openssl-s_server - SSL/TLS server program
openssl s_server [-help] [-port
+int] [-accept val] [-unix val]
[-4] [-6] [-unlink] [-context val]
[-verify int] [-Verify int] [-cert
infile] [-cert2 infile] [-certform
DER|PEM|P12] [-cert_chain infile]
[-build_chain] [-serverinfo val] [-key
filename|uri] [-key2 filename|uri]
[-keyform DER|PEM|P12|ENGINE]
[-pass val] [-dcert infile] [-dcertform
DER|PEM|P12] [-dcert_chain infile]
[-dkey filename|uri] [-dkeyform
DER|PEM|P12|ENGINE] [-dpass val]
[-nbio_test] [-crlf] [-debug] [-msg]
[-msgfile outfile] [-state] [-nocert]
[-quiet] [-no_resume_ephemeral] [-www] [-WWW]
[-http_server_binmode] [-no_ca_names]
[-ignore_unexpected_eof] [-servername]
[-servername_fatal] [-tlsextdebug] [-HTTP]
[-id_prefix val] [-keymatexport val]
[-keymatexportlen +int] [-CRL infile]
[-CRLform DER|PEM] [-crl_download]
[-chainCAfile infile] [-chainCApath dir]
[-chainCAstore uri] [-verifyCAfile infile]
[-verifyCApath dir] [-verifyCAstore uri]
[-no_cache] [-ext_cache] [-verify_return_error]
[-verify_quiet] [-ign_eof] [-no_ign_eof]
[-no_etm] [-status] [-status_verbose]
[-status_timeout int] [-proxy
[http[s]://][userinfo@]host[:port][/path]] [-no_proxy
addresses] [-status_url val] [-status_file
infile] [-ssl_config val] [-trace]
[-security_debug] [-security_debug_verbose] [-brief]
[-rev] [-async] [-max_send_frag +int]
[-split_send_frag +int] [-max_pipelines +int]
[-naccept +int] [-read_buf +int] [-bugs]
[-no_comp] [-comp] [-no_ticket] [-serverpref]
[-legacy_renegotiation] [-no_renegotiation]
[-no_resumption_on_reneg] [-allow_no_dhe_kex]
[-prioritize_chacha] [-strict] [-sigalgs val]
[-client_sigalgs val] [-groups val]
[-curves val] [-named_curve val] [-cipher
val] [-ciphersuites val] [-dhparam
infile] [-record_padding val]
[-debug_broken_protocol] [-nbio] [-psk_identity
val] [-psk_hint val] [-psk val]
[-psk_session file] [-srpvfile infile]
[-srpuserseed val] [-timeout] [-mtu +int]
[-listen] [-sctp] [-sctp_label_bug] [-use_srtp
val] [-no_dhe] [-nextprotoneg val] [-alpn
val] [-sendfile] [-keylogfile outfile]
[-recv_max_early_data int] [-max_early_data int]
[-early_data] [-stateless] [-anti_replay]
[-no_anti_replay] [-num_tickets] [-nameopt
option] [-no_ssl3] [-no_tls1] [-no_tls1_1]
[-no_tls1_2] [-no_tls1_3] [-ssl3] [-tls1]
[-tls1_1] [-tls1_2] [-tls1_3] [-dtls]
[-dtls1] [-dtls1_2] [-allow_proxy_certs]
[-attime timestamp] [-no_check_time]
[-check_ss_sig] [-crl_check] [-crl_check_all]
[-explicit_policy] [-extended_crl] [-ignore_critical]
[-inhibit_any] [-inhibit_map] [-partial_chain]
[-policy arg] [-policy_check] [-policy_print]
[-purpose purpose] [-suiteB_128]
[-suiteB_128_only] [-suiteB_192] [-trusted_first]
[-no_alt_chains] [-use_deltas] [-auth_level num]
[-verify_depth num] [-verify_email email]
[-verify_hostname hostname] [-verify_ip ip]
[-verify_name name] [-x509_strict]
[-issuer_checks] [-bugs] [-no_comp] [-comp]
[-no_ticket] [-serverpref] [-client_renegotiation]
[-legacy_renegotiation] [-no_renegotiation]
[-no_resumption_on_reneg] [-legacy_server_connect]
[-no_legacy_server_connect] [-no_etm]
[-allow_no_dhe_kex] [-prioritize_chacha] [-strict]
[-sigalgs algs] [-client_sigalgs algs]
[-groups groups] [-curves curves]
[-named_curve curve] [-cipher ciphers]
[-ciphersuites 1.3ciphers] [-min_protocol
minprot] [-max_protocol maxprot]
[-record_padding padding] [-debug_broken_protocol]
[-no_middlebox] [-xkey infile] [-xcert
file] [-xchain file] [-xchain_build file]
[-xcertform DER|PEM]> [-xkeyform
DER|PEM]> [-CAfile file] [-no-CAfile]
[-CApath dir] [-no-CApath] [-CAstore uri]
[-no-CAstore] [-rand files] [-writerand
file] [-engine id] [-provider name]
[-provider-path path] [-propquery propq]
This command implements a generic SSL/TLS server which listens for
connections on a given port using SSL/TLS.
