openssl - OpenSSL command line program
openssl command [
options ... ] [
parameters ... ]
openssl no-XXX [
options ]
OpenSSL is a cryptography toolkit implementing the Secure Sockets Layer (SSL
v2/v3) and Transport Layer Security (TLS v1) network protocols and related
cryptography standards required by them.
The
openssl program is a command line program for using the various
cryptography functions of OpenSSL's
crypto library from the shell. It
can be used for
o Creation and management of private keys, public keys and parameters
o Public key cryptographic operations
o Creation of X.509 certificates, CSRs and CRLs
o Calculation of Message Digests and Message Authentication Codes
o Encryption and Decryption with Ciphers
o SSL/TLS Client and Server Tests
o Handling of S/MIME signed or encrypted mail
o Timestamp requests, generation and verification
The
openssl program provides a rich variety of commands (
command
in the "SYNOPSIS" above). Each command can have many options and
argument parameters, shown above as
options and
parameters.
Detailed documentation and use cases for most standard subcommands are available
(e.g.,
openssl-x509(1)). The subcommand
openssl-list(1) may be
used to list subcommands.
The command
no-XXX tests whether a command of the specified name
is available. If no command named
XXX exists, it returns 0 (success)
and prints
no-XXX; otherwise it returns 1 and prints
XXX.
In both cases, the output goes to
stdout and nothing is printed to
stderr. Additional command line arguments are always ignored. Since for
each cipher there is a command of the same name, this provides an easy way for
shell scripts to test for the availability of ciphers in the
openssl
program. (
no-XXX is not able to detect pseudo-commands such as
quit,
list, or
no-XXX itself.)
Many commands use an external configuration file for some or all of their
arguments and have a
-config option to specify that file. The default
name of the file is
openssl.cnf in the default certificate storage
area, which can be determined from the
openssl-version(1) command using
the
-d or
-a option. The environment variable
OPENSSL_CONF can be used to specify a different file location or to
disable loading a configuration (using the empty string).
Among others, the configuration file can be used to load modules and to specify
parameters for generating certificates and random numbers. See
config(5) for details.
- asn1parse
- Parse an ASN.1 sequence.
- ca
- Certificate Authority (CA) Management.
- ciphers
- Cipher Suite Description Determination.
- cms
- CMS (Cryptographic Message Syntax) command.
- crl
- Certificate Revocation List (CRL) Management.
- crl2pkcs7
- CRL to PKCS#7 Conversion.
- dgst
- Message Digest calculation. MAC calculations are superseded
by openssl-mac(1).
- dhparam
- Generation and Management of Diffie-Hellman Parameters.
Superseded by openssl-genpkey(1) and
openssl-pkeyparam(1).
- dsa
- DSA Data Management.
- dsaparam
- DSA Parameter Generation and Management. Superseded by
openssl-genpkey(1) and openssl-pkeyparam(1).
- ec
- EC (Elliptic curve) key processing.
- ecparam
- EC parameter manipulation and generation.
- enc
- Encryption, decryption, and encoding.
- engine
- Engine (loadable module) information and manipulation.
- errstr
- Error Number to Error String Conversion.
- fipsinstall
- FIPS configuration installation.
- gendsa
- Generation of DSA Private Key from Parameters. Superseded
by openssl-genpkey(1) and openssl-pkey(1).
- genpkey
- Generation of Private Key or Parameters.
- genrsa
- Generation of RSA Private Key. Superseded by
openssl-genpkey(1).
- help
- Display information about a command's options.
- info
- Display diverse information built into the OpenSSL
libraries.
- kdf
- Key Derivation Functions.
- list
- List algorithms and features.
- mac
- Message Authentication Code Calculation.
- nseq
- Create or examine a Netscape certificate sequence.
- ocsp
- Online Certificate Status Protocol command.
- passwd
- Generation of hashed passwords.
- pkcs12
- PKCS#12 Data Management.
- pkcs7
- PKCS#7 Data Management.
- pkcs8
- PKCS#8 format private key conversion command.
- pkey
- Public and private key management.
- pkeyparam
- Public key algorithm parameter management.
- pkeyutl
- Public key algorithm cryptographic operation command.
- prime
- Compute prime numbers.
- rand
- Generate pseudo-random bytes.
- rehash
- Create symbolic links to certificate and CRL files named by
the hash values.
- req
- PKCS#10 X.509 Certificate Signing Request (CSR)
Management.
- rsa
- RSA key management.
- rsautl
- RSA command for signing, verification, encryption, and
decryption. Superseded by openssl-pkeyutl(1).
