From 77579510aa40aa769ceafc7a0c856381800e79c2 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Matt Caswell Date: Thu, 29 Mar 2018 21:02:20 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] Update the genpkey documentation Fixes #5739 Reviewed-by: Rich Salz (Merged from https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/5800) --- doc/man1/genpkey.pod | 171 +++++++++++++++++++++++-------------------- 1 file changed, 90 insertions(+), 81 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/man1/genpkey.pod b/doc/man1/genpkey.pod index de94a6bd6f..cdf21733ea 100644 --- a/doc/man1/genpkey.pod +++ b/doc/man1/genpkey.pod @@ -63,13 +63,27 @@ options. Public key algorithm to use such as RSA, DSA or DH. If used this option must precede any B<-pkeyopt> options. The options B<-paramfile> and B<-algorithm> -are mutually exclusive. +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 B<-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 B option to indicate whether PKCS#3 +or X9.42 DH parameters are required. See L +below for more details. =item B<-pkeyopt opt:value> Set the public key algorithm option B to B. The precise set of options supported depends on the public key algorithm used and its -implementation. See B below for more details. +implementation. See L and +L below for more details. =item B<-genparam> @@ -95,9 +109,10 @@ 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. +below. There are no key generation options defined for the X25519, X448, ED25519 +or ED448 algorithms. -=head1 RSA KEY GENERATION OPTIONS +=head2 RSA Key Generation Options =over 4 @@ -116,32 +131,13 @@ hexadecimal value if preceded by B<0x>. Default value is 65537. =back -=head1 RSA-PSS KEY GENERATION OPTIONS +=head2 RSA-PSS Key Generation Options Note: by default an B key has no parameter restrictions. =over 4 -=item B, B - -These options have the same meaning as the B algorithm. - -=item B - -=item B - -The RSA public exponent value. This can be a large decimal or -hexadecimal value if preceded by B<0x>. Default value is 65537. - -=back - -=head1 RSA-PSS KEY GENERATION OPTIONS - -Note: by default an B key has no parameter restrictions. - -=over 4 - -=item B, B +=item B, B, B These options have the same meaning as the B algorithm. @@ -160,91 +156,92 @@ If set the key is restricted and B specifies the minimum salt length. =back -=head1 DSA PARAMETER GENERATION OPTIONS +=head2 EC Key Generation Options + +The EC key generation options can also be used for parameter generation. =over 4 -=item B +=item B -The number of bits in the generated parameters. If not specified 1024 is used. +The EC curve to use. OpenSSL supports NIST curve names such as "P-256". + +=item B + +The encoding to use for parameters. The "encoding" parameter must be either +"named_curve" or "explicit". The default value is "named_curve". =back -=head1 DH PARAMETER GENERATION OPTIONS +=head1 PARAMETER GENERATION OPTIONS + +The options supported by each algorithm and indeed each implementation of an +algorithm can vary. The options for the OpenSSL implementations are detailed +below. + +=head2 DSA Parameter Generation Options =over 4 -=item B +=item B -The number of bits in the prime parameter B

. +The number of bits in the generated prime. If not specified 1024 is used. -=item B +=item B -The value to use for the generator B. +The number of bits in the q parameter. Must be one of 160, 224 or 256. If not +specified 160 is used. -=item B +=item B -If this option is set then the appropriate RFC5114 parameters are used -instead of generating new parameters. The value B 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. +The digest to use during parameter generation. Must be one of B, B +or B. If set, then the number of bits in B will match the output size +of the specified digest and the B parameter will be +ignored. If not set, then a digest will be used that gives an output matching +the number of bits in B, i.e. B if q length is 160, B if it 224 +or B if it is 256. =back -=head1 EC PARAMETER GENERATION OPTIONS - -The EC parameter generation options below can also -be supplied as EC key generation options. This can (for example) generate a -key from a named curve without the need to use an explicit parameter file. +=head2 DH Parameter Generation Options =over 4 -=item B - -The EC curve to use. OpenSSL supports NIST curve names such as "P-256". - -=item B +=item B -The encoding to use for parameters. The "encoding" parameter must be either -"named_curve" or "explicit". +The number of bits in the prime parameter B

. The default is 1024. -=back +=item B -=head1 GOST2001 KEY GENERATION AND PARAMETER OPTIONS +The number of bits in the sub prime parameter B. The default is 256 if the +prime is at least 2048 bits long or 160 otherwise. Only relevant if used in +conjunction with the B option to generate X9.42 DH parameters. -Gost 2001 support is not enabled by default. To enable this algorithm, -one should load the ccgost engine in the OpenSSL configuration file. -See README.gost file in the engines/ccgost directory of the source -distribution for more details. +=item B -Use of a parameter file for the GOST R 34.10 algorithm is optional. -Parameters can be specified during key generation directly as well as -during generation of parameter file. +The value to use for the generator B. The default is 2. -=over 4 +=item B -=item B +The type of DH parameters to generate. Use 0 for PKCS#3 DH and 1 for X9.42 DH. +The default is 0. -Specifies GOST R 34.10-2001 parameter set according to RFC 4357. -Parameter set can be specified using abbreviated name, object short name or -numeric OID. Following parameter sets are supported: +=item B - paramset OID Usage - A 1.2.643.2.2.35.1 Signature - B 1.2.643.2.2.35.2 Signature - C 1.2.643.2.2.35.3 Signature - XA 1.2.643.2.2.36.0 Key exchange - XB 1.2.643.2.2.36.1 Key exchange - test 1.2.643.2.2.35.0 Test purposes +If this option is set, then the appropriate RFC5114 parameters are used +instead of generating new parameters. The value B 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. =back -=head1 X25519 and X448 KEY GENERATION OPTIONS +=head2 EC Parameter Generation Options -The X25519 and X448 algorithms do not currently support any key generation -options. +The EC parameter generation options are the same as for key generation. See +L above. =head1 NOTES @@ -267,19 +264,25 @@ 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 1024 bit DSA parameters: +Generate 2048 bit DSA parameters: openssl genpkey -genparam -algorithm DSA -out dsap.pem \ - -pkeyopt dsa_paramgen_bits:1024 + -pkeyopt dsa_paramgen_bits:2048 Generate DSA key from parameters: openssl genpkey -paramfile dsap.pem -out dsakey.pem -Generate 1024 bit DH parameters: +Generate 2048 bit DH parameters: openssl genpkey -genparam -algorithm DH -out dhp.pem \ - -pkeyopt dh_paramgen_prime_len:1024 + -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: @@ -309,10 +312,16 @@ Generate an X25519 private key: openssl genpkey -algorithm X25519 -out xkey.pem +Generate an ED448 private key: + + openssl genpkey -algorithm ED448 -out xkey.pem + =head1 HISTORY The ability to use NIST curve names, and to generate an EC key directly, -were added in OpenSSL 1.0.2. +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. =head1 COPYRIGHT -- 2.25.1