openssl-verification-options - generic X.509 certificate verification options
openssl command [
options ... ] [
parameters ... ]
There are many situations where X.509 certificates are verified within the
OpenSSL libraries and in various OpenSSL commands.
Certificate verification is implemented by
X509_verify_cert(3). It is a
complicated process consisting of a number of steps and depending on numerous
options. The most important of them are detailed in the following sections.
In a nutshell, a valid chain of certificates needs to be built up and verified
starting from the
target certificate that is to be verified and ending
in a certificate that due to some policy is trusted. Verification is done
relative to the given
purpose, which is the intended use of the target
certificate, such as SSL server, or by default for any purpose.
The details of how each OpenSSL command handles errors are documented on the
specific command page.
DANE support is documented in
openssl-s_client(1),
SSL_CTX_dane_enable(3),
SSL_set1_host(3),
X509_VERIFY_PARAM_set_flags(3), and
X509_check_host(3).
In general, according to RFC 4158 and RFC 5280, a
trust anchor is any
public key and related subject distinguished name (DN) that for some reason is
considered trusted and thus is acceptable as the root of a chain of
certificates.
In practice, trust anchors are given in the form of certificates, where their
essential fields are the public key and the subject DN. In addition to the
requirements in RFC 5280, OpenSSL checks the validity period of such
certificates and makes use of some further fields. In particular, the subject
key identifier extension, if present, is used for matching trust anchors
during chain building.
In the most simple and common case, trust anchors are by default all self-signed
"root" CA certificates that are placed in the
trust store,
which is a collection of certificates that are trusted for certain uses. This
is akin to what is used in the trust stores of Mozilla Firefox, or Apple's and
Microsoft's certificate stores, ...
From the OpenSSL perspective, a trust anchor is a certificate that should be
augmented with an explicit designation for which uses of a target certificate
the certificate may serve as a trust anchor. In PEM encoding, this is
indicated by the "TRUSTED CERTIFICATE" string. Such a designation
provides a set of positive trust attributes explicitly stating trust for the
listed purposes and/or a set of negative trust attributes explicitly rejecting
the use for the listed purposes. The purposes are encoded using the values
defined for the extended key usages (EKUs) that may be given in X.509
extensions of end-entity certificates. See also the "Extended Key
Usage" section below.
The currently recognized uses are
clientAuth (SSL client use),
serverAuth (SSL server use),
emailProtection (S/MIME email use),
codeSigning (object signer use),
OCSPSigning (OCSP responder
use),
OCSP (OCSP request use),
timeStamping (TSA server use),
and
anyExtendedKeyUsage. As of OpenSSL 1.1.0, the last of these blocks
all uses when rejected or enables all uses when trusted.
A certificate, which may be CA certificate or an end-entity certificate, is
considered a trust anchor for the given use if and only if all the following
conditions hold:
- •
- It is an an element of the trust store.
- •
- It does not have a negative trust attribute rejecting the
given use.
- •
- It has a positive trust attribute accepting the given use
or (by default) one of the following compatibility conditions apply: It is
self-signed or the -partial_chain option is given (which
corresponds to the X509_V_FLAG_PARTIAL_CHAIN flag being set).
First, a certificate chain is built up starting from the target certificate and
ending in a trust anchor.
The chain is built up iteratively, looking up in turn a certificate with
suitable key usage that matches as an issuer of the current
"subject" certificate as described below. If there is such a
certificate, the first one found that is currently valid is taken, otherwise
the one that expired most recently of all such certificates. For efficiency,
no backtracking is performed, thus any further candidate issuer certificates
that would match equally are ignored.
When a self-signed certificate has been added, chain construction stops. In this
case it must fully match a trust anchor, otherwise chain building fails.
A candidate issuer certificate matches a subject certificate if all of the
following conditions hold:
- •
- Its subject name matches the issuer name of the subject
certificate.
- •
- If the subject certificate has an authority key identifier
extension, each of its sub-fields equals the corresponding subject key
identifier, serial number, and issuer field of the candidate issuer
certificate, as far as the respective fields are present in both
certificates.
- •
- The certificate signature algorithm used to sign the
subject certificate is supported and equals the public key algorithm of
the candidate issuer certificate.
The lookup first searches for issuer certificates in the trust store. If it does
not find a match there it consults the list of untrusted
("intermediate" CA) certificates, if provided.
When the certificate chain building process was successful the chain components
and their links are checked thoroughly.
The first step is to check that each certificate is well-formed. Part of these
checks are enabled only if the
-x509_strict option is given.
