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Table of Contents |
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Introduction
This document describes The article explains how to check the signature of a file signed with an X.509 certificate from the command line using OpenSSL.
The examples use EC Private Keys.
Extracting the Public Key from the X.509 Certificate
To check a signature with OpenSSL use the Public Key related to the Private Key the given file was signed with. Extract the Public Key to the pubkey.pem
file from the given certificate.pem
X.509 certificate file.
Code Block |
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openssl x509 -in certificate.pem -noout -pubkey > pubkey.pem |
How to create a Signature for a File
Signing a File with a Private Key
This step is performed by the signer of a file.
In this step the below example the test.txt
file is signed with the privkeyprivatekey.pem
Private Key file. The resulting binary signature is stored to the test.txt.sig
file.
The signer will make available the Certificate/Public Key and signature file to 3rd parties.
Code Block |
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openssl dgst -sign privkeyprivatekey.pem -keyform pem -sha256 -out test.txt.sig -binary test.txt |
How to check the Signature of a File
Extracting the Public Key from the X.509 Certificate
This step is performed by a user who wants to verify the authenticity of a file.
To check a signature with OpenSSL use the Public Key that is related to the Private Key the given file was signed with. From the given certificate.pem
X.509 certificate file extract the Public Key to the publickey.pem
file .
Code Block |
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openssl x509 -in certificate.pem -noout -pubkey > publickey.pem |
Checking the Signature by use of the Public Key
In this step the pubkeypublickey.pem
Public Key file is used to check if the test.txt.sig
signature file matches the test.txt
file.
Code Block |
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openssl dgst -verify pubkeypublickey.pem -keyform pem -sha256 -signature test.txt.sig -binary test.txt |
Possible results are include
Verified OK
- The Public Key and signature for the signed file match.
Verification Failure
- The Public Key and signature for the signed file do not match.
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