stunnel TLS Proxy |
stunnel - TLS offloading and load-balancing proxy
stunnel [FILE] | -fd N | -help | -version | -sockets | -options
stunnel [ [ -install | -uninstall | -start | -stop | -reload | -reopen | -exit ] [-quiet] [FILE] ] | -help | -version | -sockets | -options
The stunnel program is designed to work as TLS encryption wrapper between remote clients and local (inetd-startable) or remote servers. The concept is that having non-TLS aware daemons running on your system you can easily set them up to communicate with clients over secure TLS channels.
stunnel can be used to add TLS functionality to commonly used Inetd daemons like POP-2, POP-3, and IMAP servers, to standalone daemons like NNTP, SMTP and HTTP, and in tunneling PPP over network sockets without changes to the source code.
This product includes cryptographic software written by Eric Young (eay@cryptsoft.com)
Use specified configuration file
Read the config file from specified file descriptor
Print stunnel help menu
Print stunnel version and compile time defaults
Print default socket options
Print supported TLS options
Install NT Service
Uninstall NT Service
Start NT Service
Stop NT Service
Reload the configuration file of the running NT Service
Reopen the log file of the running NT Service
Exit an already started stunnel
Don't display any message boxes
Each line of the configuration file can be either:
An empty line (ignored).
A comment starting with ';' (ignored).
An 'option_name = option_value' pair.
'[service_name]' indicating a start of a service definition.
An address parameter of an option may be either:
A port number.
A colon-separated pair of IP address (either IPv4, IPv6, or domain name) and port number.
A Unix socket path (Unix only).
directory to chroot stunnel process
chroot keeps stunnel in a chrooted jail. CApath, CRLpath, pid and exec are located inside the jail and the patches have to be relative to the directory specified with chroot.
Several functions of the operating system also need their files to be located within the chroot jail, e.g.:
Delayed resolver typically needs /etc/nsswitch.conf and /etc/resolv.conf.
Local time in log files needs /etc/timezone.
Some other functions may need devices, e.g. /dev/zero or /dev/null.
select data compression algorithm
default: no compression
Deflate is the standard compression method as described in RFC 1951.
debugging level
Level is one of the syslog level names or numbers emerg (0), alert (1), crit (2), err (3), warning (4), notice (5), info (6), or debug (7). All logs for the specified level and all levels numerically less than it will be shown. Use debug = debug or debug = 7 for greatest debugging output. The default is notice (5).
The syslog facility 'daemon' will be used unless a facility name is supplied. (Facilities are not supported on Win32.)
Case is ignored for both facilities and levels.
path to Entropy Gathering Daemon socket
Entropy Gathering Daemon socket to use to feed the OpenSSL random number generator.
select hardware or software cryptographic engine
default: software-only cryptography
See Examples section for an engine configuration to use the certificate and the corresponding private key from a cryptographic device.
control hardware engine
set OpenSSL tasks delegated to the current engine
The parameter specifies a comma-separated list of task to be delegated to the current engine.
The following tasks may be available, if supported by the engine: ALL, RSA, DSA, ECDH, ECDSA, DH, RAND, CIPHERS, DIGESTS, PKEY, PKEY_CRYPTO, PKEY_ASN1.
enable or disable FIPS 140-2 mode.
This option allows you to disable entering FIPS mode if stunnel was compiled with FIPS 140-2 support.
default: no (since version 5.00)
foreground mode
Stay in foreground (don't fork).
With the yes parameter it also logs to stderr in addition to the destinations specified with syslog and output.
default: background in daemon mode
GUI icon to be displayed when there are established connections
On Windows platform the parameter should be an .ico file containing a 16x16 pixel image.
GUI icon to be displayed when no valid configuration is loaded
On Windows platform the parameter should be an .ico file containing a 16x16 pixel image.
