req.pod 22 KB

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  1. =pod
  2. =head1 NAME
  3. req - PKCS#10 certificate request and certificate generating utility.
  4. =head1 SYNOPSIS
  5. B<openssl> B<req>
  6. [B<-inform PEM|DER>]
  7. [B<-outform PEM|DER>]
  8. [B<-in filename>]
  9. [B<-passin arg>]
  10. [B<-out filename>]
  11. [B<-passout arg>]
  12. [B<-text>]
  13. [B<-pubkey>]
  14. [B<-noout>]
  15. [B<-verify>]
  16. [B<-modulus>]
  17. [B<-new>]
  18. [B<-rand file(s)>]
  19. [B<-newkey rsa:bits>]
  20. [B<-newkey alg:file>]
  21. [B<-nodes>]
  22. [B<-key filename>]
  23. [B<-keyform PEM|DER>]
  24. [B<-keyout filename>]
  25. [B<-keygen_engine id>]
  26. [B<-[digest]>]
  27. [B<-config filename>]
  28. [B<-multivalue-rdn>]
  29. [B<-x509>]
  30. [B<-days n>]
  31. [B<-set_serial n>]
  32. [B<-asn1-kludge>]
  33. [B<-no-asn1-kludge>]
  34. [B<-newhdr>]
  35. [B<-extensions section>]
  36. [B<-reqexts section>]
  37. [B<-utf8>]
  38. [B<-nameopt>]
  39. [B<-reqopt>]
  40. [B<-subject>]
  41. [B<-subj arg>]
  42. [B<-batch>]
  43. [B<-verbose>]
  44. [B<-engine id>]
  45. =head1 DESCRIPTION
  46. The B<req> command primarily creates and processes certificate requests
  47. in PKCS#10 format. It can additionally create self signed certificates
  48. for use as root CAs for example.
  49. =head1 COMMAND OPTIONS
  50. =over 4
  51. =item B<-inform DER|PEM>
  52. This specifies the input format. The B<DER> option uses an ASN1 DER encoded
  53. form compatible with the PKCS#10. The B<PEM> form is the default format: it
  54. consists of the B<DER> format base64 encoded with additional header and
  55. footer lines.
  56. =item B<-outform DER|PEM>
  57. This specifies the output format, the options have the same meaning as the
  58. B<-inform> option.
  59. =item B<-in filename>
  60. This specifies the input filename to read a request from or standard input
  61. if this option is not specified. A request is only read if the creation
  62. options (B<-new> and B<-newkey>) are not specified.
  63. =item B<-passin arg>
  64. the input file password source. For more information about the format of B<arg>
  65. see the B<PASS PHRASE ARGUMENTS> section in L<openssl(1)|openssl(1)>.
  66. =item B<-out filename>
  67. This specifies the output filename to write to or standard output by
  68. default.
  69. =item B<-passout arg>
  70. the output file password source. For more information about the format of B<arg>
  71. see the B<PASS PHRASE ARGUMENTS> section in L<openssl(1)|openssl(1)>.
  72. =item B<-text>
  73. prints out the certificate request in text form.
  74. =item B<-subject>
  75. prints out the request subject (or certificate subject if B<-x509> is
  76. specified)
  77. =item B<-pubkey>
  78. outputs the public key.
  79. =item B<-noout>
  80. this option prevents output of the encoded version of the request.
  81. =item B<-modulus>
  82. this option prints out the value of the modulus of the public key
  83. contained in the request.
  84. =item B<-verify>
  85. verifies the signature on the request.
  86. =item B<-new>
  87. this option generates a new certificate request. It will prompt
  88. the user for the relevant field values. The actual fields
  89. prompted for and their maximum and minimum sizes are specified
  90. in the configuration file and any requested extensions.
  91. If the B<-key> option is not used it will generate a new RSA private
  92. key using information specified in the configuration file.
