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-
- <manualpage metafile="ssl_faq.xml.meta">
- <parentdocument href="./">SSL/TLS</parentdocument>
-
- <title>SSL/TLS Strong Encryption: FAQ</title>
-
- <summary>
- <blockquote>
- <p>The wise man doesn't give the right answers,
- he poses the right questions.</p>
- <p class="cite">-- <cite>Claude Levi-Strauss</cite></p>
-
- </blockquote>
- <p>This chapter is a collection of frequently asked questions (FAQ) and
- corresponding answers following the popular USENET tradition. Most of these
- questions occurred on the Newsgroup <code><a href="news:comp.infosystems.www.servers.unix"
- >comp.infosystems.www.servers.unix</a></code> or the mod_ssl Support
- Mailing List <code><a href="mailto:modssl-users@modssl.org"
- >modssl-users@modssl.org</a></code>. They are collected at this place
- to avoid answering the same questions over and over.</p>
-
- <p>Please read this chapter at least once when installing mod_ssl or at least
- search for your problem here before submitting a problem report to the
- author.</p>
- </summary>
-
- <section id="about"><title>About The Module</title>
- <ul>
- <li><a href="#history">What is the history of mod_ssl?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#y2k">mod_ssl and Year 2000?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#wassenaar">mod_ssl and Wassenaar Arrangement?</a></li>
- </ul>
-
- <section id="history"><title>What is the history of mod_ssl?</title>
- <p>The mod_ssl v1 package was initially created in April 1998 by <a
- href="mailto:rse@engelschall.com">Ralf S. Engelschall</a> via porting <a
- href="mailto:ben@algroup.co.uk">Ben Laurie</a>'s <a
- href="http://www.apache-ssl.org/">Apache-SSL</a> 1.17 source patches for
- Apache 1.2.6 to Apache 1.3b6. Because of conflicts with Ben
- Laurie's development cycle it then was re-assembled from scratch for
- Apache 1.3.0 by merging the old mod_ssl 1.x with the newer Apache-SSL
- 1.18. From this point on mod_ssl lived its own life as mod_ssl v2. The
- first publicly released version was mod_ssl 2.0.0 from August 10th,
- 1998. As of this writing (August 1999) the current mod_ssl version
- is 2.4.0.</p>
-
-
- <p>After one year of very active development with over 1000 working hours and
- over 40 releases mod_ssl reached its current state. The result is an
- already very clean source base implementing a very rich functionality.
- The code size increased by a factor of 4 to currently a total of over
- 10.000 lines of ANSI C consisting of approx. 70% code and 30% code
- documentation. From the original Apache-SSL code currently approx. 5% is
- remaining only.</p>
-
- <p>After the US export restrictions for cryptographic software were
- opened, mod_ssl was integrated into the code base of Apache V2 in 2001.</p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="y2k"><title>Is mod_ssl Year 2000 compliant?</title>
- <p>Yes, mod_ssl is Year 2000 compliant.</p>
-
- <p>Because first mod_ssl internally never stores years as two digits.
- Instead it always uses the ANSI C & POSIX numerical data type
- <code>time_t</code> type, which on almost all Unix platforms at the moment
- is a <code>signed long</code> (usually 32-bits) representing seconds since
- epoch of January 1st, 1970, 00:00 UTC. This signed value overflows in
- early January 2038 and not in the year 2000. Second, date and time
- presentations (for instance the variable ``<code>%{TIME_YEAR}</code>'')
- are done with full year value instead of abbreviating to two digits.</p>
-
-
- <p>Additionally according to a <a
- href="http://www.apache.org/docs/misc/FAQ.html#year2000">Year 2000
- statement</a> from the Apache Group, the Apache webserver is Year 2000
- compliant, too. But whether OpenSSL or the underlying Operating System
- (either a Unix or Win32 platform) is Year 2000 compliant is a different
- question which cannot be answered here.</p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="wassenaar"><title>What about mod_ssl and the Wassenaar Arrangement?</title>
- <p>First, let us explain what <dfn>Wassenaar</dfn> and its <dfn>Arrangement on
- Export Controls for Conventional Arms and Dual-Use Goods and
- Technologies</dfn> is: This is a international regime, established 1995, to
- control trade in conventional arms and dual-use goods and technology. It
- replaced the previous <dfn>CoCom</dfn> regime. 33 countries are signatories:
- Argentina, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Canada, Czech Republic,
- Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Japan,
- Luxembourg, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Republic
- of Korea, Romania, Russian Federation, Slovak Republic, Spain, Sweden,
- Switzerland, Turkey, Ukraine, the United Kingdom and the United States. For more
- details look at <a
- href="http://www.wassenaar.org/">http://www.wassenaar.org/</a>.</p>
-
-
- <p>In short: The aim of the Wassenaar Arrangement is to prevent the build up
- of military capabilities that threaten regional and international security
- and stability. The Wassenaar Arrangement controls the export of
- cryptography as a dual-use good, i.e., one that has both military and
- civilian applications. However, the Wassenaar Arrangement also provides an
- exemption from export controls for mass-market software and free software.</p>
-
- <p>In the current Wassenaar <cite>List of Dual Use Goods and Technologies And
- Munitions</cite>, under <q>GENERAL SOFTWARE NOTE (GSN)</q> it says
- <q>The Lists do not control "software" which is either: 1. [...] 2. "in
- the public domain".</q> And under <q>DEFINITIONS OF TERMS USED IN
- THESE LISTS</q> one can find the definition: <q>In the public
- domain": This means "technology" or "software" which has been made
- available without restrictions upon its further dissemination. N.B.
