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Fix #1982: Newer openssl.cnf break openssl detection
Newer configuration files from openssl may include statements which aren't compatible with our supplied old openssl version. This commit adds an autodetection of such a file and uses a openssl.cnf provided by this project then.
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346
etc/openssl.cnf
Normal file
346
etc/openssl.cnf
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#
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# OpenSSL example configuration file.
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# This is mostly being used for generation of certificate requests.
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#
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# This definition stops the following lines choking if HOME isn't
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# defined.
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HOME = .
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RANDFILE = $ENV::HOME/.rnd
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# Extra OBJECT IDENTIFIER info:
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#oid_file = $ENV::HOME/.oid
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oid_section = new_oids
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# To use this configuration file with the "-extfile" option of the
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# "openssl x509" utility, name here the section containing the
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# X.509v3 extensions to use:
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# extensions =
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# (Alternatively, use a configuration file that has only
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# X.509v3 extensions in its main [= default] section.)
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[ new_oids ]
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# We can add new OIDs in here for use by 'ca', 'req' and 'ts'.
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# Add a simple OID like this:
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# testoid1=1.2.3.4
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# Or use config file substitution like this:
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# testoid2=${testoid1}.5.6
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# Policies used by the TSA examples.
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tsa_policy1 = 1.2.3.4.1
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tsa_policy2 = 1.2.3.4.5.6
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tsa_policy3 = 1.2.3.4.5.7
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####################################################################
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[ ca ]
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default_ca = CA_default # The default ca section
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####################################################################
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[ CA_default ]
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dir = ./demoCA # Where everything is kept
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certs = $dir/certs # Where the issued certs are kept
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crl_dir = $dir/crl # Where the issued crl are kept
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database = $dir/index.txt # database index file.
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#unique_subject = no # Set to 'no' to allow creation of
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# several certs with same subject.
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new_certs_dir = $dir/newcerts # default place for new certs.
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certificate = $dir/cacert.pem # The CA certificate
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serial = $dir/serial # The current serial number
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crlnumber = $dir/crlnumber # the current crl number
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# must be commented out to leave a V1 CRL
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crl = $dir/crl.pem # The current CRL
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private_key = $dir/private/cakey.pem# The private key
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RANDFILE = $dir/private/.rand # private random number file
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x509_extensions = usr_cert # The extensions to add to the cert
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# Comment out the following two lines for the "traditional"
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# (and highly broken) format.
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name_opt = ca_default # Subject Name options
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cert_opt = ca_default # Certificate field options
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# Extension copying option: use with caution.
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# copy_extensions = copy
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# Extensions to add to a CRL. Note: Netscape communicator chokes on V2 CRLs
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# so this is commented out by default to leave a V1 CRL.
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# crlnumber must also be commented out to leave a V1 CRL.
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# crl_extensions = crl_ext
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default_days = 365 # how long to certify for
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default_crl_days= 30 # how long before next CRL
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default_md = default # use public key default MD
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preserve = no # keep passed DN ordering
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# A few difference way of specifying how similar the request should look
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# For type CA, the listed attributes must be the same, and the optional
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# and supplied fields are just that :-)
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policy = policy_match
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# For the CA policy
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[ policy_match ]
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countryName = match
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stateOrProvinceName = match
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organizationName = match
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organizationalUnitName = optional
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commonName = supplied
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emailAddress = optional
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# For the 'anything' policy
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# At this point in time, you must list all acceptable 'object'
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# types.
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[ policy_anything ]
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countryName = optional
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stateOrProvinceName = optional
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localityName = optional
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organizationName = optional
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organizationalUnitName = optional
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commonName = supplied
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emailAddress = optional
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####################################################################
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[ req ]
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default_bits = 2048
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default_keyfile = privkey.pem
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distinguished_name = req_distinguished_name
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attributes = req_attributes
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x509_extensions = v3_ca # The extensions to add to the self signed cert
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# Passwords for private keys if not present they will be prompted for
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# input_password = secret
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# output_password = secret
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# This sets a mask for permitted string types. There are several options.
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# default: PrintableString, T61String, BMPString.
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# pkix : PrintableString, BMPString (PKIX recommendation before 2004)
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# utf8only: only UTF8Strings (PKIX recommendation after 2004).
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# nombstr : PrintableString, T61String (no BMPStrings or UTF8Strings).
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# MASK:XXXX a literal mask value.
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# WARNING: ancient versions of Netscape crash on BMPStrings or UTF8Strings.
