OpenSSL Command-Line HOWTO
OpenSSL Command-Line HOWTO
Home
Geek stuff
OpenSSL Command-Line HOWTO
Praise songs Paul Heinlein <[email protected]>
Paul's page
Initial publication: June 13, 2004
Most recent revision: February 11, 2009
Book notes
This site
The openssl application that ships with the OpenSSL libraries can perform a wide range of crypto
operations. This HOWTO provides some cookbook-style recipes for using it.
1 of 18
OpenSSL Command-Line HOWTO
Table of Contents
Introduction
How do I find out what OpenSSL version I’m running?
How do I get a list of the available commands?
How do I get a list of available ciphers?
Benchmarking
How do I benchmark my system’s performance?
How do I benchmark remote connections?
Certificates
How do I generate a self-signed certificate?
How do I generate a certificate request for VeriSign?
How do I test a new certificate?
How do I retrieve a remote certificate?
How do I extract information from a certificate?
How do I export or import a PKCS#12 certificate?
Certificate Verification
How do I verify a certificate?
What certificate authorities does OpenSSL recognize?
How do I get OpenSSL to recognize/verify a certificate?
Command-line clients and servers
How do I connect to a secure SMTP server?
How do I connect to a secure [whatever] server?
How do I set up an SSL server from the command line?
Digests
How do I create an MD5 or SHA1 digest of a file?
How do I sign a digest?
How do I verify a signed digest?
How do I create an Apache digest password entry?
What other kinds of digests are available?
Encryption/Decryption
How do I base64-encode something?
How do I simply encrypt a file?
Errors
How do I interpret SSL error messages?
Keys
How do I generate an RSA key?
How do I generate a public RSA key?
How do I generate a DSA key?
How do I create an elliptic curve key?
How do I remove a passphrase from a key?
Password hashes
How do I generate a crypt-style password hash?
How do I generate a shadow-style password hash?
Prime numbers
How do I test whether a number is prime?
How do I generate a set of prime numbers?
Random data
How do I generate random data?
S/MIME
How do I verify a signed S/MIME message?
How do I encrypt a S/MIME message?
How do I sign a S/MIME message?
For further reading
Comments welcome
Introduction
The openssl command-line binary that ships with the OpenSSL libraries can perform a
wide range of cryptographic operations. It can come in handy in scripts or for
accomplishing one-time command-line tasks.
Documentation for using the openssl application is somewhat scattered, however, so this
article aims to provide some practical examples of its use. I assume that you’ve already got
a functional OpenSSL installation and that the openssl binary is in your shell’s PATH.
Just to be clear, this article is strictly practical; it does not concern cryptographic theory
and concepts. If you don’t know what an MD5 sum is, this article won’t enlighten you one
2 of 18
OpenSSL Command-Line HOWTO
bit—but if all you need to know is how to use openssl to generate a file sum, you’re in luck.
The nature of this article is that I’ll be adding new examples incrementally. Check back at a
later date if I haven’t gotten to the information you need.
$ openssl version
OpenSSL 0.9.8b 04 May 2006
You can get much more information with the version -a option.
$ openssl version -a
OpenSSL 0.9.8b 04 May 2006
built on: Fri Sep 29 18:45:58 UTC 2006
platform: debian-i386-i686/cmov
options: bn(64,32) md2(int) rc4(idx,int) des(ptr,risc1,16,long) blowfish(idx)
compiler: gcc -fPIC -DOPENSSL_PIC -DZLIB -DOPENSSL_THREADS -D_REENTRANT
-DDSO_DLFCN -DHAVE_DLFCN_H -DL_ENDIAN -DTERMIO -O3 -march=i686
-Wa,--noexecstack -g -Wall -DOPENSSL_BN_ASM_PART_WORDS -DOPENSSL_IA32_SSE2
-DSHA1_ASM -DMD5_ASM -DRMD160_ASM -DAES_ASM
OPENSSLDIR: "/usr/lib/ssl"
There are three built-in options for getting lists of available commands, but none of them
provide what I consider useful output. The best thing to do is provide an invalid command
(help or -h will do nicely) to get a readable answer.