  93. =item B<-subj arg>
  94. Replaces subject field of input request with specified data and outputs
  95. modified request. The arg must be formatted as
  96. I</type0=value0/type1=value1/type2=...>,
  97. characters may be escaped by \ (backslash), no spaces are skipped.
  98. =item B<-rand file(s)>
  99. a file or files containing random data used to seed the random number
  100. generator, or an EGD socket (see L<RAND_egd(3)|RAND_egd(3)>).
  101. Multiple files can be specified separated by a OS-dependent character.
  102. The separator is B<;> for MS-Windows, B<,> for OpenVMS, and B<:> for
  103. all others.
  104. =item B<-newkey arg>
  105. this option creates a new certificate request and a new private
  106. key. The argument takes one of several forms. B<rsa:nbits>, where
  107. B<nbits> is the number of bits, generates an RSA key B<nbits>
  108. in size. If B<nbits> is omitted, i.e. B<-newkey rsa> specified,
  109. the default key size, specified in the configuration file is used.
  110. All other algorithms support the B<-newkey alg:file> form, where file may be
  111. an algorithm parameter file, created by the B<genpkey -genparam> command
  112. or and X.509 certificate for a key with approriate algorithm.
  113. B<param:file> generates a key using the parameter file or certificate B<file>,
  114. the algorithm is determined by the parameters. B<algname:file> use algorithm
  115. B<algname> and parameter file B<file>: the two algorithms must match or an
  116. error occurs. B<algname> just uses algorithm B<algname>, and parameters,
  117. if neccessary should be specified via B<-pkeyopt> parameter.
  118. B<dsa:filename> generates a DSA key using the parameters
  119. in the file B<filename>. B<ec:filename> generates EC key (usable both with
  120. ECDSA or ECDH algorithms), B<gost2001:filename> generates GOST R
  121. 34.10-2001 key (requires B<ccgost> engine configured in the configuration
  122. file). If just B<gost2001> is specified a parameter set should be
  123. specified by B<-pkeyopt paramset:X>
  124. =item B<-pkeyopt opt:value>
  125. set the public key algorithm option B<opt> to B<value>. The precise set of
  126. options supported depends on the public key algorithm used and its
  127. implementation. See B<KEY GENERATION OPTIONS> in the B<genpkey> manual page
  128. for more details.
  129. =item B<-key filename>
  130. This specifies the file to read the private key from. It also
  131. accepts PKCS#8 format private keys for PEM format files.
  132. =item B<-keyform PEM|DER>
  133. the format of the private key file specified in the B<-key>
  134. argument. PEM is the default.
  135. =item B<-keyout filename>
  136. this gives the filename to write the newly created private key to.
  137. If this option is not specified then the filename present in the
  138. configuration file is used.
  139. =item B<-nodes>
  140. if this option is specified then if a private key is created it
  141. will not be encrypted.
  142. =item B<-[digest]>
  143. this specifies the message digest to sign the request with (such as
  144. B<-md5>, B<-sha1>). This overrides the digest algorithm specified in
  145. the configuration file.
  146. Some public key algorithms may override this choice. For instance, DSA
  147. signatures always use SHA1, GOST R 34.10 signatures always use
  148. GOST R 34.11-94 (B<-md_gost94>).
  149. =item B<-config filename>
  150. this allows an alternative configuration file to be specified,
  151. this overrides the compile time filename or any specified in
  152. the B<OPENSSL_CONF> environment variable.
  153. =item B<-subj arg>
  154. sets subject name for new request or supersedes the subject name
  155. when processing a request.
  156. The arg must be formatted as I</type0=value0/type1=value1/type2=...>,
  157. characters may be escaped by \ (backslash), no spaces are skipped.
  158. =item B<-multivalue-rdn>
  159. this option causes the -subj argument to be interpreted with full
  160. support for multivalued RDNs. Example:
  161. I</DC=org/DC=OpenSSL/DC=users/UID=123456+CN=John Doe>
  162. If -multi-rdn is not used then the UID value is I<123456+CN=John Doe>.
  163. =item B<-x509>
  164. this option outputs a self signed certificate instead of a certificate
  165. request. This is typically used to generate a test certificate or
  166. a self signed root CA. The extensions added to the certificate
  167. (if any) are specified in the configuration file. Unless specified
  168. using the B<set_serial> option, a large random number will be used for
  169. the serial number.