GUI icon to be displayed when there are no established connections
On Windows platform the parameter should be an .ico file containing a 16x16 pixel image.
log file handling
This option allows you to choose whether the log file (specified with the output option) is appended or overwritten when opened or re-opened.
default: append
append log messages to a file
/dev/stdout device can be used to send log messages to the standard output (for example to log them with daemontools splogger).
pid file location
If the argument is empty, then no pid file will be created.
pid path is relative to the chroot directory if specified.
bytes to read from random seed files
path to file with random seed data
The OpenSSL library will use data from this file first to seed the random number generator.
overwrite the random seed files with new random data
default: yes
stunnel service name
The specified service name is used for syslog and as the inetd mode service name for TCP Wrappers. While this option can technically be specified in the service sections, it is only useful in global options.
default: stunnel
Set an option on the accept/local/remote socket
The values for the linger option are l_onof:l_linger. The values for the time are tv_sec:tv_usec.
Examples:
socket = l:SO_LINGER=1:60
set one minute timeout for closing local socket
socket = r:SO_OOBINLINE=yes
place out-of-band data directly into the
receive data stream for remote sockets
socket = a:SO_REUSEADDR=no
disable address reuse (enabled by default)
socket = a:SO_BINDTODEVICE=lo
only accept connections on loopback interface
enable logging via syslog
default: yes
enable the taskbar icon
default: yes
Each configuration section begins with a service name in square brackets. The service name is used for libwrap (TCP Wrappers) access control and lets you distinguish stunnel services in your log files.
Note that if you wish to run stunnel in inetd mode (where it is provided a network socket by a server such as inetd, xinetd, or tcpserver) then you should read the section entitled INETD MODE below.
accept connections on specified address
If no host specified, defaults to all IPv4 addresses for the local host.
To listen on all IPv6 addresses use:
accept = :::PORT
Certificate Authority directory
This is the directory in which stunnel will look for certificates when using the verifyChain or verifyPeer options. Note that the certificates in this directory should be named XXXXXXXX.0 where XXXXXXXX is the hash value of the DER encoded subject of the cert.
The hash algorithm has been changed in OpenSSL 1.0.0. It is required to c_rehash the directory on upgrade from OpenSSL 0.x.x to OpenSSL 1.x.x.
CApath path is relative to the chroot directory if specified.
Certificate Authority file
This file contains multiple CA certificates, to be used with the verifyChain and verifyPeer options.
certificate chain file name
The parameter specifies the file containing certificates used by stunnel to authenticate itself against the remote client or server. The file should contain the whole certificate chain starting from the actual server/client certificate, and ending with the self-signed root CA certificate. The file must be either in PEM or P12 format.
A certificate chain is required in server mode, and optional in client mode.
This parameter is also used as the certificate identifier when a hardware engine is enabled.
email address of the peer certificate subject
Multiple checkEmail options are allowed in a single service section. Certificates are accepted if no checkEmail option was specified, or the email address of the peer certificate matches any of the email addresses specified with checkEmail.
This option requires OpenSSL 1.0.2 or later.
host of the peer certificate subject
Multiple checkHost options are allowed in a single service section. Certificates are accepted if no checkHost option was specified, or the host name of the peer certificate matches any of the hosts specified with checkHost.
This option requires OpenSSL 1.0.2 or later.
IP address of the peer certificate subject
Multiple checkIP options are allowed in a single service section. Certificates are accepted if no checkIP option was specified, or the IP address of the peer certificate matches any of the IP addresses specified with checkIP.
This option requires OpenSSL 1.0.2 or later.
Select permitted TLS ciphers
A colon-delimited list of the ciphers to allow in the TLS connection, for example DES-CBC3-SHA:IDEA-CBC-MD5.
client mode (remote service uses TLS)
default: no (server mode)
OpenSSL configuration command
The OpenSSL configuration command is executed with the specified parameter. This allows any configuration commands to be invoked from the stunnel configuration file. Supported commands are described on the SSL_CONF_cmd(3ssl) manual page.
Several config lines can be used to specify multiple configuration commands.