- Copyright restrictions do not remove "technology" or "software" from being
- "in the public domain".</q></p>
-
- <p>So, both mod_ssl and OpenSSL are <q>in the public domain</q> for the purposes
- of the Wassenaar Agreement and its <q>List of Dual Use Goods and
- Technologies And Munitions List</q>.</p>
-
- <p>So, mod_ssl and OpenSSL are not affected by the Wassenaar Agreement.</p>
- </section>
- </section>
- <!-- /about -->
-
- <section id="installation"><title>About Installation</title>
- <ul>
- <li><a href="#coredump">Core dumps for HTTPS requests?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#mutex">Permission problem on SSLMutex</a></li>
- <li><a href="#mm">Shared memory and process size?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#entropy">PRNG and not enough entropy?</a></li>
- </ul>
-
- <section id="coredump"><title>When I access my website the first time via HTTPS I get a core dump?</title>
- <p>There can be a lot of reasons why a core dump can occur, of course.
- Ranging from buggy third-party modules, over buggy vendor libraries up to
- a buggy mod_ssl version. But the above situation is often caused by old or
- broken vendor DBM libraries. To solve it either build mod_ssl with the
- built-in SDBM library (specify <code>--enable-rule=SSL_SDBM</code> at the
- APACI command line) or switch from <code>SSLSessionCache dbm:</code> to the
- newer <code>SSLSessionCache shm:</code>'' variant (after you have rebuilt
- Apache with MM, of course).</p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="mutex"><title>When I startup Apache I get permission errors related to SSLMutex?</title>
- <p>When you receive entries like ``<code>mod_ssl: Child could not open
- SSLMutex lockfile /opt/apache/logs/ssl_mutex.18332 (System error follows)
- [...] System: Permission denied (errno: 13)</code>'' this is usually
- caused by to restrictive permissions on the <em>parent</em> directories.
- Make sure that all parent directories (here <code>/opt</code>,
- <code>/opt/apache</code> and <code>/opt/apache/logs</code>) have the x-bit
- set at least for the UID under which Apache's children are running (see
- the <directive module="mpm_common">User</directive> directive of Apache).</p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="mm"><title>When I use the MM library and the shared memory cache each process grows
- 1.5MB according to `top' although I specified 512000 as the cache size?</title>
- <p>The additional 1MB are caused by the global shared memory pool Apache
- allocates for all modules and which is not used by mod_ssl for
- various reasons. So the actually allocated shared memory is always
- 1MB more than what you specify on <directive module="mod_ssl">SSLSessionCache</directive>.
- But don't be confused by the display of `top': although is
- indicates that <em>each</em> process grow, this is not reality, of
- course. Instead the additional memory consumption is shared by
- all processes, i.e. the 1.5MB are allocated only once per Apache
- instance and not once per Apache server process.</p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="entropy"><title>When I fire up the server, mod_ssl stops with the error
- "Failed to generate temporary 512 bit RSA private key", why?</title>
- <p>Cryptographic software needs a source of unpredictable data
- to work correctly. Many open source operating systems provide
- a "randomness device" that serves this purpose (usually named
- <code>/dev/random</code>). On other systems, applications have to
- seed the OpenSSL Pseudo Random Number Generator (PRNG) manually with
- appropriate data before generating keys or performing public key
- encryption. As of version 0.9.5, the OpenSSL functions that need
- randomness report an error if the PRNG has not been seeded with
- at least 128 bits of randomness. So mod_ssl has to provide enough
- entropy to the PRNG to work correctly. For this one has to use the
- <code>SSLRandomSeed</code> directives.</p>
- </section>
- </section>
- <!-- /installation -->
-
- <section id="aboutconfig"><title>About Configuration</title>
- <ul>
- <li><a href="#parallel">HTTP and HTTPS with a single server?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#ports">Where is the HTTPS port?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#httpstest">How to test HTTPS manually?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#hang">Why does my connection hang?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#refused">Why do I get connection refused?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#envvars">Why are the <code>SSL_XXX</code> variables missing?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#relative">How to switch with relative hyperlinks?</a></li>
- </ul>
-
- <section id="parallel"><title>Is it possible to provide HTTP and HTTPS with a single server?</title>
- <p>Yes, HTTP and HTTPS use different server ports, so there is no direct
- conflict between them. Either run two separate server instances (one binds
- to port 80, the other to port 443) or even use Apache's elegant virtual
- hosting facility where you can easily create two virtual servers which
- Apache dispatches: one responding to port 80 and speaking HTTP and one
- responding to port 443 speaking HTTPS.</p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="ports"><title>I know that HTTP is on port 80, but where is HTTPS?</title>
- <p>You can run HTTPS on any port, but the standards specify port 443, which
- is where any HTTPS compliant browser will look by default. You can force
- your browser to look on a different port by specifying it in the URL like
- this (for port 666): <code>https://secure.server.dom:666/</code></p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="httpstest"><title>How can I speak HTTPS manually for testing purposes?</title>
- <p>While you usually just use</p>
-
- <example>$ telnet localhost 80<br />
- GET / HTTP/1.0</example>
-
-
- <p>for simple testing the HTTP protocol of Apache, it's not so easy for
- HTTPS because of the SSL protocol between TCP and HTTP. But with the
- help of OpenSSL's <code>s_client</code> command you can do a similar
- check even for HTTPS:</p>
-
- <example>$ openssl s_client -connect localhost:443 -state -debug<br />
- GET / HTTP/1.0</example>
-
- <p>Before the actual HTTP response you receive detailed information about the
- SSL handshake. For a more general command line client which directly
- understands both the HTTP and HTTPS scheme, can perform GET and POST
- methods, can use a proxy, supports byte ranges, etc. you should have a
- look at nifty <a href="http://curl.haxx.se/">cURL</a>
- tool. With it you can directly check if your Apache is running fine on
- Port 80 and 443 as following:</p>
-
- <example>$ curl http://localhost/<br />
- $ curl https://localhost/</example>
- </section>
-
- <section id="hang"><title>Why does the connection hang when I connect to my SSL-aware Apache server?</title>
- <p>Because you connected with HTTP to the HTTPS port, i.e. you used an URL of
- the form ``<code>http://</code>'' instead of ``<code>https://</code>''.