$ openssl help
openssl:Error: 'help' is an invalid command.
Standard commands
asn1parse ca ciphers crl crl2pkcs7
dgst dh dhparam dsa dsaparam
ec ecparam enc engine errstr
gendh gendsa genrsa nseq ocsp
passwd pkcs12 pkcs7 pkcs8 prime
rand req rsa rsautl s_client
s_server s_time sess_id smime speed
spkac verify version x509
Message Digest commands (see the `dgst' command for more details)
md2 md4 md5 rmd160 sha
sha1
What the shell calls “Standard commands” are the main top-level options.
You can use the same trick with any of the subcommands.
$ openssl dgst -h
unknown option '-h'
options are
-c to output the digest with separating colons
-d to output debug info
-hex output as hex dump
-binary output in binary form
-sign file sign digest using private key in file
-verify file verify a signature using public key in file
3 of 18
OpenSSL Command-Line HOWTO
In more boring fashion, you can consult the OpenSSL man pages.
Use the ciphers option. The ciphers(1) man page is quite helpful.
# list only high encryption ciphers (keys larger than 128 bits)
openssl ciphers -v 'HIGH'
Benchmarking
How do I benchmark my system’s performance?
The OpenSSL developers have built a benchmarking suite directly into the openssl binary.
It’s accessible via the speed option. It tests how many operations it can perform in a given
time, rather than how long it takes to perform a given number of operations. This strikes
me a quite sane, because the benchmarks don’t take significantly longer to run on a slow
system than on a fast one.
openssl speed
There are two sets of results. The first reports how many bytes per second can be
processed for each algorithm, the second the times needed for sign/verify cycles. Here are
the results on an 2.16GHz Intel Core 2.
4 of 18
OpenSSL Command-Line HOWTO
The s_time option lets you test connection performance. The most simple invocation will
run for 30 seconds, use any cipher, and use SSL handshaking to determine number of
connections per second, using both new and reused sessions:
Beyond that most simple invocation, s_time gives you a wide variety of testing options.
If you don’t have an SSL-enabled web server available for your use, you can emulate one
using the s_server option.
Certificates
How do I generate a self-signed certificate?
You’ll first need to decide whether or not you want to encrypt your key. Doing so means
that the key is protected by a passphrase.
On the plus side, adding a passphrase to a key makes it more secure, so the key is less
5 of 18
OpenSSL Command-Line HOWTO
likely to be useful to someone who steals it. The downside, however, is that you’ll have to
either store the passphrase in a file or type it manually every time you want to start your
web or ldap server.
It violates my normally paranoid nature to say it, but I prefer unencrypted keys, so I don’t
have to manually type a passphrase each time a secure daemon is started. (It’s not terribly
difficult to decrypt your key if you later tire of typing a passphrase.)
This example will produce a file called mycert.pem which will contain both the private key
and the public certificate based on it. The certificate will be valid for 365 days, and the key
(thanks to the -nodes option) is unencrypted.
openssl req \
-x509 -nodes -days 365 \
-newkey rsa:1024 -keyout mycert.pem -out mycert.pem
Using this command-line invocation, you’ll have to answer a lot of questions: Country
Name, State, City, and so on. The tricky question is “Common Name.” You’ll want to
answer with the hostname or CNAME by which people will address the server. This is very
important. If your web server’s real hostname is mybox.mydomain.com but people will be
using www.mydomain.com to address the box, then use the latter name to answer the
“Common Name” question.
Once you’re comfortable with the answers you provide to those questions, you can script
the whole thing by adding the -subj option. I’ve included some information about location
into the example that follows, but the only thing you really need to include for the
certificate to be useful is the hostname (CN).
openssl req \
-x509 -nodes -days 365 \
-subj '/C=US/ST=Oregon/L=Portland/CN=www.madboa.com' \
-newkey rsa:1024 -keyout mycert.pem -out mycert.pem
As in the recipe for creating a self-signed certificate, you’ll have to decide whether or not
you want a passphrase on your private key. The recipe below assumes you don’t. You’ll end
up with two files: a new private key called mykey.pem and a certificate request called
myreq.pem.
openssl req \
-new -newkey rsa:1024 -nodes \
-keyout mykey.pem -out myreq.pem
If you’ve already got a key and would like to use it for generating the request, the syntax is
a bit simpler.
