is generated;
this is the recommended practice.
419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429

=item B<-extfile filename>

file containing certificate extensions to use. If not specified then
no extensions are added to the certificate.

=item B<-extensions section>

the section to add certificate extensions from. If this option is not
specified then the extensions should either be contained in the unnamed
(default) section or the default section should contain a variable called
430
"extensions" which contains the section to use. See the
R
Rich Salz 已提交
431
L<x509v3_config(5)> manual page for details of the
432
extension section format.
433

434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442
=item B<-force_pubkey key>

when a certificate is created set its public key to B<key> instead of the
key in the certificate or certificate request. This option is useful for
creating certificates where the algorithm can't normally sign requests, for
example DH.

The format or B<key> can be specified using the B<-keyform> option.

443 444
=back

445
=head2 NAME OPTIONS
D
 
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
446 447 448 449 450 451 452 453 454 455 456

The B<nameopt> command line switch determines how the subject and issuer
names are displayed. If no B<nameopt> switch is present the default "oneline"
format is used which is compatible with previous versions of OpenSSL.
Each option is described in detail below, all options can be preceded by
a B<-> to turn the option off. Only the first four will normally be used.

=over 4

=item B<compat>

R
Richard Levitte 已提交
457
use the old format.
D
 
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
458 459 460 461 462 463 464 465 466 467 468

=item B<RFC2253>

displays names compatible with RFC2253 equivalent to B<esc_2253>, B<esc_ctrl>,
B<esc_msb>, B<utf8>, B<dump_nostr>, B<dump_unknown>, B<dump_der>,
B<sep_comma_plus>, B<dn_rev> and B<sname>.

=item B<oneline>

a oneline format which is more readable than RFC2253. It is equivalent to
specifying the  B<esc_2253>, B<esc_ctrl>, B<esc_msb>, B<utf8>, B<dump_nostr>,
N
Nils Larsch 已提交
469
B<dump_der>, B<use_quote>, B<sep_comma_plus_space>, B<space_eq> and B<sname>
R
Richard Levitte 已提交
470
options.  This is the I<default> of no name options are given explicitely.
D
 
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
471 472 473 474

=item B<multiline>

a multiline format. It is equivalent B<esc_ctrl>, B<esc_msb>, B<sep_multiline>,
N
Nils Larsch 已提交
475
B<space_eq>, B<lname> and B<align>.
D
 
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
476 477 478 479

=item B<esc_2253>

escape the "special" characters required by RFC2253 in a field That is
U
ispell  
Ulf Möller 已提交
480
B<,+"E<lt>E<gt>;>. Additionally B<#> is escaped at the beginning of a string
D
 
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
481 482 483 484
and a space character at the beginning or end of a string.

=item B<esc_ctrl>

485
escape control characters. That is those with ASCII values less than
D
 
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
486 487 488 489 490 491 492 493 494 495 496 497 498 499 500 501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 510
0x20 (space) and the delete (0x7f) character. They are escaped using the
RFC2253 \XX notation (where XX are two hex digits representing the
character value).

=item B<esc_msb>

escape characters with the MSB set, that is with ASCII values larger than
127.

=item B<use_quote>

escapes some characters by surrounding the whole string with B<"> characters,
without the option all escaping is done with the B<\> character.

=item B<utf8>

convert all strings to UTF8 format first. This is required by RFC2253. If
you are lucky enough to have a UTF8 compatible terminal then the use
of this option (and B<not> setting B<esc_msb>) may result in the correct
display of multibyte (international) characters. Is this option is not
present then multibyte characters larger than 0xff will be represented
using the format \UXXXX for 16 bits and \WXXXXXXXX for 32 bits.
Also if this option is off any UTF8Strings will be converted to their
character form first.

511
=item B<ignore_type>
D
 
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
512 513 514 515 516 517 518 519 520 521 522 523 524 525 526 527 528 529 530 531 532 533

this option does not attempt to interpret multibyte characters in any
way. That is their content octets are merely dumped as though one octet
represents each character. This is useful for diagnostic purposes but
will result in rather odd looking output.

=item B<show_type>

show the type of the ASN1 character string. The type precedes the
field contents. For example "BMPSTRING: Hello World".

