rsautl.1 9.7 KB

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  129. .\" ========================================================================
  130. .\"
  131. .IX Title "RSAUTL 1"
  132. .TH RSAUTL 1 "2019-09-12" "1.0.2g" "OpenSSL"
  133. .\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes
  134. .\" way too many mistakes in technical documents.
  135. .if n .ad l
  136. .nh
  137. .SH "NAME"
  138. rsautl \- RSA utility
  139. .SH "SYNOPSIS"
  140. .IX Header "SYNOPSIS"
  141. \&\fBopenssl\fR \fBrsautl\fR
  142. [\fB\-in file\fR]
  143. [\fB\-out file\fR]
  144. [\fB\-inkey file\fR]
  145. [\fB\-pubin\fR]
  146. [\fB\-certin\fR]
  147. [\fB\-sign\fR]
  148. [\fB\-verify\fR]
  149. [\fB\-encrypt\fR]
  150. [\fB\-decrypt\fR]
  151. [\fB\-pkcs\fR]
  152. [\fB\-ssl\fR]
  153. [\fB\-raw\fR]
  154. [\fB\-hexdump\fR]
  155. [\fB\-asn1parse\fR]
  156. .SH "DESCRIPTION"
  157. .IX Header "DESCRIPTION"
  158. The \fBrsautl\fR command can be used to sign, verify, encrypt and decrypt
  159. data using the \s-1RSA\s0 algorithm.
  160. .SH "COMMAND OPTIONS"
  161. .IX Header "COMMAND OPTIONS"
  162. .IP "\fB\-in filename\fR" 4
  163. .IX Item "-in filename"
  164. This specifies the input filename to read data from or standard input
  165. if this option is not specified.
  166. .IP "\fB\-out filename\fR" 4
  167. .IX Item "-out filename"
  168. specifies the output filename to write to or standard output by
  169. default.
  170. .IP "\fB\-inkey file\fR" 4
  171. .IX Item "-inkey file"
  172. the input key file, by default it should be an \s-1RSA\s0 private key.
  173. .IP "\fB\-pubin\fR" 4
  174. .IX Item "-pubin"
  175. the input file is an \s-1RSA\s0 public key.
  176. .IP "\fB\-certin\fR" 4
  177. .IX Item "-certin"
  178. the input is a certificate containing an \s-1RSA\s0 public key.
  179. .IP "\fB\-sign\fR" 4
  180. .IX Item "-sign"
  181. sign the input data and output the signed result. This requires
  182. and \s-1RSA\s0 private key.
  183. .IP "\fB\-verify\fR" 4
  184. .IX Item "-verify"
  185. verify the input data and output the recovered data.
  186. .IP "\fB\-encrypt\fR" 4
  187. .IX Item "-encrypt"
  188. encrypt the input data using an \s-1RSA\s0 public key.
  189. .IP "\fB\-decrypt\fR" 4
  190. .IX Item "-decrypt"
  191. decrypt the input data using an \s-1RSA\s0 private key.
  192. .IP "\fB\-pkcs, \-oaep, \-ssl, \-raw\fR" 4
  193. .IX Item "-pkcs, -oaep, -ssl, -raw"
  194. the padding to use: PKCS#1 v1.5 (the default), PKCS#1 \s-1OAEP,\s0
  195. special padding used in \s-1SSL\s0 v2 backwards compatible handshakes,
  196. or no padding, respectively.
  197. For signatures, only \fB\-pkcs\fR and \fB\-raw\fR can be used.
  198. .IP "\fB\-hexdump\fR" 4
  199. .IX Item "-hexdump"
  200. hex dump the output data.
  201. .IP "\fB\-asn1parse\fR" 4
  202. .IX Item "-asn1parse"
  203. asn1parse the output data, this is useful when combined with the
  204. \&\fB\-verify\fR option.
  205. .SH "NOTES"
  206. .IX Header "NOTES"
  207. \&\fBrsautl\fR because it uses the \s-1RSA\s0 algorithm directly can only be
  208. used to sign or verify small pieces of data.
  209. .SH "EXAMPLES"
  210. .IX Header "EXAMPLES"
  211. Sign some data using a private key:
  212. .PP
  213. .Vb 1
  214. \& openssl rsautl \-sign \-in file \-inkey key.pem \-out sig
  215. .Ve
  216. .PP
  217. Recover the signed data
  218. .PP
  219. .Vb 1
  220. \& openssl rsautl \-verify \-in sig \-inkey key.pem
  221. .Ve
  222. .PP
  223. Examine the raw signed data:
  224. .PP
  225. .Vb 1
  226. \& openssl rsautl \-verify \-in file \-inkey key.pem \-raw \-hexdump
  227. \&
  228. \& 0000 \- 00 01 ff ff ff ff ff ff\-ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ................
