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You're reading from  Demystifying Cryptography with OpenSSL 3.0

Product typeBook
Published inOct 2022
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781800560345
Edition1st Edition
Concepts
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Author (1)
Alexei Khlebnikov
Alexei Khlebnikov
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Alexei Khlebnikov

Alexei Khlebnikov has more than 20 years of professional experience in IT, where he worked in different roles - software developer, system administrator, DevOps engineer, technical leader, architect and project manager. During those years Alexei worked with many technologies - Security, Artificial Intelligence, Web Development, Embedded, Mobile, and Robotics. Among other companies, Alexei worked in Opera Software on the famous Opera Internet browser. Alexei has always been interested in security. He was one of the maintainers of security-related Opera browser modules, responsible for cryptography, SSL/TLS and integration with OpenSSL. He was also a member of the Security Architects group, responsible for the security of the Opera browser. Now Alexei lives in Oslo, Norway, and works as a senior consultant for Bespoke AS. He is also the leader of the Architects group at his current employer.
Read more about Alexei Khlebnikov

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How to sign and verify a signature on the command line

OpenSSL provides several subcommands for signing and verifying signatures. Let’s take a look:

  • The deprecated RSA-specific openssl rsautl subcommand.
  • The openssl dgst subcommand: This is usually used for message digest calculation but can also be used to sign the produced digests. This means that it cannot be used to sign PureEdDSA because that signature algorithm does not sign digests.
  • The openssl pkeyutl subcommand: This subcommand can be used to sign with any signature algorithm supported by OpenSSL. Before OpenSSL 3.0, openssl pkeyutl did not support signing long inputs; the user had to make the message digest before signing. Since OpenSSL 3.0, openssl pkeyutl supports both “raw input,” as it is called in the documentation, and a message digest as input.

We are going to use the openssl pkeyutl subcommand for our examples. Its documentation can be found on the openssl-pkeyutl man page...

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Demystifying Cryptography with OpenSSL 3.0
Published in: Oct 2022Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781800560345

Author (1)

author image
Alexei Khlebnikov

Alexei Khlebnikov has more than 20 years of professional experience in IT, where he worked in different roles - software developer, system administrator, DevOps engineer, technical leader, architect and project manager. During those years Alexei worked with many technologies - Security, Artificial Intelligence, Web Development, Embedded, Mobile, and Robotics. Among other companies, Alexei worked in Opera Software on the famous Opera Internet browser. Alexei has always been interested in security. He was one of the maintainers of security-related Opera browser modules, responsible for cryptography, SSL/TLS and integration with OpenSSL. He was also a member of the Security Architects group, responsible for the security of the Opera browser. Now Alexei lives in Oslo, Norway, and works as a senior consultant for Bespoke AS. He is also the leader of the Architects group at his current employer.
Read more about Alexei Khlebnikov