The second step is to check the extensions of every untrusted certificate for
consistency with the supplied purpose. If the
-purpose option is not
given then no such checks are done except for SSL/TLS connection setup, where
by default "sslserver" or "sslclient", are checked. The
target or "leaf" certificate, as well as any other untrusted
certificates, must have extensions compatible with the specified purpose. All
certificates except the target or "leaf" must also be valid CA
certificates. The precise extensions required are described in more detail in
"CERTIFICATE EXTENSIONS" in
openssl-x509(1).
The third step is to check the trust settings on the last certificate (which
typically is a self-signed root CA certificate). It must be trusted for the
given use. For compatibility with previous versions of OpenSSL, a self-signed
certificate with no trust attributes is considered to be valid for all uses.
The fourth, and final, step is to check the validity of the certificate chain.
For each element in the chain, including the root CA certificate, the validity
period as specified by the "notBefore" and "notAfter"
fields is checked against the current system time. The
-attime flag may
be used to use a reference time other than "now." The certificate
signature is checked as well (except for the signature of the typically
self-signed root CA certificate, which is verified only if the
-check_ss_sig option is given). When verifying a certificate signature
the keyUsage extension (if present) of the candidate issuer certificate is
checked to permit digitalSignature for signing proxy certificates or to permit
keyCertSign for signing other certificates, respectively. If all operations
complete successfully then certificate is considered valid. If any operation
fails then the certificate is not valid.
The following options specify how to supply the certificates that can be used as
trust anchors for certain uses. As mentioned, a collection of such
certificates is called a
trust store.
Note that OpenSSL does not provide a default set of trust anchors. Many Linux
distributions include a system default and configure OpenSSL to point to that.
Mozilla maintains an influential trust store that can be found at
<
https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/about/governance/policies/security-group/certs/>.
The certificates to add to the trust store can be specified using following
options.
-
-CAfile file
- Load the specified file which contains a certificate or
several of them in case the input is in PEM or PKCS#12 format. PEM-encoded
certificates may also have trust attributes set.
- -no-CAfile
- Do not load the default file of trusted certificates.
-
-CApath dir
- Use the specified directory as a collection of trusted
certificates, i.e., a trust store. Files should be named with the hash
value of the X.509 SubjectName of each certificate. This is so that the
library can extract the IssuerName, hash it, and directly lookup the file
to get the issuer certificate. See openssl-rehash(1) for
information on creating this type of directory.
- -no-CApath
- Do not use the default directory of trusted
certificates.
-
-CAstore uri
- Use uri as a store of CA certificates. The URI may
indicate a single certificate, as well as a collection of them. With URIs
in the "file:" scheme, this acts as -CAfile or
-CApath, depending on if the URI indicates a single file or
directory. See ossl_store-file(7) for more information on the
"file:" scheme.
These certificates are also used when building the server certificate chain
(for example with openssl-s_server(1)) or client certificate chain
(for example with openssl-s_time(1)).
- -no-CAstore
- Do not use the default store of trusted CA
certificates.
The certificate verification can be fine-tuned with the following flags.
- -verbose
- Print extra information about the operations being
performed.
-
-attime timestamp
- Perform validation checks using time specified by
timestamp and not current system time. timestamp is the
number of seconds since January 1, 1970 (i.e., the Unix Epoch).
- -no_check_time
- This option suppresses checking the validity period of
certificates and CRLs against the current time. If option -attime
is used to specify a verification time, the check is not suppressed.
- -x509_strict
- This disables non-compliant workarounds for broken
certificates. Thus errors are thrown on certificates not compliant with
RFC 5280.
When this option is set, among others, the following certificate
well-formedness conditions are checked:
- •
- The basicConstraints of CA certificates must be marked
critical.
- •
- CA certificates must explicitly include the keyUsage
extension.
- •
- If a pathlenConstraint is given the key usage keyCertSign
must be allowed.
- •
- The pathlenConstraint must not be given for non-CA
certificates.
- •
- The issuer name of any certificate must not be empty.
- •
- The subject name of CA certs, certs with keyUsage crlSign,
and certs without subjectAlternativeName must not be empty.
- •
- If a subjectAlternativeName extension is given it must not
be empty.
- •
- The signatureAlgorithm field and the cert signature must be
consistent.
- •
- Any given authorityKeyIdentifier and any given
subjectKeyIdentifier must not be marked critical.
- •
- The authorityKeyIdentifier must be given for X.509v3 certs
unless they are self-signed.
- •
- The subjectKeyIdentifier must be given for all X.509v3 CA
certs.
- -ignore_critical
- Normally if an unhandled critical extension is present that
is not supported by OpenSSL the certificate is rejected (as required by
RFC5280). If this option is set critical extensions are ignored.
- -issuer_checks
- Ignored.
- -crl_check
- Checks end entity certificate validity by attempting to
look up a valid CRL. If a valid CRL cannot be found an error occurs.