Similarly, you can also provide subject information on the command line.
openssl req \
-new -newkey rsa:1024 -nodes \
-subj '/CN=www.mydom.com/O=My Dom, Inc./C=US/ST=Oregon/L=Portland' \
-keyout mykey.pem -out myreq.pem
When dealing with an institution like VeriSign, you need to take special care to make sure
that the information you provide during the creation of the certificate request is exactly
correct. I know from personal experience that even a difference as trivial as substituting
“and” for “&” in the Organization Name will stall the process.
6 of 18
OpenSSL Command-Line HOWTO
If you’d like, you can double check the signature and information provided in the
certificate request.
# verify signature
openssl req -in myreq.pem -noout -verify -key mykey.pem
# check info
openssl req -in myreq.pem -noout -text
Save the key file in a secure location. You’ll need it in order to use the certificate VeriSign
sends you. The certificate request will typically be pasted into VeriSign’s online application
form.
The s_server option provides a simple but effective testing method. The example below
assumes you’ve combined your key and certificate into one file called mycert.pem.
First, launch the test server on the machine on which the certificate will be used. By
default, the server will listen on port 4433; you can alter that using the -accept option.
If the server launches without complaint, then chances are good that the certificate is
ready for production use.
You can also point your web browser at the test server, e.g., https://yourserver:4433/.
Don’t forget to specify the “https” protocol; plain-old “http” won’t work. You should see a
page listing the various ciphers available and some statistics about your connection. Most
modern browsers allow you to examine the certificate as well.
If you combine openssl and sed, you can retrieve remote certificates via a shell one-liner
or a simple script.
#!/bin/sh
#
# usage: retrieve-cert.sh remote.host.name [port]
#
REMHOST=$1
REMPORT=${2:-443}
echo |\
openssl s_client -connect ${REMHOST}:${REMPORT} 2>&1 |\
sed -ne '/-BEGIN CERTIFICATE-/,/-END CERTIFICATE-/p'
You can, in turn, pipe that information back to openssl to do things like check the dates
on all your active certificates.
#!/bin/sh
#
for CERT in \
www.yourdomain.com:443 \
ldap.yourdomain.com:636 \
imap.yourdomain.com:993 \
do
echo |\
openssl s_client -connect ${CERT} 2>/dev/null |\
sed -ne '/-BEGIN CERTIFICATE-/,/-END CERTIFICATE-/p' |\
openssl x509 -noout -subject -dates
done
An SSL certificate contains a wide range of information: issuer, valid dates, subject, and
7 of 18
OpenSSL Command-Line HOWTO
some hardcore crypto stuff. The x509 subcommand is the entry point for retrieving this
information. The examples below all assume that the certificate you want to examine is
stored in a file named cert.pem.
Using the -text option will give you the full breadth of information.
To create a PKCS#12 certificate, you’ll need a private key and a certificate. During the
conversion process, you’ll be given an opportunity to put an “Export Password” (which can
be empty, if you choose) on the certificate.
If someone sends you a PKCS#12 and any passwords needed to work with it, you can
export it into standard PEM format.
Certificate Verification
Applications linked against the OpenSSL libraries can verify certificates signed by a
recognized certificate authority (CA).
8 of 18
OpenSSL Command-Line HOWTO
If your local OpenSSL installation recognizes the certificate or its signing authority and
everything else (dates, signing chain, etc.) checks out, you’ll get a simple OK message.
If anything is amiss, you’ll see some error messages with short descriptions of the problem,
e.g.,
When OpenSSL was built for your system, it was configured with a “Directory for OpenSSL
files.” (That’s the --openssldir option passed to the configure script, for you hands-on
types.) This is the directory that typically holds information about certificate authorities
your system trusts.