- This also happens the other way round when you connect via HTTPS to a HTTP
- port, i.e. when you try to use ``<code>https://</code>'' on a server that
- doesn't support SSL (on this port). Make sure you are connecting to a
- virtual server that supports SSL, which is probably the IP associated with
- your hostname, not localhost (127.0.0.1).</p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="refused"><title>Why do I get ``Connection Refused'' messages when trying to access my freshly
- installed Apache+mod_ssl server via HTTPS?</title>
- <p>There can be various reasons. Some of the common mistakes is that people
- start Apache with just ``<code>apachectl start</code>'' (or
- ``<code>httpd</code>'') instead of ``<code>apachectl startssl</code>'' (or
- ``<code>httpd -DSSL</code>''. Or you're configuration is not correct. At
- least make sure that your <directive module="mpm_common">Listen</directive>
- directives match your <directive type="section" module="core">VirtualHost</directive>
- directives. And if all fails, please do yourself a favor and start over with the
- default configuration mod_ssl provides you.</p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="envvars"><title>In my CGI programs and SSI scripts the various documented
- <code>SSL_XXX</code> variables do not exist. Why?</title>
- <p>Just make sure you have ``<code>SSLOptions +StdEnvVars</code>''
- enabled for the context of your CGI/SSI requests.</p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="relative">
- <title>How can I use relative hyperlinks to switch between HTTP and
- HTTPS?</title>
- <p>Usually you have to use fully-qualified hyperlinks because
- you have to change the URL scheme. But with the help of some URL
- manipulations through mod_rewrite you can achieve the same effect while
- you still can use relative URLs:</p>
- <example>
- RewriteEngine on<br />
- RewriteRule ^/(.*):SSL$ https://%{SERVER_NAME}/$1 [R,L]<br />
- RewriteRule ^/(.*):NOSSL$ http://%{SERVER_NAME}/$1 [R,L]
- </example>
-
- <p>This rewrite ruleset lets you use hyperlinks of the form
- <code><a href="document.html:SSL"></code></p>
- </section>
- </section>
- <!-- configuration -->
-
- <section id="aboutcerts"><title>About Certificates</title>
- <ul>
- <li><a href="#keyscerts">What are Keys, CSRs and Certs?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#startup">Difference on startup?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#realcert">How to create a real cert?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#ownca">How to create my own CA?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#passphrase">How to change a pass phrase?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#removepassphrase">How to remove a pass phrase?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#verify">How to verify a key/cert pair?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#badcert">Bad Certificate Error?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#keysize">Why does a 2048-bit key not work?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#hashsymlinks">Why is client auth broken?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#pemder">How to convert from PEM to DER?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#verisign">Verisign and the magic getca program?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#sgc">Global IDs or SGC?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#gid">Global IDs and Cert Chain?</a></li>
- </ul>
-
- <section id="keyscerts"><title>What are RSA Private Keys, CSRs and Certificates?</title>
- <p>The RSA private key file is a digital file that you can use to decrypt
- messages sent to you. It has a public component which you distribute (via
- your Certificate file) which allows people to encrypt those messages to
- you. A Certificate Signing Request (CSR) is a digital file which contains
- your public key and your name. You send the CSR to a Certifying Authority
- (CA) to be converted into a real Certificate. A Certificate contains your
- RSA public key, your name, the name of the CA, and is digitally signed by
- your CA. Browsers that know the CA can verify the signature on that
- Certificate, thereby obtaining your RSA public key. That enables them to
- send messages which only you can decrypt.
- See the <a href="ssl_intro.html">Introduction</a> chapter for a general
- description of the SSL protocol.</p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="startup"><title>Seems like there is a difference on startup between the original Apache and an SSL-aware Apache?</title>
- <p>Yes, in general, starting Apache with a built-in mod_ssl is just like
- starting an unencumbered Apache, except for the fact that when you have a
- pass phrase on your SSL private key file. Then a startup dialog pops up
- asking you to enter the pass phrase.</p>
-
- <p>To type in the pass phrase manually when starting the server can be
- problematic, for instance when starting the server from the system boot
- scripts. As an alternative to this situation you can follow the steps
- below under ``How can I get rid of the pass-phrase dialog at Apache
- startup time?''.</p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="realcert"><title>Ok, I've got my server installed and want to create a real SSL
- server Certificate for it. How do I do it?</title>
- <p>Here is a step-by-step description:</p>
-
- <ol>
- <li>Make sure OpenSSL is really installed and in your <code>PATH</code>.
- But some commands even work ok when you just run the
- ``<code>openssl</code>'' program from within the OpenSSL source tree as
- ``<code>./apps/openssl</code>''.<br />
-
- <br />
- </li>
- <li>Create a RSA private key for your Apache server
- (will be Triple-DES encrypted and PEM formatted):<br />
- <br />
- <code><strong>$ openssl genrsa -des3 -out server.key 1024</strong></code><br />
- <br />
- Please backup this <code>server.key</code> file and remember the
- pass-phrase you had to enter at a secure location.
- You can see the details of this RSA private key via the command:<br />
-
- <br />
- <code><strong>$ openssl rsa -noout -text -in server.key</strong></code><br />
- <br />
- And you could create a decrypted PEM version (not recommended)
- of this RSA private key via:<br />
- <br />
- <code><strong>$ openssl rsa -in server.key -out server.key.unsecure</strong></code><br />
- <br />
-
- </li>
- <li>Create a Certificate Signing Request (CSR) with the server RSA private
- key (output will be PEM formatted):<br />
- <br />
- <code><strong>$ openssl req -new -key server.key -out server.csr</strong></code><br />
- <br />
- Make sure you enter the FQDN ("Fully Qualified Domain Name") of the
- server when OpenSSL prompts you for the "CommonName", i.e. when you
- generate a CSR for a website which will be later accessed via
- <code>https://www.foo.dom/</code>, enter "www.foo.dom" here.
