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OPENSSL-X509(1ossl) OpenSSL OPENSSL-X509(1ossl)
NAME
openssl-x509 - Certificate display and signing command
SYNOPSIS
openssl x509 [-help] [-in filename|uri] [-passin arg] [-new]
[-x509toreq] [-req] [-copy_extensions arg] [-inform DER|PEM] [-vfyopt
nm:v] [-key filename|uri] [-keyform DER|PEM|P12|ENGINE] [-signkey
filename|uri] [-out filename] [-outform DER|PEM] [-nocert] [-noout]
[-dateopt] [-text] [-certopt option] [-fingerprint] [-alias] [-serial]
[-startdate] [-enddate] [-dates] [-subject] [-issuer] [-nameopt option]
[-email] [-hash] [-subject_hash] [-subject_hash_old] [-issuer_hash]
[-issuer_hash_old] [-ext extensions] [-ocspid] [-ocsp_uri] [-purpose]
[-pubkey] [-modulus] [-checkend num] [-checkhost host] [-checkemail
host] [-checkip ipaddr] [-set_serial n] [-next_serial] [-days arg]
[-preserve_dates] [-subj arg] [-force_pubkey filename] [-clrext]
[-extfile filename] [-extensions section] [-sigopt nm:v] [-badsig]
[-ddiiggeesstt] [-CA filename|uri] [-CAform DER|PEM|P12] [-CAkey
filename|uri] [-CAkeyform DER|PEM|P12|ENGINE] [-CAserial filename]
[-CAcreateserial] [-trustout] [-setalias arg] [-clrtrust] [-addtrust
arg] [-clrreject] [-addreject arg] [-rand files] [-writerand file]
[-engine id] [-provider name] [-provider-path path] [-propquery propq]
DESCRIPTION
This command is a multi-purposes certificate handling command. It can
be used to print certificate information, convert certificates to
various forms, edit certificate trust settings, generate certificates
from scratch or from certificating requests and then self-signing them
or signing them like a "micro CA".
Since there are a large number of options they will split up into
various sections.
OPTIONS
Input, Output, and General Purpose Options
-help
Print out a usage message.
-in filename|uri
This specifies the input to read a certificate from or the input
file for reading a certificate request if the -req flag is used.
In both cases this defaults to standard input.
This option cannot be combined with the -new flag.
-passin arg
The key and certificate file password source. For more information
about the format of arg see openssl-passphrase-options(1).
-new
Generate a certificate from scratch, not using an input certificate
or certificate request. So the -in option must not be used in this
case. Instead, the -subj option needs to be given. The public key
to include can be given with the -force_pubkey option and defaults
to the key given with the -key (or -signkey) option, which implies
self-signature.
default. X.509 extensions to be added can be specified using the
-extfile option.
-req
By default a certificate is expected on input. With this option a
PKCS#10 certificate request is expected instead, which must be
correctly self-signed.
X.509 extensions included in the request are not copied by default.
X.509 extensions to be added can be specified using the -extfile
option.
-copy_extensions arg
Determines how to handle X.509 extensions when converting from a
certificate to a request using the -x509toreq option or converting
from a request to a certificate using the -req option. If arg is
none or this option is not present then extensions are ignored. If
arg is copy or copyall then all extensions are copied, except that
subject identifier and authority key identifier extensions are not
taken over when producing a certificate request.
The -ext option can be used to further restrict which extensions to
copy.
-inform DER|PEM
The input file format; unspecified by default. See
openssl-format-options(1) for details.
-vfyopt nm:v
Pass options to the signature algorithm during verify operations.
Names and values of these options are algorithm-specific.
-key filename|uri
This option provides the private key for signing a new certificate
or certificate request. Unless -force_pubkey is given, the
corresponding public key is placed in the new certificate or
certificate request, resulting in a self-signature.
This option cannot be used in conjunction with the -CA option.
It sets the issuer name to the subject name (i.e., makes it self-
issued) and changes the public key to the supplied value (unless
overridden by -force_pubkey). Unless the -preserve_dates option is
supplied, it sets the validity start date to the current time and
the end date to a value determined by the -days option.
-signkey filename|uri
This option is an alias of -key.
-keyform DER|PEM|P12|ENGINE
The key input format; unspecified by default. See
openssl-format-options(1) for details.
