mod_ssl
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Introduction
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Compatibility
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``Try to understand everything,
but believe nothing!''
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Unknown
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his chapter provides a reference to all configuration directives and
additional user visible features mod_ssl provides. It's intended as the
official resource when you want to know how a particilar mod_ssl functionality
is actually configured or activated. Each directive is documented similar to
the way standard Apache directives are documented in the official Apache
documentation set, i.e. for each directive especially the syntax, default and
context where applicable is given.
Notice that there are three major classes of directives which are used by
mod_ssl: First Global Directives (i.e. directives with context
``server config''), which can occur inside the server config files but only
outside of any sectioning commands like <VirtualHost>. Second
Per-Server Directives (i.e. those with context ``server config,
virtual host''), which can occur inside the server config files both outside
(for the main/default server) and inside <VirtualHost> sections.
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And third Per-Directory Directives (i.e. those with context ``server
config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess''), which can occur mostly
everywhere. Especially both inside the server config files and the
per-directory .htaccess files. The three classes are subsets of
each other, i.e. directives from the per-directory class can also be used in
the per-server and global context, and directives from the per-server class
can also be used the in the global context.
Additional directives and environment variables provided by mod_ssl (via
on-the-fly mapping) for backward compatiblity to other Apache SSL solutions
are documented in the Compatibility chapter.
The most visible and error-prone things of mod_ssl are the configuration
directives it provides. So we document them in great detail here to assist you
in setting up the best possible configuration of your SSL-aware webserver.
When Apache starts up it has to read the various Certificate (see SSLCertificateFile) and Private Key (see SSLCertificateKeyFile) files of the
SSL-enabled virtual servers. Because for security reasons the Private Key
files are usually encrypted, mod_ssl needs to query the administrator for a
Pass Phrase in order to decrypt those files. This query can be done in two ways
which can be configured by type:
builtin
This is the default where an interactive terminal dialog occurs at startup
time just before Apache detaches from the terminal. Here the administrator
has to manually enter the Pass Phrase for each encrypted Private Key file.
Because a lot of SSL-enabled virtual hosts can be configured, the
following reuse-scheme is used to minimize the dialog: When a Private Key
file is encrypted, all known Pass Phrases (at the beginning there are
none, of course) are tried. If one of those known Pass Phrases succeeds no
dialog pops up for this particular Private Key file. If none succeeded,
another Pass Phrase is queried on the terminal and remembered for the next
round (where it perhaps can be reused).
This scheme allows mod_ssl to be maximally flexible (because for N encrypted
Private Key files you can use N different Pass Phrases - but then
you have to enter all of them, of course) while minimizing the terminal
dialog (i.e. when you use a single Pass Phrase for all N Private Key files
this Pass Phrase is queried only once).
exec:/path/to/program
Here an external program is configured which is called at startup for each
encrypted Private Key file. It is called with an argument of
``servername:portnumber '' for which it has to print the
corresponding Pass Phrase to stdout . The intent is that this
external program first runs security checks to make sure that the system
is not compromised by an attacker, and only when these checks were passed
successfully it provides the Pass Phrase.
Both these security checks and the way the Pass Phrase is determined can
be as complex as one could think about it. mod_ssl just defines the
interface: an executable program which provides the Pass Phrase on
stdout . Nothing more or less! So, when you're really
paranoid about security, here is your interface. Anything else has to be
left as an exercise to the administrator because local security
requirements are too different.
The reuse-algorithm above is used here, too. In other words: The external
program is called only once per unique Pass Phrase.
Example:
SSLPassPhraseDialog exec:/usr/local/apache/sbin/pp-filter
This configures the SSL engine's semaphore (aka. lock) which is used for mutual
exclusion of operations which have to be done in a synchronized way between the
pre-forked Apache server processes. This directive can only be used in the
global server context because it's only useful to have one global mutex.
The following Mutex types are available:
none
This is the default where no Mutex is used at all. Use it at your own
risk. But because currently the Mutex is mainly used for synchronizing
write access to the SSL Session Cache you can live without it as long
as you accept a sometimes garbled Session Cache. So it's not recommended
to leave this the default. Instead configure a real Mutex.
file:/path/to/mutex
This is the portable and always provided Mutex variant where a physical
(lock-)file is used as the Mutex. Always use a local disk filesystem for
/path/to/mutex and never a file residing on a NFS- or
AFS-filesystem. Notice: Internally the Process ID (PID) of the Apache
parent process is automatically appended to /path/to/mutex to
make it unique, so you don't have to care about conflicts yourself.
sem
This is the most elegant but also most non-portable Mutex variant where a
SysV IPC Semaphore (under Unix) and a Windows Mutex (under Win32) is used
when possible. It is only available when the underlaying platform
supports it.
