dwww Home | Manual pages | Find package

OPENSSL-VERIFICATION-OPTIONS(1SSL)  OpenSSL OPENSSL-VERIFICATION-OPTIONS(1SSL)

NAME
       openssl-verification-options - generic X.509 certificate verification
       options

SYNOPSIS
       openssl command [ options ... ] [ parameters ... ]

DESCRIPTION
       There are many situations where X.509 certificates are verified within
       the OpenSSL libraries and in various OpenSSL commands.

       Certificate verification is implemented by X509_verify_cert(3).  It is
       a complicated process consisting of a number of steps and depending on
       numerous options.  The most important of them are detailed in the
       following sections.

       In a nutshell, a valid chain of certificates needs to be built up and
       verified starting from the target certificate that is to be verified
       and ending in a certificate that due to some policy is trusted.
       Verification is done relative to the given purpose, which is the
       intended use of the target certificate, such as SSL server, or by
       default for any purpose.

       The details of how each OpenSSL command handles errors are documented
       on the specific command page.

       DANE support is documented in openssl-s_client(1),
       SSL_CTX_dane_enable(3), SSL_set1_host(3),
       X509_VERIFY_PARAM_set_flags(3), and X509_check_host(3).

   Trust Anchors
       In general, according to RFC 4158 and RFC 5280, a trust anchor is any
       public key and related subject distinguished name (DN) that for some
       reason is considered trusted and thus is acceptable as the root of a
       chain of certificates.

       In practice, trust anchors are given in the form of certificates, where
       their essential fields are the public key and the subject DN.  In
       addition to the requirements in RFC 5280, OpenSSL checks the validity
       period of such certificates and makes use of some further fields.  In
       particular, the subject key identifier extension, if present, is used
       for matching trust anchors during chain building.

       In the most simple and common case, trust anchors are by default all
       self-signed "root" CA certificates that are placed in the trust store,
       which is a collection of certificates that are trusted for certain
       uses.  This is akin to what is used in the trust stores of Mozilla
       Firefox, or Apple's and Microsoft's certificate stores, ...

       From the OpenSSL perspective, a trust anchor is a certificate that
       should be augmented with an explicit designation for which uses of a
       target certificate the certificate may serve as a trust anchor.  In PEM
       encoding, this is indicated by the "TRUSTED CERTIFICATE" string.  Such
       a designation provides a set of positive trust attributes explicitly
       stating trust for the listed purposes and/or a set of negative trust
       attributes explicitly rejecting the use for the listed purposes.  The
       purposes are encoded using the values defined for the extended key
       usages (EKUs) that may be given in X.509 extensions of end-entity
       certificates.  See also the "Extended Key Usage" section below.

       The currently recognized uses are clientAuth (SSL client use),
       serverAuth (SSL server use), emailProtection (S/MIME email use),
       codeSigning (object signer use), OCSPSigning (OCSP responder use), OCSP
       (OCSP request use), timeStamping (TSA server use), and
       anyExtendedKeyUsage.  As of OpenSSL 1.1.0, the last of these blocks all
       uses when rejected or enables all uses when trusted.

       A certificate, which may be CA certificate or an end-entity
       certificate, is considered a trust anchor for the given use if and only
       if all the following conditions hold:

       •   It is an an element of the trust store.

       •   It  does  not  have  a negative trust attribute rejecting the given
           use.

       •   It has a positive trust attribute accepting the given  use  or  (by
           default) one of the following compatibility conditions apply: It is
           self-signed   or   the   -partial_chain   option  is  given  (which
           corresponds to the X509_V_FLAG_PARTIAL_CHAIN flag being set).

   Certification Path Building
       First, a certificate  chain  is  built  up  starting  from  the  target
       certificate and ending in a trust anchor.

