openssl-genpkey, genpkey - generate a private key
openssl genpkey [-help] [-out
filename] [-outform PEM|DER] [-pass arg]
[-cipher] [-engine id] [-paramfile
file] [-algorithm alg] [-pkeyopt opt:value]
[-genparam] [-text]
The genpkey command generates a private key.
- -help
- Print out a usage message.
- -out filename
- Output the key to the specified file. If this argument is not specified
then standard output is used.
- -outform
DER|PEM
- This specifies the output format DER or PEM. The default format is
PEM.
- -pass arg
- The output file password source. For more information about the format of
arg see "Pass Phrase Options" in openssl(1).
- -cipher
- This option encrypts the private key with the supplied cipher. Any
algorithm name accepted by EVP_get_cipherbyname() is acceptable
such as des3.
- -engine id
- Specifying an engine (by its unique id string) will cause
genpkey 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. If used this option
should precede all other options.
- -algorithm
alg
- Public key algorithm to use such as RSA, DSA or DH. If used this option
must precede any -pkeyopt options. The options -paramfile
and -algorithm are mutually exclusive. Engines may add algorithms
in addition to the standard built-in ones.
Valid built-in algorithm names for private key generation are
RSA, RSA-PSS, EC, X25519, X448, ED25519 and ED448.
Valid built-in algorithm names for parameter generation (see
the -genparam option) are DH, DSA and EC.
Note that the algorithm name X9.42 DH may be used as a synonym
for the DH algorithm. These are identical and do not indicate the type
of parameters that will be generated. Use the dh_paramgen_type
option to indicate whether PKCS#3 or X9.42 DH parameters are required.
See "DH Parameter Generation Options" below for more
details.
- -pkeyopt
opt:value
- Set the public key algorithm option opt to value. The
precise set of options supported depends on the public key algorithm used
and its implementation. See "KEY GENERATION OPTIONS" and
"PARAMETER GENERATION OPTIONS" below for more details.
- -genparam
- Generate a set of parameters instead of a private key. If used this option
must precede any -algorithm, -paramfile or -pkeyopt
options.
- -paramfile
filename
- Some public key algorithms generate a private key based on a set of
parameters. They can be supplied using this option. If this option is used
the public key algorithm used is determined by the parameters. If used
this option must precede any -pkeyopt options. The options
-paramfile and -algorithm are mutually exclusive.
- -text
- Print an (unencrypted) text representation of private and public keys and
parameters along with the PEM or DER structure.
The options supported by each algorithm and indeed each
implementation of an algorithm can vary. The options for the OpenSSL
implementations are detailed below. There are no key generation options
defined for the X25519, X448, ED25519 or ED448 algorithms.
RSA Key Generation Options
- rsa_keygen_bits:numbits
- The number of bits in the generated key. If not specified 2048 is
used.
- rsa_keygen_primes:numprimes
- The number of primes in the generated key. If not specified 2 is
used.
- rsa_keygen_pubexp:value
- The RSA public exponent value. This can be a large decimal or hexadecimal
value if preceded by 0x. Default value is 65537.
EC Key Generation Options
The EC key generation options can also be used for parameter
generation.
- ec_paramgen_curve:curve
- The EC curve to use. OpenSSL supports NIST curve names such as
"P-256".
- ec_param_enc:encoding
- The encoding to use for parameters. The "encoding" parameter
must be either "named_curve" or "explicit". The
default value is "named_curve".
The options supported by each algorithm and indeed each
implementation of an algorithm can vary. The options for the OpenSSL
implementations are detailed below.
DSA Parameter Generation Options
- dsa_paramgen_bits:numbits
- The number of bits in the generated prime. If not specified 2048 is
used.
- dsa_paramgen_q_bits:numbits
- The number of bits in the q parameter. Must be one of 160, 224 or 256. If
not specified 224 is used.
