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author | marha <marha@users.sourceforge.net> | 2009-06-28 22:07:26 +0000 |
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committer | marha <marha@users.sourceforge.net> | 2009-06-28 22:07:26 +0000 |
commit | 3562e78743202e43aec8727005182a2558117eca (patch) | |
tree | 8f9113a77d12470c5c851a2a8e4cb02e89df7d43 /openssl/doc/apps/config.pod | |
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fixesproto-4.0.tar.gz
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randrproto-1.2.2.tar.gz
scrnsaverproto-1.1.0.tar.gz
renderproto-0.9.3.tar.gz
xcmiscproto-1.1.2.tar.gz
fontsproto-2.0.2.tar.gz
xextproto-7.0.3.tar.gz
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libXdmcp-1.0.2.tar.gz
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libX11-1.1.5.tar.gz
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libxcb-1.1.tar.gz
xorg-server-1.5.3.tar.gz
Diffstat (limited to 'openssl/doc/apps/config.pod')
-rw-r--r-- | openssl/doc/apps/config.pod | 279 |
1 files changed, 279 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/openssl/doc/apps/config.pod b/openssl/doc/apps/config.pod new file mode 100644 index 000000000..ace34b62b --- /dev/null +++ b/openssl/doc/apps/config.pod @@ -0,0 +1,279 @@ + +=pod + +=for comment openssl_manual_section:5 + +=head1 NAME + +config - OpenSSL CONF library configuration files + +=head1 DESCRIPTION + +The OpenSSL CONF library can be used to read configuration files. +It is used for the OpenSSL master configuration file B<openssl.cnf> +and in a few other places like B<SPKAC> files and certificate extension +files for the B<x509> utility. OpenSSL applications can also use the +CONF library for their own purposes. + +A configuration file is divided into a number of sections. Each section +starts with a line B<[ section_name ]> and ends when a new section is +started or end of file is reached. A section name can consist of +alphanumeric characters and underscores. + +The first section of a configuration file is special and is referred +to as the B<default> section this is usually unnamed and is from the +start of file until the first named section. When a name is being looked up +it is first looked up in a named section (if any) and then the +default section. + +The environment is mapped onto a section called B<ENV>. + +Comments can be included by preceding them with the B<#> character + +Each section in a configuration file consists of a number of name and +value pairs of the form B<name=value> + +The B<name> string can contain any alphanumeric characters as well as +a few punctuation symbols such as B<.> B<,> B<;> and B<_>. + +The B<value> string consists of the string following the B<=> character +until end of line with any leading and trailing white space removed. + +The value string undergoes variable expansion. This can be done by +including the form B<$var> or B<${var}>: this will substitute the value +of the named variable in the current section. It is also possible to +substitute a value from another section using the syntax B<$section::name> +or B<${section::name}>. By using the form B<$ENV::name> environment +variables can be substituted. It is also possible to assign values to +environment variables by using the name B<ENV::name>, this will work +if the program looks up environment variables using the B<CONF> library +instead of calling B<getenv()> directly. + +It is possible to escape certain characters by using any kind of quote +or the B<\> character. By making the last character of a line a B<\> +a B<value> string can be spread across multiple lines. In addition +the sequences B<\n>, B<\r>, B<\b> and B<\t> are recognized. + +=head1 OPENSSL LIBRARY CONFIGURATION + +In OpenSSL 0.9.7 and later applications can automatically configure certain +aspects of OpenSSL using the master OpenSSL configuration file, or optionally +an alternative configuration file. The B<openssl> utility includes this +functionality: any sub command uses the master OpenSSL configuration file +unless an option is used in the sub command to use an alternative configuration +file. + +To enable library configuration the default section needs to contain an +appropriate line which points to the main configuration section. The default +name is B<openssl_conf> which is used by the B<openssl> utility. Other +applications may use an alternative name such as B<myapplicaton_conf>. + +The configuration section should consist of a set of name value pairs which +contain specific module configuration information. The B<name> represents +the name of the I<configuration module> the meaning of the B<value> is +module specific: it may, for example, represent a further configuration +section containing configuration module specific information. E.g. + + openssl_conf = openssl_init + + [openssl_init] + + oid_section = new_oids + engines = engine_section + + [new_oids] + + ... new oids here ... + + [engine_section] + + ... engine stuff here ... + +Currently there are two configuration modules. One for ASN1 objects another +for ENGINE configuration. + +=head2 ASN1 OBJECT CONFIGURATION MODULE + +This module has the name B<oid_section>. The value of this variable points +to a section containing name value pairs of OIDs: the name is the OID short +and long name, the value is the numerical form of the OID. Although some of +the B<openssl> utility sub commands already have their own ASN1 OBJECT section +functionality not all do. By using the ASN1 OBJECT configuration module +B<all> the B<openssl> utility sub commands can see the new objects as well +as any compliant applications. For example: + + [new_oids] + + some_new_oid = 1.2.3.4 + some_other_oid = 1.2.3.5 + +In OpenSSL 0.9.8 it is also possible