       The  chain  is  built  up iteratively, looking up in turn a certificate
       with suitable key usage that  matches  as  an  issuer  of  the  current
       "subject"   certificate  as  described  below.   If  there  is  such  a
       certificate, the first one found that  is  currently  valid  is  taken,
       otherwise  the one that expired most recently of all such certificates.
       For  efficiency,  no  backtracking  is  performed,  thus  any   further
       candidate issuer certificates that would match equally are ignored.

       When  a  self-signed  certificate  has  been  added, chain construction
       stops.  In this case it must fully  match  a  trust  anchor,  otherwise
       chain building fails.

       A  candidate issuer certificate matches a subject certificate if all of
       the following conditions hold:

       •   Its  subject  name  matches  the  issuer  name   of   the   subject
           certificate.

       •   If   the  subject  certificate  has  an  authority  key  identifier
           extension, each of its sub-fields equals the corresponding  subject
           key  identifier,  serial  number, and issuer field of the candidate
           issuer certificate, as far as the respective fields are present  in
           both certificates.

       •   The  certificate  signature  algorithm  used  to  sign  the subject
           certificate is supported and equals the public key algorithm of the
           candidate issuer certificate.

       The lookup first searches for issuer certificates in the  trust  store.
       If  it  does  not  find a match there it consults the list of untrusted
       ("intermediate" CA) certificates, if provided.

   Certification Path Validation
       When the certificate chain building process was  successful  the  chain
       components and their links are checked thoroughly.

       The  first step is to check that each certificate is well-formed.  Part
       of these checks are enabled only if the -x509_strict option is given.

       The  second  step  is  to  check  the  extensions  of  every  untrusted
       certificate for consistency with the supplied purpose.  If the -purpose
       option  is  not  given  then no such checks are done except for SSL/TLS
       connection setup, where by  default  "sslserver"  or  "sslclient",  are
       checked.   The  target  or  "leaf"  certificate,  as  well as any other
       untrusted  certificates,  must  have  extensions  compatible  with  the
       specified  purpose.   All certificates except the target or "leaf" must
       also be valid CA certificates.  The  precise  extensions  required  are
       described    in    more   detail   in   "CERTIFICATE   EXTENSIONS"   in
       openssl-x509(1).

       The third step is to check the trust settings on the  last  certificate
       (which  typically  is  a  self-signed root CA certificate).  It must be
       trusted for the given use.  For compatibility with previous versions of
       OpenSSL,  a  self-signed  certificate  with  no  trust  attributes   is
       considered to be valid for all uses.

       The fourth, and final, step is to check the validity of the certificate
       chain.    For  each  element  in  the  chain,  including  the  root  CA
       certificate, the validity period as specified by  the  "notBefore"  and
       "notAfter"  fields  is  checked  against  the current system time.  The
       -attime flag may be used to use a reference time other than "now."  The
       certificate signature is checked as well (except for the  signature  of
       the  typically  self-signed root CA certificate, which is verified only
       if the -check_ss_sig option is given).  When  verifying  a  certificate
       signature  the  keyUsage extension (if present) of the candidate issuer
       certificate is checked to permit  digitalSignature  for  signing  proxy
       certificates  or  to permit keyCertSign for signing other certificates,
       respectively.  If all operations complete successfully then certificate
       is considered valid. If any operation fails then the certificate is not
       valid.

OPTIONS
   Trusted Certificate Options
       The following options specify how to supply the certificates  that  can
       be  used as trust anchors for certain uses.  As mentioned, a collection
       of such certificates is called a trust store.

       Note that OpenSSL does not provide a  default  set  of  trust  anchors.
       Many Linux distributions include a system default and configure OpenSSL
       to  point  to  that.  Mozilla maintains an influential trust store that
       can                   be                    found                    at
       <https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/about/governance/policies/security-group/certs/>.

       The  certificates  to  add  to  the  trust store can be specified using
       following options.

       -CAfile file
           Load the specified file which contains a certificate or several  of
           them  in  case  the input is in PEM or PKCS#12 format.  PEM-encoded
           certificates may also have trust attributes set.

