openssl/doc/apps/rehash.pod
Timo Teras 8f6f1441a3 Add rehash command to openssl
On Unix/Linux platforms, merge c_rehash script into openssl as a
C program.

Signed-off-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@akamai.com>
Reviewed-by: Tim Hudson <tjh@openssl.org>
2015-09-06 18:03:54 -04:00

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=pod
=for comment
Original text by James Westby, contributed under the OpenSSL license.
=head1 NAME
c_rehash, rehash - Create symbolic links to files named by the hash values
=head1 SYNOPSIS
B<openssl>
B<rehash>
B<[-old]>
B<[-h]>
B<[-n]>
B<[-v]>
[ I<directory>...]
B<c_rehash>
I<flags...>
=head1 DESCRIPTION
On some platforms, the OpenSSL B<rehash> command is available as
an external script called B<c_rehash>. They are functionally equivalent.
B<rehash> scans directories and calculates a hash value of each
C<.pem>, C<.crt>, C<.cer>, or C<.crl>
file in the specified directory list and creates symbolic links
for each file, where the name of the link is the hash value.
(If the platform does not support symbolic links, a copy is made.)
This utility is useful as many programs that use OpenSSL require
directories to be set up like this in order to find certificates.
If any directories are named on the command line, then those are
processed in turn. If not, then the B<SSL_CERT_DIR> environment variable
is consulted; this should be a colon-separated list of directories,
like the Unix B<PATH> variable.
If that is not set then the default directory (installation-specific
but often B</usr/local/ssl/certs>) is processed.
In order for a directory to be processed, the user must have write
permissions on that directory, otherwise it will be skipped.
The links created are of the form C<HHHHHHHH.D>, where each B<H>
is a hexadecimal character and B<D> is a single decimal digit.
When processing a directory, B<rehash> will first remove all links
that have a name in that syntax. If you have links in that format
used for other purposes, they will be removed.
To skip the removal step, use the B<-n> flag.
Hashes for CRL's look similar except the letter B<r> appears after
the period, like this: C<HHHHHHHH.rD>.
Multiple objects may have the same hash; they will be indicated by
incrementing the B<D> value. Duplicates are found by comparing the
full SHA-1 fingerprint. A warning will be displayed if a duplicate
is found.
A warning will also be displayed if there are files that
cannot be parsed as either a certificate or a CRL.
The program uses the B<openssl> program to compute the hashes and
fingerprints. If not found in the user's B<PATH>, then set the
B<OPENSSL> environment variable to the full pathname.
Any program can be used, it will be invoked as follows for either
a certificate or CRL:
$OPENSSL x509 -hash -fingerprint -noout -in FILENAME
$OPENSSL crl -hash -fingerprint -noout -in FILENAME
where B<FILENAME> is the filename. It must output the hash of the
file on the first line, and the fingerprint on the second,
optionally prefixed with some text and an equals sign.
=head1 OPTIONS
=over 4
=item B<-old>
Use old-style hashing (MD5, as opposed to SHA-1) for generating
links for releases before 1.0.0. Note that current versions will
not use the old style.
=item B<-h>
Display a brief usage message.
=item B<-n>
Do not remove existing links.
This is needed when keeping new and old-style links in the same directory.
=item B<-v>
Print messages about old links removed and new links created.
By default, B<rehash> only lists each directory as it is processed.
=back
=head1 ENVIRONMENT
=over
=item B<OPENSSL>
The path to an executable to use to generate hashes and
fingerprints (see above).
=item B<SSL_CERT_DIR>
Colon separated list of directories to operate on.
Ignored if directories are listed on the command line.
=back
=head1 SEE ALSO
L<openssl(1)>,
L<crl(1)>.
L<x509(1)>.