ocspNameocsp -- Online Certificate Status Protocol utility Synopsisopenssl ocsp
[-out file]
[-issuer file]
[-cert file]
[-serial n]
[-signer file]
[-signkey file]
[-sign_other file]
[-no_certs]
[-req_text]
[-resp_text]
[-text]
[-reqout file]
[-respout file]
[-reqin file]
[-respin file]
[-nonce]
[-no_nonce]
[-url URL]
[-host host:n]
[-path]
[-CApath dir]
[-CAfile file]
[-VAfile file]
[-validity_period n]
[-status_age n]
[-noverify]
[-verify_other file]
[-trust_other]
[-no_intern]
[-no_signature_verify]
[-no_cert_verify]
[-no_chain]
[-no_cert_checks]
[-port num]
[-index file]
[-CA file]
[-rsigner file]
[-rkey file]
[-rother file]
[-resp_no_certs]
[-nmin n]
[-ndays n]
[-resp_key_id]
[-nrequest n]
[-md5|-sha1|...] |
DESCRIPTION The Online Certificate Status Protocol (OCSP) enables applications to
determine the (revocation) state of an identified certificate (RFC
2560).
The ocsp command performs many
common OCSP tasks. It can be used to print out requests and
responses, create requests and send queries to an OCSP responder and
behave like a mini OCSP server itself.
OCSP CLIENT OPTIONS - -out filename
specify output filename, default is standard output.
- -issuer filename
This specifies the current issuer certificate. This option
can be used multiple times. The certificate specified in
filename must be in PEM
format. This option MUST
come before any -cert
options.
- -cert filename
Add the certificate filename
to the request. The issuer certificate is taken from the
previous issuer option, or
an error occurs if no issuer certificate is specified.
- -serial num
Same as the cert option
except the certificate with serial number num is added to the request. The
serial number is interpreted as a decimal integer unless
preceded by 0x. Negative
integers can also be specified by preceding the value by a
- sign.
- -signer filename, -signkey filename
Sign the OCSP request using the certificate specified in the
signer option and the
private key specified by the signkey option. If the signkey option is not present then the
private key is read from the same file as the certificate. If
neither option is specified then the OCSP request is not
signed.
- -sign_other filename
Additional certificates to include in the signed request.
- -nonce, -no_nonce
Add an OCSP nonce extension to a request or disable OCSP
nonce addition. Normally if an OCSP request is input using
the respin option no nonce
is added: using the nonce
option will force addition of a nonce. If an OCSP request is
being created (using cert
and serial options) a nonce
is automatically added specifying no_nonce overrides this.
- -req_text, -resp_text, -text
print out the text form of the OCSP request, response or both
respectively.
- -reqout file, -respout file
write out the DER encoded certificate request or response to
file.
- -reqin file, -respin file
read OCSP request or response file from file. These option are ignored if OCSP
request or response creation is implied by other options (for
example with serial,
cert and host options).
- -url responder_url
specify the responder URL. Both HTTP and HTTPS (SSL/TLS) URLs
can be specified.
- -host hostname:port, -path pathname
if the host option is
present then the OCSP request is sent to the host hostname on port port. path specifies the HTTP path name to
use or "/" by default.
- -CAfile file, -CApath pathname
file or pathname containing trusted CA certificates. These
are used to verify the signature on the OCSP response.
- -verify_other file
file containing additional certificates to search when
attempting to locate the OCSP response signing certificate.
Some responders omit the actual signer's certificate from the
response: this option can be used to supply the necessary
certificate in such cases.
- -trust_other
the certificates specified by the -verify_other option should be
explicitly trusted and no additional checks will be performed
on them. This is useful when the complete responder
certificate chain is not available or trusting a root CA is
not appropriate.
- -VAfile file
file containing explicitly trusted responder certificates.
Equivalent to the -verify_other and -trust_other options.
- -noverify
don't attempt to verify the OCSP response signature or the
nonce values. This option will normally only be used for
debugging since it disables all verification of the
responders certificate.
- -no_intern
ignore certificates contained in the OCSP response when
searching for the signers certificate. With this option the
signers certificate must be specified with either the
-verify_other or -VAfile options.
- -no_signature_verify
don't check the signature on the OCSP response. Since this
option tolerates invalid signatures on OCSP responses it will
normally only be used for testing purposes.
- -no_cert_verify
don't verify the OCSP response signers certificate at all.
Since this option allows the OCSP response to be signed by
any certificate it should only be used for testing purposes.
- -no_chain
do not use certificates in the response as additional
untrusted CA certificates.
- -no_cert_checks
don't perform any additional checks on the OCSP response
signers certificate. That is do not make any checks to see if
the signers certificate is authorised to provide the
necessary status information: as a result this option should
only be used for testing purposes.
- -validity_period nsec, -status_age age
these options specify the range of times, in seconds, which
will be tolerated in an OCSP response. Each certificate
status response includes a notBefore time and an optional
notAfter time. The current
time should fall between these two values, but the interval
between the two times may be only a few seconds. In practice
the OCSP responder and clients clocks may not be precisely
synchronised and so such a check may fail. To avoid this the
-validity_period option can
be used to specify an acceptable error range in seconds, the
default value is 5 minutes.