       -no-CAfile
           Do not load the default file of trusted certificates.

       -CApath dir
           Use  the  specified  directory   as   a   collection   of   trusted
           certificates,  i.e., a trust store.  Files should be named with the
           hash value of the X.509 SubjectName of each certificate. This is so
           that the library can extract the IssuerName, hash it, and  directly
           lookup   the   file   to   get   the   issuer   certificate.    See
           openssl-rehash(1)  for  information  on  creating  this   type   of
           directory.

       -no-CApath
           Do not use the default directory of trusted certificates.

       -CAstore uri
           Use  uri  as  a  store  of CA certificates.  The URI may indicate a
           single certificate, as well as a collection of them.  With URIs  in
           the  "file:"  scheme, this acts as -CAfile or -CApath, depending on
           if  the  URI  indicates  a   single   file   or   directory.    See
           ossl_store-file(7) for more information on the "file:" scheme.

           These   certificates   are  also  used  when  building  the  server
           certificate chain (for example with openssl-s_server(1)) or  client
           certificate chain (for example with openssl-s_time(1)).

       -no-CAstore
           Do not use the default store of trusted CA certificates.

   Verification Options
       The  certificate  verification  can  be  fine-tuned  with the following
       flags.

       -verbose
           Print extra information about the operations being performed.

       -attime timestamp
           Perform validation checks using time specified by timestamp and not
           current system time. timestamp  is  the  number  of  seconds  since
           January 1, 1970 (i.e., the Unix Epoch).

       -no_check_time
           This option suppresses checking the validity period of certificates
           and  CRLs  against  the  current time. If option -attime is used to
           specify a verification time, the check is not suppressed.

       -x509_strict
           This disables non-compliant workarounds  for  broken  certificates.
           Thus errors are thrown on certificates not compliant with RFC 5280.

           When  this  option  is set, among others, the following certificate
           well-formedness conditions are checked:

           •   The  basicConstraints  of  CA  certificates  must   be   marked
               critical.

           •   CA certificates must explicitly include the keyUsage extension.

           •   If  a pathlenConstraint is given the key usage keyCertSign must
               be allowed.

           •   The  pathlenConstraint   must   not   be   given   for   non-CA
               certificates.

           •   The issuer name of any certificate must not be empty.

           •   The  subject name of CA certs, certs with keyUsage crlSign, and
               certs without subjectAlternativeName must not be empty.

           •   If a subjectAlternativeName extension is given it must  not  be
               empty.

           •   The  signatureAlgorithm  field  and  the cert signature must be
               consistent.

           •   Any    given    authorityKeyIdentifier    and     any     given
               subjectKeyIdentifier must not be marked critical.

           •   The  authorityKeyIdentifier  must  be  given  for X.509v3 certs
               unless they are self-signed.

           •   The subjectKeyIdentifier must  be  given  for  all  X.509v3  CA
               certs.

       -ignore_critical
           Normally  if an unhandled critical extension is present that is not
           supported by OpenSSL the certificate is rejected  (as  required  by
           RFC5280).  If this option is set critical extensions are ignored.

       -issuer_checks
           Ignored.

       -crl_check
           Checks  end  entity certificate validity by attempting to look up a
           valid CRL.  If a valid CRL cannot be found an error occurs.

       -crl_check_all
           Checks the validity of all certificates in the chain by  attempting
           to look up valid CRLs.

       -use_deltas
           Enable support for delta CRLs.

       -extended_crl
           Enable  extended  CRL  features such as indirect CRLs and alternate
           CRL signing keys.

       -suiteB_128_only, -suiteB_128, -suiteB_192
           Enable the Suite B mode operation at 128 bit Level of Security, 128
           bit or 192 bit, or only 192 bit  Level  of  Security  respectively.
           See  RFC6460  for  details.  In  particular the supported signature
           algorithms are reduced to support only ECDSA and SHA256  or  SHA384
           and only the elliptic curves P-256 and P-384.