This option requires OpenSSL 1.0.2 or later.
connect to a remote address
If no host is specified, the host defaults to localhost.
Multiple connect options are allowed in a single service section.
If host resolves to multiple addresses and/or if multiple connect options are specified, then the remote address is chosen using a round-robin algorithm.
Certificate Revocation Lists directory
This is the directory in which stunnel will look for CRLs when using the verifyChain and verifyPeer options. Note that the CRLs in this directory should be named XXXXXXXX.r0 where XXXXXXXX is the hash value of the CRL.
The hash algorithm has been changed in OpenSSL 1.0.0. It is required to c_rehash the directory on upgrade from OpenSSL 0.x.x to OpenSSL 1.x.x.
CRLpath path is relative to the chroot directory if specified.
Certificate Revocation Lists file
This file contains multiple CRLs, used with the verifyChain and verifyPeer options.
specify ECDH curve name
To get a list of supported curves use:
openssl ecparam -list_curves
default: prime256v1
connection identifier type
This identifier allows you to distinguish log entries generated for each of the connections.
Currently supported types:
The numeric sequential identifier is only unique within a single instance of stunnel, but very compact. It is most useful for manual log analysis.
This alphanumeric identifier is globally unique, but longer than the sequential number. It is most useful for automated log analysis.
The operating system thread identifier is neither unique (even within a single instance of stunnel) nor short. It is most useful for debugging software or configuration issues.
The operating system process identifier (PID) may be useful in the inetd mode.
default: sequential
debugging level
Level is a one of the syslog level names or numbers emerg (0), alert (1), crit (2), err (3), warning (4), notice (5), info (6), or debug (7). All logs for the specified level and all levels numerically less than it will be shown. Use debug = debug or debug = 7 for greatest debugging output. The default is notice (5).
delay DNS lookup for the connect option
This option is useful for dynamic DNS, or when DNS is not available during stunnel startup (road warrior VPN, dial-up configurations).
Delayed resolver mode is automatically engaged when stunnel fails to resolve on startup any of the connect targets for a service.
Delayed resolver inflicts failover = prio.
default: no
select engine ID for the service
select engine number for the service
The engines are numbered starting from 1.
execute a local inetd-type program
exec path is relative to the chroot directory if specified.
The following environmental variables are set on Unix platforms: REMOTE_HOST, REMOTE_PORT, SSL_CLIENT_DN, SSL_CLIENT_I_DN.
arguments for exec including the program name ($0)
Quoting is currently not supported. Arguments are separated with an arbitrary amount of whitespace.
Failover strategy for multiple "connect" targets.
round robin - fair load distribution
priority - use the order specified in config file
default: rr
use IDENT (RFC 1413) username checking
include all configuration file parts located in DIRECTORY
The files are included in the ascending alphabetical order of their names.
private key for the certificate specified with cert option
A private key is needed to authenticate the certificate owner. Since this file should be kept secret it should only be readable by its owner. On Unix systems you can use the following command:
chmod 600 keyfile
This parameter is also used as the private key identifier when a hardware engine is enabled.
default: the value of the cert option
Enable or disable the use of /etc/hosts.allow and /etc/hosts.deny.
default: no (since version 5.00)
By default, the IP address of the outgoing interface is used as the source for remote connections. Use this option to bind a static local IP address instead.
select OCSP responder for certificate verification
validate certificates with their AIA OCSP responders
This option enables stunnel to validate certificates with the list of OCSP responder URLs retrieved from their AIA (Authority Information Access) extension.
specify OCSP responder flag
Several OCSPflag can be used to specify multiple flags.
currently supported flags: NOCERTS, NOINTERN, NOSIGS, NOCHAIN, NOVERIFY, NOEXPLICIT, NOCASIGN, NODELEGATED, NOCHECKS, TRUSTOTHER, RESPID_KEY, NOTIME
send and verify the OCSP nonce extension
This option protects the OCSP protocol against replay attacks. Due to its computational overhead, the nonce extension is usually only supported on internal (e.g. corporate) responders, and not on public OCSP responders.