In addition to the options below, this command also supports the
common and server only options documented "Supported Command Line
Commands" in SSL_CONF_cmd(3)
- -help
- Print out a usage message.
- -port
+int
- The TCP port to listen on for connections. If not specified 4433 is
used.
- -accept
val
- The optional TCP host and port to listen on for connections. If not
specified, *:4433 is used.
- -unix
val
- Unix domain socket to accept on.
- -4
- Use IPv4 only.
- -6
- Use IPv6 only.
- -unlink
- For -unix, unlink any existing socket first.
- -context
val
- Sets the SSL context id. It can be given any string value. If this option
is not present a default value will be used.
- -verify int,
-Verify int
- The verify depth to use. This specifies the maximum length of the client
certificate chain and makes the server request a certificate from the
client. With the -verify option a certificate is requested but the
client does not have to send one, with the -Verify option the
client must supply a certificate or an error occurs.
If the cipher suite cannot request a client certificate (for
example an anonymous cipher suite or PSK) this option has no effect.
- -cert
infile
- The certificate to use, most servers cipher suites require the use of a
certificate and some require a certificate with a certain public key type:
for example the DSS cipher suites require a certificate containing a DSS
(DSA) key. If not specified then the filename server.pem will be
used.
- -cert2
infile
- The certificate file to use for servername; default is
"server2.pem".
- -certform
DER|PEM|P12
- The server certificate file format; unspecified by default. See
openssl-format-options(1) for details.
- -cert_chain
- A file or URI of untrusted certificates to use when attempting to build
the certificate chain related to the certificate specified via the
-cert option. The input can be in PEM, DER, or PKCS#12 format.
- -build_chain
- Specify whether the application should build the server certificate chain
to be provided to the client.
- -serverinfo
val
- A file containing one or more blocks of PEM data. Each PEM block must
encode a TLS ServerHello extension (2 bytes type, 2 bytes length, followed
by "length" bytes of extension data). If the client sends an
empty TLS ClientHello extension matching the type, the corresponding
ServerHello extension will be returned.
- -key
filename|uri
- The private key to use. If not specified then the certificate file will be
used.
- -key2
filename|uri
- The private Key file to use for servername if not given via
-cert2.
- -keyform
DER|PEM|P12|ENGINE
- The key format; unspecified by default. See
openssl-format-options(1) for details.
- -pass
val
- The private key and certificate file password source. For more information
about the format of val, see
openssl-passphrase-options(1).
- -dcert infile,
-dkey filename|uri
- Specify an additional certificate and private key, these behave in the
same manner as the -cert and -key options except there is no
default if they are not specified (no additional certificate and key is
used). As noted above some cipher suites require a certificate containing
a key of a certain type. Some cipher suites need a certificate carrying an
RSA key and some a DSS (DSA) key. By using RSA and DSS certificates and
keys a server can support clients which only support RSA or DSS cipher
suites by using an appropriate certificate.
- -dcert_chain
- A file or URI of untrusted certificates to use when attempting to build
the server certificate chain when a certificate specified via the
-dcert option is in use. The input can be in PEM, DER, or PKCS#12
format.
- -dcertform
DER|PEM|P12
- The format of the additional certificate file; unspecified by default. See
openssl-format-options(1) for details.
- -dkeyform
DER|PEM|P12|ENGINE
- The format of the additional private key; unspecified by default. See
openssl-format-options(1) for details.
- -dpass
val
- The passphrase for the additional private key and certificate. For more
information about the format of val, see
openssl-passphrase-options(1).
- -nbio_test
- Tests non blocking I/O.
- -crlf
- This option translated a line feed from the terminal into CR+LF.
- -debug
- Print extensive debugging information including a hex dump of all
traffic.
