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Current Directory: /usr/share/doc/lynx/docs
Viewing File: /usr/share/doc/lynx/docs/README.sslcerts
Lynx SSL support for certificates - README.sslcerts file BACKGROUND: The original README.ssl document for lynx stated: Note that the server... may not have a valid certificate. Lynx will not complain, as it does not yet support certificates... Such lack of support is no longer the case. Lynx now features excellent certificate management through the openssl project. There is almost no online documentation available regarding how to use openssl's certificate management with other programs, so this will accompany lynx and hopefully encourage good practical security for unix clients. Lynx relies on openssl to not only encrypt connections over https, but also to determine whether it should even accept a certificate and establish a secure connection with a remote host. Because of this reliance upon openssl by lynx, most of this tutorial deals with how to use openssl to "install" both vendor-provided CA cert bundles as well as self-signed certs from trusted sources and, most importantly, how to get them recognized by lynx. While lynx on many systems will transparently accept valid certificates, not all systems enjoy such functionality. Further, as noted above, older versions of lynx do not perform any validity checks on a certificate. There is also the common case of wanting to trust, use and install a self-signed certificate from a known server source and have it be trusted by client programs. Briefly, the procedure will involve confirming the default system location for certificates, setting values for SSL_CERT_DIR and SSL_CERT_FILE in the environment, and converting and hashing the certificates using openssl utilities to enable recognition. THE CURRENT SITUATION: Prior to lynx2.8.5dev9, lynx did not check at all for certificate validity. Since lynx2.8.5.dev9, lynx has reported this openssl error: SSL error:unable to get local issuer certificate-Continue? (y) whenever an https connection was initiated and the certificate could not be found, for whatever reason, by openssl, and therefore lynx. This checking for a certificate is an enhancement to security, but rather tediously generates errors at each https browser request. The ability to turn off reporting of this error to the user was added to lynx2.8.5dev16 as the FORCE_SSL_PROMPT setting in lynx.cfg as noted in the CHANGELOG: This lets the user decide whether to ignore prompting for questionable aspects of an SSL connection. While this is a convenient setting to employ when using lynx to script https -dumps, it by definition ignores the issue of certificate validity altogether. Those concerned with proper certificate management and the maintenance of a store of updated CA certificates will be uncomfortable with this relaxed security setting. The ability to accept a 'wildcard' certificate, where the first character is a '*' was added to lynx2.8.6dev18. PRELIMINARY PROCEDURES: It is assumed that openssl has been installed correctly, that the default cert directory is /usr/local/ssl/certs, (it's often /etc/ssl/certs, but we need a point of departure for the discussion) and that lynx has been compiled --with-ssl. The default location for certs on your system may be different, or there may not be one. You will have to substitute that location for /usr/local/ssl/certs in the following instructions, and/or set environment variables. To determine the default location for certs on your system you may run the following command: strings libcrypto.a | grep -in cert | less Look in this output for SSL_CERT_DIR and SSL_CERT_FILE, and the lines just above them. This is your default location, respectively, for certificates, and the CA cert bundle, cert.pem. You will need to know where libcrypto.a is found of course. Example output: <snip> 7490:/etc/ssl/certs 7491:/etc/ssl/cert.pem 7492:SSL_CERT_DIR 7493:SSL_CERT_FILE <snip> Other possible example output: <snip> 31555:/usr/local/ssl/certs 31556:/usr/local/ssl/cert.pem 31557:SSL_CERT_DIR 31558:SSL_CERT_FILE <snip> Note that when OpenSSL is installed, the c_rehash utility is installed in a bin directory (default /usr/local/ssl/bin). You will need to know where it is on your system. The command: whereis c_rehash will probably give useful results. Note also that there is no CA cert bundle distributed with OpenSSL. The OpenSSL team specifically decided NOT to do that. Getting a set of trusted certificates is left up to the installer. It is no longer a fairly trivial procedure to pull the bundle of trusted root certs out of a recent version of Internet Explorer. Multiple certificates are no longer exportable as a DER formatted file; extraction of a single certificate is the only export for DER, and DER is what converts to PEM. Users with access to Apple OS X can export all certificates from Keychain Access System Roots as a .pem file. Place this in SSL_CERT_DIR and hash it and you're done. The MirOS BSD project also provides them. The procedure to convert and install them is detailed later in this document, and if you simply need to have commercially provided certificates trusted by