| =pod |
| |
| =head1 NAME |
| |
| s_client - SSL/TLS client program |
| |
| =head1 SYNOPSIS |
| |
| B<openssl> B<s_client> |
| [B<-help>] |
| [B<-connect host:port>] |
| [B<-proxy host:port>] |
| [B<-unix path>] |
| [B<-4>] |
| [B<-6>] |
| [B<-servername name>] |
| [B<-verify depth>] |
| [B<-verify_return_error>] |
| [B<-cert filename>] |
| [B<-certform DER|PEM>] |
| [B<-key filename>] |
| [B<-keyform DER|PEM>] |
| [B<-pass arg>] |
| [B<-CApath directory>] |
| [B<-CAfile filename>] |
| [B<-no-CAfile>] |
| [B<-no-CApath>] |
| [B<-dane_tlsa_domain domain>] |
| [B<-dane_tlsa_rrdata rrdata>] |
| [B<-dane_ee_no_namechecks>] |
| [B<-attime timestamp>] |
| [B<-check_ss_sig>] |
| [B<-crl_check>] |
| [B<-crl_check_all>] |
| [B<-explicit_policy>] |
| [B<-extended_crl>] |
| [B<-ignore_critical>] |
| [B<-inhibit_any>] |
| [B<-inhibit_map>] |
| [B<-no_check_time>] |
| [B<-partial_chain>] |
| [B<-policy arg>] |
| [B<-policy_check>] |
| [B<-policy_print>] |
| [B<-purpose purpose>] |
| [B<-suiteB_128>] |
| [B<-suiteB_128_only>] |
| [B<-suiteB_192>] |
| [B<-trusted_first>] |
| [B<-no_alt_chains>] |
| [B<-use_deltas>] |
| [B<-auth_level num>] |
| [B<-nameopt option>] |
| [B<-verify_depth num>] |
| [B<-verify_email email>] |
| [B<-verify_hostname hostname>] |
| [B<-verify_ip ip>] |
| [B<-verify_name name>] |
| [B<-x509_strict>] |
| [B<-reconnect>] |
| [B<-showcerts>] |
| [B<-debug>] |
| [B<-msg>] |
| [B<-nbio_test>] |
| [B<-state>] |
| [B<-nbio>] |
| [B<-crlf>] |
| [B<-ign_eof>] |
| [B<-no_ign_eof>] |
| [B<-quiet>] |
| [B<-ssl3>] |
| [B<-tls1>] |
| [B<-tls1_1>] |
| [B<-tls1_2>] |
| [B<-tls1_3>] |
| [B<-no_ssl3>] |
| [B<-no_tls1>] |
| [B<-no_tls1_1>] |
| [B<-no_tls1_2>] |
| [B<-no_tls1_3>] |
| [B<-dtls>] |
| [B<-dtls1>] |
| [B<-dtls1_2>] |
| [B<-fallback_scsv>] |
| [B<-async>] |
| [B<-split_send_frag>] |
| [B<-max_pipelines>] |
| [B<-read_buf>] |
| [B<-bugs>] |
| [B<-comp>] |
| [B<-no_comp>] |
| [B<-cipher cipherlist>] |
| [B<-serverpref>] |
| [B<-starttls protocol>] |
| [B<-xmpphost hostname>] |
| [B<-engine id>] |
| [B<-tlsextdebug>] |
| [B<-no_ticket>] |
| [B<-sess_out filename>] |
| [B<-sess_in filename>] |
| [B<-rand file(s)>] |
| [B<-serverinfo types>] |
| [B<-status>] |
| [B<-alpn protocols>] |
| [B<-nextprotoneg protocols>] |
| [B<-ct|noct>] |
| [B<-ctlogfile>] |
| [B<-keylogfile file>] |
| [B<-early_data file>] |
| |
| =head1 DESCRIPTION |
| |
| The B<s_client> command implements a generic SSL/TLS client which connects |
| to a remote host using SSL/TLS. It is a I<very> useful diagnostic tool for |
| SSL servers. |
| |
| =head1 OPTIONS |
| |
| In addition to the options below the B<s_client> utility also supports the |
| common and client only options documented in the |
| in the "Supported Command Line Commands" section of the L<SSL_CONF_cmd(3)> |
| manual page. |
| |
| =over 4 |
| |
| =item B<-help> |
| |
| Print out a usage message. |
| |
| =item B<-connect host:port> |
| |
| This specifies the host and optional port to connect to. If not specified |
| then an attempt is made to connect to the local host on port 4433. |
| |
| =item B<-proxy host:port> |
| |
| When used with the B<-connect> flag, the program uses the host and port |
| specified with this flag and issues an HTTP CONNECT command to connect |
| to the desired server. |
| |
| =item B<-unix path> |
| |
| Connect over the specified Unix-domain socket. |
| |
| =item B<-4> |
| |
| Use IPv4 only. |
| |
| =item B<-6> |
| |
| Use IPv6 only. |
| |
| =item B<-servername name> |
| |
| Set the TLS SNI (Server Name Indication) extension in the ClientHello message. |
| |
| =item B<-cert certname> |
| |
| The certificate to use, if one is requested by the server. The default is |
