5.8 KiB
Binaries
All the precompiled binaries provided here have extended support for everything which is normally not in OpenSSL or LibreSSL -- 40+56 Bit, export/ANON ciphers, weak DH ciphers, weak EC curves, SSLv2 etc. -- all the dirty features needed for testing. OTOH they also come with extended support for new / advanced cipher suites and/or features which are not in the official branch like (old version of the) CHACHA20+POLY1305 and CAMELLIA 256 bit ciphers. They also have IPv6 support, see below.
The (stripped) binaries this directory are all compiled from my openssl snapshot (https://github.com/drwetter/openssl) from Peter Mosman's openssl fork (https://github.com/PeterMosmans/openssl). Thx a bunch, Peter!
Compiled Linux and FreeBSD binaries so far come from Dirk, other contributors see ../CREDITS.md .
**I discontinued to upload the not commonly used binaries at github ** (ARM7l, Darwin.i386 and all kerberos compiles) as it is not very appropriate to use github especially for those. The main site for all binaries is https://testssl.sh/openssl-1.0.2i-chacha.pm.ipv6.contributed/, also see the tarball @ https://testssl.sh/openssl-1.0.2i-chacha.pm.ipv6.Linux+FreeBSD.tar.gz
The binaries here have the naming scheme openssl.$(uname).$(uname -m)
and will be picked up from testssl.sh if you run testssl.sh directly
off the git directory. Otherwise you need testssl.sh
to point to it
via the argument (--openssl=<here>
) or as an environment variable
(OPENSSL=<here> testssl.sh <yourargs>
).
The Linux binaries with the trailing -krb5
come with Kerberos 5 support,
they won't be picked up automatically as you need to make sure first they
run (see libraries below).
Compiling and Usage Instructions
General
Both 64+32 bit Linux binaries were compiled under Ubuntu 12.04 LTS. Likely you cannot use them for older distributions, younger worked in all my test environments. I provide for each distributions two sets of binaries (no IPv6 here):
- completely statically linked binaries
- dynamically linked binaries, additionally with MIT Kerberos support ("krb5" in the name). They provide also KRB5-* and EXP-KRB5-* support (in OpenSSL terminology, see krb5-ciphers.txt).
For the latter you need a whopping bunch of kerberos runtime libraries which you maybe need to install from your distributor (libgssapi_krb5, libkrb5, libcom_err, libk5crypto, libkrb5support, libkeyutils). The 'static' binaries do not have MIT kerberos support as there are no static kerberos libs and I did not bother to compile them from the sources.
Compilation instructions
If you want to compile OpenSSL yourself, here are the instructions:
1.) get openssl from Peter Mosmans' repo:
git clone https://github.com/PeterMosmans/openssl
cd openssl
or use my repo:
git clone https://github.com/drwetter/openssl
cd openssl
2.) configure the damned thing. Options I used (see https://github.com/drwetter/testssl.sh/blob/master/utils/make-openssl.sh)
for 64Bit including Kerberos ciphers:
./config --prefix=/usr/ --openssldir=/etc/ssl enable-zlib enable-ssl2 enable-rc5 enable-rc2 \
enable-GOST enable-cms enable-md2 enable-mdc2 enable-ec enable-ec2m enable-ecdh enable-ecdsa \
enable-seed enable-camellia enable-idea enable-rfc3779 enable-ec_nistp_64_gcc_128 \
--with-krb5-flavor=MIT experimental-jpake -DOPENSSL_USE_BUILD_DATE
for 64Bit, static binaries:
./config --prefix=/usr/ --openssldir=/etc/ssl enable-zlib enable-ssl2 enable-rc5 enable-rc2 \
enable-GOST enable-cms enable-md2 enable-mdc2 enable-ec enable-ec2m enable-ecdh enable-ecdsa \
enable-seed enable-camellia enable-idea enable-rfc3779 enable-ec_nistp_64_gcc_128 \
-static experimental-jpake -DOPENSSL_USE_BUILD_DATE
for 32 Bit including Kerberos ciphers:
./config --prefix=/usr/ --openssldir=/etc/ssl enable-zlib enable-ssl2 enable-rc5 enable-rc2 \
enable-GOST enable-cms enable-md2 enable-mdc2 enable-ec enable-ec2m enable-ecdh enable-ecdsa \
enable-seed enable-camellia enable-idea enable-rfc3779 no-ec_nistp_64_gcc_128 \
--with-krb5-flavor=MIT experimental-jpake -DOPENSSL_USE_BUILD_DATE
for 32 Bit, static binaries:
./config --prefix=/usr/ --openssldir=/etc/ssl enable-zlib enable-ssl2 enable-rc5 enable-rc2 \
enable-GOST enable-cms enable-md2 enable-mdc2 enable-ec enable-ec2m enable-ecdh enable-ecdsa \
enable-seed enable-camellia enable-idea enable-rfc3779 no-ec_nistp_64_gcc_128 \
-static experimental-jpake -DOPENSSL_USE_BUILD_DATE
IPv6 support would need additionally the patch from fedora-dirk-ipv6.diff
(included already
in my branch). This doesn't give you the option of an IPv6 enabled proxy yet.
It is good practice to compile those binaries with -DOPENSSL_USE_IPV6
as
later on you can tell them apart byopenssl version -a
.
Four GOST [1][2] ciphers come via engine support automagically with this setup. Two additional GOST
ciphers can be compiled in (GOST-GOST94
, GOST-MD5
) with -DTEMP_GOST_TLS
but as of now they make
problems under some circumstances, so unless you desperately need those ciphers I would stay away from
-DTEMP_GOST_TLS
.
If you don't have / don't want Kerberos libraries and devel rpms/debs, just omit "--with-krb5-flavor=MIT" (see examples). If you have another Kerberos flavor you would need to figure out by yourself.
3.) make depend
4.) make
5.) make report (check whether it runs ok!)
6.) ./apps/openssl ciphers -V 'ALL:COMPLEMENTOFALL' | wc -l
lists for me
- 193(+4 GOST) ciphers including kerberos
- 179(+4 GOST) ciphers without kerberos
as opposed to ~110 from Ubuntu or Opensuse.
Never use these binaries for anything other than testing
Enjoy, Dirk
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GOST_%29block_cipher%29
[2] http://fossies.org/linux/openssl/engines/ccgost/README.gost