  170. If existing request is specified with the B<-in> option, it is converted
  171. to the self signed certificate otherwise new request is created.
  172. =item B<-days n>
  173. when the B<-x509> option is being used this specifies the number of
  174. days to certify the certificate for. The default is 30 days.
  175. =item B<-set_serial n>
  176. serial number to use when outputting a self signed certificate. This
  177. may be specified as a decimal value or a hex value if preceded by B<0x>.
  178. It is possible to use negative serial numbers but this is not recommended.
  179. =item B<-extensions section>
  180. =item B<-reqexts section>
  181. these options specify alternative sections to include certificate
  182. extensions (if the B<-x509> option is present) or certificate
  183. request extensions. This allows several different sections to
  184. be used in the same configuration file to specify requests for
  185. a variety of purposes.
  186. =item B<-utf8>
  187. this option causes field values to be interpreted as UTF8 strings, by
  188. default they are interpreted as ASCII. This means that the field
  189. values, whether prompted from a terminal or obtained from a
  190. configuration file, must be valid UTF8 strings.
  191. =item B<-nameopt option>
  192. option which determines how the subject or issuer names are displayed. The
  193. B<option> argument can be a single option or multiple options separated by
  194. commas. Alternatively the B<-nameopt> switch may be used more than once to
  195. set multiple options. See the L<x509(1)|x509(1)> manual page for details.
  196. =item B<-reqopt>
  197. customise the output format used with B<-text>. The B<option> argument can be
  198. a single option or multiple options separated by commas.
  199. See discission of the B<-certopt> parameter in the L<B<x509>|x509(1)>
  200. command.
  201. =item B<-asn1-kludge>
  202. by default the B<req> command outputs certificate requests containing
  203. no attributes in the correct PKCS#10 format. However certain CAs will only
  204. accept requests containing no attributes in an invalid form: this
  205. option produces this invalid format.
  206. More precisely the B<Attributes> in a PKCS#10 certificate request
  207. are defined as a B<SET OF Attribute>. They are B<not OPTIONAL> so
  208. if no attributes are present then they should be encoded as an
  209. empty B<SET OF>. The invalid form does not include the empty
  210. B<SET OF> whereas the correct form does.
  211. It should be noted that very few CAs still require the use of this option.
  212. =item B<-no-asn1-kludge>
  213. Reverses effect of B<-asn1-kludge>
  214. =item B<-newhdr>
  215. Adds the word B<NEW> to the PEM file header and footer lines on the outputted
  216. request. Some software (Netscape certificate server) and some CAs need this.
  217. =item B<-batch>
  218. non-interactive mode.
  219. =item B<-verbose>
  220. print extra details about the operations being performed.
  221. =item B<-engine id>
  222. specifying an engine (by its unique B<id> string) will cause B<req>
  223. to attempt to obtain a functional reference to the specified engine,
  224. thus initialising it if needed. The engine will then be set as the default
  225. for all available algorithms.
  226. =item B<-keygen_engine id>
  227. specifies an engine (by its unique B<id> string) which would be used
  228. for key generation operations.
  229. =back
  230. =head1 CONFIGURATION FILE FORMAT
  231. The configuration options are specified in the B<req> section of
  232. the configuration file. As with all configuration files if no
  233. value is specified in the specific section (i.e. B<req>) then
  234. the initial unnamed or B<default> section is searched too.
  235. The options available are described in detail below.
  236. =over 4
  237. =item B<input_password output_password>
  238. The passwords for the input private key file (if present) and
  239. the output private key file (if one will be created). The
  240. command line options B<passin> and B<passout> override the
  241. configuration file values.