- -security_debug
- Print output from SSL/TLS security framework.
- -security_debug_verbose
- Print more output from SSL/TLS security framework
- -msg
- Show all protocol messages with hex dump.
- -msgfile
outfile
- File to send output of -msg or -trace to, default standard
output.
- -state
- Prints the SSL session states.
- -CRL
infile
- The CRL file to use.
- -CRLform
DER|PEM
- The CRL file format; unspecified by default. See
openssl-format-options(1) for details.
- -crl_download
- Download CRLs from distribution points given in CDP extensions of
certificates
- -verifyCAfile
filename
- A file in PEM format CA containing trusted certificates to use for
verifying client certificates.
- -verifyCApath
dir
- A directory containing trusted certificates to use for verifying client
certificates. This directory must be in "hash format", see
openssl-verify(1) for more information.
- -verifyCAstore
uri
- The URI of a store containing trusted certificates to use for verifying
client certificates.
- -chainCAfile
file
- A file in PEM format containing trusted certificates to use when
attempting to build the server certificate chain.
- -chainCApath
dir
- A directory containing trusted certificates to use for building the server
certificate chain provided to the client. This directory must be in
"hash format", see openssl-verify(1) for more
information.
- -chainCAstore
uri
- The URI of a store containing trusted certificates to use for building the
server certificate chain provided to the client. The URI may indicate a
single certificate, as well as a collection of them. With URIs in the
"file:" scheme, this acts as
-chainCAfile or -chainCApath, depending on if the URI
indicates a directory or a single file. See ossl_store-file(7) for
more information on the "file:"
scheme.
- -nocert
- If this option is set then no certificate is used. This restricts the
cipher suites available to the anonymous ones (currently just anonymous
DH).
- -quiet
- Inhibit printing of session and certificate information.
- -no_resume_ephemeral
- Disable caching and tickets if ephemeral (EC)DH is used.
- -tlsextdebug
- Print a hex dump of any TLS extensions received from the server.
- -www
- Sends a status message back to the client when it connects. This includes
information about the ciphers used and various session parameters. The
output is in HTML format so this option can be used with a web browser.
The special URL "/renegcert" turns on
client cert validation, and "/reneg"
tells the server to request renegotiation. The -early_data option
cannot be used with this option.
- -WWW,
-HTTP
- Emulates a simple web server. Pages will be resolved relative to the
current directory, for example if the URL
"https://myhost/page.html" is requested
the file ./page.html will be sent. If the -HTTP flag is
used, the files are sent directly, and should contain any HTTP response
headers (including status response line). If the -WWW option is
used, the response headers are generated by the server, and the file
extension is examined to determine the Content-Type header.
Extensions of "html",
"htm", and
"php" are
"text/html" and all others are
"text/plain". In addition, the special
URL "/stats" will return status
information like the -www option. Neither of these options can be
used in conjunction with -early_data.
- -http_server_binmode
- When acting as web-server (using option -WWW or -HTTP) open
files requested by the client in binary mode.
- -no_ca_names
- Disable TLS Extension CA Names. You may want to disable it for security
reasons or for compatibility with some Windows TLS implementations
crashing when this extension is larger than 1024 bytes.
- -ignore_unexpected_eof
- Some TLS implementations do not send the mandatory close_notify alert on
shutdown. If the application tries to wait for the close_notify alert but
the peer closes the connection without sending it, an error is generated.
When this option is enabled the peer does not need to send the
close_notify alert and a closed connection will be treated as if the
close_notify alert was received. For more information on shutting down a
connection, see SSL_shutdown(3).
- -servername
- Servername for HostName TLS extension.
- -servername_fatal
- On servername mismatch send fatal alert (default: warning alert).
- -id_prefix
val
- Generate SSL/TLS session IDs prefixed by val. This is mostly useful
for testing any SSL/TLS code (e.g. proxies) that wish to deal with
multiple servers, when each of which might be generating a unique range of
session IDs (e.g. with a certain prefix).
- -keymatexport
- Export keying material using label.
- -keymatexportlen
- Export the given number of bytes of keying material; default 20.
- -no_cache
- Disable session cache.
- -ext_cache.
- Disable internal cache, set up and use external cache.
- -verify_return_error
- Verification errors normally just print a message but allow the connection
to continue, for debugging purposes. If this option is used, then
verification errors close the connection.
- -verify_quiet
- No verify output except verify errors.
- -ign_eof
- Ignore input EOF (default: when -quiet).
- -no_ign_eof
- Do not ignore input EOF.