The default location for this directory is /usr/local/ssl, but most vendors put it
elsewhere, e.g., /usr/share/ssl (Red Hat/Fedora), /etc/ssl (Gentoo), /usr/lib/ssl
(Debian), or /System/Library/OpenSSL (Macintosh OS X).
Use the version option to identify which directory (labeled OPENSSLDIR) your installation
uses.
openssl version -d
Within that directory and a subdirectory called certs, you’re likely to find one or more of
three different kinds of files.
2. Some small files in the certs subdirectory named with a .pem file extension, each of
which contains a certificate from a single CA.
3. Some symlinks in the certs subdirectory with obscure filenames like 052eae11.0.
There is typically one of these links for each .pem file.
The first part of obscure filename is actually a hash value based on the certificate
within the .pem file to which it points. The file extension is just an iterator, since it’s
theoretically possible that multiple certificates can generate identical hashes.
When an application encounters a remote certificate, it will typically check to see if the cert
can be found in cert.pem or, if not, in a file named after the certificate’s hash value. If
found, the certificate is considered verified.
It’s interesting to note that some applications, like Sendmail, allow you to specify at
runtime the location of the certificates you trust, while others, like Pine, do not.
Put the file that contains the certificate you’d like to trust into the certs directory
9 of 18
OpenSSL Command-Line HOWTO
discussed above. Then create the hash-based symlink. Here’s a little script that’ll do just
that.
#!/bin/sh
#
# usage: certlink.sh filename [filename ...]
In this section, I assume you are familiar with the specific protocols at issue: SMTP, HTTP,
etc. Explaining them is out of the scope of this article.
You can test, or even use, an SSL-enabled SMTP server from the command line using the
s_client option.
Secure SMTP servers offer secure connections on up to three ports: 25 (TLS), 465 (SSL),
and 587 (TLS). Some time around the 0.9.7 release, the openssl binary was given the
ability to use STARTTLS when talking to SMTP servers.
# port 465/SSL
openssl s_client -connect remote.host:465
RFC821 suggests (although it falls short of explicitly specifying) the two characters
"<CRLF>" as line-terminator. Most mail agents do not care about this and accept either
"<LF>" or "<CRLF>" as line-terminators, but Qmail does not. If you want to comply to the
letter with RFC821 and/or communicate with Qmail, use also the -crlf option:
10 of 18
OpenSSL Command-Line HOWTO
The s_server option allows you to set up an SSL-enabled server from the command line,
but it’s I wouldn’t recommend using it for anything other than testing or debugging. If you
need a production-quality wrapper around an otherwise insecure server, check out
Stunnel instead.
The s_server option works best when you have a certificate; it’s fairly limited without one.
Digests
Generating digests with the dgst option is one of the more straightforward tasks you can
accomplish with the openssl binary. Producing digests is done so often, as a matter of
fact, that you can find special-use binaries for doing the same thing.
# MD5 digest
openssl dgst -md5 filename
# SHA1 digest
openssl dgst -sha1 filename
The MD5 digests are identical to those created with the widely available md5sum
command, though the output formats differ.
The same is true for SHA1 digests and the output of the sha1sum application.
If you want to ensure that the digest you create doesn’t get modified without your
permission, you can sign it using your private key. The following example assumes that you
want to sign the SHA1 sum of a file called foo-1.23.tar.gz.
11 of 18
OpenSSL Command-Line HOWTO
To verify a signed digest you’ll need the file from which the digest was derived, the signed
digest, and the signer’s public key.
Apache’s HTTP digest authentication feature requires a special password format. Apache
ships with the htdigest utility, but it will only write to a file, not to standard output. When
working with remote users, it’s sometimes nice for them to be able to generate a password
hash on a machine they trust and then mail it for inclusion in your local password
database.
The format of the password database is relatively simple: a colon-separated list of the
username, authorization realm (specified by the Apache AuthName directive), and an MD5
digest of those two items and the password. Below is a script that duplicates the output of
htdigest, except that the output is written to standard output. It takes advantage of the
dgst option’s ability to read from standard input.
