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- =pod
- =for comment
- Original text by James Westby, contributed under the OpenSSL license.
- =head1 NAME
- c_rehash - Create symbolic links to files named by the hash values
- =head1 SYNOPSIS
- B<c_rehash>
- B<[-old]>
- B<[-h]>
- B<[-n]>
- B<[-v]>
- [ I<directory>...]
- =head1 DESCRIPTION
- B<c_rehash> scans directories and calculates a hash value of each
- C<.pem>, C<.crt>, C<.cer>, or C<.crl>
- file in the specified directory list and creates symbolic links
- for each file, where the name of the link is the hash value.
- (If the platform does not support symbolic links, a copy is made.)
- This utility is useful as many programs that use OpenSSL require
- directories to be set up like this in order to find certificates.
- If any directories are named on the command line, then those are
- processed in turn. If not, then the B<SSL_CERT_DIR> environment variable
- is consulted; this shold be a colon-separated list of directories,
- like the Unix B<PATH> variable.
- If that is not set then the default directory (installation-specific
- but often B</usr/local/ssl/certs>) is processed.
- In order for a directory to be processed, the user must have write
- permissions on that directory, otherwise it will be skipped.
- The links created are of the form C<HHHHHHHH.D>, where each B<H>
- is a hexadecimal character and B<D> is a single decimal digit.
- When processing a directory, B<c_rehash> will first remove all links
- that have a name in that syntax. If you have links in that format
- used for other purposes, they will be removed.
- To skip the removal step, use the B<-n> flag.
- Hashes for CRL's look similar except the letter B<r> appears after
- the period, like this: C<HHHHHHHH.rD>.
- Multiple objects may have the same hash; they will be indicated by
- incrementing the B<D> value. Duplicates are found by comparing the
- full SHA-1 fingerprint. A warning will be displayed if a duplicate
- is found.
- A warning will also be displayed if there are files that
- cannot be parsed as either a certificate or a CRL.
- The program uses the B<openssl> program to compute the hashes and
- fingerprints. If not found in the user's B<PATH>, then set the
- B<OPENSSL> environment variable to the full pathname.
- Any program can be used, it will be invoked as follows for either
- a certificate or CRL:
- $OPENSSL x509 -hash -fingerprint -noout -in FILENAME
- $OPENSSL crl -hash -fingerprint -noout -in FILENAME
- where B<FILENAME> is the filename. It must output the hash of the
- file on the first line, and the fingerprint on the second,
- optionally prefixed with some text and an equals sign.
- =head1 OPTIONS
- =over 4
- =item B<-old>
- Use old-style hashing (MD5, as opposed to SHA-1) for generating
- links for releases before 1.0.0. Note that current versions will
- not use the old style.
- =item B<-h>
- Display a brief usage message.
- =item B<-n>
- Do not remove existing links.
- This is needed when keeping new and old-style links in the same directory.
- =item B<-v>
- Print messages about old links removed and new links created.
- By default, B<c_rehash> only lists each directory as it is processed.
- =back
- =head1 ENVIRONMENT
- =over
- =item B<OPENSSL>
- The path to an executable to use to generate hashes and
- fingerprints (see above).
- =item B<SSL_CERT_DIR>
- Colon separated list of directories to operate on.
- Ignored if directories are listed on the command line.
- =back
- =head1 SEE ALSO
- L<openssl(1)|openssl(1)>,
- L<crl(1)|crl(1)>.
- L<x509(1)|x509(1)>.
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