       -auth_level level
           Set  the  certificate chain authentication security level to level.
           The  authentication  security  level  determines   the   acceptable
           signature  and  public  key  strength  when  verifying  certificate
           chains.  For a certificate chain to validate, the  public  keys  of
           all  the  certificates must meet the specified security level.  The
           signature  algorithm  security  level  is  enforced  for  all   the
           certificates  in  the  chain  except  for the chain's trust anchor,
           which is either directly trusted or validated by means  other  than
           its   signature.    See   SSL_CTX_set_security_level(3)   for   the
           definitions of the available levels.  The default security level is
           -1, or "not set".  At security level 0 or lower all algorithms  are
           acceptable.   Security  level 1 requires at least 80-bit-equivalent
           security and is broadly interoperable, though it will, for example,
           reject MD5 signatures or RSA keys shorter than 1024 bits.

       -partial_chain
           Allow verification to succeed if an incomplete chain can be  built.
           That is, a chain ending in a certificate that normally would not be
           trusted  (because  it has no matching positive trust attributes and
           is not self-signed) but is an element of  the  trust  store.   This
           certificate may be self-issued or belong to an intermediate CA.

       -check_ss_sig
           Verify  the  signature  of  the  last certificate in a chain if the
           certificate is supposedly self-signed.  This is prohibited and will
           result in an error if it is a non-conforming  CA  certificate  with
           key  usage  restrictions  not  including the keyCertSign bit.  This
           verification is disabled by default  because  it  doesn't  add  any
           security.

       -allow_proxy_certs
           Allow the verification of proxy certificates.

       -trusted_first
           As  of  OpenSSL  1.1.0  this  option is on by default and cannot be
           disabled.

           When constructing the certificate chain, the  trusted  certificates
           specified  via  -CAfile,  -CApath,  -CAstore or -trusted are always
           used before any certificates specified via -untrusted.

       -no_alt_chains
           As of OpenSSL 1.1.0, since -trusted_first always  on,  this  option
           has no effect.

       -trusted file
           Parse  file  as  a  set  of one or more certificates.  Each of them
           qualifies as trusted if has a suitable positive trust attribute  or
           it  is self-signed or the -partial_chain option is specified.  This
           option implies the -no-CAfile, -no-CApath, and -no-CAstore  options
           and  it  cannot  be  used  with  the  -CAfile,  -CApath or -CAstore
           options, so only certificates specified using the  -trusted  option
           are trust anchors.  This option may be used multiple times.

       -untrusted file
           Parse  file as a set of one or more certificates.  All certificates
           (typically of intermediate CAs) are considered untrusted and may be
           used to construct a certificate chain from the  target  certificate
           to a trust anchor.  This option may be used multiple times.

       -policy arg
           Enable policy processing and add arg to the user-initial-policy-set
           (see  RFC5280).  The  policy  arg  can  be an object name an OID in
           numeric form.  This argument can appear more than once.

       -explicit_policy
           Set policy variable require-explicit-policy (see RFC5280).

       -policy_check
           Enables certificate policy processing.

       -policy_print
           Print out diagnostics related to policy processing.

       -inhibit_any
           Set policy variable inhibit-any-policy (see RFC5280).

       -inhibit_map
           Set policy variable inhibit-policy-mapping (see RFC5280).

       -purpose purpose
           The intended use for the certificate.  Currently  defined  purposes
           are    "sslclient",    "sslserver",   "nssslserver",   "smimesign",
           "smimeencrypt",  "crlsign",  "ocsphelper",   "timestampsign",   and
           "any".  If peer certificate verification is enabled, by default the
           TLS  implementation  as  well as the commands s_client and s_server
           check  for  consistency  with  TLS  server  or  TLS   client   use,
           respectively.