- -crl_check_all
- Checks the validity of all certificates in the chain
by attempting to look up valid CRLs.
- -use_deltas
- Enable support for delta CRLs.
- -extended_crl
- Enable extended CRL features such as indirect CRLs and
alternate CRL signing keys.
-
-suiteB_128_only, -suiteB_128,
-suiteB_192
- Enable the Suite B mode operation at 128 bit Level of
Security, 128 bit or 192 bit, or only 192 bit Level of Security
respectively. See RFC6460 for details. In particular the supported
signature algorithms are reduced to support only ECDSA and SHA256 or
SHA384 and only the elliptic curves P-256 and P-384.
-
-auth_level level
- Set the certificate chain authentication security level to
level. The authentication security level determines the acceptable
signature and public key strength when verifying certificate chains. For a
certificate chain to validate, the public keys of all the certificates
must meet the specified security level. The signature algorithm
security level is enforced for all the certificates in the chain except
for the chain's trust anchor, which is either directly trusted or
validated by means other than its signature. See
SSL_CTX_set_security_level(3) for the definitions of the available
levels. The default security level is -1, or "not set". At
security level 0 or lower all algorithms are acceptable. Security level 1
requires at least 80-bit-equivalent security and is broadly interoperable,
though it will, for example, reject MD5 signatures or RSA keys shorter
than 1024 bits.
- -partial_chain
- Allow verification to succeed if an incomplete chain can be
built. That is, a chain ending in a certificate that normally would not be
trusted (because it has no matching positive trust attributes and is not
self-signed) but is an element of the trust store. This certificate may be
self-issued or belong to an intermediate CA.
- -check_ss_sig
- Verify the signature of the last certificate in a chain if
the certificate is supposedly self-signed. This is prohibited and will
result in an error if it is a non-conforming CA certificate with key usage
restrictions not including the keyCertSign bit. This verification is
disabled by default because it doesn't add any security.
- -allow_proxy_certs
- Allow the verification of proxy certificates.
- -trusted_first
- As of OpenSSL 1.1.0 this option is on by default and cannot
be disabled.
When constructing the certificate chain, the trusted certificates specified
via -CAfile, -CApath, -CAstore or -trusted are
always used before any certificates specified via -untrusted.
- -no_alt_chains
- As of OpenSSL 1.1.0, since -trusted_first always on,
this option has no effect.
-
-trusted file
- Parse file as a set of one or more certificates.
Each of them qualifies as trusted if has a suitable positive trust
attribute or it is self-signed or the -partial_chain option is
specified. This option implies the -no-CAfile, -no-CApath,
and -no-CAstore options and it cannot be used with the
-CAfile, -CApath or -CAstore options, so only
certificates specified using the -trusted option are trust anchors.
This option may be used multiple times.
-
-untrusted file
- Parse file as a set of one or more certificates. All
certificates (typically of intermediate CAs) are considered untrusted and
may be used to construct a certificate chain from the target certificate
to a trust anchor. This option may be used multiple times.
-
-policy arg
- Enable policy processing and add arg to the
user-initial-policy-set (see RFC5280). The policy arg can be an
object name an OID in numeric form. This argument can appear more than
once.
- -explicit_policy
- Set policy variable require-explicit-policy (see
RFC5280).
- -policy_check
- Enables certificate policy processing.
- -policy_print
- Print out diagnostics related to policy processing.
- -inhibit_any
- Set policy variable inhibit-any-policy (see RFC5280).
- -inhibit_map
- Set policy variable inhibit-policy-mapping (see
RFC5280).
-
-purpose purpose
- The intended use for the certificate. Currently defined
purposes are "sslclient", "sslserver",
"nssslserver", "smimesign", "smimeencrypt",
"crlsign", "ocsphelper", "timestampsign",
and "any". If peer certificate verification is enabled, by
default the TLS implementation as well as the commands s_client and
s_server check for consistency with TLS server or TLS client use,
respectively.
While IETF RFC 5280 says that id-kp-serverAuth and
id-kp-clientAuth are only for WWW use, in practice they are used
for all kinds of TLS clients and servers, and this is what OpenSSL assumes
as well.
-
-verify_depth num
- Limit the certificate chain to num intermediate CA
certificates. A maximal depth chain can have up to num+2
certificates, since neither the end-entity certificate nor the
trust-anchor certificate count against the -verify_depth
limit.
-
-verify_email email
- Verify if email matches the email address in Subject
Alternative Name or the email in the subject Distinguished Name.
-
-verify_hostname hostname
- Verify if hostname matches DNS name in Subject
Alternative Name or Common Name in the subject certificate.
-
-verify_ip ip
- Verify if ip matches the IP address in Subject
Alternative Name of the subject certificate.