=item B<dump_der>

when this option is set any fields that need to be hexdumped will
be dumped using the DER encoding of the field. Otherwise just the
content octets will be displayed. Both options use the RFC2253
B<#XXXX...> format.

=item B<dump_nostr>

dump non character string types (for example OCTET STRING) if this
option is not set then non character string types will be displayed
U
ispell  
Ulf Möller 已提交
534
as though each content octet represents a single character.
D
 
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
535 536 537 538 539 540 541 542 543 544 545 546 547 548 549 550 551 552 553

=item B<dump_all>

dump all fields. This option when used with B<dump_der> allows the
DER encoding of the structure to be unambiguously determined.

=item B<dump_unknown>

dump any field whose OID is not recognised by OpenSSL.

=item B<sep_comma_plus>, B<sep_comma_plus_space>, B<sep_semi_plus_space>,
B<sep_multiline>

these options determine the field separators. The first character is
between RDNs and the second between multiple AVAs (multiple AVAs are
very rare and their use is discouraged). The options ending in
"space" additionally place a space after the separator to make it
more readable. The B<sep_multiline> uses a linefeed character for
the RDN separator and a spaced B<+> for the AVA separator. It also
554 555
indents the fields by four characters. If no field separator is specified
then B<sep_comma_plus_space> is used by default.
D
 
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
556 557 558 559

=item B<dn_rev>

reverse the fields of the DN. This is required by RFC2253. As a side
560
effect this also reverses the order of multiple AVAs but this is
D
 
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
561 562 563 564 565 566 567 568 569 570
permissible.

=item B<nofname>, B<sname>, B<lname>, B<oid>

these options alter how the field name is displayed. B<nofname> does
not display the field at all. B<sname> uses the "short name" form
(CN for commonName for example). B<lname> uses the long form.
B<oid> represents the OID in numerical form and is useful for
diagnostic purpose.

571 572 573 574 575
=item B<align>

align field values for a more readable output. Only usable with
B<sep_multiline>.

N
Nils Larsch 已提交
576
=item B<space_eq>
D
 
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
577 578 579 580 581 582

places spaces round the B<=> character which follows the field
name.

=back

583
=head2 TEXT OPTIONS
D
 
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
584 585 586 587 588

As well as customising the name output format, it is also possible to
customise the actual fields printed using the B<certopt> options when
the B<text> option is present. The default behaviour is to print all fields.

L
Lutz Jänicke 已提交
589 590
=over 4

D
 
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
591 592 593 594 595 596 597 598 599 600 601 602 603 604 605 606 607 608 609 610 611 612 613 614 615 616 617 618 619 620 621 622 623 624 625 626 627 628 629 630 631 632 633 634 635 636 637 638 639 640 641 642 643 644 645 646 647 648 649 650 651 652 653 654
=item B<compatible>

use the old format. This is equivalent to specifying no output options at all.

=item B<no_header>

don't print header information: that is the lines saying "Certificate" and "Data".

=item B<no_version>

don't print out the version number.

=item B<no_serial>

don't print out the serial number.

=item B<no_signame>

don't print out the signature algorithm used.

=item B<no_validity>

don't print the validity, that is the B<notBefore> and B<notAfter> fields.

=item B<no_subject>

don't print out the subject name.

=item B<no_issuer>

don't print out the issuer name.

=item B<no_pubkey>

don't print out the public key.

=item B<no_sigdump>

don't give a hexadecimal dump of the certificate signature.

=item B<no_aux>

don't print out certificate trust information.

=item B<no_extensions>

don't print out any X509V3 extensions.

=item B<ext_default>

retain default extension behaviour: attempt to print out unsupported certificate extensions.

=item B<ext_error>

print an error message for unsupported certificate extensions.

=item B<ext_parse>

ASN1 parse unsupported extensions.

=item B<ext_dump>

hex dump unsupported extensions.

655 656 657 658 659
=item B<ca_default>

the value used by the B<ca> utility, equivalent to B<no_issuer>, B<no_pubkey>, B<no_header>,
B<no_version>, B<no_sigdump> and B<no_signame>.

D
 
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
660 661
=back

662 663 664 665 666 667 668
=head1 EXAMPLES

Note: in these examples the '\' means the example should be all on one
line.