-out filename
This specifies the output filename to write to or standard output
by default.
-outform DER|PEM
The output format; the default is PEM. See
This option prevents output except for printing as requested by
below options.
Certificate Printing Options
Note: the -alias and -purpose options are also printing options but are
described in the "Trust Settings" section.
-dateopt
Specify the date output format. Values are: rfc_822 and iso_8601.
Defaults to rfc_822.
-text
Prints out the certificate in text form. Full details are printed
including the public key, signature algorithms, issuer and subject
names, serial number any extensions present and any trust settings.
-certopt option
Customise the print format used with -text. The option argument can
be a single option or multiple options separated by commas. The
-certopt switch may be also be used more than once to set multiple
options. See the "Text Printing Flags" section for more
information.
-fingerprint
Calculates and prints the digest of the DER encoded version of the
entire certificate (see digest options). This is commonly called a
"fingerprint". Because of the nature of message digests, the
fingerprint of a certificate is unique to that certificate and two
certificates with the same fingerprint can be considered to be the
same.
-alias
Prints the certificate "alias" (nickname), if any.
-serial
Prints the certificate serial number.
-startdate
Prints out the start date of the certificate, that is the notBefore
date.
-enddate
Prints out the expiry date of the certificate, that is the notAfter
date.
-dates
Prints out the start and expiry dates of a certificate.
-subject
Prints the subject name.
-issuer
Prints the issuer name.
-nameopt option
This specifies how the subject or issuer names are displayed. See
openssl-namedisplay-options(1) for details.
-email
OpenSSL to form an index to allow certificates in a directory to be
looked up by subject name.
-subject_hash_old
Prints the "hash" of the certificate subject name using the older
algorithm as used by OpenSSL before version 1.0.0.
-issuer_hash
Prints the "hash" of the certificate issuer name.
-issuer_hash_old
Prints the "hash" of the certificate issuer name using the older
algorithm as used by OpenSSL before version 1.0.0.
-ext extensions
Prints out the certificate extensions in text form. Can also be
used to restrict which extensions to copy. Extensions are
specified with a comma separated string, e.g.,
"subjectAltName,subjectKeyIdentifier". See the x509v3_config(5)
manual page for the extension names.
-ocspid
Prints the OCSP hash values for the subject name and public key.
-ocsp_uri
Prints the OCSP responder address(es) if any.
-purpose
This option performs tests on the certificate extensions and
outputs the results. For a more complete description see
"Certificate Extensions" in openssl-verification-options(1).
-pubkey
Prints the certificate's SubjectPublicKeyInfo block in PEM format.
-modulus
This option prints out the value of the modulus of the public key
contained in the certificate.
Certificate Checking Options
-checkend arg
Checks if the certificate expires within the next arg seconds and
exits nonzero if yes it will expire or zero if not.
-checkhost host
Check that the certificate matches the specified host.
-checkemail email
Check that the certificate matches the specified email address.
-checkip ipaddr
Check that the certificate matches the specified IP address.
Certificate Output Options
-set_serial n
Specifies the serial number to use. This option can be used with
the -key, -signkey, or -CA options. If used in conjunction with
the -CA option the serial number file (as specified by the
-CAserial option) is not used.
Specifies the number of days until a newly generated certificate
expires. The default is 30. Cannot be used together with the
-preserve_dates option.
-preserve_dates
When signing a certificate, preserve "notBefore" and "notAfter"
dates of any input certificate instead of adjusting them to current
time and duration. Cannot be used together with the -days option.
-subj arg
When a certificate is created set its subject name to the given
value. When the certificate is self-signed the issuer name is set
to the same value.
The arg must be formatted as
"/type0=value0/type1=value1/type2=...". Special characters may be
escaped by "\" (backslash), whitespace is retained. Empty values
are permitted, but the corresponding type will not be included in
the certificate. Giving a single "/" will lead to an empty
sequence of RDNs (a NULL-DN). Multi-valued RDNs can be formed by
placing a "+" character instead of a "/" between the
AttributeValueAssertions (AVAs) that specify the members of the
set. Example:
"/DC=org/DC=OpenSSL/DC=users/UID=123456+CN=John Doe"
This option can be used in conjunction with the -force_pubkey
option to create a certificate even without providing an input
certificate or certificate request.
-force_pubkey filename
When a certificate is created set its public key to the key in
filename instead of the key contained in the input or given with
the -key (or -signkey) option.
