| SSLCLIENT(1) | DACS Tools and Utilities | SSLCLIENT(1) |
sslclient — an SSL client
sslclient [dacsoptions] [ -caf | --ca_cert_file filename ]
[ -cad | --ca_cert_dir dirname ]
[ -ccf | --cert_chain_file filename ]
[ -C | --ciphers cipherstring ]
[ [-dvp] | [--default_verify_paths] cipherstring ]
[ -h | --help ] [ -kf | --key_file filename ]
[ -kft | --key_file_type
pem | asn1 ]
[ -p | -sp | [--server_port] portnum ]
[ -r | --random filename ]
[[ -sm | --server_match regex ] ...]
[ -vd | --verify_depth depth ]
[ -vt | --verify_type
none | peer ] [--] server [:port ]
This program is part of the DACS suite.
It can be used with the usual DACS command line options
(dacsoptions),
provided they all appear before the program-specific flags
(note that the -un flag can be used to suppress configuration
file processing).
sslclient is also used by the
http(1) command and by requests
generated internally by DACS components.
The sslclient utility acts as an SSL client. After establishing a bidirectional SSL connection with an SSL server, it forwards its standard input to the SSL server and writes data produced by the SSL server to sslclient's standard output.
sslclient connects to
server (a domain name or IP address).
If a port number suffix is given (port),
it is used;
otherwise, if a port number is specified as a separate command line argument
(--server_port portnum),
that is used; failing that, the
default SSL port for
https (443) is used.
The program reads from its standard input and the server asynchronously (using non-blocking I/O). Note that the server side might need to see end-of-file on its input before its output is returned to sslclient.
This program's underlying SSL functionality is provided by OpenSSL.
sslclient recognizes these options:
-caf filename--ca_cert_file filename
This identifies filename as a file of
CA certificates in PEM format.
This is the CAfile argument to the
OpenSSL
SSL_CTX_load_verify_locations() function.
It is similar to
mod_ssl's
SSLCACertificateFile
directive, except that it is used to verify the server's SSL certificate.
-cad dirname--ca_cert_dir dirname
This identifies dirname as a directory containing
CA certificates in PEM format, one certificate per file.
This is the CApath argument to the
OpenSSL
SSL_CTX_load_verify_locations() function.
It is similar to
mod_ssl's
SSLCACertificatePath
directive, except that it is used to verify the server's certificate.
-ccf filename--cert_chain_file filename
This causes the client certificate chain to be loaded from
filename,
a file containing certificates in PEM format.
This is the file argument to the
OpenSSL
SSL_CTX_use_certificate_chain_file() function.
It is similar to
mod_ssl's
SSLCACertificateChainFile
directive, except that it is used for the client's chain.
If you want the client certificate to be sent you must also
specify the -kf flag.
-C cipherstring--ciphers cipherstring
This sets the list of ciphers to be used to
cipherstring.
This is the str argument to the
OpenSSL
SSL_CTX_set_cipher_list() function.
It is similar to
mod_ssl's
SSLCipherSuite
directive.
-dvp--default_verify_paths
This flag tells sslclient to use
default locations for finding CA certificates.
It results in a call to the
OpenSSL
SSL_CTX_set_default_verify_paths() function.
-h--helpPrint a usage synopsis.
-kf filename--key_file filename
This sets sslclient's private key to the first
private key found in filename.
This is the file argument to the
OpenSSL
SSL_CTX_usePrivateKey_file() function.
The default private key file type is PEM.
If the key has been encrypted, the program will prompt for the passphrase.
-kft type--key_file_type type
The private key file type is set to type,
which must be either pem or asn1
(case insensitive).
The default private key file type is PEM.
-p portnum-sp portnum--server_port portnum
Unless appended to the server argument,
portnum is the port number to use,
overriding the default port (443).
-r filename--random filename
Seed material for the PRNG is read from filename.
This is the filename argument to the
OpenSSL
RAND_load_file() function.
-sm regex--server_match regex
This argument, which may be repeated, specifies a
constraint on the server's identity by matching an attribute value in the
server's certificate against regex.
These tests are made immediately after an SSL connection is established.
Each regex is an IEEE Std 1003.2 ("POSIX.2")
regular expression with extended expressions and case insensitivity
(REG_EXTENDED | REG_ICASE).
See below for the matching algorithm.
-vd depth--verify_depth depth
This sets the maximum depth for certificate chain verification
to depth.
This is the depth argument to the
OpenSSL
SSL_CTX_set_verify_depth() function.
-vt type--verify_type type
This sets the verification mode to
type, which must be either
none or peer (case insensitive).
This is the mode argument to the
OpenSSL
SSL_CTX_set_verify() function.
--This argument explicitly marks the end of the flags.
The DACS -v
(or --verbose) flag causes the program to
show some of the server's SSL certificate, print feedback about
regular expression matching, and so on.
If sslclient is not doing what you expect, try
using this flag.
If the server presents a valid SSL (X.509) certificate, a set of checks is applied to it to help ensure that sslclient is communicating with the intended entity. Verification is successful and checking is terminated as soon as any test is successful. If no test succeeds, the program terminates immediately.
You can use a command like the following one to display an X.509 certificate to stdout in text form:
% openssl x509 -noout -text < cert.crt
Here, cert.crt is the certificate to display.
The server certificate's
subjectAltName extension fields have the
format field-name:field-value.
For each such field, tests are made in the following sequence:
the entire field is matched against each of the regular expressions given on the command line.
if the previous test failed and
field-name is "DNS" (exact match),
it is compared case insensitively to the server's name
(as given on the command line).
if the previous test failed and
if the field-name is
"IP Address" (exact match),
it is compared to the server's name (exact match),
which is assumed to be an IP address
(as given on the command line).
If the above procedure is unsuccessful and the server certificate's
commonName attribute value is available,
it is matched against each of the regular expressions given on the
command line.
The following command line attempts to connect to port 443 at example.com and prints to stdout the server's response to a request for the home page:
% perl -e 'printf "GET / HTTP/1.0\n\n";' | sslclient example.com:443
When used with DACS logging configured,
messages are directed to a log file, otherwise error messages and verbose
output are written to stderr.
The program exits 0 if everything was fine,
1 if an error occurred.
A wrapper mode of operation might be useful.
It would also be useful to have a mode where it listens for an SSL connection for input (rather than its standard input) and then relays data over that connection to a specified server, possibly but not necessarily via SSL. This mode might run on a firewall host to forward an approved incoming SSL connection (presumably authenticated by a client certificate, and possibly by a DACS ruleset) to a service running on an interior host, for instance.
http(1), openssl(1), s_client(1), stunnel(1), curl(1), sslwrap(1), and others, and regex(3).
A variety of reference material on SSL/TLS is available. Perhaps best is Network Security with OpenSSL by John Viega, Matt Messier, and Pravir Chandra, O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 2002. Also useful are SSL/TLS Strong Encryption: An Introduction, Netscape SSL 3.0 Specification, and RFC 2246.
Copyright © 2003-2012 Distributed Systems Software.
See the
LICENSE
file that accompanies the distribution
for licensing information.
| DACS Version 1.4.27b | 19-Mar-2012 | SSLCLIENT(1) |
| Table of Contents | ![]() |
Font:
|
−− | Set | ++ |
$Id: sslclient.1.xml 2566 2012-03-02 16:56:19Z brachman $