Example:
SSLMutex file:/usr/local/apache/logs/ssl_mutex
This configures one or more sources for seeding the Pseudo Random Number
Generator (PRNG) in OpenSSL at startup time (context is
startup ) and/or just before a new SSL connection is established
(context is connect ). This directive can only be used
in the global server context because the PRNG is a global facility.
The following source variants are available:
builtin
This is the always available builtin seeding source. It's usage
consumes minimum CPU cycles under runtime and hence can be always used
without drawbacks. The source used for seeding the PRNG contains of the
current time, the current process id and (when applicable) a randomly
choosen 1KB extract of the inter-process scoreboard structure of Apache.
The drawback is that this is not really a strong source and at startup
time (where the scoreboard is still not available) this source just
produces a few bytes of entropy. So you should always, at least for the
startup, use an additional seeding source.
file:/path/to/source
This variant uses an external file /path/to/source as the
source for seeding the PRNG. When bytes is specified only the
first bytes number of bytes of the file form the entropy. When
bytes is not specified the whole file forms the entropy. Use this
especially at startup time, for instance with an available
/dev/random and/or /dev/urandom devices (which
usually exist on modern Unix derivates like FreeBSD and Linux).
But be careful: Usually /dev/random provides only as
much entropy data as it actually has, i.e. when you request 512 bytes of
entropy, but the device currently has only 100 bytes available two things
can happen: On some platforms you receive only the 100 bytes while on
other platforms the read blocks until enough bytes are available (which
can take a long time). Here using an existing /dev/urandom is
better, because it never blocks and actually gives the amount of requested
data. The drawback is just that the quality of the received data may not
be the best.
On some platforms like FreeBSD one can even control how the entropy is
actually generated, i.e. by which system interrupts. More details one can
find under rndcontrol(8) on those platforms. Alternatively, when
your system lacks such a random device, you can use tool like EGD (Entropy Gathering
Daemon) and run it's client program with the
exec:/path/to/program/ variant (see below).
exec:/path/to/program
This variant uses an external executable /path/to/program as
the source for seeding the PRNG. When bytes is specified only the
first bytes number of bytes of it's stdout contents
form the entropy. When bytes is not specified the whole data
produced on stdout form the entropy. Use this only at startup
time when you need a very strong seeding with the help of an external
program (for instance as in the example above with the
truerand utility you can find in the mod_ssl distribution
which is based on the AT&T truerand library). Using this at
the connection context slows down the server too dramatically, of course.
So usually you should avoid using external programs at this context.
Example:
SSLRandomSeed startup builtin
SSLRandomSeed startup file:/dev/random
SSLRandomSeed startup file:/dev/urandom 1024
SSLRandomSeed startup exec:/usr/local/bin/truerand 16
SSLRandomSeed connect builtin
SSLRandomSeed connect file:/dev/random
SSLRandomSeed connect file:/dev/urandom 1024
This configures the storage type of the global/inter-process SSL Session
Cache. This cache is an optional facility which speeds up parallel request
processing. Because for requests to the same server process (via HTTP
keep-alive) OpenSSL already caches the SSL session information locally. But
because modern clients request inlined images and other data via parallel
requests (usually up to four parallel requests are common) those requests are
served by different pre-forked server processes. Here an
inter-process cache helps to avoid unneccessary session handshakes.
The following two storage types are currently supported:
none
This is the default and just disables the global/inter-process Session
Cache. There is no drawback in functionality, but a noticeable speed
penalty can be observed.
dbm:/path/to/datafile
This makes use of a DBM hashfile on the local disk to synchronize the
local OpenSSL memory caches of the server processes. The little more amount
of I/O on the server results in a visible request speedup for your
clients. So it's recommended to use this storage.
shm:/path/to/datafile [( size) ]
This makes use of a high-performance hash table (approx. size bytes
in size) inside a shared memory segment in RAM (established via
/path/to/datafile ) to synchronize the local OpenSSL memory
caches of the server processes. This storage type is not available on all
platforms. See the mod_ssl INSTALL document for details on
how to build Apache+EAPI with shared memory support.
Examples:
SSLSessionCache dbm:/usr/local/apache/logs/ssl_gcache_data
SSLSessionCache shm:/usr/local/apache/logs/ssl_gcache_data(512000)
Name: | SSLSessionCacheTimeout |
Description: | Number of seconds before an SSL session expires in the Session Cache |
Syntax: | SSLSessionCacheTimeout seconds |
Default: | SSLSessionCacheTimeout 300 |
Context: | server config, virtual host |
Override: | Not applicable |
Status: | Extension |
Module: | mod_ssl |
Compatibility: | mod_ssl 2.0 |
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This directive sets the timeout in seconds for the information stored in the
global/inter-process SSL Session Cache and the OpenSSL internal memory cache.