- -no_etm
- Disable Encrypt-then-MAC negotiation.
- -status
- Enables certificate status request support (aka OCSP stapling).
- -status_verbose
- Enables certificate status request support (aka OCSP stapling) and gives a
verbose printout of the OCSP response.
- -status_timeout
int
- Sets the timeout for OCSP response to int seconds.
- -proxy
[http[s]://][userinfo@]host[:port][/path]
- The HTTP(S) proxy server to use for reaching the OCSP server unless
-no_proxy applies, see below. The proxy port defaults to 80 or 443
if the scheme is "https"; apart from
that the optional "http://" or
"https://" prefix is ignored, as well as
any userinfo and path components. Defaults to the environment variable
"http_proxy" if set, else
"HTTP_PROXY" in case no TLS is used,
otherwise "https_proxy" if set, else
"HTTPS_PROXY".
- -no_proxy
addresses
- List of IP addresses and/or DNS names of servers not to use an HTTP(S)
proxy for, separated by commas and/or whitespace (where in the latter case
the whole argument must be enclosed in "..."). Default is from
the environment variable "no_proxy" if
set, else "NO_PROXY".
- -status_url
val
- Sets a fallback responder URL to use if no responder URL is present in the
server certificate. Without this option an error is returned if the server
certificate does not contain a responder address. The optional userinfo
and fragment URL components are ignored. Any given query component is
handled as part of the path component.
- -status_file
infile
- Overrides any OCSP responder URLs from the certificate and always provides
the OCSP Response stored in the file. The file must be in DER format.
- -ssl_config
val
- Configure SSL_CTX using the given configuration value.
- -trace
- Show verbose trace output of protocol messages.
- -brief
- Provide a brief summary of connection parameters instead of the normal
verbose output.
- -rev
- Simple echo server that sends back received text reversed. Also sets
-brief. Cannot be used in conjunction with -early_data.
- -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 -engine option. For test purposes the
dummy async engine (dasync) can be used (if available).
- -max_send_frag
+int
- The maximum size of data fragment to send. See
SSL_CTX_set_max_send_fragment(3) for further information.
- -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 cipher suite has been negotiated, an engine
that supports pipelining has been loaded, and max_pipelines is greater
than 1. See SSL_CTX_set_split_send_fragment(3) for further
information.
- -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 cipher suite has been negotiated. The
default value is 1. See SSL_CTX_set_max_pipelines(3) for further
information.
- -naccept
+int
- The server will exit after receiving the specified number of connections,
default unlimited.
- -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
SSL_CTX_set_default_read_buffer_len(3) for further
information).
- -bugs
- There are several known bugs in SSL and TLS implementations. Adding this
option enables various workarounds.
- -no_comp
- Disable negotiation of TLS compression. TLS compression is not recommended
and is off by default as of OpenSSL 1.1.0.
- -comp
- Enable negotiation of 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.
- -no_ticket
- Disable RFC4507bis session ticket support. This option has no effect if
TLSv1.3 is negotiated. See -num_tickets.
- -num_tickets
- Control the number of tickets that will be sent to the client after a full
handshake in TLSv1.3. The default number of tickets is 2. This option does
not affect the number of tickets sent after a resumption handshake.
- -serverpref
- Use the server's cipher preferences, rather than the client's
preferences.
- -prioritize_chacha
- Prioritize ChaCha ciphers when preferred by clients. Requires
-serverpref.
- -no_resumption_on_reneg
- Set the SSL_OP_NO_SESSION_RESUMPTION_ON_RENEGOTIATION option.
- -client_sigalgs
val
- Signature algorithms to support for client certificate authentication
(colon-separated list).
- -named_curve
val
- Specifies the elliptic curve to use. NOTE: this is single curve, not a
list. For a list of all possible curves, use:
$ openssl ecparam -list_curves
- -cipher
val
- This allows the list of TLSv1.2 and below ciphersuites used by the server
to be modified. This list is combined with any TLSv1.3 ciphersuites that
have been configured. When the client sends a list of supported ciphers
the first client cipher also included in the server list is used. Because
the client specifies the preference order, the order of the server
cipherlist is irrelevant. See openssl-ciphers(1) for more
information.
- -ciphersuites
val
- This allows the list of TLSv1.3 ciphersuites used by the server to be
modified. This list is combined with any TLSv1.2 and below ciphersuites
that have been configured. When the client sends a list of supported
ciphers the first client cipher also included in the server list is used.