OpenSSL library options
The parameter is the OpenSSL option name as described in the SSL_CTX_set_options(3ssl) manual, but without SSL_OP_ prefix. stunnel -options lists the options found to be allowed in the current combination of stunnel and the OpenSSL library used to build it.
Several option lines can be used to specify multiple options. An option name can be prepended with a dash ("-") to disable the option.
For example, for compatibility with the erroneous Eudora TLS implementation, the following option can be used:
options = DONT_INSERT_EMPTY_FRAGMENTS
default:
options = NO_SSLv2
options = NO_SSLv3
application protocol to negotiate TLS
This option enables initial, protocol-specific negotiation of the TLS encryption. The protocol option should not be used with TLS encryption on a separate port.
Currently supported protocols:
Proprietary (undocummented) extension of CIFS protocol implemented in Samba. Support for this extension was dropped in Samba 3.0.0.
Based on RFC 2817 - Upgrading to TLS Within HTTP/1.1, section 5.2 - Requesting a Tunnel with CONNECT
This protocol is only supported in client mode.
Based on RFC 2595 - Using TLS with IMAP, POP3 and ACAP
Based on RFC 4642 - Using Transport Layer Security (TLS) with Network News Transfer Protocol (NNTP)
This protocol is only supported in client mode.
Based on http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.3/static/protocol-flow.html#AEN73982
Based on RFC 2449 - POP3 Extension Mechanism
Haproxy client IP address http://haproxy.1wt.eu/download/1.5/doc/proxy-protocol.txt
Based on RFC 2487 - SMTP Service Extension for Secure SMTP over TLS
SOCKS versions 4, 4a, and 5 are supported. The SOCKS protocol itself is encapsulated within TLS encryption layer to protect the final destination address.
http://www.openssh.com/txt/socks4.protocol
http://www.openssh.com/txt/socks4a.protocol
The BIND command of the SOCKS protocol is not supported. The USERID parameter is ignored.
See Examples section for sample configuration files for VPN based on SOCKS encryption.
authentication type for the protocol negotiations
Currently, this option is only supported in the client-side 'connect' and 'smtp' protocols.
Supported authentication types for the 'connect' protocol are 'basic' or 'ntlm'. The default 'connect' authentication type is 'basic'.
Supported authentication types for the 'smtp' protocol are 'plain' or 'login'. The default 'smtp' authentication type is 'plain'.
domain for the protocol negotiations
Currently, this option is only supported in the client-side 'connect' protocol.
destination address for the protocol negotiations
protocolHost specifies the final TLS server to be connected to by the proxy, and not the proxy server directly connected by stunnel. The proxy server should be specified with the 'connect' option.
Currently the protocol destination address only applies to the 'connect' protocol.
password for the protocol negotiations
Currently, this option is only supported in the client-side 'connect' and 'smtp' protocols.
username for the protocol negotiations
Currently, this option is only supported in the client-side 'connect' and 'smtp' protocols.
PSK identity for the PSK client
PSKidentity can be used on stunnel clients to select the PSK identity used for authentication. This option is ignored in server sections.
default: the first identity specified in the PSKsecrets file.
file with PSK identities and corresponding keys
Each line of the file in the following format:
IDENTITY:KEY
The key is required to be at least 20 characters long. The file should not be world-readable nor world-writable.
allocate a pseudoterminal for 'exec' option
redirect TLS client connections on certificate-based authentication failures
This option only works in server mode. Some protocol negotiations are also incompatible with the redirect option.
support TLS renegotiation
Applications of the TLS renegotiation include some authentication scenarios, or re-keying long lasting connections.