#!/bin/bash
printf "\n%s:%s:%s\n" \
"$UNAME" \
"$AUTHNAME" \
$(printf "${UNAME}:${AUTHNAME}:${PWORD}" | openssl dgst -md5)
Use the built-in list-message-digest-commands option to get a list of the digest types
available to your local OpenSSL installation.
openssl list-message-digest-commands
Encryption/Decryption
How do I base64-encode something?
Note that echo will silently attach a newline character to your string. Consider using its -n
12 of 18
OpenSSL Command-Line HOWTO
option if you want to avoid that situation, which could be important if you’re trying to
encode a password or authentication string.
Simple file encryption is probably better done using a tool like GPG. Still, you may have
occasion to want to encrypt a file without having to build or use a key/certificate structure.
All you want to have to remember is a password. It can nearly be that simple—if you can
also remember the cipher you employed for encryption.
To choose a cipher, consult the enc(1) man page. More simply (and perhaps more
accurately), you can ask openssl for a list in one of two ways.
After you choose a cipher, you’ll also have to decide if you want to base64-encode the data.
Doing so will mean the encrypted data can be, say, pasted into an email message.
Otherwise, the output will be a binary file.
# the same, only the output is base64 encoded for, e.g., e-mail
openssl enc -aes-256-cbc -a -salt -in file.txt -out file.enc
To decrypt file.enc you or the file’s recipient will need to remember the cipher and the
passphrase.
If you’d like to avoid typing a passphrase every time you encrypt or decrypt a file, the
openssl(1) man page provides the details under the heading “PASS PHRASE
ARGUMENTS.” The format of the password argument is fairly simple.
Errors
How do I interpret SSL error messages?
Poking through your system logs, you see some error messages that are evidently related
to OpenSSL or crypto:
13 of 18
OpenSSL Command-Line HOWTO
The first step to figure out what’s going wrong is to use the errstr option to intrepret the
error code. The code number is found between “error:” and “:lib”. In this case, it’s
0407006A.
If you’ve got a full OpenSSL installation, including all the development documentation, you
can start your investigation there. In this example, the
RSA_padding_add_PKCS1_type_1(3) man page will inform you that PKCS #1 involves
block methods for signatures. After that, of course, you’d need to pore through your
application’s source code to identify when it would expect be receiving those sorts of
packets.
Keys
How do I generate an RSA key?
Use the rsa option to produce a public version of your private RSA key.
Building DSA keys requires a parameter file, and DSA verify operations are slower than
their RSA counterparts, so they aren’t as widely used as RSA keys.
If you’re only going to build a single DSA key, you can do so in just one step using the
dsaparam subcommand.
If, on the other hand, you’ll be creating several DSA keys, you’ll probably want to build a
shared parameter file before generating the keys. It can take a while to build the
parameters, but once built, key generation is done quickly.
Routines for working with elliptic curve cryptography were added to OpenSSL in version
0.9.8. Generating an EC key involves the ecparam option.
14 of 18
OpenSSL Command-Line HOWTO
Perhaps you’ve grown tired of typing your passphrase every time your secure daemon
starts. You can decrypt your key, removing the passphrase requirement, using the rsa or
dsa option, depending on the signature algorithm you chose when creating your private
key.
If you created an RSA key and it is stored in a standalone file called key.pem, then here’s
how to output a decrypted version of the same key to a file called newkey.pem.
Often, you’ll have your private key and public certificate stored in the same file. If they are
stored in a file called mycert.pem, you can construct a decrypted version called
newcert.pem in two steps.
Password hashes
Using the passwd option, you can generate password hashes that interoperate with
traditional /etc/passwd files, newer-style /etc/shadow files, and Apache password files.
If you know an existing password’s “salt,” you can duplicate the hash.
Newer Unix systems use a more secure MD5-based hashing mechanism that uses an eight-
character salt (as compared to the two-character salt in traditional crypt()-style hashes).