It can be set as low as 15 for testing, but should be set to higher
values like 300 in real life.
Example:
SSLSessionCacheTimeout 600
This directive toggles the usage of the SSL/TLS Protocol Engine. This is
usually used inside a <VirtualHost> section to enable SSL/TLS for a
particular virtual host. Per default the SSL/TLS Protocol Engine is disabled
for both the main server and all configured virtual hosts.
Example:
<VirtualHost _default_:443>
SSLEngine on
...
</VirtualHost>
This directive can be used to control the SSL protocol flavors mod_ssl should
use when establishing it's server environment. Clients then can only connect
with one of the provided protocols.
The available (case-insensitive) protocols are:
SSLv2
This is the Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) protocol, version 2.0. It is the
original SSL protocol as designed by Netscape Corporation.
SSLv3
This is the Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) protocol, version 3.0. It is the
successor to SSLv2 and the currently (as of February 1999) de-facto
standardized SSL protocol from Netscape Corporation. It's supported by
mostly all popular browsers.
TLSv1
This is the Transport Layer Security (TLS) protocol, version 1.0. It is the
successor to SSLv3 and currently (as of February 1999) still under
construction by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). It's still
not supported by any popular browsers.
All
This is a shortcut for ``+SSLv2 +SSLv3 +TLSv1 '' and a
convinient way for enabling all protocols except one when used in
combination with the minus sign on a protocol as the example above shows.
Example:
# enable SSLv3 and TLSv1, but not SSLv2
SSLProtocol all -SSLv2
Name: | SSLCipherSuite |
Description: | Cipher Suite available for negotiation in SSL handshake |
Syntax: | SSLCipherSuite cipher-spec |
Default: | SSLCipherSuite ALL:!ADH:RC4+RSA:+HIGH:+MEDIUM:+LOW:+SSLv2:+EXP |
Context: | server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess |
Override: | AuthConfig |
Status: | Extension |
Module: | mod_ssl |
Compatibility: | mod_ssl 2.1 |
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This complex directive uses a colon-separated cipher-spec string
consisting of OpenSSL cipher specifications to configure the Cipher Suite the
client is permitted to negotiate in the SSL handshake phase. Notice that this
directive can be used both in per-server and per-directory context. In
per-server context it applies to the standard SSL handshake when a connection
is established. In per-directory context it forces a SSL renegotation with the
reconfigured Cipher Suite after the HTTP request was read but before the HTTP
response is sent.
An SSL cipher specification in cipher-spec is composed of 4 major
attributes plus a few extra minor ones:
- Key Exchange Algorithm:
RSA or Diffie-Hellman variants.
- Authentication Algorithm:
RSA, Diffie-Hellman, DSS or none.
- Cipher/Encryption Algorithm:
DES, Triple-DES, RC4, RC2, IDEA or none.
- MAC Digest Algorithm:
MD5, SHA or SHA1.
An SSL cipher can also be an export cipher and is either a SSLv2 or SSLv3/TLSv1
cipher (here TLSv1 is equivalent to SSLv3). To specify which ciphers to use,
one can either specify all the Ciphers, one at a time, or use aliases to
specify the preference and order for the ciphers (see Table
1).