| not to use a certificate. |
| |
| =item B<-certform format> |
| |
| The certificate format to use: DER or PEM. PEM is the default. |
| |
| =item B<-key keyfile> |
| |
| The private key to use. If not specified then the certificate file will |
| be used. |
| |
| =item B<-keyform format> |
| |
| The private format to use: DER or PEM. PEM is the default. |
| |
| =item B<-pass arg> |
| |
| the private key password source. For more information about the format of B<arg> |
| see the B<PASS PHRASE ARGUMENTS> section in L<openssl(1)>. |
| |
| =item B<-verify depth> |
| |
| The verify depth to use. This specifies the maximum length of the |
| server certificate chain and turns on server certificate verification. |
| Currently the verify operation continues after errors so all the problems |
| with a certificate chain can be seen. As a side effect the connection |
| will never fail due to a server certificate verify failure. |
| |
| =item B<-verify_return_error> |
| |
| Return verification errors instead of continuing. This will typically |
| abort the handshake with a fatal error. |
| |
| =item B<-nameopt option> |
| |
| option which determines how the subject or issuer names are displayed. The |
| B<option> argument can be a single option or multiple options separated by |
| commas. Alternatively the B<-nameopt> switch may be used more than once to |
| set multiple options. See the L<x509(1)> manual page for details. |
| |
| =item B<-CApath directory> |
| |
| The directory to use for server certificate verification. This directory |
| must be in "hash format", see B<verify> for more information. These are |
| also used when building the client certificate chain. |
| |
| =item B<-CAfile file> |
| |
| A file containing trusted certificates to use during server authentication |
| and to use when attempting to build the client certificate chain. |
| |
| =item B<-no-CAfile> |
| |
| Do not load the trusted CA certificates from the default file location |
| |
| =item B<-no-CApath> |
| |
| Do not load the trusted CA certificates from the default directory location |
| |
| =item B<-dane_tlsa_domain domain> |
| |
| Enable RFC6698/RFC7671 DANE TLSA authentication and specify the |
| TLSA base domain which becomes the default SNI hint and the primary |
| reference identifier for hostname checks. This must be used in |
| combination with at least one instance of the B<-dane_tlsa_rrdata> |
| option below. |
| |
| When DANE authentication succeeds, the diagnostic output will include |
| the lowest (closest to 0) depth at which a TLSA record authenticated |
| a chain certificate. When that TLSA record is a "2 1 0" trust |
| anchor public key that signed (rather than matched) the top-most |
| certificate of the chain, the result is reported as "TA public key |
| verified". Otherwise, either the TLSA record "matched TA certificate" |
| at a positive depth or else "matched EE certificate" at depth 0. |
| |
| =item B<-dane_tlsa_rrdata rrdata> |
| |
| Use one or more times to specify the RRDATA fields of the DANE TLSA |
| RRset associated with the target service. The B<rrdata> value is |
| specied in "presentation form", that is four whitespace separated |
| fields that specify the usage, selector, matching type and associated |
| data, with the last of these encoded in hexadecimal. Optional |
| whitespace is ignored in the associated data field. For example: |
| |
| $ openssl s_client -brief -starttls smtp \ |
| -connect smtp.example.com:25 \ |
| -dane_tlsa_domain smtp.example.com \ |
| -dane_tlsa_rrdata "2 1 1 |
| B111DD8A1C2091A89BD4FD60C57F0716CCE50FEEFF8137CDBEE0326E 02CF362B" \ |
| -dane_tlsa_rrdata "2 1 1 |
| 60B87575447DCBA2A36B7D11AC09FB24A9DB406FEE12D2CC90180517 616E8A18" |