  242. =item B<default_bits>
  243. Specifies the default key size in bits.
  244. This option is used in conjunction with the B<-new> option to generate
  245. a new key. It can be overridden by specifying an explicit key size in
  246. the B<-newkey> option. The smallest accepted key size is 512 bits. If
  247. no key size is specified then 2048 bits is used.
  248. =item B<default_keyfile>
  249. This is the default filename to write a private key to. If not
  250. specified the key is written to standard output. This can be
  251. overridden by the B<-keyout> option.
  252. =item B<oid_file>
  253. This specifies a file containing additional B<OBJECT IDENTIFIERS>.
  254. Each line of the file should consist of the numerical form of the
  255. object identifier followed by white space then the short name followed
  256. by white space and finally the long name.
  257. =item B<oid_section>
  258. This specifies a section in the configuration file containing extra
  259. object identifiers. Each line should consist of the short name of the
  260. object identifier followed by B<=> and the numerical form. The short
  261. and long names are the same when this option is used.
  262. =item B<RANDFILE>
  263. This specifies a filename in which random number seed information is
  264. placed and read from, or an EGD socket (see L<RAND_egd(3)|RAND_egd(3)>).
  265. It is used for private key generation.
  266. =item B<encrypt_key>
  267. If this is set to B<no> then if a private key is generated it is
  268. B<not> encrypted. This is equivalent to the B<-nodes> command line
  269. option. For compatibility B<encrypt_rsa_key> is an equivalent option.
  270. =item B<default_md>
  271. This option specifies the digest algorithm to use. Possible values
  272. include B<md5 sha1 mdc2>. If not present then MD5 is used. This
  273. option can be overridden on the command line.
  274. =item B<string_mask>
  275. This option masks out the use of certain string types in certain
  276. fields. Most users will not need to change this option.
  277. It can be set to several values B<default> which is also the default
  278. option uses PrintableStrings, T61Strings and BMPStrings if the
  279. B<pkix> value is used then only PrintableStrings and BMPStrings will
  280. be used. This follows the PKIX recommendation in RFC2459. If the
  281. B<utf8only> option is used then only UTF8Strings will be used: this
  282. is the PKIX recommendation in RFC2459 after 2003. Finally the B<nombstr>
  283. option just uses PrintableStrings and T61Strings: certain software has
  284. problems with BMPStrings and UTF8Strings: in particular Netscape.
  285. =item B<req_extensions>
  286. this specifies the configuration file section containing a list of
  287. extensions to add to the certificate request. It can be overridden
  288. by the B<-reqexts> command line switch. See the
  289. L<x509v3_config(5)|x509v3_config(5)> manual page for details of the
  290. extension section format.
  291. =item B<x509_extensions>
  292. this specifies the configuration file section containing a list of
  293. extensions to add to certificate generated when the B<-x509> switch
  294. is used. It can be overridden by the B<-extensions> command line switch.
  295. =item B<prompt>
  296. if set to the value B<no> this disables prompting of certificate fields
  297. and just takes values from the config file directly. It also changes the
  298. expected format of the B<distinguished_name> and B<attributes> sections.
  299. =item B<utf8>
  300. if set to the value B<yes> then field values to be interpreted as UTF8
  301. strings, by default they are interpreted as ASCII. This means that
  302. the field values, whether prompted from a terminal or obtained from a
  303. configuration file, must be valid UTF8 strings.
  304. =item B<attributes>
  305. this specifies the section containing any request attributes: its format
  306. is the same as B<distinguished_name>. Typically these may contain the
  307. challengePassword or unstructuredName types. They are currently ignored
  308. by OpenSSL's request signing utilities but some CAs might want them.
  309. =item B<distinguished_name>
  310. This specifies the section containing the distinguished name fields to
  311. prompt for when generating a certificate or certificate request. The format
  312. is described in the next section.