Because the client specifies the preference order, the order of the server
cipherlist is irrelevant. See openssl-ciphers(1) command for more
information. The format for this list is a simple colon (":")
separated list of TLSv1.3 ciphersuite names.
- -dhparam
infile
- The DH parameter file to use. The ephemeral DH cipher suites generate keys
using a set of DH parameters. If not specified then an attempt is made to
load the parameters from the server certificate file. If this fails then a
static set of parameters hard coded into this command will be used.
- -nbio
- Turns on non blocking I/O.
- -timeout
- Enable timeouts.
- -mtu
- Set link-layer MTU.
- -psk_identity
val
- Expect the client to send PSK identity val when using a PSK cipher
suite, and warn if they do not. By default, the expected PSK identity is
the string "Client_identity".
- -psk_hint
val
- Use the PSK identity hint val when using a PSK cipher suite.
- -psk val
- Use the PSK key val when using a PSK cipher suite. The key is given
as a hexadecimal number without leading 0x, for example -psk 1a2b3c4d.
This option must be provided in order to use a PSK cipher.
- -psk_session
file
- Use the pem encoded SSL_SESSION data stored in file as the basis of
a PSK. Note that this will only work if TLSv1.3 is negotiated.
- -srpvfile
- The verifier file for SRP. This option is deprecated.
- -srpuserseed
- A seed string for a default user salt. This option is deprecated.
- -listen
- This option can only be used in conjunction with one of the DTLS options
above. With this option, this command will listen on a UDP port for
incoming connections. Any ClientHellos that arrive will be checked to see
if they have a cookie in them or not. Any without a cookie will be
responded to with a HelloVerifyRequest. If a ClientHello with a cookie is
received then this command will connect to that peer and complete the
handshake.
- -sctp
- Use SCTP for the transport protocol instead of UDP in DTLS. Must be used
in conjunction with -dtls, -dtls1 or -dtls1_2. This
option is only available where OpenSSL has support for SCTP enabled.
- -sctp_label_bug
- Use the incorrect behaviour of older OpenSSL implementations when
computing endpoint-pair shared secrets for DTLS/SCTP. This allows
communication with older broken implementations but breaks
interoperability with correct implementations. Must be used in conjunction
with -sctp. This option is only available where OpenSSL has support
for SCTP enabled.
- -use_srtp
- Offer SRTP key management with a colon-separated profile list.
- -no_dhe
- If this option is set then no DH parameters will be loaded effectively
disabling the ephemeral DH cipher suites.
- -alpn val,
-nextprotoneg val
- These flags enable the Application-Layer Protocol Negotiation or Next
Protocol Negotiation (NPN) extension, respectively. ALPN is the IETF
standard and replaces NPN. The val list is a comma-separated list
of supported protocol names. The list should contain the most desirable
protocols first. Protocol names are printable ASCII strings, for example
"http/1.1" or "spdy/3". The flag -nextprotoneg
cannot be specified if -tls1_3 is used.
- -sendfile
- If this option is set and KTLS is enabled, SSL_sendfile() will be
used instead of BIO_write() to send the HTTP response requested by
a client. This option is only valid if -WWW or -HTTP is
specified.
- -keylogfile
outfile
- Appends TLS secrets to the specified keylog file such that external
programs (like Wireshark) can decrypt TLS connections.
- -max_early_data
int
- Change the default maximum early data bytes that are specified for new
sessions and any incoming early data (when used in conjunction with the
-early_data flag). The default value is approximately 16k. The
argument must be an integer greater than or equal to 0.
- -recv_max_early_data
int
- Specify the hard limit on the maximum number of early data bytes that will
be accepted.
- -early_data
- Accept early data where possible. Cannot be used in conjunction with
-www, -WWW, -HTTP or -rev.
- -stateless
- Require TLSv1.3 cookies.
- -anti_replay,
-no_anti_replay
- Switches replay protection on or off, respectively. Replay protection is
on by default unless overridden by a configuration file. When it is on,
OpenSSL will automatically detect if a session ticket has been used more
than once, TLSv1.3 has been negotiated, and early data is enabled on the
server. A full handshake is forced if a session ticket is used a second or
subsequent time. Any early data that was sent will be rejected.
- -nameopt
option
- This specifies how the subject or issuer names are displayed. See
openssl-namedisplay-options(1) for details.
- -no_ssl3,
-no_tls1, -no_tls1_1, -no_tls1_2, -no_tls1_3,
-ssl3, -tls1, -tls1_1, -tls1_2,
-tls1_3
- See "TLS Version Options" in openssl(1).