| ... |
| Verification: OK |
| Verified peername: smtp.example.com |
| DANE TLSA 2 1 1 ...ee12d2cc90180517616e8a18 matched TA certificate at depth 1 |
| ... |
| |
| =item B<-dane_ee_no_namechecks> |
| |
| This disables server name checks when authenticating via DANE-EE(3) TLSA |
| records. |
| For some applications, primarily web browsers, it is not safe to disable name |
| checks due to "unknown key share" attacks, in which a malicious server can |
| convince a client that a connection to a victim server is instead a secure |
| connection to the malicious server. |
| The malicious server may then be able to violate cross-origin scripting |
| restrictions. |
| Thus, despite the text of RFC7671, name checks are by default enabled for |
| DANE-EE(3) TLSA records, and can be disabled in applications where it is safe |
| to do so. |
| In particular, SMTP and XMPP clients should set this option as SRV and MX |
| records already make it possible for a remote domain to redirect client |
| connections to any server of its choice, and in any case SMTP and XMPP clients |
| do not execute scripts downloaded from remote servers. |
| |
| =item B<-attime>, B<-check_ss_sig>, B<-crl_check>, B<-crl_check_all>, |
| B<-explicit_policy>, B<-extended_crl>, B<-ignore_critical>, B<-inhibit_any>, |
| B<-inhibit_map>, B<-no_alt_chains>, B<-no_check_time>, B<-partial_chain>, B<-policy>, |
| B<-policy_check>, B<-policy_print>, B<-purpose>, B<-suiteB_128>, |
| B<-suiteB_128_only>, B<-suiteB_192>, B<-trusted_first>, B<-use_deltas>, |
| B<-auth_level>, B<-verify_depth>, B<-verify_email>, B<-verify_hostname>, |
| B<-verify_ip>, B<-verify_name>, B<-x509_strict> |
| |
| Set various certificate chain validation options. See the |
| L<verify(1)> manual page for details. |
| |
| =item B<-reconnect> |
| |
| reconnects to the same server 5 times using the same session ID, this can |
| be used as a test that session caching is working. |
| |
| =item B<-showcerts> |
| |
| display the whole server certificate chain: normally only the server |
| certificate itself is displayed. |
| |
| =item B<-prexit> |
| |
| print session information when the program exits. This will always attempt |
| to print out information even if the connection fails. Normally information |
| will only be printed out once if the connection succeeds. This option is useful |
| because the cipher in use may be renegotiated or the connection may fail |
| because a client certificate is required or is requested only after an |
| attempt is made to access a certain URL. Note: the output produced by this |
| option is not always accurate because a connection might never have been |
| established. |
| |
| =item B<-state> |
| |
| prints out the SSL session states. |
| |
| =item B<-debug> |
| |
| print extensive debugging information including a hex dump of all traffic. |
| |
| =item B<-msg> |
| |
| show all protocol messages with hex dump. |
| |
| =item B<-trace> |
| |
| show verbose trace output of protocol messages. OpenSSL needs to be compiled |
| with B<enable-ssl-trace> for this option to work. |
| |
| =item B<-msgfile> |
| |
| file to send output of B<-msg> or B<-trace> to, default standard output. |
| |
| =item B<-nbio_test> |
| |
| tests non-blocking I/O |
| |
| =item B<-nbio> |
| |
| turns on non-blocking I/O |
| |
| =item B<-crlf> |
| |
| this option translated a line feed from the terminal into CR+LF as required |
| by some servers. |
| |
| =item B<-ign_eof> |
| |
| inhibit shutting down the connection when end of file is reached in the |
| input. |
| |
| =item B<-quiet> |
| |
| inhibit printing of session and certificate information. This implicitly |
| turns on B<-ign_eof> as well. |
