1 =pod 2 3 =head1 NAME 4 5 config - OpenSSL CONF library configuration files 6 7 =head1 DESCRIPTION 8 9 The OpenSSL CONF library can be used to read configuration files. 10 It is used for the OpenSSL master configuration file B<openssl.cnf> 11 and in a few other places like B<SPKAC> files and certificate extension 12 files for the B<x509> utility. OpenSSL applications can also use the 13 CONF library for their own purposes. 14 15 A configuration file is divided into a number of sections. Each section 16 starts with a line B<[ section_name ]> and ends when a new section is 17 started or end of file is reached. A section name can consist of 18 alphanumeric characters and underscores. 19 20 The first section of a configuration file is special and is referred 21 to as the B<default> section. This section is usually unnamed and spans from the 22 start of file until the first named section. When a name is being looked up 23 it is first looked up in a named section (if any) and then the 24 default section. 25 26 The environment is mapped onto a section called B<ENV>. 27 28 Comments can be included by preceding them with the B<#> character 29 30 Other files can be included using the B<.include> directive followed 31 by a path. If the path points to a directory all files with 32 names ending with B<.cnf> or B<.conf> are included from the directory. 33 Recursive inclusion of directories from files in such directory is not 34 supported. That means the files in the included directory can also contain 35 B<.include> directives but only inclusion of regular files is supported 36 there. The inclusion of directories is not supported on systems without 37 POSIX IO support. 38 39 It is strongly recommended to use absolute paths with the B<.include> 40 directive. Relative paths are evaluated based on the application current 41 working directory so unless the configuration file containing the 42 B<.include> directive is application specific the inclusion will not 43 work as expected. 44 45 There can be optional B<=> character and whitespace characters between 46 B<.include> directive and the path which can be useful in cases the 47 configuration file needs to be loaded by old OpenSSL versions which do 48 not support the B<.include> syntax. They would bail out with error 49 if the B<=> character is not present but with it they just ignore 50 the include. 51 52 Each section in a configuration file consists of a number of name and 53 value pairs of the form B<name=value> 54 55 The B<name> string can contain any alphanumeric characters as well as 56 a few punctuation symbols such as B<.> B<,> B<;> and B<_>. 57 58 The B<value> string consists of the string following the B<=> character 59 until end of line with any leading and trailing white space removed. 60 61 The value string undergoes variable expansion. This can be done by 62 including the form B<$var> or B<${var}>: this will substitute the value 63 of the named variable in the current section. It is also possible to 64 substitute a value from another section using the syntax B<$section::name> 65 or B<${section::name}>. By using the form B<$ENV::name> environment 66 variables can be substituted. It is also possible to assign values to 67 environment variables by using the name B<ENV::name>, this will work 68 if the program looks up environment variables using the B<CONF> library 69 instead of calling getenv() directly. The value string must not exceed 64k in 70 length after variable expansion. Otherwise an error will occur. 71 72 It is possible to escape certain characters by using any kind of quote 73 or the B<\> character. By making the last character of a line a B<\> 74 a B<value> string can be spread across multiple lines. In addition 75 the sequences B<\n>, B<\r>, B<\b> and B<\t> are recognized. 76 77 All expansion and escape rules as described above that apply to B<value> 78 also apply to the path of the B<.include> directive. 