Table 1: OpenSSL Cipher Specification Tags
Tag | Description |
Key Exchange Algorithm: |
kRSA | RSA key exchange |
kDHr | Diffie-Hellman key exchange with RSA key |
kDHd | Diffie-Hellman key exchange with DSA key |
kEDH | Ephemeral (temp.key) Diffie-Hellman key exchange (no cert) |
Authentication Algorithm: |
aNULL | No authentication |
aRSA | RSA authentication |
aDSS | DSS authentication |
aDH | Diffie-Hellman authentication |
Cipher Encoding Algorithm: |
eNULL | No encoding |
DES | DES encoding |
3DES | Triple-DES encoding |
RC4 | RC4 encoding |
RC2 | RC2 encoding |
IDEA | IDEA encoding |
MAC Digest Algorithm: |
MD5 | MD5 hash function |
SHA1 | SHA1 hash function |
SHA | SHA hash function |
Aliases: |
SSLv2 | all SSL version 2.0 ciphers |
SSLv3 | all SSL version 3.0 ciphers |
EXP | all export ciphers |
LOW | all low strength ciphers (no export, single DES) |
MEDIUM | all ciphers with 128 bit encryption |
HIGH | all ciphers using Triple-DES |
RSA | all ciphers using RSA key exchange |
DH | all ciphers using Diffie-Hellman key exchange |
EDH | all ciphers using Ephemeral Diffie-Hellman key exchange |
ADH | all ciphers using Anonymous Diffie-Hellman key exchange |
DSS | all ciphers using DSS authentication |
NULL | all ciphers using no encryption |
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Now where this becomes interesting is that these can be put together to
specify the order and ciphers you wish to use. To speed this up there are
also aliases (SSLv2, SSLv3, EXP, LOW, MEDIUM, HIGH ) for certain
groups of ciphers. These tags can be joined together with prefixes to form
the cipher-spec. Available prefixes are:
- none: add cipher to list
+ : add ciphers to list and pull them to current location in list
- : remove cipher from list (can be added later again)
! : kill cipher from list completely (can not be added later again)
A simpler way to look at all of this is to use the ``openssl ciphers
-v '' command which provides a nice way to successively create the
correct cipher-spec string. The default cipher-spec string
is ``ALL:!ADH:RC4+RSA:+HIGH:+MEDIUM:+LOW:+SSLv2:+EXP '' which
means the following: first, remove from consideration any ciphers that do not
authenticate, i.e. for SSL only the Anonymous Diffie-Hellman ciphers. Next,
use ciphers using RC4 and RSA. Next include the high, medium and then the low
security ciphers. Finally pull all SSLv2 and export ciphers to the
end of the list.
$ openssl ciphers -v 'ALL:!ADH:RC4+RSA:+HIGH:+MEDIUM:+LOW:+SSLv2:+EXP'
NULL-SHA SSLv3 Kx=RSA Au=RSA Enc=None Mac=SHA1
NULL-MD5 SSLv3 Kx=RSA Au=RSA Enc=None Mac=MD5
EDH-RSA-DES-CBC3-SHA SSLv3 Kx=DH Au=RSA Enc=3DES(168) Mac=SHA1
... ... ... ... ...
EXP-RC4-MD5 SSLv3 Kx=RSA(512) Au=RSA Enc=RC4(40) Mac=MD5 export
EXP-RC2-CBC-MD5 SSLv2 Kx=RSA(512) Au=RSA Enc=RC2(40) Mac=MD5 export
EXP-RC4-MD5 SSLv2 Kx=RSA(512) Au=RSA Enc=RC4(40) Mac=MD5 export
The complete list of particular RSA & DH ciphers for SSL is given in Table 2.
Example:
SSLCipherSuite RSA:!EXP:!NULL:+HIGH:+MEDIUM:-LOW
Table 2: Particular SSL Ciphers
Cipher-Tag | Protocol | Key Ex. | Auth. | Enc. | MAC | Type |
RSA Ciphers: |
DES-CBC3-SHA | SSLv3 | RSA | RSA | 3DES(168) | SHA1 | |
DES-CBC3-MD5 | SSLv2 | RSA | RSA | 3DES(168) | MD5 | |
IDEA-CBC-SHA | SSLv3 | RSA | RSA | IDEA(128) | SHA1 | |
RC4-SHA | SSLv3 | RSA | RSA | RC4(128) | SHA1 | |
RC4-MD5 | SSLv3 | RSA | RSA | RC4(128) | MD5 | |
IDEA-CBC-MD5 | SSLv2 | RSA | RSA | IDEA(128) | MD5 | |
RC2-CBC-MD5 | SSLv2 | RSA | RSA | RC2(128) | MD5 | |
RC4-MD5 | SSLv2 | RSA | RSA | RC4(128) | MD5 | |
DES-CBC-SHA | SSLv3 | RSA | RSA | DES(56) | SHA1 | |
RC4-64-MD5 | SSLv2 | RSA | RSA | RC4(64) | MD5 | |
DES-CBC-MD5 | SSLv2 | RSA | RSA | DES(56) | MD5 | |
EXP-DES-CBC-SHA | SSLv3 | RSA(512) | RSA | DES(40) | SHA1 | export |
EXP-RC2-CBC-MD5 | SSLv3 | RSA(512) | RSA | RC2(40) | MD5 | export |
EXP-RC4-MD5 | SSLv3 | RSA(512) | RSA | RC4(40) | MD5 | export |
EXP-RC2-CBC-MD5 | SSLv2 | RSA(512) | RSA | RC2(40) | MD5 | export |
EXP-RC4-MD5 | SSLv2 | RSA(512) | RSA | RC4(40) | MD5 | export |
NULL-SHA | SSLv3 | RSA | RSA | None | SHA1 | |
NULL-MD5 | SSLv3 | RSA | RSA | None | MD5 | |
Diffie-Hellman Ciphers: |