| |
| =item B<-no_ign_eof> |
| |
| shut down the connection when end of file is reached in the input. |
| Can be used to override the implicit B<-ign_eof> after B<-quiet>. |
| |
| =item B<-psk_identity identity> |
| |
| Use the PSK identity B<identity> when using a PSK cipher suite. |
| |
| =item B<-psk key> |
| |
| Use the PSK key B<key> when using a PSK cipher suite. The key is |
| given as a hexadecimal number without leading 0x, for example -psk |
| 1a2b3c4d. |
| |
| =item B<-ssl3>, B<-tls1>, B<-tls1_1>, B<-tls1_2>, B<-tls1_3>, B<-no_ssl3>, B<-no_tls1>, B<-no_tls1_1>, B<-no_tls1_2>, B<-no_tls1_3> |
| |
| These options require or disable the use of the specified SSL or TLS protocols. |
| By default B<s_client> will negotiate the highest mutually supported protocol |
| version. |
| When a specific TLS version is required, only that version will be offered to |
| and accepted from the server. |
| |
| =item B<-dtls>, B<-dtls1>, B<-dtls1_2> |
| |
| These options make B<s_client> use DTLS protocols instead of TLS. |
| With B<-dtls>, B<s_client> will negotiate any supported DTLS protocol version, |
| whilst B<-dtls1> and B<-dtls1_2> will only support DTLS1.0 and DTLS1.2 |
| respectively. |
| |
| =item B<-fallback_scsv> |
| |
| Send TLS_FALLBACK_SCSV in the ClientHello. |
| |
| =item B<-async> |
| |
| switch on asynchronous mode. Cryptographic operations will be performed |
| asynchronously. This will only have an effect if an asynchronous capable engine |
| is also used via the B<-engine> option. For test purposes the dummy async engine |
| (dasync) can be used (if available). |
| |
| =item B<-split_send_frag int> |
| |
| The size used to split data for encrypt pipelines. If more data is written in |
| one go than this value then it will be split into multiple pipelines, up to the |
| maximum number of pipelines defined by max_pipelines. This only has an effect if |
| a suitable ciphersuite has been negotiated, an engine that supports pipelining |
| has been loaded, and max_pipelines is greater than 1. See |
| L<SSL_CTX_set_split_send_fragment(3)> for further information. |
| |
| =item B<-max_pipelines int> |
| |
| The maximum number of encrypt/decrypt pipelines to be used. This will only have |
| an effect if an engine has been loaded that supports pipelining (e.g. the dasync |
| engine) and a suitable ciphersuite has been negotiated. The default value is 1. |
| See L<SSL_CTX_set_max_pipelines(3)> for further information. |
| |
| =item B<-read_buf int> |
| |
| The default read buffer size to be used for connections. This will only have an |
| effect if the buffer size is larger than the size that would otherwise be used |
| and pipelining is in use (see L<SSL_CTX_set_default_read_buffer_len(3)> for |
| further information). |
| |
| =item B<-bugs> |
| |
| there are several known bug in SSL and TLS implementations. Adding this |
| option enables various workarounds. |
| |
| =item B<-comp> |
| |
| Enables support for SSL/TLS compression. |
| This option was introduced in OpenSSL 1.1.0. |
| TLS compression is not recommended and is off by default as of |
| OpenSSL 1.1.0. |
| |
| =item B<-no_comp> |
| |
| Disables support for SSL/TLS compression. |
| TLS compression is not recommended and is off by default as of |
| OpenSSL 1.1.0. |
| |
| =item B<-brief> |
| |
| only provide a brief summary of connection parameters instead of the |
| normal verbose output. |
| |
| =item B<-cipher cipherlist> |
| |
| this allows the cipher list sent by the client to be modified. Although |
| the server determines which cipher suite is used it should take the first |
| supported cipher in the list sent by the client. See the B<ciphers> |