- You can see the details of this CSR via the command<br />
-
- <br />
- <code><strong>$ openssl req -noout -text -in server.csr</strong></code><br />
- <br />
- </li>
- <li>You now have to send this Certificate Signing Request (CSR) to
- a Certifying Authority (CA) for signing. The result is then a real
- Certificate which can be used for Apache. Here you have two options:
- First you can let the CSR sign by a commercial CA like Verisign or
- Thawte. Then you usually have to post the CSR into a web form, pay for
- the signing and await the signed Certificate you then can store into a
- server.crt file. For more information about commercial CAs have a look
- at the following locations:<br />
- <br />
- <ol>
- <li> Verisign<br />
-
- <a href="http://digitalid.verisign.com/server/apacheNotice.htm">
- http://digitalid.verisign.com/server/apacheNotice.htm
- </a>
- </li>
- <li> Thawte Consulting<br />
- <a href="http://www.thawte.com/certs/server/request.html">
- http://www.thawte.com/certs/server/request.html
- </a>
- </li>
-
- <li> CertiSign Certificadora Digital Ltda.<br />
- <a href="http://www.certisign.com.br">
- http://www.certisign.com.br
- </a>
- </li>
- <li> IKS GmbH<br />
- <a href="http://www.iks-jena.de/produkte/ca/">
-
- http://www.iks-jena.de/produkte/ca/
- </a>
- </li>
- <li> Uptime Commerce Ltd.<br />
- <a href="http://www.uptimecommerce.com">
- http://www.uptimecommerce.com
- </a>
- </li>
- <li> BelSign NV/SA<br />
-
- <a href="http://www.belsign.be">
- http://www.belsign.be
- </a>
- </li>
- </ol>
-
- Second you can use your own CA and now have to sign the CSR yourself by
- this CA. Read the next answer in this FAQ on how to sign a CSR with
- your CA yourself.
- You can see the details of the received Certificate via the command:<br />
- <br />
- <code><strong>$ openssl x509 -noout -text -in server.crt</strong></code><br />
-
- </li>
- <li>Now you have two files: <code>server.key</code> and
- <code>server.crt</code>. These now can be used as following inside your
- Apache's <code>httpd.conf</code> file:
- <pre>
- SSLCertificateFile /path/to/this/server.crt
- SSLCertificateKeyFile /path/to/this/server.key
- </pre>
- The <code>server.csr</code> file is no longer needed.
- </li>
-
- </ol>
- </section>
-
- <section id="ownca"><title>How can I create and use my own Certificate Authority (CA)?</title>
- <p>The short answer is to use the <code>CA.sh</code> or <code>CA.pl</code>
-
- script provided by OpenSSL. The long and manual answer is this:</p>
-
- <ol>
- <li>Create a RSA private key for your CA
- (will be Triple-DES encrypted and PEM formatted):<br />
- <br />
- <code><strong>$ openssl genrsa -des3 -out ca.key 1024</strong></code><br />
- <br />
- Please backup this <code>ca.key</code> file and remember the
- pass-phrase you currently entered at a secure location.
- You can see the details of this RSA private key via the command<br />
-
- <br />
- <code><strong>$ openssl rsa -noout -text -in ca.key</strong></code><br />
- <br />
- And you can create a decrypted PEM version (not recommended) of this
- private key via:<br />
- <br />
- <code><strong>$ openssl rsa -in ca.key -out ca.key.unsecure</strong></code><br />
- <br />
-
- </li>
- <li>Create a self-signed CA Certificate (X509 structure)
- with the RSA key of the CA (output will be PEM formatted):<br />
- <br />
- <code><strong>$ openssl req -new -x509 -days 365 -key ca.key -out ca.crt</strong></code><br />
- <br />
- You can see the details of this Certificate via the command:<br />
- <br />
-
- <code><strong>$ openssl x509 -noout -text -in ca.crt</strong></code><br />
- <br />
- </li>
- <li>Prepare a script for signing which is needed because
- the ``<code>openssl ca</code>'' command has some strange requirements
- and the default OpenSSL config doesn't allow one easily to use
- ``<code>openssl ca</code>'' directly. So a script named
- <code>sign.sh</code> is distributed with the mod_ssl distribution
- (subdir <code>pkg.contrib/</code>). Use this script for signing.
- </li>
-
- <li>Now you can use this CA to sign server CSR's in order to create real
- SSL Certificates for use inside an Apache webserver (assuming
- you already have a <code>server.csr</code> at hand):<br />
- <br />
- <code><strong>$ ./sign.sh server.csr</strong></code><br />
- <br />
- This signs the server CSR and results in a <code>server.crt</code> file.<br />
-
- </li>
- </ol>
-
- </section>
-
- <section id="passphrase"><title>How can I change the pass-phrase on my private key file?</title>
- <p>You simply have to read it with the old pass-phrase and write it again
- by specifying the new pass-phrase. You can accomplish this with the following
- commands:</p>
-
-
- <p><code><strong>$ openssl rsa -des3 -in server.key -out server.key.new</strong></code><br />
- <code><strong>$ mv server.key.new server.key</strong></code><br /></p>
-
- <p>Here you're asked two times for a PEM pass-phrase. At the first
- prompt enter the old pass-phrase and at the second prompt
- enter the new pass-phrase.</p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="removepassphrase"><title>How can I get rid of the pass-phrase dialog at Apache startup time?</title>
- <p>The reason why this dialog pops up at startup and every re-start
- is that the RSA private key inside your server.key file is stored in
- encrypted format for security reasons. The pass-phrase is needed to be
- able to read and parse this file. When you can be sure that your server is
- secure enough you perform two steps:</p>
-
- <ol>
- <li>Remove the encryption from the RSA private key (while
- preserving the original file):<br />
- <br />
- <code><strong>$ cp server.key server.key.org</strong></code><br />
- <code><strong>$ openssl rsa -in server.key.org -out server.key</strong></code><br />
-
- <br />
- </li>
- <li>Make sure the server.key file is now only readable by root:<br />
- <br />
- <code><strong>$ chmod 400 server.key</strong></code><br />
- <br />
- </li>
- </ol>
-
- <p>Now <code>server.key</code> will contain an unencrypted copy of the key.