- -dtls, -dtls1,
-dtls1_2
- These specify the use of DTLS instead of TLS. See "TLS Version
Options" in openssl(1).
- -bugs,
-comp, -no_comp, -no_ticket, -serverpref,
-client_renegotiation, -legacy_renegotiation,
-no_renegotiation, -no_resumption_on_reneg,
-legacy_server_connect, -no_legacy_server_connect,
-no_etm -allow_no_dhe_kex, -prioritize_chacha,
-strict, -sigalgs algs, -client_sigalgs
algs, -groups groups, -curves curves,
-named_curve curve, -cipher ciphers,
-ciphersuites 1.3ciphers, -min_protocol minprot,
-max_protocol maxprot, -record_padding padding,
-debug_broken_protocol, -no_middlebox
- See "SUPPORTED COMMAND LINE COMMANDS" in SSL_CONF_cmd(3)
for details.
- -xkey infile,
-xcert file, -xchain file, -xchain_build
file, -xcertform DER|PEM, -xkeyform
DER|PEM
- Set extended certificate verification options. See "Extended
Verification Options" in openssl-verification-options(1) for
details.
- -CAfile
file, -no-CAfile, -CApath dir,
-no-CApath, -CAstore uri, -no-CAstore
- See "Trusted Certificate Options" in
openssl-verification-options(1) for details.
- -rand files,
-writerand file
- See "Random State Options" in openssl(1) for
details.
- -engine
id
- See "Engine Options" in openssl(1). This option is
deprecated.
- -provider
name
- -provider-path
path
- -propquery
propq
- See "Provider Options" in openssl(1), provider(7),
and property(7).
- -allow_proxy_certs,
-attime, -no_check_time, -check_ss_sig,
-crl_check, -crl_check_all, -explicit_policy,
-extended_crl, -ignore_critical, -inhibit_any,
-inhibit_map, -no_alt_chains, -partial_chain,
-policy, -policy_check, -policy_print, -purpose,
-suiteB_128, -suiteB_128_only, -suiteB_192,
-trusted_first, -use_deltas, -auth_level,
-verify_depth, -verify_email, -verify_hostname,
-verify_ip, -verify_name, -x509_strict
-issuer_checks
- Set various options of certificate chain verification. See
"Verification Options" in openssl-verification-options(1)
for details.
If the server requests a client certificate, then verification
errors are displayed, for debugging, but the command will proceed unless
the -verify_return_error option is used.
If a connection request is established with an SSL client and
neither the -www nor the -WWW option has been used then
normally any data received from the client is displayed and any key presses
will be sent to the client.
Certain commands are also recognized which perform special
operations. These commands are a letter which must appear at the start of a
line. They are listed below.
- q
- End the current SSL connection but still accept new connections.
- Q
- End the current SSL connection and exit.
- r
- Renegotiate the SSL session (TLSv1.2 and below only).
- R
- Renegotiate the SSL session and request a client certificate (TLSv1.2 and
below only).
- P
- Send some plain text down the underlying TCP connection: this should cause
the client to disconnect due to a protocol violation.
- S
- Print out some session cache status information.
- k
- Send a key update message to the client (TLSv1.3 only)
- K
- Send a key update message to the client and request one back (TLSv1.3
only)
- c
- Send a certificate request to the client (TLSv1.3 only)
This command can be used to debug SSL clients. To accept
connections from a web browser the command:
openssl s_server -accept 443 -www
can be used for example.
Although specifying an empty list of CAs when requesting a client
certificate is strictly speaking a protocol violation, some SSL clients
interpret this to mean any CA is acceptable. This is useful for debugging
purposes.
The session parameters can printed out using the
openssl-sess_id(1) command.
Because this program has a lot of options and also because some of
the techniques used are rather old, the C source for this command is rather
hard to read and not a model of how things should be done. A typical SSL
server program would be much simpler.
The output of common ciphers is wrong: it just gives the list of
ciphers that OpenSSL recognizes and the client supports.
There should be a way for this command to print out details of any
unknown cipher suites a client says it supports.
The -no_alt_chains option was added in OpenSSL 1.1.0.
The -allow-no-dhe-kex and -prioritize_chacha options were added in
OpenSSL 1.1.1.
The -srpvfile, -srpuserseed, and -engine
option were deprecated in OpenSSL 3.0.
Copyright 2000-2022 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>.