Display the contents of a certificate:

669
 openssl x509 -in cert.pem -noout -text
670

671
Display the certificate serial number:
672

673
 openssl x509 -in cert.pem -noout -serial
674

D
 
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
675 676 677 678 679 680 681 682 683 684 685
Display the certificate subject name:

 openssl x509 -in cert.pem -noout -subject

Display the certificate subject name in RFC2253 form:

 openssl x509 -in cert.pem -noout -subject -nameopt RFC2253

Display the certificate subject name in oneline form on a terminal
supporting UTF8:

N
Nils Larsch 已提交
686
 openssl x509 -in cert.pem -noout -subject -nameopt oneline,-esc_msb
D
 
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
687

688 689
Display the certificate MD5 fingerprint:

690
 openssl x509 -in cert.pem -noout -fingerprint
691 692 693

Display the certificate SHA1 fingerprint:

694
 openssl x509 -sha1 -in cert.pem -noout -fingerprint
695 696 697

Convert a certificate from PEM to DER format:

698
 openssl x509 -in cert.pem -inform PEM -out cert.der -outform DER
699 700 701

Convert a certificate to a certificate request:

702
 openssl x509 -x509toreq -in cert.pem -out req.pem -signkey key.pem
703 704 705 706

Convert a certificate request into a self signed certificate using
extensions for a CA:

707
 openssl x509 -req -in careq.pem -extfile openssl.cnf -extensions v3_ca \
708
	-signkey key.pem -out cacert.pem
709

710
Sign a certificate request using the CA certificate above and add user
711 712
certificate extensions:

713
 openssl x509 -req -in req.pem -extfile openssl.cnf -extensions v3_usr \
714
	-CA cacert.pem -CAkey key.pem -CAcreateserial
715 716 717 718 719


Set a certificate to be trusted for SSL client use and change set its alias to
"Steve's Class 1 CA"

720 721
 openssl x509 -in cert.pem -addtrust clientAuth \
	-setalias "Steve's Class 1 CA" -out trust.pem
722

723 724 725 726
=head1 NOTES

The PEM format uses the header and footer lines:

D
Typo  
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
727 728
 -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
 -----END CERTIFICATE-----
729 730 731

it will also handle files containing:

D
Typo  
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
732 733
 -----BEGIN X509 CERTIFICATE-----
 -----END X509 CERTIFICATE-----
734

735 736
Trusted certificates have the lines

D
Typo  
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
737 738
 -----BEGIN TRUSTED CERTIFICATE-----
 -----END TRUSTED CERTIFICATE-----
739

D
 
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
740 741 742 743 744
The conversion to UTF8 format used with the name options assumes that
T61Strings use the ISO8859-1 character set. This is wrong but Netscape
and MSIE do this as do many certificates. So although this is incorrect
it is more likely to display the majority of certificates correctly.

745 746 747 748 749 750 751
The B<-fingerprint> option takes the digest of the DER encoded certificate.
This is commonly called a "fingerprint". Because of the nature of message
digests the fingerprint of a certificate is unique to that certificate and
two certificates with the same fingerprint can be considered to be the same.

The Netscape fingerprint uses MD5 whereas MSIE uses SHA1.

752 753 754 755
The B<-email> option searches the subject name and the subject alternative
name extension. Only unique email addresses will be printed out: it will
not print the same address more than once.

756 757 758 759 760 761 762 763 764 765 766 767 768 769 770 771 772 773 774 775 776 777 778 779 780 781 782 783 784 785 786 787 788 789 790 791 792 793 794 795 796 797 798 799 800 801 802 803 804 805 806 807 808 809 810 811 812 813 814 815 816 817 818 819 820 821 822 823 824 825 826 827 828 829 830 831 832 833 834 835 836 837 838 839 840 841 842 843 844 845 846 847 848 849 850 851 852 853 854 855 856 857 858 859 860 861 862 863 864 865 866 867 868
=head1 CERTIFICATE EXTENSIONS

The B<-purpose> option checks the certificate extensions and determines
what the certificate can be used for. The actual checks done are rather
complex and include various hacks and workarounds to handle broken
certificates and software.

The same code is used when verifying untrusted certificates in chains
so this section is useful if a chain is rejected by the verify code.

The basicConstraints extension CA flag is used to determine whether the
certificate can be used as a CA. If the CA flag is true then it is a CA,
if the CA flag is false then it is not a CA. B<All> CAs should have the
CA flag set to true.