If the notAfter time is
omitted from a response then this means that new status
information is immediately available. In this case the age of
the notBefore field is
checked to see it is not older than age seconds old. By default this
additional check is not performed.
- -md5|-sha1|-sha256|-ripemod160|...
this option sets digest algorithm to use for certificate
identification in the OCSP request. By default SHA-1 is used.
OCSP SERVER OPTIONS - -index indexfile
indexfile is a text index
file in ca format containing
certificate revocation information.
If the index option is
specified the ocsp utility
is in responder mode, otherwise it is in client mode. The
request(s) the responder processes can be either specified on
the command line (using issuer and serial options), supplied in a file
(using the respin option) or
via external OCSP clients (if port or url is specified).
If the index option is
present then the CA and
rsigner options must also be
present.
- -CA file
CA certificate corresponding to the revocation information in
indexfile.
- -rsigner file
The certificate to sign OCSP responses with.
- -rother file
Additional certificates to include in the OCSP response.
- -resp_no_certs
Don't include any certificates in the OCSP response.
- -resp_key_id
Identify the signer certificate using the key ID, default is
to use the subject name.
- -rkey file
The private key to sign OCSP responses with: if not present
the file specified in the rsigner option is used.
- -port portnum
Port to listen for OCSP requests on. The port may also be
specified using the url
option.
- -nrequest number
The OCSP server will exit after receiving number requests, default unlimited.
- -nmin minutes, -ndays days
Number of minutes or days when fresh revocation information
is available: used in the nextUpdate field. If neither option is
present then the nextUpdate
field is omitted meaning fresh revocation information is
immediately available.
OCSP Response verification. OCSP Response follows the rules specified in RFC2560.
Initially the OCSP responder certificate is located and the signature
on the OCSP request checked using the responder certificate's public
key.
Then a normal certificate verify is performed on the OCSP responder
certificate building up a certificate chain in the process. The
locations of the trusted certificates used to build the chain can be
specified by the CAfile and
CApath options or they will be
looked for in the standard OpenSSL certificates directory.
If the initial verify fails then the OCSP verify process halts with
an error.
Otherwise the issuing CA certificate in the request is compared to
the OCSP responder certificate: if there is a match then the OCSP
verify succeeds.
Otherwise the OCSP responder certificate's CA is checked against the
issuing CA certificate in the request. If there is a match and the
OCSPSigning extended key usage is present in the OCSP responder
certificate then the OCSP verify succeeds.
Otherwise the root CA of the OCSP responders CA is checked to see if
it is trusted for OCSP signing. If it is the OCSP verify succeeds.
If none of these checks is successful then the OCSP verify fails.
What this effectively means if that if the OCSP responder certificate
is authorised directly by the CA it is issuing revocation information
about (and it is correctly configured) then verification will
succeed.
If the OCSP responder is a "global responder" which can give details
about multiple CAs and has its own separate certificate chain then
its root CA can be trusted for OCSP signing. For example:
openssl x509 -in ocspCA.pem -addtrust OCSPSigning -out trustedCA.pem |
Alternatively the responder certificate itself can be explicitly
trusted with the -VAfile option.
NOTES As noted, most of the verify options are for testing or debugging
purposes. Normally only the -CApath,
-CAfile and (if the responder is a
'global VA') -VAfile options need to
be used.
The OCSP server is only useful for test and demonstration purposes:
it is not really usable as a full OCSP responder. It contains only a
very simple HTTP request handling and can only handle the POST form
of OCSP queries. It also handles requests serially meaning it cannot
respond to new requests until it has processed the current one. The
text index file format of revocation is also inefficient for large
quantities of revocation data.
It is possible to run the ocsp
application in responder mode via a CGI script using the respin and respout options.
EXAMPLES Create an OCSP request and write it to a file:
openssl ocsp -issuer issuer.pem -cert c1.pem -cert c2.pem -reqout req.der |
Send a query to an OCSP responder with URL http://ocsp.myhost.com/
save the response to a file and print it out in text form
openssl ocsp -issuer issuer.pem -cert c1.pem -cert c2.pem \
-url http://ocsp.myhost.com/ -resp_text -respout resp.der |
Read in an OCSP response and print out text form:
openssl ocsp -respin resp.der -text |
OCSP server on port 8888 using a standard ca configuration, and a separate responder
certificate. All requests and responses are printed to a file.
openssl ocsp -index demoCA/index.txt -port 8888 -rsigner rcert.pem -CA demoCA/cacert.pem
-text -out log.txt |
As above but exit after processing one request:
openssl ocsp -index demoCA/index.txt -port 8888 -rsigner rcert.pem -CA demoCA/cacert.pem
-nrequest 1 |
Query status information using internally generated request:
openssl ocsp -index demoCA/index.txt -rsigner rcert.pem -CA demoCA/cacert.pem
-issuer demoCA/cacert.pem -serial 1 |
Query status information using request read from a file, write
response to a second file.
openssl ocsp -index demoCA/index.txt -rsigner rcert.pem -CA demoCA/cacert.pem
-reqin req.der -respout resp.der |
|