  229. \& 0010 \- ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff\-ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ................
  230. \& 0020 \- ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff\-ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ................
  231. \& 0030 \- ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff\-ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ................
  232. \& 0040 \- ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff\-ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ................
  233. \& 0050 \- ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff\-ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ................
  234. \& 0060 \- ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff\-ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ................
  235. \& 0070 \- ff ff ff ff 00 68 65 6c\-6c 6f 20 77 6f 72 6c 64 .....hello world
  236. .Ve
  237. .PP
  238. The PKCS#1 block formatting is evident from this. If this was done using
  239. encrypt and decrypt the block would have been of type 2 (the second byte)
  240. and random padding data visible instead of the 0xff bytes.
  241. .PP
  242. It is possible to analyse the signature of certificates using this
  243. utility in conjunction with \fBasn1parse\fR. Consider the self signed
  244. example in certs/pca\-cert.pem . Running \fBasn1parse\fR as follows yields:
  245. .PP
  246. .Vb 1
  247. \& openssl asn1parse \-in pca\-cert.pem
  248. \&
  249. \& 0:d=0 hl=4 l= 742 cons: SEQUENCE
  250. \& 4:d=1 hl=4 l= 591 cons: SEQUENCE
  251. \& 8:d=2 hl=2 l= 3 cons: cont [ 0 ]
  252. \& 10:d=3 hl=2 l= 1 prim: INTEGER :02
  253. \& 13:d=2 hl=2 l= 1 prim: INTEGER :00
  254. \& 16:d=2 hl=2 l= 13 cons: SEQUENCE
  255. \& 18:d=3 hl=2 l= 9 prim: OBJECT :md5WithRSAEncryption
  256. \& 29:d=3 hl=2 l= 0 prim: NULL
  257. \& 31:d=2 hl=2 l= 92 cons: SEQUENCE
  258. \& 33:d=3 hl=2 l= 11 cons: SET
  259. \& 35:d=4 hl=2 l= 9 cons: SEQUENCE
  260. \& 37:d=5 hl=2 l= 3 prim: OBJECT :countryName
  261. \& 42:d=5 hl=2 l= 2 prim: PRINTABLESTRING :AU
  262. \& ....
  263. \& 599:d=1 hl=2 l= 13 cons: SEQUENCE
  264. \& 601:d=2 hl=2 l= 9 prim: OBJECT :md5WithRSAEncryption
  265. \& 612:d=2 hl=2 l= 0 prim: NULL
  266. \& 614:d=1 hl=3 l= 129 prim: BIT STRING
  267. .Ve
  268. .PP
  269. The final \s-1BIT STRING\s0 contains the actual signature. It can be extracted with:
  270. .PP
  271. .Vb 1
  272. \& openssl asn1parse \-in pca\-cert.pem \-out sig \-noout \-strparse 614
  273. .Ve
  274. .PP
  275. The certificate public key can be extracted with:
  276. .PP
  277. .Vb 1
  278. \& openssl x509 \-in test/testx509.pem \-pubkey \-noout >pubkey.pem
  279. .Ve
  280. .PP
  281. The signature can be analysed with:
  282. .PP
  283. .Vb 1
  284. \& openssl rsautl \-in sig \-verify \-asn1parse \-inkey pubkey.pem \-pubin
  285. \&
  286. \& 0:d=0 hl=2 l= 32 cons: SEQUENCE
  287. \& 2:d=1 hl=2 l= 12 cons: SEQUENCE
  288. \& 4:d=2 hl=2 l= 8 prim: OBJECT :md5
  289. \& 14:d=2 hl=2 l= 0 prim: NULL
  290. \& 16:d=1 hl=2 l= 16 prim: OCTET STRING
  291. \& 0000 \- f3 46 9e aa 1a 4a 73 c9\-37 ea 93 00 48 25 08 b5 .F...Js.7...H%..
  292. .Ve
  293. .PP
  294. This is the parsed version of an \s-1ASN1\s0 DigestInfo structure. It can be seen that
  295. the digest used was md5. The actual part of the certificate that was signed can
  296. be extracted with:
  297. .PP
  298. .Vb 1
  299. \& openssl asn1parse \-in pca\-cert.pem \-out tbs \-noout \-strparse 4
  300. .Ve
  301. .PP
  302. and its digest computed with:
  303. .PP
  304. .Vb 2
  305. \& openssl md5 \-c tbs
  306. \& MD5(tbs)= f3:46:9e:aa:1a:4a:73:c9:37:ea:93:00:48:25:08:b5
  307. .Ve
  308. .PP
  309. which it can be seen agrees with the recovered value above.
  310. .SH "SEE ALSO"
  311. .IX Header "SEE ALSO"
  312. \&\fIdgst\fR\|(1), \fIrsa\fR\|(1), \fIgenrsa\fR\|(1)