If the basicConstraints extension is absent then the certificate is
considered to be a "possible CA" other extensions are checked according
to the intended use of the certificate. A warning is given in this case
because the certificate should really not be regarded as a CA: however
it is allowed to be a CA to work around some broken software.

If the certificate is a V1 certificate (and thus has no extensions) and
it is self signed it is also assumed to be a CA but a warning is again
given: this is to work around the problem of Verisign roots which are V1
self signed certificates.

If the keyUsage extension is present then additional restraints are
made on the uses of the certificate. A CA certificate B<must> have the
keyCertSign bit set if the keyUsage extension is present.

The extended key usage extension places additional restrictions on the
certificate uses. If this extension is present (whether critical or not)
the key can only be used for the purposes specified.

A complete description of each test is given below. The comments about
basicConstraints and keyUsage and V1 certificates above apply to B<all>
CA certificates.


=over 4

=item B<SSL Client>

The extended key usage extension must be absent or include the "web client
authentication" OID.  keyUsage must be absent or it must have the
digitalSignature bit set. Netscape certificate type must be absent or it must
have the SSL client bit set.

=item B<SSL Client CA>

The extended key usage extension must be absent or include the "web client
authentication" OID. Netscape certificate type must be absent or it must have
the SSL CA bit set: this is used as a work around if the basicConstraints
extension is absent.

=item B<SSL Server>

The extended key usage extension must be absent or include the "web server
authentication" and/or one of the SGC OIDs.  keyUsage must be absent or it
must have the digitalSignature, the keyEncipherment set or both bits set.
Netscape certificate type must be absent or have the SSL server bit set.

=item B<SSL Server CA>

The extended key usage extension must be absent or include the "web server
authentication" and/or one of the SGC OIDs.  Netscape certificate type must
be absent or the SSL CA bit must be set: this is used as a work around if the
basicConstraints extension is absent.

=item B<Netscape SSL Server>

For Netscape SSL clients to connect to an SSL server it must have the
keyEncipherment bit set if the keyUsage extension is present. This isn't
always valid because some cipher suites use the key for digital signing.
Otherwise it is the same as a normal SSL server.

=item B<Common S/MIME Client Tests>

The extended key usage extension must be absent or include the "email
protection" OID. Netscape certificate type must be absent or should have the
S/MIME bit set. If the S/MIME bit is not set in netscape certificate type
then the SSL client bit is tolerated as an alternative but a warning is shown:
this is because some Verisign certificates don't set the S/MIME bit.

=item B<S/MIME Signing>

In addition to the common S/MIME client tests the digitalSignature bit must
be set if the keyUsage extension is present.

=item B<S/MIME Encryption>

In addition to the common S/MIME tests the keyEncipherment bit must be set
if the keyUsage extension is present.

=item B<S/MIME CA>

The extended key usage extension must be absent or include the "email
protection" OID. Netscape certificate type must be absent or must have the
S/MIME CA bit set: this is used as a work around if the basicConstraints
extension is absent. 

=item B<CRL Signing>

The keyUsage extension must be absent or it must have the CRL signing bit
set.

=item B<CRL Signing CA>

The normal CA tests apply. Except in this case the basicConstraints extension
must be present.

=back

869 870 871 872 873 874 875 876 877
=head1 BUGS

Extensions in certificates are not transferred to certificate requests and
vice versa.

It is possible to produce invalid certificates or requests by specifying the
wrong private key or using inconsistent options in some cases: these should
be checked.

878
There should be options to explicitly set such things as start and end
879 880 881 882
dates rather than an offset from the current time.

=head1 SEE ALSO

R
Rich Salz 已提交
883 884 885
L<req(1)>, L<ca(1)>, L<genrsa(1)>,
L<gendsa(1)>, L<verify(1)>,
L<x509v3_config(5)> 
886

887 888
=head1 HISTORY

D
Dr. Stephen Henson 已提交
889 890 891 892 893 894
The hash algorithm used in the B<-subject_hash> and B<-issuer_hash> options
before OpenSSL 1.0.0 was based on the deprecated MD5 algorithm and the encoding
of the distinguished name. In OpenSSL 1.0.0 and later it is based on a
canonical version of the DN using SHA1. This means that any directories using
the old form must have their links rebuilt using B<c_rehash> or similar. 

895
=cut