- s_client
- This implements a generic SSL/TLS client which can
establish a transparent connection to a remote server speaking SSL/TLS.
It's intended for testing purposes only and provides only rudimentary
interface functionality but internally uses mostly all functionality of
the OpenSSL ssl library.
- s_server
- This implements a generic SSL/TLS server which accepts
connections from remote clients speaking SSL/TLS. It's intended for
testing purposes only and provides only rudimentary interface
functionality but internally uses mostly all functionality of the OpenSSL
ssl library. It provides both an own command line oriented protocol
for testing SSL functions and a simple HTTP response facility to emulate
an SSL/TLS-aware webserver.
- s_time
- SSL Connection Timer.
- sess_id
- SSL Session Data Management.
- smime
- S/MIME mail processing.
- speed
- Algorithm Speed Measurement.
- spkac
- SPKAC printing and generating command.
- srp
- Maintain SRP password file. This command is
deprecated.
- storeutl
- Command to list and display certificates, keys, CRLs,
etc.
- ts
- Time Stamping Authority command.
- verify
- X.509 Certificate Verification. See also the
openssl-verification-options(1) manual page.
- version
- OpenSSL Version Information.
- x509
- X.509 Certificate Data Management.
- blake2b512
- BLAKE2b-512 Digest
- blake2s256
- BLAKE2s-256 Digest
- md2
- MD2 Digest
- md4
- MD4 Digest
- md5
- MD5 Digest
- mdc2
- MDC2 Digest
- rmd160
- RMD-160 Digest
- sha1
- SHA-1 Digest
- sha224
- SHA-2 224 Digest
- sha256
- SHA-2 256 Digest
- sha384
- SHA-2 384 Digest
- sha512
- SHA-2 512 Digest
- sha3-224
- SHA-3 224 Digest
- sha3-256
- SHA-3 256 Digest
- sha3-384
- SHA-3 384 Digest
- sha3-512
- SHA-3 512 Digest
- shake128
- SHA-3 SHAKE128 Digest
- shake256
- SHA-3 SHAKE256 Digest
- sm3
- SM3 Digest
The following aliases provide convenient access to the most used encodings and
ciphers.
Depending on how OpenSSL was configured and built, not all ciphers listed here
may be present. See
openssl-enc(1) for more information.
-
aes128, aes-128-cbc, aes-128-cfb,
aes-128-ctr, aes-128-ecb, aes-128-ofb
- AES-128 Cipher
-
aes192, aes-192-cbc, aes-192-cfb,
aes-192-ctr, aes-192-ecb, aes-192-ofb
- AES-192 Cipher
-
aes256, aes-256-cbc, aes-256-cfb,
aes-256-ctr, aes-256-ecb, aes-256-ofb
- AES-256 Cipher
-
aria128, aria-128-cbc, aria-128-cfb,
aria-128-ctr, aria-128-ecb, aria-128-ofb
- Aria-128 Cipher
-
aria192, aria-192-cbc, aria-192-cfb,
aria-192-ctr, aria-192-ecb, aria-192-ofb
- Aria-192 Cipher
-
aria256, aria-256-cbc, aria-256-cfb,
aria-256-ctr, aria-256-ecb, aria-256-ofb
- Aria-256 Cipher
- base64
- Base64 Encoding
-
bf, bf-cbc, bf-cfb, bf-ecb,
bf-ofb
- Blowfish Cipher
-
camellia128, camellia-128-cbc,
camellia-128-cfb, camellia-128-ctr, camellia-128-ecb,
camellia-128-ofb
- Camellia-128 Cipher
-
camellia192, camellia-192-cbc,
camellia-192-cfb, camellia-192-ctr, camellia-192-ecb,
camellia-192-ofb
- Camellia-192 Cipher
-
camellia256, camellia-256-cbc,
camellia-256-cfb, camellia-256-ctr, camellia-256-ecb,
camellia-256-ofb
- Camellia-256 Cipher
-
cast, cast-cbc
- CAST Cipher
-
cast5-cbc, cast5-cfb, cast5-ecb,
cast5-ofb
- CAST5 Cipher
- chacha20
- Chacha20 Cipher
-
des, des-cbc, des-cfb, des-ecb,
des-ede, des-ede-cbc, des-ede-cfb, des-ede-ofb,
des-ofb
- DES Cipher
-
des3, desx, des-ede3,
des-ede3-cbc, des-ede3-cfb, des-ede3-ofb
- Triple-DES Cipher
-
idea, idea-cbc, idea-cfb,
idea-ecb, idea-ofb
- IDEA Cipher
-
rc2, rc2-cbc, rc2-cfb, rc2-ecb,
rc2-ofb
- RC2 Cipher
- rc4
- RC4 Cipher
-
rc5, rc5-cbc, rc5-cfb, rc5-ecb,
rc5-ofb
- RC5 Cipher
-
seed, seed-cbc, seed-cfb,
seed-ecb, seed-ofb
- SEED Cipher
-
sm4, sm4-cbc, sm4-cfb, sm4-ctr,
sm4-ecb, sm4-ofb
- SM4 Cipher
Details of which options are available depend on the specific command. This
section describes some common options with common behavior.