79 80 =head1 OPENSSL LIBRARY CONFIGURATION 81 82 Applications can automatically configure certain 83 aspects of OpenSSL using the master OpenSSL configuration file, or optionally 84 an alternative configuration file. The B<openssl> utility includes this 85 functionality: any sub command uses the master OpenSSL configuration file 86 unless an option is used in the sub command to use an alternative configuration 87 file. 88 89 To enable library configuration the default section needs to contain an 90 appropriate line which points to the main configuration section. The default 91 name is B<openssl_conf> which is used by the B<openssl> utility. Other 92 applications may use an alternative name such as B<myapplication_conf>. 93 All library configuration lines appear in the default section at the start 94 of the configuration file. 95 96 The configuration section should consist of a set of name value pairs which 97 contain specific module configuration information. The B<name> represents 98 the name of the I<configuration module>. The meaning of the B<value> is 99 module specific: it may, for example, represent a further configuration 100 section containing configuration module specific information. E.g.: 101 102 # This must be in the default section 103 openssl_conf = openssl_init 104 105 [openssl_init] 106 107 oid_section = new_oids 108 engines = engine_section 109 110 [new_oids] 111 112 ... new oids here ... 113 114 [engine_section] 115 116 ... engine stuff here ... 117 118 The features of each configuration module are described below. 119 120 =head2 ASN1 Object Configuration Module 121 122 This module has the name B<oid_section>. The value of this variable points 123 to a section containing name value pairs of OIDs: the name is the OID short 124 and long name, the value is the numerical form of the OID. Although some of 125 the B<openssl> utility sub commands already have their own ASN1 OBJECT section 126 functionality not all do. By using the ASN1 OBJECT configuration module 127 B<all> the B<openssl> utility sub commands can see the new objects as well 128 as any compliant applications. For example: 129 130 [new_oids] 131 132 some_new_oid = 1.2.3.4 133 some_other_oid = 1.2.3.5 134 135 It is also possible to set the value to the long name followed 136 by a comma and the numerical OID form. For example: 137 138 shortName = some object long name, 1.2.3.4 139 140 =head2 Engine Configuration Module 141 142 This ENGINE configuration module has the name B<engines>. The value of this 143 variable points to a section containing further ENGINE configuration 144 information. 145 146 The section pointed to by B<engines> is a table of engine names (though see 147 B<engine_id> below) and further sections containing configuration information 148 specific to each ENGINE. 149 150 Each ENGINE specific section is used to set default algorithms, load 151 dynamic, perform initialization and send ctrls. The actual operation performed 152 depends on the I<command> name which is the name of the name value pair. The 153 currently supported commands are listed below. 154 155 For example: 156 157 [engine_section] 158 159 # Configure ENGINE named "foo" 160 foo = foo_section 161 # Configure ENGINE named "bar" 162 bar = bar_section 163 164 [foo_section] 165 ... foo ENGINE specific commands ... 166 167 [bar_section] 168 ... "bar" ENGINE specific commands ... 169 170 The command B<engine_id> is used to give the ENGINE name. If used this 171 command must be first. For example: 172 173 [engine_section] 174 # This would normally handle an ENGINE named "foo" 175 foo = foo_section 176 177 [foo_section] 178 # Override default name and use "myfoo" instead. 179 engine_id = myfoo 180 181 The command B<dynamic_path> loads and adds an ENGINE from the given path. It 182 is equivalent to sending the ctrls B<SO_PATH> with the path argument followed 183 by B<LIST_ADD> with value 2 and B<LOAD> to the dynamic ENGINE. If this is 184 not the required behaviour then alternative ctrls can be sent directly 185 to the dynamic ENGINE using ctrl commands. 186 187 The command B<init> determines whether to initialize the ENGINE. If the value 188 is B<0> the ENGINE will not be initialized, if B<1> and attempt it made to 189 initialized the ENGINE immediately. If the B<init> command is not present 190 then an attempt will be made to initialize the ENGINE after all commands in 191 its section have been processed. 192 193 The command B<default_algorithms> sets the default algorithms an ENGINE will 194 supply using the functions ENGINE_set_default_string(). 