- If you point your server at this file it will not prompt you for a
- pass-phrase. HOWEVER, if anyone gets this key they will be able to
- impersonate you on the net. PLEASE make sure that the permissions on that
- file are really such that only root or the web server user can read it
- (preferably get your web server to start as root but run as another
- server, and have the key readable only by root).</p>
-
- <p>As an alternative approach you can use the ``<code>SSLPassPhraseDialog
- exec:/path/to/program</code>'' facility. But keep in mind that this is
- neither more nor less secure, of course.</p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="verify"><title>How do I verify that a private key matches its Certificate?</title>
- <p>The private key contains a series of numbers. Two of those numbers form
- the "public key", the others are part of your "private key". The "public
- key" bits are also embedded in your Certificate (we get them from your
- CSR). To check that the public key in your cert matches the public
- portion of your private key, you need to view the cert and the key and
- compare the numbers. To view the Certificate and the key run the
- commands:</p>
-
- <p><code><strong>$ openssl x509 -noout -text -in server.crt</strong></code><br />
- <code><strong>$ openssl rsa -noout -text -in server.key</strong></code></p>
-
- <p>The `modulus' and the `public exponent' portions in the key and the
- Certificate must match. But since the public exponent is usually 65537
- and it's bothering comparing long modulus you can use the following
- approach:</p>
-
-
- <p><code><strong>$ openssl x509 -noout -modulus -in server.crt | openssl md5</strong></code><br />
- <code><strong>$ openssl rsa -noout -modulus -in server.key | openssl md5</strong></code></p>
-
- <p>And then compare these really shorter numbers. With overwhelming
- probability they will differ if the keys are different. BTW, if I want to
- check to which key or certificate a particular CSR belongs you can compute</p>
-
- <p><code><strong>$ openssl req -noout -modulus -in server.csr | openssl md5</strong></code></p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="badcert"><title>What does it mean when my connections fail with an "alert bad certificate"
- error?</title>
- <p>Usually when you see errors like <code>OpenSSL: error:14094412: SSL
- routines:SSL3_READ_BYTES:sslv3 alert bad certificate</code> in the SSL
- logfile, this means that the browser was unable to handle the server
- certificate/private-key which perhaps contain a RSA-key not equal to 1024
- bits. For instance Netscape Navigator 3.x is one of those browsers.</p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="keysize"><title>Why does my 2048-bit private key not work?</title>
- <p>The private key sizes for SSL must be either 512 or 1024 for compatibility
- with certain web browsers. A keysize of 1024 bits is recommended because
- keys larger than 1024 bits are incompatible with some versions of Netscape
- Navigator and Microsoft Internet Explorer, and with other browsers that
- use RSA's BSAFE cryptography toolkit.</p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="hashsymlinks"><title>Why is client authentication broken after upgrading from
- SSLeay version 0.8 to 0.9?</title>
- <p>The CA certificates under the path you configured with
- <code>SSLCACertificatePath</code> are found by SSLeay through hash
- symlinks. These hash values are generated by the `<code>openssl x509 -noout
- -hash</code>' command. But the algorithm used to calculate the hash for a
- certificate has changed between SSLeay 0.8 and 0.9. So you have to remove
- all old hash symlinks and re-create new ones after upgrading. Use the
- <code>Makefile</code> mod_ssl placed into this directory.</p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="pemder"><title>How can I convert a certificate from PEM to DER format?</title>
- <p>The default certificate format for SSLeay/OpenSSL is PEM, which actually
- is Base64 encoded DER with header and footer lines. For some applications
- (e.g. Microsoft Internet Explorer) you need the certificate in plain DER
- format. You can convert a PEM file <code>cert.pem</code> into the
- corresponding DER file <code>cert.der</code> with the following command:
- <code><strong>$ openssl x509 -in cert.pem -out cert.der -outform DER</strong></code></p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="verisign"><title>I try to install a Verisign certificate. Why can't I find neither the
- <code>getca</code> nor <code>getverisign</code> programs Verisign mentions?</title>
- <p>This is because Verisign has never provided specific instructions
- for Apache+mod_ssl. Rather they tell you what you should do
- if you were using C2Net's Stronghold (a commercial Apache
- based server with SSL support). The only thing you have to do
- is to save the certificate into a file and give the name of
- that file to the <code>SSLCertificateFile</code> directive.
- Remember that you need to give the key file in as well (see
- <code>SSLCertificateKeyFile</code> directive). For a better
- CA-related overview on SSL certificate fiddling you can look at <a
- href="http://www.thawte.com/html/SUPPORT/server/softwaredocs/modssl.html">Thawte's mod_ssl instructions</a>.</p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="sgc"><title>Can I use the Server Gated Cryptography (SGC) facility (aka Verisign Global
- ID) also with mod_ssl?</title>
- <p>Yes, mod_ssl since version 2.1 supports the SGC facility. You don't have
- to configure anything special for this, just use a Global ID as your
- server certificate. The <em>step up</em> of the clients are then
- automatically handled by mod_ssl under run-time. For details please read
- the <code>README.GlobalID</code> document in the mod_ssl distribution.</p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="gid"><title>After I have installed my new Verisign Global ID server certificate, the
- browsers complain that they cannot verify the server certificate?</title>
- <p>That is because Verisign uses an intermediate CA certificate between
- the root CA certificate (which is installed in the browsers) and
- the server certificate (which you installed in the server). You
- should have received this additional CA certificate from Verisign.