- -help
- Provides a terse summary of all options. If an option takes
an argument, the "type" of argument is also given.
- --
- This terminates the list of options. It is mostly useful if
any filename parameters start with a minus sign:
openssl verify [flags...] -- -cert1.pem...
See
openssl-format-options(1) for manual page.
See the
openssl-passphrase-options(1) manual page.
Prior to OpenSSL 1.1.1, it was common for applications to store information
about the state of the random-number generator in a file that was loaded at
startup and rewritten upon exit. On modern operating systems, this is
generally no longer necessary as OpenSSL will seed itself from a trusted
entropy source provided by the operating system. These flags are still
supported for special platforms or circumstances that might require them.
It is generally an error to use the same seed file more than once and every use
of
-rand should be paired with
-writerand.
-
-rand files
- A file or files containing random data used to seed the
random number generator. Multiple files can be specified separated by an
OS-dependent character. The separator is ";" for MS-Windows,
"," for OpenVMS, and ":" for all others. Another way
to specify multiple files is to repeat this flag with different
filenames.
-
-writerand file
- Writes the seed data to the specified file upon
exit. This file can be used in a subsequent command invocation.
See the
openssl-verification-options(1) manual page.
See the
openssl-namedisplay-options(1) manual page.
Several commands use SSL, TLS, or DTLS. By default, the commands use TLS and
clients will offer the lowest and highest protocol version they support, and
servers will pick the highest version that the client offers that is also
supported by the server.
The options below can be used to limit which protocol versions are used, and
whether TCP (SSL and TLS) or UDP (DTLS) is used. Note that not all protocols
and flags may be available, depending on how OpenSSL was built.
-
-ssl3, -tls1, -tls1_1, -tls1_2,
-tls1_3, -no_ssl3, -no_tls1, -no_tls1_1,
-no_tls1_2, -no_tls1_3
- These options require or disable the use of the specified
SSL or TLS protocols. When a specific TLS version is required, only that
version will be offered or accepted. Only one specific protocol can be
given and it cannot be combined with any of the no_ options. The
no_* options do not work with s_time and ciphers
commands but work with s_client and s_server commands.
-
-dtls, -dtls1, -dtls1_2
- These options specify to use DTLS instead of TLS. With
-dtls, clients will negotiate any supported DTLS protocol version.
Use the -dtls1 or -dtls1_2 options to support only DTLS1.0
or DTLS1.2, respectively.
-
-engine id
- Load the engine identified by id and use all the
methods it implements (algorithms, key storage, etc.), unless specified
otherwise in the command-specific documentation or it is configured to do
so, as described in "Engine Configuration" in config(5).
The engine will be used for key ids specified with -key and similar
options when an option like -keyform engine is given.
A special case is the "loader_attic" engine, which is meant just
for internal OpenSSL testing purposes and supports loading keys,
parameters, certificates, and CRLs from files. When this engine is used,
files with such credentials are read via this engine. Using the
"file:" schema is optional; a plain file (path) name will
do.
Options specifying keys, like
-key and similar, can use the generic
OpenSSL engine key loading URI scheme "org.openssl.engine:" to
retrieve private keys and public keys. The URI syntax is as follows, in
simplified form:
org.openssl.engine:{engineid}:{keyid}
Where "{engineid}" is the identity/name of the engine, and
"{keyid}" is a key identifier that's acceptable by that engine. For
example, when using an engine that interfaces against a PKCS#11
implementation, the generic key URI would be something like this (this happens
to be an example for the PKCS#11 engine that's part of OpenSC):
-key org.openssl.engine:pkcs11:label_some-private-key
As a third possibility, for engines and providers that have implemented their
own
OSSL_STORE_LOADER(3), "org.openssl.engine:" should not be
necessary. For a PKCS#11 implementation that has implemented such a loader,
the PKCS#11 URI as defined in RFC 7512 should be possible to use directly:
-key pkcs11:object=some-private-key;pin-value=1234
-
-provider name
- Load and initialize the provider identified by name.