           While IETF RFC 5280 says that id-kp-serverAuth and id-kp-clientAuth
           are  only  for  WWW use, in practice they are used for all kinds of
           TLS clients and servers, and this is what OpenSSL assumes as well.

       -verify_depth num
           Limit the certificate chain to num intermediate CA certificates.  A
           maximal depth chain  can  have  up  to  num+2  certificates,  since
           neither the end-entity certificate nor the trust-anchor certificate
           count against the -verify_depth limit.

       -verify_email email
           Verify  if  email  matches the email address in Subject Alternative
           Name or the email in the subject Distinguished Name.

       -verify_hostname hostname
           Verify if hostname matches DNS name in Subject Alternative Name  or
           Common Name in the subject certificate.

       -verify_ip ip
           Verify  if ip matches the IP address in Subject Alternative Name of
           the subject certificate.

       -verify_name name
           Use default verification policies like  trust  model  and  required
           certificate   policies   identified   by  name.   The  trust  model
           determines which auxiliary trust or reject OIDs are  applicable  to
           verifying the given certificate chain.  They can be given using the
           -addtrust  and  -addreject  options for openssl-x509(1).  Supported
           policy  names  include:  default,  pkcs7,  smime_sign,  ssl_client,
           ssl_server.   These  mimics  the  combinations of purpose and trust
           settings used in SSL, CMS and S/MIME.  As  of  OpenSSL  1.1.0,  the
           trust model is inferred from the purpose when not specified, so the
           -verify_name   options   are   functionally   equivalent   to   the
           corresponding -purpose settings.

   Extended Verification Options
       Sometimes there may be more than one certificate chain  leading  to  an
       end-entity   certificate.    This   usually  happens  when  a  root  or
       intermediate  CA  signs  a  certificate  for  another  a  CA  in  other
       organization.   Another  reason  is  when a CA might have intermediates
       that use two different signature formats, such as a SHA-1 and a SHA-256
       digest.

       The following options can be used to provide data that will  allow  the
       OpenSSL command to generate an alternative chain.

       -xkey infile, -xcert infile, -xchain
           Specify  an  extra  certificate, private key and certificate chain.
           These behave in the same manner as the -cert, -key and  -cert_chain
           options.   When  specified,  the callback returning the first valid
           chain will be in use by the client.

       -xchain_build
           Specify whether the application should build the certificate  chain
           to  be  provided  to  the server for the extra certificates via the
           -xkey, -xcert, and -xchain options.

       -xcertform DER|PEM|P12
           The input format for the extra certificate.   This  option  has  no
           effect and is retained for backward compatibility only.

       -xkeyform DER|PEM|P12
           The  input format for the extra key.  This option has no effect and
           is retained for backward compatibility only.

   Certificate Extensions
       Options like -purpose lead  to  checking  the  certificate  extensions,
       which  determine  what  the  target  certificate  and  intermediate  CA
       certificates can be used for.

       Basic Constraints

       The basicConstraints extension CA flag is used to determine whether the
       certificate can be used as a CA. If the CA flag is true then  it  is  a
       CA,  if  the  CA flag is false then it is not a CA. All CAs should have
       the CA flag set to true.

       If the basicConstraints extension is absent, which  includes  the  case
       that  it  is an X.509v1 certificate, then the certificate is considered
       to be a "possible CA" and other extensions are checked according to the
       intended use of the certificate.  The treatment of certificates without
       basicConstraints as a CA is presently supported, but this could  change
       in the future.

       Key Usage

       If  the  keyUsage  extension  is present then additional restraints are
       made on the uses of the certificate. A CA  certificate  must  have  the
       keyCertSign bit set if the keyUsage extension is present.

       Extended Key Usage

       The  extKeyUsage  (EKU) extension places additional restrictions on the
       certificate uses. If this extension is  present  (whether  critical  or
       not) the key can only be used for the purposes specified.