ADH-DES-CBC3-SHA | SSLv3 | DH | None | 3DES(168) | SHA1 | |
ADH-DES-CBC-SHA | SSLv3 | DH | None | DES(56) | SHA1 | |
ADH-RC4-MD5 | SSLv3 | DH | None | RC4(128) | MD5 | |
EDH-RSA-DES-CBC3-SHA | SSLv3 | DH | RSA | 3DES(168) | SHA1 | |
EDH-DSS-DES-CBC3-SHA | SSLv3 | DH | DSS | 3DES(168) | SHA1 | |
EDH-RSA-DES-CBC-SHA | SSLv3 | DH | RSA | DES(56) | SHA1 | |
EDH-DSS-DES-CBC-SHA | SSLv3 | DH | DSS | DES(56) | SHA1 | |
EXP-EDH-RSA-DES-CBC-SHA | SSLv3 | DH(512) | RSA | DES(40) | SHA1 | export |
EXP-EDH-DSS-DES-CBC-SHA | SSLv3 | DH(512) | DSS | DES(40) | SHA1 | export |
EXP-ADH-DES-CBC-SHA | SSLv3 | DH(512) | None | DES(40) | SHA1 | export |
EXP-ADH-RC4-MD5 | SSLv3 | DH(512) | None | RC4(40) | MD5 | export |
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This directive points to the PEM-encoded Certificate file for the server and
optionally also to the corresponding RSA or DSA Private Key file for it
(contained in the same file). If the contained Private Key is encrypted the
Pass Phrase dialog is forced at startup time. This directive can be used up to
two times (referencing different filenames) when both a RSA and a DSA based
server certificate is used in parallel.
Example:
SSLCertificateFile /usr/local/apache/conf/ssl.crt/server.crt
This directive points to the PEM-encoded Private Key file for the server. If
the Private Key is not combined with the Certificate in the
SSLCertificateFile , use this additional directive to point to the
file with the stand-alone Private Key. When SSLCertificateFile
is used and the file contains both the Certificate and the Private Key this
directive need not be used. But we strongly dissuade from this practice.
Instead it is recommended to separate the Certificate and the Private Key. If
the contained Private Key is encrypted, the Pass Phrase dialog is forced at
startup time. This directive can be used up to two times (referencing
different filenames) when both a RSA and a DSA based private key is used in
parallel.
Example:
SSLCertificateKeyFile /usr/local/apache/conf/ssl.key/server.key
This directive sets the directory where you keep the Certificates of
Certification Authorities (CAs) whose clients you deal with. These are used to
verify the client certificate on Client Authentication.
The files in this directory have to be PEM-encoded and are accessed through
hash filenames. So usually you have not only to place the Certificate files
there. Additionally you have to create symbolic links named
hash-value.N. And you should always make sure this directory
contains the appropriate symbolic links. Use the Makefile which
comes with mod_ssl to accomplish this task.
Example:
SSLCACertificatePath /usr/local/apache/conf/ssl.crt/
This directive sets the all-in-one file where you can assemble the
Certificates of Certification Authorities (CA) whose clients you deal
with. These are used for Client Authentication. Such a file is simply the
concatenation of the various PEM-encoded Certificate files, in order of
preference. This can be used alternatively and/or additionally to SSLCACertificatePath.
Example:
SSLCACertificateFile /usr/local/apache/conf/ssl.crt/ca-bundle-client.crt
This directive sets the directory where you keep the Certificate Revocation
Lists (CRL) of Certification Authorities (CAs) whose clients you deal with.
These are used to revoke the client certificate on Client Authentication.
The files in this directory have to be PEM-encoded and are accessed through
hash filenames. So usually you have not only to place the CRL files there.
Additionally you have to create symbolic links named
hash-value.rN. And you should always make sure this directory
contains the appropriate symbolic links. Use the Makefile which
comes with mod_ssl to accomplish this task.
Example:
SSLCARevocationPath /usr/local/apache/conf/ssl.crl/
This directive sets the all-in-one file where you can assemble the
Certificate Revocation Lists (CRL) of Certification Authorities (CA) whose
clients you deal with. These are used for Client Authentication.
Such a file is simply the concatenation of the various PEM-encoded CRL
files, in order of preference. This can be used alternatively and/or
additionally to SSLCARevocationPath.