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string_mask = utf8only
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# req_extensions = v3_req # The extensions to add to a certificate request
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[ req_distinguished_name ]
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countryName = Country Name (2 letter code)
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countryName_default = AU
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countryName_min = 2
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countryName_max = 2
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stateOrProvinceName = State or Province Name (full name)
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stateOrProvinceName_default = Some-State
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localityName = Locality Name (eg, city)
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0.organizationName = Organization Name (eg, company)
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0.organizationName_default = Internet Widgits Pty Ltd
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# we can do this but it is not needed normally :-)
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#1.organizationName = Second Organization Name (eg, company)
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#1.organizationName_default = World Wide Web Pty Ltd
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organizationalUnitName = Organizational Unit Name (eg, section)
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#organizationalUnitName_default =
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commonName = Common Name (e.g. server FQDN or YOUR name)
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commonName_max = 64
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emailAddress = Email Address
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emailAddress_max = 64
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# SET-ex3 = SET extension number 3
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[ req_attributes ]
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challengePassword = A challenge password
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challengePassword_min = 4
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challengePassword_max = 20
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unstructuredName = An optional company name
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[ usr_cert ]
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# These extensions are added when 'ca' signs a request.
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# This goes against PKIX guidelines but some CAs do it and some software
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# requires this to avoid interpreting an end user certificate as a CA.
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basicConstraints=CA:FALSE
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# Here are some examples of the usage of nsCertType. If it is omitted
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# the certificate can be used for anything *except* object signing.
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# This is OK for an SSL server.
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# nsCertType = server
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# For an object signing certificate this would be used.
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# nsCertType = objsign
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# For normal client use this is typical
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# nsCertType = client, email
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# and for everything including object signing:
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# nsCertType = client, email, objsign
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# This is typical in keyUsage for a client certificate.
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# keyUsage = nonRepudiation, digitalSignature, keyEncipherment
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# This will be displayed in Netscape's comment listbox.
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nsComment = "OpenSSL Generated Certificate"
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# PKIX recommendations harmless if included in all certificates.
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subjectKeyIdentifier=hash
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authorityKeyIdentifier=keyid,issuer
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# This stuff is for subjectAltName and issuerAltname.
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# Import the email address.
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# subjectAltName=email:copy
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# An alternative to produce certificates that aren't
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# deprecated according to PKIX.
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# subjectAltName=email:move
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# Copy subject details
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# issuerAltName=issuer:copy
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#nsCaRevocationUrl = http://www.domain.dom/ca-crl.pem
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#nsBaseUrl
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#nsRevocationUrl
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#nsRenewalUrl
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#nsCaPolicyUrl
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#nsSslServerName
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# This is required for TSA certificates.
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# extendedKeyUsage = critical,timeStamping
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[ v3_req ]
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# Extensions to add to a certificate request
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basicConstraints = CA:FALSE
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keyUsage = nonRepudiation, digitalSignature, keyEncipherment
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[ v3_ca ]
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# Extensions for a typical CA
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# PKIX recommendation.
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subjectKeyIdentifier=hash
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authorityKeyIdentifier=keyid:always,issuer
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basicConstraints = critical,CA:true
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# Key usage: this is typical for a CA certificate. However since it will
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# prevent it being used as an test self-signed certificate it is best
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# left out by default.
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# keyUsage = cRLSign, keyCertSign
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# Some might want this also
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# nsCertType = sslCA, emailCA
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# Include email address in subject alt name: another PKIX recommendation
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# subjectAltName=email:copy
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# Copy issuer details
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# issuerAltName=issuer:copy
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# DER hex encoding of an extension: beware experts only!
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# obj=DER:02:03
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# Where 'obj' is a standard or added object
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# You can even override a supported extension:
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# basicConstraints= critical, DER:30:03:01:01:FF
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[ crl_ext ]
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# CRL extensions.
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# Only issuerAltName and authorityKeyIdentifier make any sense in a CRL.
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# issuerAltName=issuer:copy
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authorityKeyIdentifier=keyid:always
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[ proxy_cert_ext ]
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# These extensions should be added when creating a proxy certificate
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# This goes against PKIX guidelines but some CAs do it and some software
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# requires this to avoid interpreting an end user certificate as a CA.
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basicConstraints=CA:FALSE
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# Here are some examples of the usage of nsCertType. If it is omitted
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# the certificate can be used for anything *except* object signing.
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# This is OK for an SSL server.
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# nsCertType = server
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# For an object signing certificate this would be used.
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# nsCertType = objsign
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# For normal client use this is typical
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# nsCertType = client, email
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# and for everything including object signing:
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# nsCertType = client, email, objsign
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# This is typical in keyUsage for a client certificate.