This option is useful for creating self-issued certificates that
are not self-signed, for instance when the key cannot be used for
signing, such as DH. It can also be used in conjunction with -new
and -subj to directly generate a certificate containing any desired
public key.
-clrext
When transforming a certificate to a new certificate by default all
certificate extensions are retained.
When transforming a certificate or certificate request, the -clrext
option prevents taking over any extensions from the source. In any
case, when producing a certificate request, neither subject
identifier nor authority key identifier extensions are included.
-extfile filename
Configuration file containing certificate and request X.509
extensions to add.
-extensions section
The section in the extfile to add X.509 extensions from. If this
option is not specified then the extensions should either be
contained in the unnamed (default) section or the default section
should contain a variable called "extensions" which contains the
-badsig
Corrupt the signature before writing it; this can be useful for
testing.
-ddiiggeesstt
The digest to use. This affects any signing or printing option
that uses a message digest, such as the -fingerprint, -key, and -CA
options. Any digest supported by the openssl-dgst(1) command can
be used. If not specified then SHA1 is used with -fingerprint or
the default digest for the signing algorithm is used, typically
SHA256.
Micro-CA Options
-CA filename|uri
Specifies the "CA" certificate to be used for signing. When
present, this behaves like a "micro CA" as follows: The subject
name of the "CA" certificate is placed as issuer name in the new
certificate, which is then signed using the "CA" key given as
detailed below.
This option cannot be used in conjunction with -key (or -signkey).
This option is normally combined with the -req option referencing a
CSR. Without the -req option the input must be an existing
certificate unless the -new option is given, which generates a
certificate from scratch.
-CAform DER|PEM|P12,
The format for the CA certificate; unspecified by default. See
openssl-format-options(1) for details.
-CAkey filename|uri
Sets the CA private key to sign a certificate with. The private
key must match the public key of the certificate given with -CA.
If this option is not provided then the key must be present in the
-CA input.
-CAkeyform DER|PEM|P12|ENGINE
The format for the CA key; unspecified by default. See
openssl-format-options(1) for details.
-CAserial filename
Sets the CA serial number file to use.
When creating a certificate with this option and with the -CA
option, the certificate serial number is stored in the given file.
This file consists of one line containing an even number of hex
digits with the serial number used last time. After reading this
number, it is incremented and used, and the file is updated.
The default filename consists of the CA certificate file base name
with .srl appended. For example if the CA certificate file is
called mycacert.pem it expects to find a serial number file called
mycacert.srl.
If the -CA option is specified and neither <-CAserial> or
<-CAcreateserial> is given and the default serial number file does
not exist, a random number is generated; this is the recommended
practice.
Trust Settings
A trusted certificate is an ordinary certificate which has several
additional pieces of information attached to it such as the permitted
and prohibited uses of the certificate and possibly an "alias"
(nickname).
Normally when a certificate is being verified at least one certificate
must be "trusted". By default a trusted certificate must be stored
locally and must be a root CA: any certificate chain ending in this CA
is then usable for any purpose.
Trust settings currently are only used with a root CA. They allow a
finer control over the purposes the root CA can be used for. For
example, a CA may be trusted for SSL client but not SSL server use.
See openssl-verification-options(1) for more information on the meaning
of trust settings.
Future versions of OpenSSL will recognize trust settings on any
certificate: not just root CAs.
-trustout
Mark any certificate PEM output as <trusted> certificate rather
than ordinary. An ordinary or trusted certificate can be input but
by default an ordinary certificate is output and any trust settings
are discarded. With the -trustout option a trusted certificate is
output. A trusted certificate is automatically output if any trust
settings are modified.
-setalias arg
Sets the "alias" of the certificate. This will allow the
certificate to be referred to using a nickname for example "Steve's
Certificate".
-clrtrust
Clears all the permitted or trusted uses of the certificate.
-addtrust arg
Adds a trusted certificate use. Any object name can be used here
but currently only clientAuth, serverAuth, emailProtection, and
anyExtendedKeyUsage are defined. As of OpenSSL 1.1.0, the last of
these blocks all purposes when rejected or enables all purposes
when trusted. Other OpenSSL applications may define additional
uses.
-clrreject
Clears all the prohibited or rejected uses of the certificate.