       A complete description of each check is given below. The comments about
       basicConstraints  and  keyUsage and X.509v1 certificates above apply to
       all CA certificates.

       SSL Client
           The extended key usage extension must be absent or include the "web
           client authentication" OID.  The keyUsage extension must be  absent
           or  it  must  have  the  digitalSignature  bit  set.   The Netscape
           certificate type must be absent or it must have the SSL client  bit
           set.

       SSL Client CA
           The extended key usage extension must be absent or include the "web
           client  authentication" OID.  The Netscape certificate type must be
           absent or it must have the SSL CA bit set.  This is used as a  work
           around if the basicConstraints extension is absent.

       SSL Server
           The extended key usage extension must be absent or include the "web
           server  authentication"  and/or  one of the SGC OIDs.  The keyUsage
           extension must be absent or it must have the digitalSignature,  the
           keyEncipherment  set  or  both  bits set.  The Netscape certificate
           type must be absent or have the SSL server bit set.

       SSL Server CA
           The extended key usage extension must be absent or include the "web
           server authentication" and/or one of the SGC  OIDs.   The  Netscape
           certificate  type  must  be  absent  or the SSL CA bit must be set.
           This is used as a work around if the basicConstraints extension  is
           absent.

       Netscape SSL Server
           For  Netscape  SSL clients to connect to an SSL server it must have
           the keyEncipherment bit set if the keyUsage extension  is  present.
           This  isn't always valid because some cipher suites use the key for
           digital signing.  Otherwise it is the same as a normal SSL server.

       Common S/MIME Client Tests
           The extended key usage extension must  be  absent  or  include  the
           "email  protection"  OID.   The  Netscape  certificate type must be
           absent or should have the S/MIME bit set. If the S/MIME bit is  not
           set  in  the  Netscape  certificate type then the SSL client bit is
           tolerated as an alternative  but  a  warning  is  shown.   This  is
           because some Verisign certificates don't set the S/MIME bit.

       S/MIME Signing
           In  addition to the common S/MIME client tests the digitalSignature
           bit or the nonRepudiation bit must be set if the keyUsage extension
           is present.

       S/MIME Encryption
           In addition to the common S/MIME tests the keyEncipherment bit must
           be set if the keyUsage extension is present.

       S/MIME CA
           The extended key usage extension must  be  absent  or  include  the
           "email  protection"  OID.   The  Netscape  certificate type must be
           absent or must have the S/MIME CA bit set.  This is used as a  work
           around if the basicConstraints extension is absent.

       CRL Signing
           The  keyUsage  extension  must  be  absent  or it must have the CRL
           signing bit set.

       CRL Signing CA
           The normal CA tests apply. Except in this case the basicConstraints
           extension must be present.

BUGS
       The issuer checks still  suffer  from  limitations  in  the  underlying
       X509_LOOKUP  API.  One consequence of this is that trusted certificates
       with matching subject name must appear in a file (as specified  by  the
       -CAfile  option), a directory (as specified by -CApath), or a store (as
       specified by -CAstore).  If there are multiple such  matches,  possibly
       in  multiple  locations,  only the first one (in the mentioned order of
       locations) is recognised.

SEE ALSO
       X509_verify_cert(3), openssl-verify(1), openssl-ocsp(1), openssl-ts(1),
       openssl-s_client(1),       openssl-s_server(1),       openssl-smime(1),
       openssl-cmp(1), openssl-cms(1)

HISTORY
       The checks enabled by -x509_strict have been extended in OpenSSL 3.0.

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright 2000-2023 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.

       Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License").  You may not use
       this file except in compliance with the License.  You can obtain a copy
       in    the   file   LICENSE   in   the   source   distribution   or   at
       <https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>.

3.0.13                            2025-09-18OPENSSL-VERIFICATION-OPTIONS(1SSL)

Generated by dwww version 1.16 on Tue Dec 16 14:25:07 CET 2025.