Example:
SSLCARevocationFile /usr/local/apache/conf/ssl.crl/ca-bundle-client.crl
This directive sets the Certificate verification level for the Client
Authentication. Notice that this directive can be used both in per-server and
per-directory context. In per-server context it applies to the client
authentication process used in the standard SSL handshake when a connection is
established. In per-directory context it forces a SSL renegotation with the
reconfigured client verification level after the HTTP request was read but
before the HTTP response is sent.
The following levels are available for level:
- none:
no client Certificate is required at all
- optional:
the client may present a valid Certificate
- require:
the client has to present a valid Certificate
- optional_no_ca:
the client may present a valid Certificate
but has not to be (successfully) verifyable.
In practice only levels none and require are
really interesting. Because level optional doesn't work with
all browsers and level optional_no_ca is actually against the
idea of authentication (but can be used to establish SSL test pages, etc.)
Example:
SSLVerifyClient require
This directive sets how deeply mod_ssl should verify before deciding that the
clients don't have a valid certificate. Notice that this directive can be
used both in per-server and per-directory context. In per-server context it
applies to the client authentication process used in the standard SSL
handshake when a connection is established. In per-directory context it forces
a SSL renegotation with the reconfigured client verification depth after the
HTTP request was read but before the HTTP response is sent.
The depth actually is the maximum number of intermediate certificate issuers,
i.e. the number of CA certificates which are max allowed to be followed while
verifying the client certificate. A depth of 0 means that self-signed client
certificates are accepted only, the default depth of 1 means the client
certificate can be self-signed or has to be signed by a CA which is directly
known to the server (i.e. the CA's certificate is under
SSLCACertificatePath ), etc.
Example:
SSLVerifyDepth 10
This directive sets the name of the dedicated SSL protocol engine logfile.
Error type messages are additionally duplicated to the general Apache error
log file (directive ErrorLog ). Put this somewhere where it cannot
be used for symlink attacks on a real server (i.e. somewhere where only root
can write). If the filename does not begin with a slash
('/ ') then it is assumed to be relative to the Server
Root. If filename begins with a bar ('| ') then the
following string is assumed to be a path to an executable program to which a
reliable pipe can be established. The directive should occur only once per
virtual server config.
Example:
SSLLog /usr/local/apache/logs/ssl_engine_log
This directive sets the verbosity degree of the dedicated SSL protocol engine
logfile. The level is one of the following (in ascending order where
higher levels include lower levels):
none
no dedicated SSL logging is done, but messages of level
``error '' are still written to the general Apache error
logfile.
error
log messages of error type only, i.e. messages which show fatal situations
(processing is stopped). Those messages are also duplicated to the
general Apache error logfile.
warn
log also warning messages, i.e. messages which show non-fatal problems
(processing is continued).
info
log also informational messages, i.e. messages which show major
processing steps.
trace
log also trace messages, i.e. messages which show minor processing steps.
debug
log also debugging messages, i.e. messages which show development and
low-level I/O information.
Example:
SSLLogLevel warn
This directive can be used to control various run-time options on a
per-directory basis. Normally, if multiple SSLOptions could
apply to a directory, then the most specific one is taken completely; the
options are not merged. However if all the options on the
SSLOptions directive are preceded by a plus (+ ) or
minus (- ) symbol, the options are merged. Any options preceded by
a + are added to the options currently in force, and any options
preceded by a - are removed from the options currently in force.
The available options are:
CompatEnvVars
When this option is enabled, additional CGI/SSI environment variables are
created for backward compatibility to other Apache SSL solutions. Look in
the Compatibility chapter for details on the
actually generated variables.
ExportCertData
When this option is enabled, two additional CGI/SSI environment variables
are created: SSL_CLIENT_CERT and
SSL_SERVER_CERT . These contain the PEM-encoded X.509
Certificates of client and server for the current HTTPS connection and can
be used by CGI scripts for deeper Certificate checking. This bloats up
the environment a little bit which is why you have to use this option to
enable it on demand.
FakeBasicAuth
When this option is enabled, the Subject Distinguished Name (DN) of the
Client X509 Certificate is translated into a HTTP Basic Authorization
username. This means that the standard Apache authentication methods can
be used for access control. The user name is just the Subject of the
Client's X509 Certificate (can be determined by running OpenSSL's
openssl x509 command: openssl x509 -noout -subject -in
certificate.crt ). Note that no password is
obtained from the user. Every entry in the user file needs this password:
``xxj31ZMTZzkVA '', which is the encrypted version of the word
``password ''.
StrictRequire
This forces forbidden access when SSLRequireSSL or
SSLRequire successfully decided that access should be
forbidden. Usually the default is that at least a used ``Satisfy
any '' can cancel such access denies (when other access restrictions
were passed), because that's how the Apache Satisfy mechanism should work.