-
-verify_name name
- Use default verification policies like trust model and
required certificate policies identified by name. The trust model
determines which auxiliary trust or reject OIDs are applicable to
verifying the given certificate chain. They can be given using the
-addtrust and -addreject options for openssl-x509(1).
Supported policy names include: default, pkcs7,
smime_sign, ssl_client, ssl_server. These mimics the
combinations of purpose and trust settings used in SSL, CMS and S/MIME. As
of OpenSSL 1.1.0, the trust model is inferred from the purpose when not
specified, so the -verify_name options are functionally equivalent
to the corresponding -purpose settings.
Sometimes there may be more than one certificate chain leading to an end-entity
certificate. This usually happens when a root or intermediate CA signs a
certificate for another a CA in other organization. Another reason is when a
CA might have intermediates that use two different signature formats, such as
a SHA-1 and a SHA-256 digest.
The following options can be used to provide data that will allow the OpenSSL
command to generate an alternative chain.
-
-xkey infile, -xcert infile,
-xchain
- Specify an extra certificate, private key and certificate
chain. These behave in the same manner as the -cert, -key
and -cert_chain options. When specified, the callback returning the
first valid chain will be in use by the client.
- -xchain_build
- Specify whether the application should build the
certificate chain to be provided to the server for the extra certificates
via the -xkey, -xcert, and -xchain options.
-
-xcertform DER|PEM|P12
- The input format for the extra certificate. This option has
no effect and is retained for backward compatibility only.
-
-xkeyform DER|PEM|P12
- The input format for the extra key. This option has no
effect and is retained for backward compatibility only.
Options like
-purpose lead to checking the certificate extensions, which
determine what the target certificate and intermediate CA certificates can be
used for.
Basic Constraints
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.
All CAs should have the CA
flag set to true.
If the basicConstraints extension is absent, which includes the case that it is
an X.509v1 certificate, then the certificate is considered to be a
"possible CA" and other extensions are checked according to the
intended use of the certificate. The treatment of certificates without
basicConstraints as a CA is presently supported, but this could change in the
future.
Key Usage
If the keyUsage extension is present then additional restraints are made on the
uses of the certificate. A CA certificate
must have the keyCertSign bit
set if the keyUsage extension is present.
Extended Key Usage
The extKeyUsage (EKU) 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 check is given below. The comments about
basicConstraints and keyUsage and X.509v1 certificates above apply to
all CA certificates.
- SSL Client
- The extended key usage extension must be absent or include
the "web client authentication" OID. The keyUsage extension must
be absent or it must have the digitalSignature bit set. The Netscape
certificate type must be absent or it must have the SSL client bit
set.
- SSL Client CA
- The extended key usage extension must be absent or include
the "web client authentication" OID. The 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.
- SSL Server
- The extended key usage extension must be absent or include
the "web server authentication" and/or one of the SGC OIDs. The
keyUsage extension must be absent or it must have the digitalSignature,
the keyEncipherment set or both bits set. The Netscape certificate type
must be absent or have the SSL server bit set.
- SSL Server CA
- The extended key usage extension must be absent or include
the "web server authentication" and/or one of the SGC OIDs. The
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.
- 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.
- Common S/MIME Client Tests
- The extended key usage extension must be absent or include
the "email protection" OID. The Netscape certificate type must
be absent or should have the S/MIME bit set. If the S/MIME bit is not set
in the 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.
- S/MIME Signing
- In addition to the common S/MIME client tests the
digitalSignature bit or the nonRepudiation bit must be set if the keyUsage
extension is present.
- S/MIME Encryption
- In addition to the common S/MIME tests the keyEncipherment
bit must be set if the keyUsage extension is present.
- S/MIME CA
- The extended key usage extension must be absent or include
the "email protection" OID. The 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.
- CRL Signing
- The keyUsage extension must be absent or it must have the
CRL signing bit set.
- CRL Signing CA
- The normal CA tests apply. Except in this case the
basicConstraints extension must be present.
The issuer checks still suffer from limitations in the underlying X509_LOOKUP
API. One consequence of this is that trusted certificates with matching
subject name must appear in a file (as specified by the
-CAfile
option), a directory (as specified by
-CApath), or a store (as
specified by
-CAstore). If there are multiple such matches, possibly in
multiple locations, only the first one (in the mentioned order of locations)
is recognised.
X509_verify_cert(3),
openssl-verify(1),
openssl-ocsp(1),
openssl-ts(1),
openssl-s_client(1),
openssl-s_server(1),
openssl-smime(1),
openssl-cmp(1),
openssl-cms(1)
The checks enabled by
-x509_strict have been extended in OpenSSL 3.0.
Copyright 2000-2023 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License"). You may not use
this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy in the
file LICENSE in the source distribution or at
<
https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>.