-addreject arg
Adds a prohibited trust anchor purpose. It accepts the same values
as the -addtrust option.
Generic options
-rand files, -writerand file
See "Random State Options" in openssl(1) for details.
-engine id
See "Engine Options" in openssl(1). This option is deprecated.
customise the actual fields printed using the certopt option when the
text option is present. The default behaviour is to print all fields.
compatible
Use the old format. This is equivalent to specifying no printing
options at all.
no_header
Don't print header information: that is the lines saying
"Certificate" and "Data".
no_version
Don't print out the version number.
no_serial
Don't print out the serial number.
no_signame
Don't print out the signature algorithm used.
no_validity
Don't print the validity, that is the notBefore and notAfter
fields.
no_subject
Don't print out the subject name.
no_issuer
Don't print out the issuer name.
no_pubkey
Don't print out the public key.
no_sigdump
Don't give a hexadecimal dump of the certificate signature.
no_aux
Don't print out certificate trust information.
no_extensions
Don't print out any X509V3 extensions.
ext_default
Retain default extension behaviour: attempt to print out
unsupported certificate extensions.
ext_error
Print an error message for unsupported certificate extensions.
ext_parse
ASN1 parse unsupported extensions.
ext_dump
Hex dump unsupported extensions.
ca_default
The value used by openssl-ca(1), equivalent to no_issuer,
no_pubkey, no_header, and no_version.
Print the "Subject Alternative Name" extension of a certificate:
openssl x509 -in cert.pem -noout -ext subjectAltName
Print more extensions of a certificate:
openssl x509 -in cert.pem -noout -ext subjectAltName,nsCertType
Print the certificate serial number:
openssl x509 -in cert.pem -noout -serial
Print the certificate subject name:
openssl x509 -in cert.pem -noout -subject
Print the certificate subject name in RFC2253 form:
openssl x509 -in cert.pem -noout -subject -nameopt RFC2253
Print the certificate subject name in oneline form on a terminal
supporting UTF8:
openssl x509 -in cert.pem -noout -subject -nameopt oneline,-esc_msb
Print the certificate SHA1 fingerprint:
openssl x509 -sha1 -in cert.pem -noout -fingerprint
Convert a certificate from PEM to DER format:
openssl x509 -in cert.pem -inform PEM -out cert.der -outform DER
Convert a certificate to a certificate request:
openssl x509 -x509toreq -in cert.pem -out req.pem -key key.pem
Convert a certificate request into a self-signed certificate using
extensions for a CA:
openssl x509 -req -in careq.pem -extfile openssl.cnf -extensions v3_ca \
-key key.pem -out cacert.pem
Sign a certificate request using the CA certificate above and add user
certificate extensions:
openssl x509 -req -in req.pem -extfile openssl.cnf -extensions v3_usr \
-CA cacert.pem -CAkey key.pem -CAcreateserial
Set a certificate to be trusted for SSL client use and change set its
alias to "Steve's Class 1 CA"
openssl x509 -in cert.pem -addtrust clientAuth \
-setalias "Steve's Class 1 CA" -out trust.pem
NOTES
The conversion to UTF8 format used with the name options assumes that
T61Strings use the ISO8859-1 character set. This is wrong but Netscape
BUGS
It is possible to produce invalid certificates or requests by
specifying the wrong private key, using unsuitable X.509 extensions, or
using inconsistent options in some cases: these should be checked.
There should be options to explicitly set such things as start and end
dates rather than an offset from the current time.
SEE ALSO
openssl(1), openssl-req(1), openssl-ca(1), openssl-genrsa(1),
openssl-gendsa(1), openssl-verify(1), x509v3_config(5)
HISTORY
The hash algorithm used in the -subject_hash and -issuer_hash options
before OpenSSL 1.0.0 was based on the deprecated MD5 algorithm and the
encoding of the distinguished name. In OpenSSL 1.0.0 and later it is
based on a canonical version of the DN using SHA1. This means that any
directories using the old form must have their links rebuilt using
openssl-rehash(1) or similar.
The -signkey option has been renamed to -key in OpenSSL 3.0, keeping
the old name as an alias.
The -engine option was deprecated in OpenSSL 3.0.
The -C option was removed in OpenSSL 3.0.
COPYRIGHT
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>.
3.0.11 2023-09-22 OPENSSL-X509(1ossl)