195 196 If the name matches none of the above command names it is assumed to be a 197 ctrl command which is sent to the ENGINE. The value of the command is the 198 argument to the ctrl command. If the value is the string B<EMPTY> then no 199 value is sent to the command. 200 201 For example: 202 203 204 [engine_section] 205 206 # Configure ENGINE named "foo" 207 foo = foo_section 208 209 [foo_section] 210 # Load engine from DSO 211 dynamic_path = /some/path/fooengine.so 212 # A foo specific ctrl. 213 some_ctrl = some_value 214 # Another ctrl that doesn't take a value. 215 other_ctrl = EMPTY 216 # Supply all default algorithms 217 default_algorithms = ALL 218 219 =head2 EVP Configuration Module 220 221 This modules has the name B<alg_section> which points to a section containing 222 algorithm commands. 223 224 Currently the only algorithm command supported is B<fips_mode> whose 225 value can only be the boolean string B<off>. If B<fips_mode> is set to B<on>, 226 an error occurs as this library version is not FIPS capable. 227 228 =head2 SSL Configuration Module 229 230 This module has the name B<ssl_conf> which points to a section containing 231 SSL configurations. 232 233 Each line in the SSL configuration section contains the name of the 234 configuration and the section containing it. 235 236 Each configuration section consists of command value pairs for B<SSL_CONF>. 237 Each pair will be passed to a B<SSL_CTX> or B<SSL> structure if it calls 238 SSL_CTX_config() or SSL_config() with the appropriate configuration name. 239 240 Note: any characters before an initial dot in the configuration section are 241 ignored so the same command can be used multiple times. 242 243 For example: 244 245 ssl_conf = ssl_sect 246 247 [ssl_sect] 248 249 server = server_section 250 251 [server_section] 252 253 RSA.Certificate = server-rsa.pem 254 ECDSA.Certificate = server-ecdsa.pem 255 Ciphers = ALL:!RC4 256 257 The system default configuration with name B<system_default> if present will 258 be applied during any creation of the B<SSL_CTX> structure. 259 260 Example of a configuration with the system default: 261 262 ssl_conf = ssl_sect 263 264 [ssl_sect] 265 system_default = system_default_sect 266 267 [system_default_sect] 268 MinProtocol = TLSv1.2 269 MinProtocol = DTLSv1.2 270 271 =head1 NOTES 272 273 If a configuration file attempts to expand a variable that doesn't exist 274 then an error is flagged and the file will not load. This can happen 275 if an attempt is made to expand an environment variable that doesn't 276 exist. For example in a previous version of OpenSSL the default OpenSSL 277 master configuration file used the value of B<HOME> which may not be 278 defined on non Unix systems and would cause an error. 279 280 This can be worked around by including a B<default> section to provide 281 a default value: then if the environment lookup fails the default value 282 will be used instead. For this to work properly the default value must 283 be defined earlier in the configuration file than the expansion. See 284 the B<EXAMPLES> section for an example of how to do this. 285 286 If the same variable exists in the same section then all but the last 287 value will be silently ignored. In certain circumstances such as with 288 DNs the same field may occur multiple times. This is usually worked 289 around by ignoring any characters before an initial B<.> e.g. 290 291 1.OU="My first OU" 292 2.OU="My Second OU" 293 294 =head1 EXAMPLES 295 296 Here is a sample configuration file using some of the features 297 mentioned above. 298 299 # This is the default section. 300 301 HOME=/temp 302 RANDFILE= ${ENV::HOME}/.rnd 303 configdir=$ENV::HOME/config 304 305 [ section_one ] 306 307 # We are now in section one. 308 309 # Quotes permit leading and trailing whitespace 310 any = " any variable name " 311 312 other = A string that can \ 313 cover several lines \ 314 by including \\ characters 315 316 message = Hello World\n 317 318 [ section_two ] 319 320 greeting = $section_one::message 321 322 This next example shows how to expand environment variables safely. 