- If not, complain to them. Then configure this certificate with the
- <code>SSLCertificateChainFile</code> directive in the server. This
- makes sure the intermediate CA certificate is send to the browser
- and this way fills the gap in the certificate chain.</p>
- </section>
- </section>
- <!-- /certs -->
-
- <section id="aboutssl"><title>About SSL Protocol</title>
- <ul>
- <li><a href="#random">Random SSL errors under heavy load?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#load">Why has the server a higher load?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#establishing">Why are connections horribly slow?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#ciphers">Which ciphers are supported?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#adh">How to use Anonymous-DH ciphers</a></li>
- <li><a href="#sharedciphers">Why do I get 'no shared ciphers'?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#vhosts">HTTPS and name-based vhosts</a></li>
- <li><a href="#vhosts2">Why is it not possible to use Name-Based Virtual
- Hosting to identify different SSL virtual hosts?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#lockicon">The lock icon in Netscape locks very late</a></li>
- <li><a href="#msie">Why do I get I/O errors with MSIE clients?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#nn">Why do I get I/O errors with NS clients?</a></li>
- </ul>
-
- <section id="random"><title>Why do I get lots of random SSL protocol errors under heavy server load?</title>
- <p>There can be a number of reasons for this, but the main one
- is problems with the SSL session Cache specified by the
- <directive module="mod_ssl">SSLSessionCache</directive> directive. The DBM session
- cache is most likely the source of the problem, so trying the SHM session cache or
- no cache at all may help.</p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="load"><title>Why has my webserver a higher load now that I run SSL there?</title>
- <p>Because SSL uses strong cryptographic encryption and this needs a lot of
- number crunching. And because when you request a webpage via HTTPS even
- the images are transferred encrypted. So, when you have a lot of HTTPS
- traffic the load increases.</p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="establishing"><title>Often HTTPS connections to my server require up to 30 seconds for establishing
- the connection, although sometimes it works faster?</title>
- <p>Usually this is caused by using a <code>/dev/random</code> device for
- <code>SSLRandomSeed</code> which is blocking in read(2) calls if not
- enough entropy is available. Read more about this problem in the reference
- chapter under <code>SSLRandomSeed</code>.</p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="ciphers"><title>What SSL Ciphers are supported by mod_ssl?</title>
- <p>Usually just all SSL ciphers which are supported by the
- version of OpenSSL in use (can depend on the way you built
- OpenSSL). Typically this at least includes the following:</p>
-
- <ol>
- <li>RC4 with MD5</li>
-
- <li>RC4 with MD5 (export version restricted to 40-bit key)</li>
- <li>RC2 with MD5</li>
- <li>RC2 with MD5 (export version restricted to 40-bit key)</li>
- <li>IDEA with MD5</li>
- <li>DES with MD5</li>
- <li>Triple-DES with MD5</li>
-
- </ol>
-
- <p>To determine the actual list of supported ciphers you can
- run the following command:</p>
- <example>$ openssl ciphers -v</example>
- </section>
-
- <section id="adh"><title>I want to use Anonymous Diffie-Hellman (ADH) ciphers, but I always get ``no
- shared cipher'' errors?</title>
- <p>In order to use Anonymous Diffie-Hellman (ADH) ciphers, it is not enough
- to just put ``<code>ADH</code>'' into your <code>SSLCipherSuite</code>.
- Additionally you have to build OpenSSL with
- ``<code>-DSSL_ALLOW_ADH</code>''. Because per default OpenSSL does not
- allow ADH ciphers for security reasons. So if you are actually enabling
- these ciphers make sure you are informed about the side-effects.</p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="sharedciphers"><title>I always just get a 'no shared ciphers' error if
- I try to connect to my freshly installed server?</title>
- <p>Either you have messed up your <code>SSLCipherSuite</code>
- directive (compare it with the pre-configured example in
- <code>httpd.conf-dist</code>) or you have chosen the DSA/DH
- algorithms instead of RSA when you generated your private key
- and ignored or overlooked the warnings. If you have chosen
- DSA/DH, then your server no longer speaks RSA-based SSL ciphers
- (at least not until you also configure an additional RSA-based
- certificate/key pair). But current browsers like NS or IE only speak
- RSA ciphers. The result is the "no shared ciphers" error. To fix
- this, regenerate your server certificate/key pair and this time
- choose the RSA algorithm.</p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="vhosts"><title>Why can't I use SSL with name-based/non-IP-based virtual hosts?</title>
- <p>The reason is very technical. Actually it's some sort of a chicken and
- egg problem: The SSL protocol layer stays below the HTTP protocol layer
- and encapsulates HTTP. When an SSL connection (HTTPS) is established
- Apache/mod_ssl has to negotiate the SSL protocol parameters with the
- client. For this mod_ssl has to consult the configuration of the virtual
- server (for instance it has to look for the cipher suite, the server
- certificate, etc.). But in order to dispatch to the correct virtual server
- Apache has to know the <code>Host</code> HTTP header field. For this the
- HTTP request header has to be read. This cannot be done before the SSL
- handshake is finished. But the information is already needed at the SSL
- handshake phase. Bingo!</p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="vhosts2"><title>Why is it not possible to use Name-Based
- Virtual Hosting to identify different SSL virtual hosts?</title>
- <p>Name-Based Virtual Hosting is a very popular method of identifying
- different virtual hosts. It allows you to use the same IP address and
- the same port number for many different sites. When people move on to
- SSL, it seems natural to assume that the same method can be used to have
- lots of different SSL virtual hosts on the same server.</p>
-
- <p>It comes as rather a shock to learn that it is impossible.</p>
-
- <p>The reason is that the SSL protocol is a separate layer which
- encapsulates the HTTP protocol. So the problem is that the SSL session
- is a separate transaction that takes place before the HTTP session even
- starts. Therefore all the server receives is an SSL request on IP
- address X and port Y (usually 443). Since the SSL request does not
- contain any Host: field, the server has no way to decide which SSL
- virtual host to use. Usually, it will just use the first one it finds
- that matches the port and IP address.</p>
-
- <p>You can, of course, use Name-Based Virtual Hosting to identify many
- non-SSL virtual hosts (all on port 80, for example) and then you can
- have no more than 1 SSL virtual host (on port 443). But if you do this,
- you must make sure to put the non-SSL port number on the NameVirtualHost
- directive, e.g.</p>
-
- <example>
- NameVirtualHost 192.168.1.1:80
- </example>
-
- <p>Other workaround solutions are: </p>
-
- <p>Use separate IP addresses for different SSL hosts.