Generating them is still straightforward using the -1 option:
The salt in this format consists of the eight characters between the second and third dollar
signs, in this case sXiKzkus. So you can also duplicate a hash with a known salt and
password.
Prime numbers
Current cryptographic techniques rely heavily on the generation and testing of prime
numbers, so it’s no surprise that the OpenSSL libraries contain several routines dealing
with primes. Beginning with version 0.9.7e (or so), the prime option was added to the
15 of 18
OpenSSL Command-Line HOWTO
openssl binary.
Pass the number to the prime option. Note that the number returned by openssl will be in
hex, not decimal, format.
Pass a bunch of numbers to openssl and see what sticks. The seq utility is useful in this
capacity.
Random data
How do I generate random data?
On a Unix box with a /dev/urandom device and a copy of GNU head, you can achieve a
similar effect, often with better entropy:
Make sure you know the trade-offs between the random and urandom devices before
relying on them for truly critical entropy. Consult the random(4) man page on Linux and
BSD systems, or random(7D) on Solaris, for further information.
S/MIME
S/MIME is a standard for sending and receiving secure MIME data, especially in e-mail
messages. Automated S/MIME capabilities have been added to quite a few e-mail clients,
though openssl can provide command-line S/MIME services using the smime option.
Note that the documentation in the smime(1) man page includes a number of good
examples.
It’s pretty easy to verify a signed message. Use your mail client to save the signed message
16 of 18
OpenSSL Command-Line HOWTO
If the messages has been modified by an unauthorized party, the output will conclude with
a failure message indicating that the digest and/or the signature doesn’t match what you
received:
Verification failure
23016:error:21071065:PKCS7 routines:PKCS7_signatureVerify:digest
failure:pk7_doit.c:804:
23016:error:21075069:PKCS7 routines:PKCS7_verify:signature
failure:pk7_smime.c:265:
Likewise, if the sender’s certificate isn’t recognized by your OpenSSL infrastructure, you’ll
get a similar error:
Verification failure
9544:error:21075075:PKCS7 routines:PKCS7_verify:certificate verify
error:pk7_smime.c:222:Verify error:self signed certificate
Most e-mail clients send a copy of the public certificate in the signature attached to the
message. From the command line, you can view the certificate data yourself. You’ll use the
smime -pk7out option to pipe a copy of the PKCS#7 certificate back into the pkcs7 option.
It’s oddly cumbersome but it works.
If you’d like to extract a copy of your correspondent’s certificate for long-term use, use just
the first part of that pipe.
At that point, you can either integrate it into your OpenSSL infrastructure or you can save
it off somewhere for special use.
Let’s say that someone sends you her public certificate and asks that you encrypt some
message to her. You’ve saved her certificate as her-cert.pem. You’ve saved your reply as
my-message.txt.
To get the default—though fairly weak—RC2-40 encryption, you just tell openssl where
the message and the certificate are located.
If you’re pretty sure your remote correspondent has a robust SSL toolkit, you can specify a
stronger encryption algorithm like triple DES:
By default, the encrypted message, including the mail headers, is sent to standard output.
Use the -out option or your shell to redirect it to a file. Or, much trickier, pipe the output
directly to sendmail.
17 of 18
OpenSSL Command-Line HOWTO
-encrypt \
-des3 \
-in my-message.txt \
-from 'Your Fullname <[email protected]>' \
-to 'Her Fullname <[email protected]>' \
-subject 'My encrypted reply' |\
sendmail [email protected]
If you don’t need to encrypt the entire message, but you do want to sign it so that your
recipient can be assured of the message’s integrity, the recipe is similar to that for
encryption. The main difference is that you need to have your own key and certificate,
since you can’t sign anything with the recipient’s cert.
openssl smime \
-sign \
-signer /path/to/your-cert.pem \
-in my-message.txt \
-from 'Your Fullname <[email protected]>' \
-to 'Her Fullname <[email protected]>' \
-subject 'My signed reply' |\
sendmail [email protected]
Comments welcome
Comments and suggestions about this document are appreciated and can be addressed to
the author at <[email protected]>.
This article is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
18 of 18