Digital signature for a file using openssl
Yes, the dgst and rsautl component of OpenSSL can be used to compute a signature given an RSA key pair.
Signing:
openssl dgst -sha256 data.txt > hash
openssl rsautl -sign -inkey privatekey.pem -keyform PEM -in hash >signature
Verifying just the signature:
openssl rsautl -verify -inkey publickey.pem -pubin -keyform PEM -in signature
Update: Capturing Reto's comments from below because this is an important nuance. Presumably if you are going to the trouble to verify, you want to know the signature was produced on the plaintext to which it is attached:
This might sound obvious for some but: Be aware, rsautl verify
just decrypts the file signature
. The output of this call is guaranteed to be produced by the owner of the private key, but beside that nothing else is being checked. So to actually verify the consistency of data.txt
you have to regenerate the digest and then compare it against the output of openssl rsautl -verify
.
Verifying that the owner of the private key does vouch for data.txt
:
openssl dgst -sha256 -verify publickey.pem -signature signature data.txt
For this operation, openssl requires the public key, the signature, and the message.
To digitally sign document in openssl it will work
For this first your certificate should be trusted it would be look like this
-----BEGIN TRUSTED CERTIFICATE-----
MIIDbjCCAlYCCQCOyunl25ProDANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQUFADB5MQswCQYDVQQGEwJJ
...
-----END TRUSTED CERTIFICATE-----
Then use following command
smime -sign -signer certificate.pem -inkey private.key -in test.txt \
-out test1.txt -from ashish -to singhal
To Generate Private Key
openssl genrsa -out privatekey.pem 2048
To Sign
openssl dgst -sha256 -sign privatekey.pem -out data.txt.signature data.txt
To Generate The Public Key
dgst -verify
requires the public key
openssl rsa -in privatekey.pem -outform PEM -pubout -out publickey.pem
To Verify
openssl dgst -sha256 -verify publickey.pem -signature data.txt.signature data.txt
- In case of success: prints
"Verified OK"
, return code0
- In case of failure: prints
"Verification Failure"
, return code1