- Use different port numbers for different SSL hosts.</p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="lockicon"><title>When I use Basic Authentication over HTTPS the lock icon in Netscape browsers
- still shows the unlocked state when the dialog pops up. Does this mean the
- username/password is still transmitted unencrypted?</title>
- <p>No, the username/password is already transmitted encrypted. The icon in
- Netscape browsers is just not really synchronized with the SSL/TLS layer
- (it toggles to the locked state when the first part of the actual webpage
- data is transferred which is not quite correct) and this way confuses
- people. The Basic Authentication facility is part of the HTTP layer and
- this layer is above the SSL/TLS layer in HTTPS. And before any HTTP data
- communication takes place in HTTPS the SSL/TLS layer has already done the
- handshake phase and switched to encrypted communication. So, don't get
- confused by this icon.</p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="msie"><title>When I connect via HTTPS to an Apache+mod_ssl+OpenSSL server with Microsoft Internet
- Explorer (MSIE) I get various I/O errors. What is the reason?</title>
- <p>The first reason is that the SSL implementation in some MSIE versions has
- some subtle bugs related to the HTTP keep-alive facility and the SSL close
- notify alerts on socket connection close. Additionally the interaction
- between SSL and HTTP/1.1 features are problematic with some MSIE versions,
- too. You've to work-around these problems by forcing
- Apache+mod_ssl+OpenSSL to not use HTTP/1.1, keep-alive connections or
- sending the SSL close notify messages to MSIE clients. This can be done by
- using the following directive in your SSL-aware virtual host section:</p>
- <example>
- SetEnvIf User-Agent ".*MSIE.*" \<br />
- nokeepalive ssl-unclean-shutdown \<br />
- downgrade-1.0 force-response-1.0
- </example>
- <p>Additionally it is known some MSIE versions have also problems
- with particular ciphers. Unfortunately one cannot workaround these
- bugs only for those MSIE particular clients, because the ciphers
- are already used in the SSL handshake phase. So a MSIE-specific
- <directive module="mod_setenvif">SetEnvIf</directive> doesn't work
- to solve these problems. Instead one has to do more drastic
- adjustments to the global parameters. But before you decide to do
- this, make sure your clients really have problems. If not, do not
- do this, because it affects all(!) your clients, i.e., also your
- non-MSIE clients.</p>
-
- <p>The next problem is that 56bit export versions of MSIE 5.x browsers have a
- broken SSLv3 implementation which badly interacts with OpenSSL versions
- greater than 0.9.4. You can either accept this and force your clients to
- upgrade their browsers, or you downgrade to OpenSSL 0.9.4 (hmmm), or you
- can decide to workaround it by accepting the drawback that your workaround
- will horribly affect also other browsers:</p>
- <example>SSLProtocol all -SSLv3</example>
- <p>This completely disables the SSLv3 protocol and lets those browsers work.
- But usually this is an even less acceptable workaround. A more reasonable
- workaround is to address the problem more closely and disable only the
- ciphers which cause trouble.</p>
- <example><p><code>SSLCipherSuite
- ALL:!ADH:<strong>!EXPORT56</strong>:RC4+RSA:+HIGH:+MEDIUM:+LOW:+SSLv2:+EXP</code>
- </p></example>
-
- <p>This also lets the broken MSIE versions work, but only removes the
- newer 56bit TLS ciphers.</p>
-
- <p>Another problem with MSIE 5.x clients is that they refuse to connect to
- URLs of the form <code>https://12.34.56.78/</code> (IP-addresses are used
- instead of the hostname), if the server is using the Server Gated
- Cryptography (SGC) facility. This can only be avoided by using the fully
- qualified domain name (FQDN) of the website in hyperlinks instead, because
- MSIE 5.x has an error in the way it handles the SGC negotiation.</p>
-
- <p>And finally there are versions of MSIE which seem to require that
- an SSL session can be reused (a totally non standard-conforming
- behaviour, of course). Connection with those MSIE versions only work
- if a SSL session cache is used. So, as a work-around, make sure you
- are using a session cache (see <directive module="mod_ssl"
- >SSLSessionCache</directive> directive).</p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="nn"><title>When I connect via HTTPS to an Apache+mod_ssl server with Netscape Navigator I
- get I/O errors and the message "Netscape has encountered bad data from the
- server" What's the reason?</title>
- <p>
- The problem usually is that you had created a new server certificate with
- the same DN, but you had told your browser to accept forever the old
- server certificate. Once you clear the entry in your browser for the old
- certificate, everything usually will work fine. Netscape's SSL
- implementation is correct, so when you encounter I/O errors with Netscape
- Navigator it is most of the time caused by the configured certificates.</p>
- </section>
- </section>
- <!-- /aboutssl -->
-
- <section id="support"><title>About Support</title>
- <ul>
- <li><a href="#resources">Resources in case of problems?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#contact">Support in case of problems?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#reportdetails">How to write a problem report?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#coredumphelp">I got a core dump, can you help me?</a></li>
- <li><a href="#backtrace">How to get a backtrace?</a></li>
- </ul>
-
- <section id="resources"><title>What information resources are available in case of mod_ssl problems?</title>
- <p>The following information resources are available.