lynx, you can skip down a few lines to the INSTALLING OR UPDATING THE CA BUNDLE section. Extracted Mozilla cert bundles are available for download from the curl project, http://curl.haxx.se/docs/caextract.html along with a script to extract from Mozilla source. INSTALLING A SELF-SIGNED CERTIFICATE: When you would like to trust a self-signed (non-commercial) certificate you will need to get hold of the actual file. If it's a cert local to your network you can ask the sysadmin to make it available for download as a link on a webpage. If such file is not human-readable it's probably DER formatted and will need to be converted to PEM format to allow openssl to use it. To convert DER formatted certificates into something openssl can deal with: Save the cert as site_name.crt in a directory. In that directory, type: openssl x509 -inform DER -in site_name.crt -outform PEM -out site_name.pem You can now copy this individual cert into the directory for that, usually /usr/local/ssl/certs. The alternative is to concatenate the individual certs to the cert.pem bundle in /usr/local/ssl. (Please see INSTALLING OR UPDATING THE CA BUNDLE below). The cert file will now be in an acceptable format to openssl, PEM encoded. However, openssl, and by extension lynx, will not know about it until that cert is symbolically linked to a file named after the hash value of that cert, in the default directory /usr/local/ssl/certs. So the next thing to do is to hash the cert using c_rehash. INSTALLING OR UPDATING THE CA BUNDLE: Now would be a good time to check to see if you have the bundle of CA certs /usr/local/ssl/cert.pem, or to update them. CA bundles are available in various places, such as the MirOS BSD distribution, for those who want to take that route, or you can extract the current bundle from a current version of Internet Explorer (export them all from IE and transfer it onto your system). From MirOS, a cert bundle is available at http://caunter.ca/ssl.certs.shar It includes the cacert.org certificate. Download the latest revision; read the file to see how to get the certs out. No hashing is necessary with this set of certs; it is already done; ignore the c_rehash usage below for this bundle. Simply run `sh ssl.certs.shar` in SSL_CERT_DIR. From IE 5.x certs extract as a PKCS7 file and need to be converted with something like: openssl pkcs7 -inform DER -in bundle.crt -outform PEM -out cert.pem \ -print_certs -text The resulting cert.pem file should be copied to the default directory for bundles (usually /usr/local/ssl) and renamed to "cert.pem", assuming that is the SSL_CERT_FILE. Individual certs can also process if added and hashed in /usr/local/ssl/certs. We now have all of the individual certs we wish to trust in our certs directory, and the most recent bundle of CA certs as well. Confirm that you have the script c_rehash (See PRELIMINARY PROCEDURES; if it is not found, a copy is usually located in the tools directory of the openssl source tree. If you use this copy, it needs the execute bit set or it will not run). Run: ./c_rehash The c_rehash utility is a perl script that runs openssl commands which creates the files named after the hash values of the certs in the default directory for certs. Its output looks like this: Doing /usr/local/ssl/certs vsignss.pem => f73e89fd.0 vsign3.pem => 7651b327.0 ...more output <snip> All pem encoded certs in /usr/local/ssl/certs will now be recognized. SETTING AND EXPORTING ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES: If lynx is still not recognizing certs, environment variables need to be set; if on a sh type shell, the variables also need to be exported. The environment variables SSL_CERT_DIR and SSL_CERT_FILE need to be set if a non-default location is used for certificates, or if certs just can't be found by lynx. They may be set as follows in /etc/profile, or a shell initialization .profile or .*shrc, if we run a non csh type shell, according to the results of the search for the default location for certs procedure (See PRELIMINARY PROCEDURES): SSL_CERT_DIR="/usr/local/ssl/certs" SSL_CERT_FILE="/usr/local/ssl/cert.pem" export SSL_CERT_DIR SSL_CERT_FILE On csh type shells, you can use: setenv SSL_CERT_DIR "/usr/local/ssl/certs" setenv SSL_CERT_FILE "/usr/local/ssl/cert.pem" Note that the environment variable SSL_CERT_FILE applies to the cert-bundle if used outside of the default location (/usr/local/ssl/cert.pem) compiled into OpenSSL. There are issues with SSL_CERT_FILE in 0.9.6x versions of openssl. The configuration file lynx.cfg allows a system SSL_CERT_FILE variable to be set which can simplify matters. SSL_CERT_FILE:/etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt Make sure you have FORCE_SSL_PROMPT set to PROMPT in lynx.cfg like so: FORCE_SSL_PROMPT:PROMPT You will now connect without error to https servers with trusted certs, but will still get this error for untrusted certs: SSL error:self signed certificate-Continue? (y) A quick check confirms that these procedures have the same effect with ssl errors in the pine program. 2003 updated 2009 Stefan Caunter <stefan.caunter@mohawkcollege.ca> Mohawk College Department of Computer Science Hamilton Ontario Canada