- dsa_paramgen_md:digest
- The digest to use during parameter generation. Must be one of sha1,
sha224 or sha256. If set, then the number of bits in
q will match the output size of the specified digest and the
dsa_paramgen_q_bits parameter will be ignored. If not set, then a
digest will be used that gives an output matching the number of bits in
q, i.e. sha1 if q length is 160, sha224 if it 224 or
sha256 if it is 256.
DH Parameter Generation Options
- dh_paramgen_prime_len:numbits
- The number of bits in the prime parameter p. The default is
2048.
- dh_paramgen_subprime_len:numbits
- The number of bits in the sub prime parameter q. The default is 256
if the prime is at least 2048 bits long or 160 otherwise. Only relevant if
used in conjunction with the dh_paramgen_type option to generate
X9.42 DH parameters.
- dh_paramgen_generator:value
- The value to use for the generator g. The default is 2.
- dh_paramgen_type:value
- The type of DH parameters to generate. Use 0 for PKCS#3 DH and 1 for X9.42
DH. The default is 0.
- dh_rfc5114:num
- If this option is set, then the appropriate RFC5114 parameters are used
instead of generating new parameters. The value num can take the
values 1, 2 or 3 corresponding to RFC5114 DH parameters consisting of 1024
bit group with 160 bit subgroup, 2048 bit group with 224 bit subgroup and
2048 bit group with 256 bit subgroup as mentioned in RFC5114 sections 2.1,
2.2 and 2.3 respectively. If present this overrides all other DH parameter
options.
EC Parameter Generation Options
The EC parameter generation options are the same as for key
generation. See "EC Key Generation Options" above.
The use of the genpkey program is encouraged over the algorithm
specific utilities because additional algorithm options and ENGINE provided
algorithms can be used.
Generate an RSA private key using default parameters:
openssl genpkey -algorithm RSA -out key.pem
Encrypt output private key using 128 bit AES and the passphrase
"hello":
openssl genpkey -algorithm RSA -out key.pem -aes-128-cbc -pass pass:hello
Generate a 2048 bit RSA key using 3 as the public exponent:
openssl genpkey -algorithm RSA -out key.pem \
-pkeyopt rsa_keygen_bits:2048 -pkeyopt rsa_keygen_pubexp:3
Generate 2048 bit DSA parameters:
openssl genpkey -genparam -algorithm DSA -out dsap.pem \
-pkeyopt dsa_paramgen_bits:2048
Generate DSA key from parameters:
openssl genpkey -paramfile dsap.pem -out dsakey.pem
Generate 2048 bit DH parameters:
openssl genpkey -genparam -algorithm DH -out dhp.pem \
-pkeyopt dh_paramgen_prime_len:2048
Generate 2048 bit X9.42 DH parameters:
openssl genpkey -genparam -algorithm DH -out dhpx.pem \
-pkeyopt dh_paramgen_prime_len:2048 \
-pkeyopt dh_paramgen_type:1
Output RFC5114 2048 bit DH parameters with 224 bit subgroup:
openssl genpkey -genparam -algorithm DH -out dhp.pem -pkeyopt dh_rfc5114:2
Generate DH key from parameters:
openssl genpkey -paramfile dhp.pem -out dhkey.pem
Generate EC parameters:
openssl genpkey -genparam -algorithm EC -out ecp.pem \
-pkeyopt ec_paramgen_curve:secp384r1 \
-pkeyopt ec_param_enc:named_curve
Generate EC key from parameters:
openssl genpkey -paramfile ecp.pem -out eckey.pem
Generate EC key directly:
openssl genpkey -algorithm EC -out eckey.pem \
-pkeyopt ec_paramgen_curve:P-384 \
-pkeyopt ec_param_enc:named_curve
Generate an X25519 private key:
openssl genpkey -algorithm X25519 -out xkey.pem
Generate an ED448 private key:
openssl genpkey -algorithm ED448 -out xkey.pem
The ability to use NIST curve names, and to generate an EC key
directly, were added in OpenSSL 1.0.2. The ability to generate X25519 keys
was added in OpenSSL 1.1.0. The ability to generate X448, ED25519 and ED448
keys was added in OpenSSL 1.1.1.
Copyright 2006-2021 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
<https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>.