to set the value to the long name followed +by a comma and the numerical OID form. For example: + + shortName = some object long name, 1.2.3.4 + +=head2 ENGINE CONFIGURATION MODULE + +This ENGINE configuration module has the name B<engines>. The value of this +variable points to a section containing further ENGINE configuration +information. + +The section pointed to by B<engines> is a table of engine names (though see +B<engine_id> below) and further sections containing configuration informations +specific to each ENGINE. + +Each ENGINE specific section is used to set default algorithms, load +dynamic, perform initialization and send ctrls. The actual operation performed +depends on the I<command> name which is the name of the name value pair. The +currently supported commands are listed below. + +For example: + + [engine_section] + + # Configure ENGINE named "foo" + foo = foo_section + # Configure ENGINE named "bar" + bar = bar_section + + [foo_section] + ... foo ENGINE specific commands ... + + [bar_section] + ... "bar" ENGINE specific commands ... + +The command B<engine_id> is used to give the ENGINE name. If used this +command must be first. For example: + + [engine_section] + # This would normally handle an ENGINE named "foo" + foo = foo_section + + [foo_section] + # Override default name and use "myfoo" instead. + engine_id = myfoo + +The command B<dynamic_path> loads and adds an ENGINE from the given path. It +is equivalent to sending the ctrls B<SO_PATH> with the path argument followed +by B<LIST_ADD> with value 2 and B<LOAD> to the dynamic ENGINE. If this is +not the required behaviour then alternative ctrls can be sent directly +to the dynamic ENGINE using ctrl commands. + +The command B<init> determines whether to initialize the ENGINE. If the value +is B<0> the ENGINE will not be initialized, if B<1> and attempt it made to +initialized the ENGINE immediately. If the B<init> command is not present +then an attempt will be made to initialize the ENGINE after all commands in +its section have been processed. + +The command B<default_algorithms> sets the default algorithms an ENGINE will +supply using the functions B<ENGINE_set_default_string()> + +If the name matches none of the above command names it is assumed to be a +ctrl command which is sent to the ENGINE. The value of the command is the +argument to the ctrl command. If the value is the string B<EMPTY> then no +value is sent to the command. + +For example: + + + [engine_section] + + # Configure ENGINE named "foo" + foo = foo_section + + [foo_section] + # Load engine from DSO + dynamic_path = /some/path/fooengine.so + # A foo specific ctrl. + some_ctrl = some_value + # Another ctrl that doesn't take a value. + other_ctrl = EMPTY + # Supply all default algorithms + default_algorithms = ALL + +=head1 NOTES + +If a configuration file attempts to expand a variable that doesn't exist +then an error is flagged and the file will not load. This can happen +if an attempt is made to expand an environment variable that doesn't +exist. For example in a previous version of OpenSSL the default OpenSSL +master configuration file used the value of B<HOME> which may not be +defined on non Unix systems and would cause an error. + +This can be worked around by including a B<default> section to provide +a default value: then if the environment lookup fails the default value +will be used instead. For this to work properly the default value must +be defined earlier in the configuration file than the expansion. See +the B<EXAMPLES> section for an example of how to do this. + +If the same variable exists in the same section then all but the last +value will be silently ignored. In certain circumstances such as with +DNs the same field may occur multiple times. This is usually worked +around by ignoring any characters before an initial B<.> e.g. + + 1.OU="My first OU" + 2.OU="My Second OU" + +=head1 EXAMPLES + +Here is a sample configuration file using some of the features +mentioned above. + + # This is the default section. + + HOME=/temp + RANDFILE= ${ENV::HOME}/.rnd + configdir=$ENV::HOME/config + + [ section_one ] + + # We are now in section one. + + # Quotes permit leading and trailing whitespace + any = " any variable name " + + other = A string that can \ + cover several lines \ + by including \\ characters + + message = Hello World\n + + [ section_two ] + + greeting = $section_one::message + +This next example shows how to expand environment variables safely. + +Suppose you want a variable called B<tmpfile> to refer to a +temporary filename. The directory it is placed in can determined by +the the B<TEMP> or B<TMP> environment variables but they may not be +set to any value at all. If you just include the environment variable +names and the variable doesn't exist then this will cause an error when +an attempt is made to load the configuration file. By making use of the +default section both values can be looked up with B<TEMP> taking +priority and B</tmp> used if neither is defined: + + TMP=/tmp + # The above value is used if TMP isn't in the environment + TEMP=$ENV::TMP + # The above value is used if TEMP isn't in the environment + tmpfile=${ENV::TEMP}/tmp.filename + +=head1 BUGS + +Currently there is no way to include characters using the octal B<\nnn> +form. Strings are all null terminated so nulls cannot form part of +the value. + +The escaping isn't quite right: if you want to use sequences like B<\n> +you can't use any quote escaping on the same line. + +Files are loaded in a single pass. This means that an variable expansion +will only work if the variables referenced are defined earlier in the +file. + +=head1 SEE ALSO + +L<x509(1)|x509(1)>, L<req(1)|req(1)>, L<ca(1)|ca(1)> + +=cut |