| command for more information. |
| |
| =item B<-starttls protocol> |
| |
| send the protocol-specific message(s) to switch to TLS for communication. |
| B<protocol> is a keyword for the intended protocol. Currently, the only |
| supported keywords are "smtp", "pop3", "imap", "ftp", "xmpp", "xmpp-server", |
| "irc", "postgres", "lmtp", "nntp", "sieve" and "ldap". |
| |
| =item B<-xmpphost hostname> |
| |
| This option, when used with "-starttls xmpp" or "-starttls xmpp-server", |
| specifies the host for the "to" attribute of the stream element. |
| If this option is not specified, then the host specified with "-connect" |
| will be used. |
| |
| =item B<-tlsextdebug> |
| |
| print out a hex dump of any TLS extensions received from the server. |
| |
| =item B<-no_ticket> |
| |
| disable RFC4507bis session ticket support. |
| |
| =item B<-sess_out filename> |
| |
| output SSL session to B<filename> |
| |
| =item B<-sess_in sess.pem> |
| |
| load SSL session from B<filename>. The client will attempt to resume a |
| connection from this session. |
| |
| =item B<-engine id> |
| |
| specifying an engine (by its unique B<id> string) will cause B<s_client> |
| to attempt to obtain a functional reference to the specified engine, |
| thus initialising it if needed. The engine will then be set as the default |
| for all available algorithms. |
| |
| =item B<-rand file(s)> |
| |
| a file or files containing random data used to seed the random number |
| generator, or an EGD socket (see L<RAND_egd(3)>). |
| Multiple files can be specified separated by an OS-dependent character. |
| The separator is B<;> for MS-Windows, B<,> for OpenVMS, and B<:> for |
| all others. |
| |
| =item B<-serverinfo types> |
| |
| a list of comma-separated TLS Extension Types (numbers between 0 and |
| 65535). Each type will be sent as an empty ClientHello TLS Extension. |
| The server's response (if any) will be encoded and displayed as a PEM |
| file. |
| |
| =item B<-status> |
| |
| sends a certificate status request to the server (OCSP stapling). The server |
| response (if any) is printed out. |
| |
| =item B<-alpn protocols>, B<-nextprotoneg protocols> |
| |
| these flags enable the |
| Enable the Application-Layer Protocol Negotiation or Next Protocol |
| Negotiation extension, respectively. ALPN is the IETF standard and |
| replaces NPN. |
| The B<protocols> list is a |
| comma-separated protocol names that the client should advertise |
| support for. The list should contain most wanted protocols first. |
| Protocol names are printable ASCII strings, for example "http/1.1" or |
| "spdy/3". |
| Empty list of protocols is treated specially and will cause the client to |
| advertise support for the TLS extension but disconnect just after |
| receiving ServerHello with a list of server supported protocols. |
| |
| =item B<-ct|noct> |
| |
| Use one of these two options to control whether Certificate Transparency (CT) |
| is enabled (B<-ct>) or disabled (B<-noct>). |
| If CT is enabled, signed certificate timestamps (SCTs) will be requested from |
| the server and reported at handshake completion. |
| |
| Enabling CT also enables OCSP stapling, as this is one possible delivery method |
| for SCTs. |
| |
| =item B<-ctlogfile> |
| |
| A file containing a list of known Certificate Transparency logs. See |
| L<SSL_CTX_set_ctlog_list_file(3)> for the expected file format. |
| |
| =item B<-keylogfile file> |
| |
| Appends TLS secrets to the specified keylog file such that external programs |
| (like Wireshark) can decrypt TLS connections. |
| |
| =item B<-early_data file> |
| |
| Reads the contents of the specified file and attempts to send it as early data |
