Funny Curly things
Introduction
The curl tool is sometimes very handy to query grid services. For example, you can use curl to query the status of grid jobs, and in theory you could even submit a grid job using curl.
Starting with Fedora 12, RedHat has decided to change the way curl is built by default. As Fedora 12 is the 'baseline' for RedHat Enterprise Linux 6, this also affects the curl command in RHEL6, CentOS6 and Scientific Linux 6. In the past, curl was built and linked using the OpenSSL libraries. With Fedora 12+/RHEL6+, curl is now built and linked using the NSS library. This has an impact on how you can use curl to query different grid services.
The problem does not apply to grid services only, every site that requires a client-side certificate chain, that is, the client needs to present both a certificate and an intermediary key, is affected.
This page is the result of a comparison of the different SSL libraries that curl can be built against. The following SSL libraries were tested, using curl-7.22.0, which was the latest and greatest version of curl at the time of writing:
- OpenSSL 1.0.0d
- NSS 3.12.10
- GnuTLS 2.8.6
- PolarSSL 0.14.3
CA & sub-CA setup
The CA and sub-CA and certificate setup can be depicted using ASCII art:
Nikhef CA + 127.0.0.1 (server) + subca + client
First we create a Certificate Authority (CA) using the easy-rsa scripts as found in OpenVPN. The resulting ca.pem has the following subject:
$ openssl x509 -subject -issuer -noout -in ca.pem subject= /C=NL/L=Amsterdam/O=Nikhef/OU=Curl-test/CN=Nikhef CA issuer= /C=NL/L=Amsterdam/O=Nikhef/OU=Curl-test/CN=Nikhef CA
Next we create a sub-CA and sign it using the CA from the previous step:
$ openssl x509 -subject -issuer -noout -in subca.pem subject= /C=NL/L=Amsterdam/O=Nikhef/OU=Curl-test/CN=subca issuer= /C=NL/L=Amsterdam/O=Nikhef/OU=Curl-test/CN=Nikhef CA
The server certificate for host 127.0.0.1 is signed by the CA itself:
$ openssl x509 -subject -issuer -noout -in server.pem subject= /C=NL/L=Amsterdam/O=Nikhef/OU=Curl-test/CN=127.0.0.1 issuer= /C=NL/L=Amsterdam/O=Nikhef/OU=Curl-test/CN=Nikhef CA
But the client certificate is signed by the subCA:
$ openssl x509 -subject -issuer -noout -in client-cert.pem subject= /C=NL/L=Amsterdam/O=Nikhef/OU=Curl-test/CN=client issuer= /C=NL/L=Amsterdam/O=Nikhef/OU=Curl-test/CN=subca
We also create some stacked PEM files, which are simply concatenations of the certificates listed above:
- ca+subca.pem = ca.pem + subca.pem
- client.pem = client-cert.pem + client-key.pem
- client-certchain.pem = client-cert.pem + subca.pem
And for the --capath test a directory containing the hashed certificate names is created.
A tarball containing the entire certificate setup used for this investigation is available: curl-ca.tar.gz
Notes
- the hashed certificate names are created using openssl 1.0
- the files 'client.pem' and 'server.pem' contain both the public certificate and the private key.
The idea behind this CA and sub-CA setup is that we will configure the server to trust all certificates signed by the CA only. If a client certificate is signed by the sub-CA then the client must present both its certificate and the sub-CA certificate to the server. This is more or less the reverse to what happens with most SSL-enabled websites: the browser trusts only a set of root CAs so the HTTPS webserver has to present all intermediary certificates to the browser, otherwise the browser will not trust the server.
Testing setup
All tests, except for the GSI proxy certificate tests, can be performed on any (Linux) machine using the curl-ca tarball from above.
As the number of tests is quite large, a testcurl script was created to automate testing. The script and all needed certificate files, as well as a helper script to generate RFC3820 proxies, are included in the curltest.tar.gz tarball.
The testcurl script can perform three tests:
- regular certificate test
- RFC proxy (RFC3820) certificate test. An RFC3820 proxy certificate is generated on-the-fly
- GSI proxy certificate test; for this a valid GSI proxy needs to be present on the system.
The testcurl script launches a server process based on 'openssl s_server':
$ openssl s_server -Verify 0 -CAfile ca.pem -cert server.pem -key server.pem -dhparam dh2048.pem
after which curl is called with many different combinations of command-line parameters. The testcurl script accepts several command-line options
Curl certificate/ca+subca/proxy certificate test script testcurl v1.0 - JJK - Nikhef Usage: ./testcurl -d|--debug --(test-build)|--no-(test-build) --(test-type) --no-(test-type) --all -h|--help Options -d|--debug increase debugging verbosity --all run all tests -h|--help display this help message Where (test-build) can be system for the system version of curl (default, use --no-system to override) openssl for curl built and linked against OpenSSL nss for curl built and linked against NSS gnutls for curl built and linked against GnuTLS polarssl for curl built and linked against PolarSSL and where (test-type) can be cert-test to test regular certificates using a CA and sub-CA gsi-test to test GSI proxy certificates (file ./gsiproxy) rfc-test to test RFC3820 compliant proxy certificates (file ./rfcproxy)
By default the testcurl script will test only regular certificates using the system version of curl. For the {openssl|nss|gnutls|polarssl} builds of curl it is assumed that all files are present in
/home/janjust/src/curl-7.22.0
but this can easily be changed in the testcurl script.