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# keyUsage = nonRepudiation, digitalSignature, keyEncipherment
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# This will be displayed in Netscape's comment listbox.
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nsComment = "OpenSSL Generated Certificate"
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# PKIX recommendations harmless if included in all certificates.
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subjectKeyIdentifier=hash
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authorityKeyIdentifier=keyid,issuer
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# This stuff is for subjectAltName and issuerAltname.
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# Import the email address.
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# subjectAltName=email:copy
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# An alternative to produce certificates that aren't
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# deprecated according to PKIX.
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# subjectAltName=email:move
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# Copy subject details
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# issuerAltName=issuer:copy
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#nsCaRevocationUrl = http://www.domain.dom/ca-crl.pem
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#nsBaseUrl
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#nsRevocationUrl
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#nsRenewalUrl
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#nsCaPolicyUrl
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#nsSslServerName
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# This really needs to be in place for it to be a proxy certificate.
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proxyCertInfo=critical,language:id-ppl-anyLanguage,pathlen:3,policy:foo
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####################################################################
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[ tsa ]
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default_tsa = tsa_config1 # the default TSA section
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[ tsa_config1 ]
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# These are used by the TSA reply generation only.
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dir = ./demoCA # TSA root directory
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serial = $dir/tsaserial # The current serial number (mandatory)
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crypto_device = builtin # OpenSSL engine to use for signing
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signer_cert = $dir/tsacert.pem # The TSA signing certificate
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# (optional)
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certs = $dir/cacert.pem # Certificate chain to include in reply
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# (optional)
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signer_key = $dir/private/tsakey.pem # The TSA private key (optional)
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signer_digest = sha256 # Signing digest to use. (Optional)
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default_policy = tsa_policy1 # Policy if request did not specify it
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# (optional)
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other_policies = tsa_policy2, tsa_policy3 # acceptable policies (optional)
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digests = sha1, sha256, sha384, sha512 # Acceptable message digests (mandatory)
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accuracy = secs:1, millisecs:500, microsecs:100 # (optional)
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clock_precision_digits = 0 # number of digits after dot. (optional)
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ordering = yes # Is ordering defined for timestamps?
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# (optional, default: no)
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tsa_name = yes # Must the TSA name be included in the reply?
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# (optional, default: no)
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ess_cert_id_chain = no # Must the ESS cert id chain be included?
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# (optional, default: no)
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20
testssl.sh
20
testssl.sh
@ -19151,10 +19151,18 @@ find_openssl_binary() {
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: # 5. we tried hard and failed, so now we use the system binaries
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fi
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# no ERRFILE initialized yet, thus we use /dev/null for stderr directly
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$OPENSSL version -a 2>/dev/null >/dev/null
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if [[ $? -ne 0 ]] || [[ ! -x "$OPENSSL" ]]; then
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[[ ! -x "$OPENSSL" ]] && fatal "cannot exec or find any openssl binary" $ERR_OSSLBIN
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# The former detection only was flawed, because when the system supplied openssl.cnf file
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# couldn't be parsed by our openssl it bailed out here with a misleading error, see #1982.
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# Now we try with another version of the config file and if it still fails we bail out.
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if ! $OPENSSL version -d >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
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export OPENSSL_CONF="$TESTSSL_INSTALL_DIR/etc/openssl.cnf"
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if ! $OPENSSL version -d >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
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fatal "cannot exec or find any openssl binary" $ERR_OSSLBIN
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else
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debugme1 echo "We provide our own openssl.cnf file as the one from your system cannot be used"
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fi
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fi
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# https://www.openssl.org/news/changelog.html
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@ -19916,8 +19924,10 @@ initialize_engine(){
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# Avoid clashes of OpenSSL 1.1.1 config file with our openssl 1.0.2. This is for Debian 10
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export OPENSSL_CONF=''
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return 1
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else # we have engine support
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if [[ -n "$OPENSSL_CONF" ]]; then
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else
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# we have engine support. But we want to check whether an external OPENSSL_CONF was supplied.
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# $TESTSSL_INSTALL_DIR/etc/openssl.cnf is an internal presetting, see #1982
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if [[ -n "$OPENSSL_CONF" ]] && [[ "$OPENSSL_CONF" != "$TESTSSL_INSTALL_DIR/etc/openssl.cnf" ]]; then
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prln_warning "For now I am providing the config file to have GOST support"
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else
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OPENSSL_CONF=$TEMPDIR/gost.conf
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