| to the server. This will only work with resumed sessions that support early |
| data and when the server accepts the early data. |
| |
| =back |
| |
| =head1 CONNECTED COMMANDS |
| |
| If a connection is established with an SSL server then any data received |
| from the server is displayed and any key presses will be sent to the |
| server. When used interactively (which means neither B<-quiet> nor B<-ign_eof> |
| have been given), the session will be renegotiated if the line begins with an |
| B<R>, and if the line begins with a B<Q> or if end of file is reached, the |
| connection will be closed down. |
| |
| =head1 NOTES |
| |
| B<s_client> can be used to debug SSL servers. To connect to an SSL HTTP |
| server the command: |
| |
| openssl s_client -connect servername:443 |
| |
| would typically be used (https uses port 443). If the connection succeeds |
| then an HTTP command can be given such as "GET /" to retrieve a web page. |
| |
| If the handshake fails then there are several possible causes, if it is |
| nothing obvious like no client certificate then the B<-bugs>, |
| B<-ssl3>, B<-tls1>, B<-no_ssl3>, B<-no_tls1> options can be tried |
| in case it is a buggy server. In particular you should play with these |
| options B<before> submitting a bug report to an OpenSSL mailing list. |
| |
| A frequent problem when attempting to get client certificates working |
| is that a web client complains it has no certificates or gives an empty |
| list to choose from. This is normally because the server is not sending |
| the clients certificate authority in its "acceptable CA list" when it |
| requests a certificate. By using B<s_client> the CA list can be viewed |
| and checked. However some servers only request client authentication |
| after a specific URL is requested. To obtain the list in this case it |
| is necessary to use the B<-prexit> option and send an HTTP request |
| for an appropriate page. |
| |
| If a certificate is specified on the command line using the B<-cert> |
| option it will not be used unless the server specifically requests |
| a client certificate. Therefor merely including a client certificate |
| on the command line is no guarantee that the certificate works. |
| |
| If there are problems verifying a server certificate then the |
| B<-showcerts> option can be used to show the whole chain. |
| |
| The B<s_client> utility is a test tool and is designed to continue the |
| handshake after any certificate verification errors. As a result it will |
| accept any certificate chain (trusted or not) sent by the peer. None test |
| applications should B<not> do this as it makes them vulnerable to a MITM |
| attack. This behaviour can be changed by with the B<-verify_return_error> |
| option: any verify errors are then returned aborting the handshake. |
| |
| =head1 BUGS |
| |
| Because this program has a lot of options and also because some of the |
| techniques used are rather old, the C source of B<s_client> is rather hard to |
| read and not a model of how things should be done. |
| A typical SSL client program would be much simpler. |
| |
| The B<-prexit> option is a bit of a hack. We should really report |
| information whenever a session is renegotiated. |
| |
| =head1 SEE ALSO |
| |
| L<SSL_CONF_cmd(3)>, |
| L<sess_id(1)>, L<s_server(1)>, L<ciphers(1)> |
| |
| =head1 HISTORY |
| |
| The -no_alt_chains options was first added to OpenSSL 1.1.0. |
| |
| =head1 COPYRIGHT |
| |
| Copyright 2000-2016 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved. |
| |
| Licensed under the OpenSSL license (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 |
| L<https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>. |
| |
| =cut |