- In case of problems you should search here first.</p>
-
- <dl>
- <dt>Answers in the User Manual's F.A.Q. List (this)</dt>
- <dd><a href="http://httpd.apache.org/docs-2.0/ssl/ssl_faq.html">
- http://httpd.apache.org/docs-2.0/ssl/ssl_faq.html</a><br />
- First look inside the F.A.Q. (this text), perhaps your problem is such
- popular that it was already answered a lot of times in the past.
- </dd>
- <dt>Postings from the modssl-users Support Mailing List <a
- href="http://www.modssl.org/support/"
- >http://www.modssl.org/support/</a></dt>
- <dd>Second search for your problem in one of the existing archives of the
- modssl-users mailing list. Perhaps your problem popped up at least once for
- another user, too.
- </dd>
- </dl>
- </section>
-
- <section id="contact"><title>What support contacts are available in case of mod_ssl problems?</title>
- <p>The following lists all support possibilities for mod_ssl, in order of
- preference, i.e. start in this order and do not pick the support possibility
- you just like most, please.</p>
-
- <ol>
- <li><em>Write a Problem Report into the Bug Database</em><br />
- <a href="http://www.modssl.org/support/bugdb/">
- http://www.modssl.org/support/bugdb/</a><br />
- This is the preferred way of submitting your problem report, because this
- way it gets filed into the bug database (it cannot be lost) <em>and</em>
- send to the modssl-users mailing list (others see the current problems and
- learn from answers).
- </li>
-
- <li><em>Write a Problem Report to the modssl-users Support Mailing List</em><br />
- <a href="mailto:modssl-users@modssl.org">
- modssl-users@modssl.org</a><br />
- This is the second way of submitting your problem report. You have to
- subscribe to the list first, but then you can easily discuss your problem
- with both the author and the whole mod_ssl user community.
- </li>
- </ol>
- </section>
-
- <section id="reportdetails"><title>What information and details should I
- provide when writing a bug report?</title>
- <p>You have to at least always provide the following information:</p>
-
- <dl>
- <dt>Apache and OpenSSL version information</dt>
- <dd>The Apache version can be determined
- by running ``<code>httpd -v</code>''. The OpenSSL version can be
- determined by running ``<code>openssl version</code>''. Alternatively when
- you have Lynx installed you can run the command ``<code>lynx -mime_header
- http://localhost/ | grep Server</code>'' to determine all information in a
- single step.
- </dd>
-
- <dt>The details on how you built and installed Apache+mod_ssl+OpenSSL</dt>
- <dd>For this you can provide a logfile of your terminal session which shows
- the configuration and install steps. Alternatively you can at least
- provide the <code>configure</code> command line you used.
- </dd>
-
- <dt>In case of core dumps please include a Backtrace</dt>
- <dd>In case your Apache+mod_ssl+OpenSSL should really dump core please attach
- a stack-frame ``backtrace'' (see the next question on how to get it).
- Without this information the reason for your core dump cannot be found.
- So you have to provide the backtrace, please.
- </dd>
-
- <dt>A detailed description of your problem</dt>
- <dd>Don't laugh, I'm totally serious. I already got a lot of problem reports
- where the people not really said what's the actual problem is. So, in your
- own interest (you want the problem be solved, don't you?) include as much
- details as possible, please. But start with the essentials first, of
- course.
- </dd>
- </dl>
- </section>
-
- <section id="coredumphelp"><title>I got a core dump, can you help me?</title>
- <p>In general no, at least not unless you provide more details about the code
- location where Apache dumped core. What is usually always required in
- order to help you is a backtrace (see next question). Without this
- information it is mostly impossible to find the problem and help you in
- fixing it.</p>
- </section>
-
- <section id="backtrace"><title>Ok, I got a core dump but how do I get a backtrace to find out the reason for it?</title>
- <p>Follow the following steps:</p>
- <ol>
- <li>Make sure you have debugging symbols available in at least
- Apache. On platforms where you use GCC/GDB you have to build
- Apache+mod_ssl with ``<code>OPTIM="-g -ggdb3"</code>'' to achieve this. On
- other platforms at least ``<code>OPTIM="-g"</code>'' is needed.
- </li>
-
- <li>Startup the server and try to produce the core-dump. For this you perhaps
- want to use a directive like ``<code>CoreDumpDirectory /tmp</code>'' to
- make sure that the core-dump file can be written. You then should get a
- <code>/tmp/core</code> or <code>/tmp/httpd.core</code> file. When you
- don't get this, try to run your server under an UID != 0 (root), because
- most "current" kernels do not allow a process to dump core after it has
- done a <code>setuid()</code> (unless it does an <code>exec()</code>) for
- security reasons (there can be privileged information left over in
- memory). Additionally you can run ``<code>/path/to/httpd -X</code>''
- manually to force Apache to not fork.
- </li>
-
- <li>Analyze the core-dump. For this run <code>gdb /path/to/httpd
- /tmp/httpd.core</code> or a similar command has to run. In GDB you then
- just have to enter the <code>bt</code> command and, voila, you get the
- backtrace. For other debuggers consult your local debugger manual. Send
- this backtrace to the author.
- </li>
- </ol>
- </section>
- </section>
- </manualpage>
-