  313. =back
  314. =head1 DISTINGUISHED NAME AND ATTRIBUTE SECTION FORMAT
  315. There are two separate formats for the distinguished name and attribute
  316. sections. If the B<prompt> option is set to B<no> then these sections
  317. just consist of field names and values: for example,
  318. CN=My Name
  319. OU=My Organization
  320. emailAddress=someone@somewhere.org
  321. This allows external programs (e.g. GUI based) to generate a template file
  322. with all the field names and values and just pass it to B<req>. An example
  323. of this kind of configuration file is contained in the B<EXAMPLES> section.
  324. Alternatively if the B<prompt> option is absent or not set to B<no> then the
  325. file contains field prompting information. It consists of lines of the form:
  326. fieldName="prompt"
  327. fieldName_default="default field value"
  328. fieldName_min= 2
  329. fieldName_max= 4
  330. "fieldName" is the field name being used, for example commonName (or CN).
  331. The "prompt" string is used to ask the user to enter the relevant
  332. details. If the user enters nothing then the default value is used if no
  333. default value is present then the field is omitted. A field can
  334. still be omitted if a default value is present if the user just
  335. enters the '.' character.
  336. The number of characters entered must be between the fieldName_min and
  337. fieldName_max limits: there may be additional restrictions based
  338. on the field being used (for example countryName can only ever be
  339. two characters long and must fit in a PrintableString).
  340. Some fields (such as organizationName) can be used more than once
  341. in a DN. This presents a problem because configuration files will
  342. not recognize the same name occurring twice. To avoid this problem
  343. if the fieldName contains some characters followed by a full stop
  344. they will be ignored. So for example a second organizationName can
  345. be input by calling it "1.organizationName".
  346. The actual permitted field names are any object identifier short or
  347. long names. These are compiled into OpenSSL and include the usual
  348. values such as commonName, countryName, localityName, organizationName,
  349. organizationalUnitName, stateOrProvinceName. Additionally emailAddress
  350. is include as well as name, surname, givenName initials and dnQualifier.
  351. Additional object identifiers can be defined with the B<oid_file> or
  352. B<oid_section> options in the configuration file. Any additional fields
  353. will be treated as though they were a DirectoryString.
  354. =head1 EXAMPLES
  355. Examine and verify certificate request:
  356. openssl req -in req.pem -text -verify -noout
  357. Create a private key and then generate a certificate request from it:
  358. openssl genrsa -out key.pem 2048
  359. openssl req -new -key key.pem -out req.pem
  360. The same but just using req:
  361. openssl req -newkey rsa:2048 -keyout key.pem -out req.pem
  362. Generate a self signed root certificate:
  363. openssl req -x509 -newkey rsa:2048 -keyout key.pem -out req.pem
  364. Example of a file pointed to by the B<oid_file> option:
  365. 1.2.3.4 shortName A longer Name
  366. 1.2.3.6 otherName Other longer Name
  367. Example of a section pointed to by B<oid_section> making use of variable
  368. expansion:
  369. testoid1=1.2.3.5
  370. testoid2=${testoid1}.6
  371. Sample configuration file prompting for field values:
  372. [ req ]
  373. default_bits = 2048
  374. default_keyfile = privkey.pem
  375. distinguished_name = req_distinguished_name
  376. attributes = req_attributes
  377. x509_extensions = v3_ca
  378. dirstring_type = nobmp
  379. [ req_distinguished_name ]
  380. countryName = Country Name (2 letter code)
  381. countryName_default = AU
  382. countryName_min = 2
  383. countryName_max = 2
  384. localityName = Locality Name (eg, city)
  385. organizationalUnitName = Organizational Unit Name (eg, section)
  386. commonName = Common Name (eg, YOUR name)
  387. commonName_max = 64
  388. emailAddress = Email Address
  389. emailAddress_max = 40
  390. [ req_attributes ]
  391. challengePassword = A challenge password
  392. challengePassword_min = 4
  393. challengePassword_max = 20
  394. [ v3_ca ]
  395. subjectKeyIdentifier=hash
  396. authorityKeyIdentifier=keyid:always,issuer:always
  397. basicConstraints = CA:true
  398. Sample configuration containing all field values:
  399. RANDFILE = $ENV::HOME/.rnd
  400. [ req ]
  401. default_bits = 2048
  402. default_keyfile = keyfile.pem
  403. distinguished_name = req_distinguished_name
  404. attributes = req_attributes
  405. prompt = no
  406. output_password = mypass
  407. [ req_distinguished_name ]
  408. C = GB
  409. ST = Test State or Province
  410. L = Test Locality
  411. O = Organization Name
  412. OU = Organizational Unit Name
  413. CN = Common Name
  414. emailAddress = test@email.address
  415. [ req_attributes ]
  416. challengePassword = A challenge password
  417. =head1 NOTES
  418. The header and footer lines in the B<PEM> format are normally:
  419. -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE REQUEST-----
  420. -----END CERTIFICATE REQUEST-----
  421. some software (some versions of Netscape certificate server) instead needs:
  422. -----BEGIN NEW CERTIFICATE REQUEST-----
  423. -----END NEW CERTIFICATE REQUEST-----
  424. which is produced with the B<-newhdr> option but is otherwise compatible.