The name can be also a path to the provider module. In that case
the provider name will be the specified path and not just the provider
module name. Interpretation of relative paths is platform specific. The
configured "MODULESDIR" path, OPENSSL_MODULES environment
variable, or the path specified by -provider-path is prepended to
relative paths. See provider(7) for a more detailed
description.
-
-provider-path path
- Specifies the search path that is to be used for looking
for providers. Equivalently, the OPENSSL_MODULES environment
variable may be set.
-
-propquery propq
- Specifies the property query clause to be used when
fetching algorithms from the loaded providers. See property(7) for
a more detailed description.
The OpenSSL library can be take some configuration parameters from the
environment. Some of these variables are listed below. For information about
specific commands, see
openssl-engine(1),
openssl-rehash(1), and
tsget(1).
For information about the use of environment variables in configuration, see
"ENVIRONMENT" in
config(5).
For information about querying or specifying CPU architecture flags, see
OPENSSL_ia32cap(3), and
OPENSSL_s390xcap(3).
For information about all environment variables used by the OpenSSL libraries,
see
openssl-env(7).
-
OPENSSL_TRACE=name[,...]
- Enable tracing output of OpenSSL library, by name. This
output will only make sense if you know OpenSSL internals well. Also, it
might not give you any output at all, depending on how OpenSSL was built.
The value is a comma separated list of names, with the following
available:
- TRACE
- Traces the OpenSSL trace API itself.
- INIT
- Traces OpenSSL library initialization and cleanup.
- TLS
- Traces the TLS/SSL protocol.
- TLS_CIPHER
- Traces the ciphers used by the TLS/SSL protocol.
- CONF
- Show details about provider and engine configuration.
- ENGINE_TABLE
- The function that is used by RSA, DSA (etc) code to select
registered ENGINEs, cache defaults and functional references (etc), will
generate debugging summaries.
- ENGINE_REF_COUNT
- Reference counts in the ENGINE structure will be monitored
with a line of generated for each change.
- PKCS5V2
- Traces PKCS#5 v2 key generation.
- PKCS12_KEYGEN
- Traces PKCS#12 key generation.
- PKCS12_DECRYPT
- Traces PKCS#12 decryption.
- X509V3_POLICY
- Generates the complete policy tree at various points during
X.509 v3 policy evaluation.
- BN_CTX
- Traces BIGNUM context operations.
- CMP
- Traces CMP client and server activity.
- STORE
- Traces STORE operations.
- DECODER
- Traces decoder operations.
- ENCODER
- Traces encoder operations.
- REF_COUNT
- Traces decrementing certain ASN.1 structure
references.
openssl-asn1parse(1),
openssl-ca(1),
openssl-ciphers(1),
openssl-cms(1),
openssl-crl(1),
openssl-crl2pkcs7(1),
openssl-dgst(1),
openssl-dhparam(1),
openssl-dsa(1),
openssl-dsaparam(1),
openssl-ec(1),
openssl-ecparam(1),
openssl-enc(1),
openssl-engine(1),
openssl-errstr(1),
openssl-gendsa(1),
openssl-genpkey(1),
openssl-genrsa(1),
openssl-kdf(1),
openssl-list(1),
openssl-mac(1),
openssl-nseq(1),
openssl-ocsp(1),
openssl-passwd(1),
openssl-pkcs12(1),
openssl-pkcs7(1),
openssl-pkcs8(1),
openssl-pkey(1),
openssl-pkeyparam(1),
openssl-pkeyutl(1),
openssl-prime(1),
openssl-rand(1),
openssl-rehash(1),
openssl-req(1),
openssl-rsa(1),
openssl-rsautl(1),
openssl-s_client(1),
openssl-s_server(1),
openssl-s_time(1),
openssl-sess_id(1),
openssl-smime(1),
openssl-speed(1),
openssl-spkac(1),
openssl-srp(1),
openssl-storeutl(1),
openssl-ts(1),
openssl-verify(1),
openssl-version(1),
openssl-x509(1),
config(5),
crypto(7),
openssl-env(7).
ssl(7),
x509v3_config(5)
The
list -
XXX-algorithms options were added in OpenSSL
1.0.0; For notes on the availability of other commands, see their individual
manual pages.
The
-issuer_checks option is deprecated as of OpenSSL 1.1.0 and is
silently ignored.
The
-xcertform and
-xkeyform options are obsolete since OpenSSL
3.0 and have no effect.
The interactive mode, which could be invoked by running "openssl" with
no further arguments, was removed in OpenSSL 3.0, and running that program
with no arguments is now equivalent to "openssl help".
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>.