But for strict access restriction you can use SSLRequireSSL
and/or SSLRequire in combination with an ``SSLOptions
+StrictRequire ''. Then an additional ``Satisfy Any ''
has no chance once mod_ssl has decided to deny access.
OptRenegotiate
This enables optimized SSL connection renegotiation handling when SSL
directives are used in per-directory context. Per default a strict
handling is enabled where every per-directory reconfiguration of
SSL parameters cause a full SSL renegotiation handshake. When this
option is used mod_ssl tries to avoid unnecessary handshakes by doing more
granular (but still safe) parameter checks. Nevertheless these granular
checks sometimes maybe not what the user expects, so enable this on a
per-directory basis only, please.
Example:
SSLOptions +FakeBasicAuth -CompatEnvVars
This directive forbids access unless HTTP over SSL (i.e. HTTPS) is enabled for
the current connection. This is very handy inside the SSL-enabled virtual
host or directories for defending against configuration errors that expose
stuff that should be protected. When this directive is present all requests
are denied which are not using SSL.
Example:
SSLRequireSSL
This directive specifies a general access requirement which has to be
fulfilled in order to allow access. It's a very powerful directive because the
requirement specification is an arbitrarily complex boolean expression
containing any number of access checks.
The expression must match the following syntax (given as a BNF
grammar notation):
expr ::= "true" | "false"
| "!" expr
| expr "&&" expr
| expr "||" expr
| "(" expr ")"
| comp
comp ::= word "==" word | word "eq" word
| word "!=" word | word "ne" word
| word "<" word | word "lt" word
| word "<=" word | word "le" word
| word ">" word | word "gt" word
| word ">=" word | word "ge" word
| word "in" "{" wordlist "}"
| word "=~" regex
| word "!~" regex
wordlist ::= word
| wordlist "," word
word ::= digit
| cstring
| variable
| function
digit ::= [0-9]+
cstring ::= "..."
variable ::= "%{" varname "}"
function ::= funcname "(" funcargs ")"
while for varname any variable from Table 3
can be used. Finally for funcname the following functions
are available:
Notice that expression is first parsed into an internal machine
representation and then evaluated in a second step. Actually in Global and
Per-Server Class context expression is parsed at startup time and
at runtime the machine representation is executed only. For Per-Directory
context this is different: Here expression has to be parsed and
immediately executed for every request.
Example:
SSLRequire ( %{SSL_CIPHER} !~ m/^(EXP|NULL)-/ \
and %{SSL_CLIENT_S_DN_O} eq "Snake Oil, Ltd." \
and %{SSL_CLIENT_S_DN_OU} in {"Staff", "CA", "Dev"} \
and %{TIME_WDAY} >= 1 and %{TIME_WDAY} <= 5 \
and %{TIME_HOUR} >= 8 and %{TIME_HOUR} <= 20 ) \
or %{REMOTE_ADDR} =~ m/^192\.76\.162\.[0-9]+$/
Table 3: Available Variables for SSLRequire
Standard CGI/1.0 and Apache variables:
HTTP_USER_AGENT PATH_INFO AUTH_TYPE
HTTP_REFERER QUERY_STRING SERVER_SOFTWARE
HTTP_COOKIE REMOTE_HOST API_VERSION
HTTP_FORWARDED REMOTE_IDENT TIME_YEAR
HTTP_HOST IS_SUBREQ TIME_MON
HTTP_PROXY_CONNECTION DOCUMENT_ROOT TIME_DAY
HTTP_ACCEPT SERVER_ADMIN TIME_HOUR
HTTP:headername SERVER_NAME TIME_MIN
THE_REQUEST SERVER_PORT TIME_SEC
REQUEST_METHOD SERVER_PROTOCOL TIME_WDAY
REQUEST_SCHEME REMOTE_ADDR TIME
REQUEST_URI REMOTE_USER ENV:variablename
REQUEST_FILENAME
SSL-related variables:
HTTPS SSL_CLIENT_M_VERSION SSL_SERVER_M_VERSION
SSL_CLIENT_M_SERIAL SSL_SERVER_M_SERIAL
SSL_PROTOCOL SSL_CLIENT_V_START SSL_SERVER_V_START
SSL_SESSION_ID SSL_CLIENT_V_END SSL_SERVER_V_END
SSL_CIPHER SSL_CLIENT_S_DN SSL_SERVER_S_DN
SSL_CIPHER_ALGKEYSIZE SSL_CLIENT_S_DN_C SSL_SERVER_S_DN_C
SSL_CIPHER_USEKEYSIZE SSL_CLIENT_S_DN_SP SSL_SERVER_S_DN_SP
SSL_VERSION_LIBRARY SSL_CLIENT_S_DN_L SSL_SERVER_S_DN_L