  425. Either form is accepted transparently on input.
  426. The certificate requests generated by B<Xenroll> with MSIE have extensions
  427. added. It includes the B<keyUsage> extension which determines the type of
  428. key (signature only or general purpose) and any additional OIDs entered
  429. by the script in an extendedKeyUsage extension.
  430. =head1 DIAGNOSTICS
  431. The following messages are frequently asked about:
  432. Using configuration from /some/path/openssl.cnf
  433. Unable to load config info
  434. This is followed some time later by...
  435. unable to find 'distinguished_name' in config
  436. problems making Certificate Request
  437. The first error message is the clue: it can't find the configuration
  438. file! Certain operations (like examining a certificate request) don't
  439. need a configuration file so its use isn't enforced. Generation of
  440. certificates or requests however does need a configuration file. This
  441. could be regarded as a bug.
  442. Another puzzling message is this:
  443. Attributes:
  444. a0:00
  445. this is displayed when no attributes are present and the request includes
  446. the correct empty B<SET OF> structure (the DER encoding of which is 0xa0
  447. 0x00). If you just see:
  448. Attributes:
  449. then the B<SET OF> is missing and the encoding is technically invalid (but
  450. it is tolerated). See the description of the command line option B<-asn1-kludge>
  451. for more information.
  452. =head1 ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
  453. The variable B<OPENSSL_CONF> if defined allows an alternative configuration
  454. file location to be specified, it will be overridden by the B<-config> command
  455. line switch if it is present. For compatibility reasons the B<SSLEAY_CONF>
  456. environment variable serves the same purpose but its use is discouraged.
  457. =head1 BUGS
  458. OpenSSL's handling of T61Strings (aka TeletexStrings) is broken: it effectively
  459. treats them as ISO-8859-1 (Latin 1), Netscape and MSIE have similar behaviour.
  460. This can cause problems if you need characters that aren't available in
  461. PrintableStrings and you don't want to or can't use BMPStrings.
  462. As a consequence of the T61String handling the only correct way to represent
  463. accented characters in OpenSSL is to use a BMPString: unfortunately Netscape
  464. currently chokes on these. If you have to use accented characters with Netscape
  465. and MSIE then you currently need to use the invalid T61String form.
  466. The current prompting is not very friendly. It doesn't allow you to confirm what
  467. you've just entered. Other things like extensions in certificate requests are
  468. statically defined in the configuration file. Some of these: like an email
  469. address in subjectAltName should be input by the user.
  470. =head1 SEE ALSO
  471. L<x509(1)|x509(1)>, L<ca(1)|ca(1)>, L<genrsa(1)|genrsa(1)>,
  472. L<gendsa(1)|gendsa(1)>, L<config(5)|config(5)>,
  473. L<x509v3_config(5)|x509v3_config(5)>
  474. =cut