323 324 Suppose you want a variable called B<tmpfile> to refer to a 325 temporary filename. The directory it is placed in can determined by 326 the B<TEMP> or B<TMP> environment variables but they may not be 327 set to any value at all. If you just include the environment variable 328 names and the variable doesn't exist then this will cause an error when 329 an attempt is made to load the configuration file. By making use of the 330 default section both values can be looked up with B<TEMP> taking 331 priority and B</tmp> used if neither is defined: 332 333 TMP=/tmp 334 # The above value is used if TMP isn't in the environment 335 TEMP=$ENV::TMP 336 # The above value is used if TEMP isn't in the environment 337 tmpfile=${ENV::TEMP}/tmp.filename 338 339 Simple OpenSSL library configuration example to enter FIPS mode: 340 341 # Default appname: should match "appname" parameter (if any) 342 # supplied to CONF_modules_load_file et al. 343 openssl_conf = openssl_conf_section 344 345 [openssl_conf_section] 346 # Configuration module list 347 alg_section = evp_sect 348 349 [evp_sect] 350 # Set to "yes" to enter FIPS mode if supported 351 fips_mode = yes 352 353 Note: in the above example you will get an error in non FIPS capable versions 354 of OpenSSL. 355 356 Simple OpenSSL library configuration to make TLS 1.2 and DTLS 1.2 the 357 system-default minimum TLS and DTLS versions, respectively: 358 359 # Toplevel section for openssl (including libssl) 360 openssl_conf = default_conf_section 361 362 [default_conf_section] 363 # We only specify configuration for the "ssl module" 364 ssl_conf = ssl_section 365 366 [ssl_section] 367 system_default = system_default_section 368 369 [system_default_section] 370 MinProtocol = TLSv1.2 371 MinProtocol = DTLSv1.2 372 373 The minimum TLS protocol is applied to B<SSL_CTX> objects that are TLS-based, 374 and the minimum DTLS protocol to those are DTLS-based. 375 The same applies also to maximum versions set with B<MaxProtocol>. 376 377 More complex OpenSSL library configuration. Add OID and don't enter FIPS mode: 378 379 # Default appname: should match "appname" parameter (if any) 380 # supplied to CONF_modules_load_file et al. 381 openssl_conf = openssl_conf_section 382 383 [openssl_conf_section] 384 # Configuration module list 385 alg_section = evp_sect 386 oid_section = new_oids 387 388 [evp_sect] 389 # This will have no effect as FIPS mode is off by default. 390 # Set to "yes" to enter FIPS mode, if supported 391 fips_mode = no 392 393 [new_oids] 394 # New OID, just short name 395 newoid1 = 1.2.3.4.1 396 # New OID shortname and long name 397 newoid2 = New OID 2 long name, 1.2.3.4.2 398 399 The above examples can be used with any application supporting library 400 configuration if "openssl_conf" is modified to match the appropriate "appname". 401 402 For example if the second sample file above is saved to "example.cnf" then 403 the command line: 404 405 OPENSSL_CONF=example.cnf openssl asn1parse -genstr OID:1.2.3.4.1 406 407 will output: 408 409 0:d=0 hl=2 l= 4 prim: OBJECT :newoid1 410 411 showing that the OID "newoid1" has been added as "1.2.3.4.1". 412 413 =head1 ENVIRONMENT 414 415 =over 4 416 417 =item B<OPENSSL_CONF> 418 419 The path to the config file. 420 Ignored in set-user-ID and set-group-ID programs. 421 422 =item B<OPENSSL_ENGINES> 423 424 The path to the engines directory. 425 Ignored in set-user-ID and set-group-ID programs. 426 427 =back 428 429 =head1 BUGS 430 431 Currently there is no way to include characters using the octal B<\nnn> 432 form. Strings are all null terminated so nulls cannot form part of 433 the value. 434 435 The escaping isn't quite right: if you want to use sequences like B<\n> 436 you can't use any quote escaping on the same line. 437 438 Files are loaded in a single pass. This means that a variable expansion 439 will only work if the variables referenced are defined earlier in the 440 file. 441 442 =head1 SEE ALSO 443 444 L<x509(1)>, L<req(1)>, L<ca(1)> 445 446 =head1 COPYRIGHT 447 448 Copyright 2000-2020 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved. 449 450 Licensed under the OpenSSL license (the "License"). You may not use 451 this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy 452 in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at 453 L<https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>. 454 455 =cut 456