SSL_VERSION_INTERFACE SSL_CLIENT_S_DN_O SSL_SERVER_S_DN_O
SSL_CLIENT_S_DN_OU SSL_SERVER_S_DN_OU
SSL_CLIENT_S_DN_CN SSL_SERVER_S_DN_CN
SSL_CLIENT_S_DN_Email SSL_SERVER_S_DN_Email
SSL_CLIENT_I_DN SSL_SERVER_I_DN
SSL_CLIENT_I_DN_C SSL_SERVER_I_DN_C
SSL_CLIENT_I_DN_SP SSL_SERVER_I_DN_SP
SSL_CLIENT_I_DN_L SSL_SERVER_I_DN_L
SSL_CLIENT_I_DN_O SSL_SERVER_I_DN_O
SSL_CLIENT_I_DN_OU SSL_SERVER_I_DN_OU
SSL_CLIENT_I_DN_CN SSL_SERVER_I_DN_CN
SSL_CLIENT_I_DN_Email SSL_SERVER_I_DN_Email
SSL_CLIENT_A_SIG SSL_SERVER_A_SIG
SSL_CLIENT_A_KEY SSL_SERVER_A_KEY
SSL_CLIENT_CERT SSL_SERVER_CERT
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This module provides a lot of SSL information as additional environment
variables to the SSI and CGI namespace. The generated variables are listed in
Table 4. For backward compatibility the information can
be made available under different names, too. Look in the Compatibility chapter for details on the
compatibility variables.
Table 4: SSI/CGI Environment Variables
Variable Name: |
Value Type: |
Description: |
HTTPS | flag | HTTPS is being used. |
SSL_PROTOCOL | string | The SSL protocol version (SSLv2, SSLv3, TLSv1) |
SSL_SESSION_ID | string | The hex-encoded SSL session id |
SSL_CIPHER | string | The cipher specification name |
SSL_CIPHER_USEKEYSIZE | number | Number of cipher bits (actually used) |
SSL_CIPHER_ALGKEYSIZE | number | Number of cipher bits (possible) |
SSL_VERSION_INTERFACE | string | The mod_ssl program version |
SSL_VERSION_LIBRARY | string | The OpenSSL program version |
SSL_CLIENT_M_VERSION | string | The version of the client certificate |
SSL_CLIENT_M_SERIAL | string | The serial of the client certificate |
SSL_CLIENT_S_DN | string | Subject DN in client's certificate |
SSL_CLIENT_S_DN_ x509 | string | Component of client's Subject DN |
SSL_CLIENT_I_DN | string | Issuer DN of client's certificate |
SSL_CLIENT_I_DN_ x509 | string | Component of client's Issuer DN |
SSL_CLIENT_V_START | string | Validity of client's certificate (start time) |
SSL_CLIENT_V_END | string | Validity of client's certificate (end time) |
SSL_CLIENT_A_SIG | string | Algorithm used for the signature of client's certificate |
SSL_CLIENT_A_KEY | string | Algorithm used for the public key of client's certificate |
SSL_SERVER_M_VERSION | string | The version of the server certificate |
SSL_SERVER_M_SERIAL | string | The serial of the server certificate |
SSL_SERVER_S_DN | string | Subject DN in server's certificate |
SSL_SERVER_S_DN_ x509 | string | Component of server's Subject DN |
SSL_SERVER_I_DN | string | Issuer DN of server's certificate |
SSL_SERVER_I_DN_ x509 | string | Component of server's Issuer DN |
SSL_SERVER_V_START | string | Validity of server's certificate (start time) |
SSL_SERVER_V_END | string | Validity of server's certificate (end time) |
SSL_SERVER_A_SIG | string | Algorithm used for the signature of server's certificate |
SSL_SERVER_A_KEY | string | Algorithm used for the public key of server's certificate |
[ where x509 is a component of a X.509 DN: C, SP, L, O, OU, CN, Email ] |
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When mod_ssl is built into Apache or at least loaded (under DSO situation)
additional functions exist for the Custom Log Format of mod_log_config. First there is an additional
``%{ varname}x '' eXtension format function
which can be used to expand any variables provided by any module, especially
those provided by mod_ssl which can you find in Table 4.
For backward compatibility there is additionally a special
``%{ name}c '' cryptography format function
provided. Information about this function is provided in the Compatibility chapter.
Example:
CustomLog logs/ssl_request_log \
"%t %h %{SSL_PROTOCOL}x %{SSL_CIPHER}x \"%r\" %b"
Introduction
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Compatibility
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