Test results
The testcurl script was tested on several (64bit) platforms:
- CentOS 5
- Scientific Linux 6
- Fedora 14
Only on Fedora 14 multiple builds of curl were tested.
CentOS 5
This version of curl is linked against OpenSSL; all tests performed by the testcurl script pass ("ok").
Curl version:
curl 7.15.5 (x86_64-redhat-linux-gnu) libcurl/7.15.5 OpenSSL/0.9.8b zlib/1.2.3 libidn/0.6.5
Test output: testcurl-centos5.log
Scientific Linux 6
This version of curl is linked against NSS.
Curl version:
curl 7.19.7 (x86_64-redhat-linux-gnu) libcurl/7.19.7 NSS/3.12.9.0 zlib/1.2.3 libidn/1.18 libssh2/1.2.2
Test output: testcurl-sl6.log
We can observe several things in the log output:
- the line
001 Error curl -s -S --cert client.pem --key client.pem --cacert ca+subca.pem https://127.0.0.1:4433
shows us that we can no longer "just" specify a certificate on the command-line. It is now required to specify a pathname, either using ./... or using an absolute path
- using both a stacked CA certificate (ca+subca.pem) or a directory containing certificate hashes work
- when running a proyx certificate test it is now MANDATORY to specify the proxy certificate itself as a CA certificate and to specify the actual CA certificates using the --cadir flag:
041 OK curl -s -S --cert ./rfcproxy --key ./rfcproxy --cacert rfcproxy --capath ./dir https://127.0.0.1:4433 042 OK curl -s -S --cert ./rfcproxy --key ./rfcproxy --cacert ./rfcproxy --capath ./dir https://127.0.0.1:4433
This applies to all types of proxy certificates: GSI, delegated GSI, RFC and delegated RFC.
An alternative option for the proxy certificates is stack the proxy certificate with the CA certificates:
cat rfcproxy ca+subca.pem > stack.pem
and then use --cacert stack.pem. This test is not present in the testcurl script, as it is not considered scalable.
Appendix: building curl
For completeness' sake this appendix lists how the different versions of curl were actually built.
All builds were done on a Fedora 14 x86_64 machine.
curl/OpenSSL
$ tar xzf curl-7.22.0.tar.gz $ mv curl-7.22.0 curl-7.22.0-openssl $ cd curl-7.22.0-openssl $ ./configure --with-ssl=/usr/include --without-nss $ make
To verify that the right curl, and more importantly, libcurl.so were created I ran
$ LD_LIBRARY_PATH=lib/.libs src/.libs/curl -V curl 7.22.0 (x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu) libcurl/7.22.0 OpenSSL/1.0.0 zlib/1.2.5 Protocols: dict file ftp ftps gopher http https imap imaps pop3 pop3s rtsp smtp smtps telnet tftp Features: IPv6 Largefile NTLM NTLM_WB SSL libz
curl/NSS
$ tar xzf curl-7.22.0.tar.gz $ mv curl-7.22.0 curl-7.22.0-nss $ cd curl-7.22.0-nss $ ./configure --with-nss --without-ssl $ make
To verify that the right curl, and more importantly, libcurl.so were created I ran
$ LD_LIBRARY_PATH=lib/.libs src/.libs/curl -V curl 7.22.0 (x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu) libcurl/7.22.0 NSS/3.12.10.0 zlib/1.2.5 Protocols: dict file ftp ftps gopher http https imap imaps pop3 pop3s rtsp smtp smtps telnet tftp Features: IPv6 Largefile NTLM NTLM_WB SSL libz
curl/GnuTLS
$ tar xzf curl-7.22.0.tar.gz $ mv curl-7.22.0 curl-7.22.0-gnutls $ cd curl-7.22.0-gnutls $ ./configure --with-gnutls=/usr/include --without-nss --without-ssl $ make
To verify that the right curl, and more importantly, libcurl.so were created I ran
$ LD_LIBRARY_PATH=lib/.libs src/.libs/curl -V curl 7.22.0 (x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu) libcurl/7.22.0 GnuTLS/2.8.6 zlib/1.2.5 Protocols: dict file ftp ftps gopher http https imap imaps pop3 pop3s rtsp smtp smtps telnet tftp Features: IPv6 Largefile NTLM NTLM_WB SSL libz
curl/PolarSSL
$ tar xzf curl-7.22.0.tar.gz $ mv curl-7.22.0 curl-7.22.0-polarssl $ cd curl-7.22.0-polarssl $ ./configure --with-polarssl=/usr/include --without-nss --without-ssl --disable-ntlm-wb $ make
Note: if I did not add --disable-ntlm-wb then the build failed in the linking phase
To verify that the right curl, and more importantly, libcurl.so were created I ran
$ LD_LIBRARY_PATH=lib/.libs src/.libs/curl -V curl 7.22.0 (x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu) libcurl/7.22.0 PolarSSL zlib/1.2.5 Protocols: dict file ftp ftps gopher http https imap imaps pop3 pop3s rtsp smtp smtps telnet tftp Features: IPv6 Largefile SSL libz