On the other hand this feature can facilitate a trivial CPU-exhaustion DoS attack:
http://vincent.bernat.im/en/blog/2011-ssl-dos-mitigation.html
Please note that disabling TLS renegotiation does not fully mitigate this issue.
default: yes (if supported by OpenSSL)
attempt to use the TCP RST flag to indicate an error
This option is not supported on some platforms.
default: yes
reconnect a connect+exec section after it was disconnected
default: no
require a client certificate for verifyChain or verifyPeer
With requireCert set to no, the stunnel server accepts client connections that did not present a certificate.
Both verifyChain = yes and verifyPeer = yes imply requireCert = yes.
default: no
Unix group id
As a global option: setgid() to the specified group in daemon mode and clear all other groups.
As a service-level option: set the group of the Unix socket specified with "accept".
Unix user id
As a global option: setuid() to the specified user in daemon mode.
As a service-level option: set the owner of the Unix socket specified with "accept".
session cache size
sessionCacheSize specifies the maximum number of the internal session cache entries.
The value of 0 can be used for unlimited size. It is not recommended for production use due to the risk of a memory exhaustion DoS attack.
session cache timeout
This is the number of seconds to keep cached TLS sessions.
address of sessiond TLS cache server
Use the service as a slave service (a name-based virtual server) for Server Name Indication TLS extension (RFC 3546).
SERVICE_NAME specifies the master service that accepts client connections with the accept option. SERVER_NAME_PATTERN specifies the host name to be redirected. The pattern may start with the '*' character, e.g. '*.example.com'. Multiple slave services are normally specified for a single master service. The sni option can also be specified more than once within a single slave service.
This service, as well as the master service, may not be configured in client mode.
The connect option of the slave service is ignored when the protocol option is specified, as protocol connects to the remote host before TLS handshake.
Libwrap checks (Unix only) are performed twice: with the master service name after TCP connection is accepted, and with the slave service name during the TLS handshake.
The sni option is only available when compiled with OpenSSL 1.0.0 and later.
Use the parameter as the value of TLS Server Name Indication (RFC 3546) extension.
Empty SERVER_NAME disables sending the SNI extension.
The sni option is only available when compiled with OpenSSL 1.0.0 and later.
select the TLS protocol version
Supported values: all, SSLv2, SSLv3, TLSv1, TLSv1.1, TLSv1.2
Availability of specific protocols depends on the linked OpenSSL library. Older versions of OpenSSL do not support TLSv1.1 and TLSv1.2. Newer versions of OpenSSL do not support SSLv2.
Obsolete SSLv2 and SSLv3 are currently disabled by default. See the options option documentation for details.
thread stack size
time to wait for expected data
time to wait for close_notify (set to 0 for buggy MSIE)
time to wait to connect to a remote host
time to keep an idle connection
enable transparent proxy support on selected platforms
Supported values:
Disable transparent proxy support. This is the default.
Re-write the address to appear as if a wrapped daemon is connecting from the TLS client machine instead of the machine running stunnel.
This option is currently available in:
This configuration requires stunnel to be executed as root and without the setuid option.
This configuration requires the following setup for iptables and routing (possibly in /etc/rc.local or equivalent file):
iptables -t mangle -N DIVERT
iptables -t mangle -A PREROUTING -p tcp -m socket -j DIVERT
iptables -t mangle -A DIVERT -j MARK --set-mark 1
iptables -t mangle -A DIVERT -j ACCEPT
ip rule add fwmark 1 lookup 100
ip route add local 0.0.0.0/0 dev lo table 100
echo 0 >/proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/lo/rp_filter
stunnel must also to be executed as root and without the setuid option.
This configuration requires the kernel to be compiled with the transparent proxy option. Connected service must be installed on a separate host. Routing towards the clients has to go through the stunnel box.
stunnel must also to be executed as root and without the setuid option.
This configuration requires additional firewall and routing setup. stunnel must also to be executed as root and without the setuid option.
This configuration works by pre-loading the libstunnel.so shared library. _RLD_LIST environment variable is used on Tru64, and LD_PRELOAD variable on other platforms.
The original destination is used instead of the connect option.
A service section for transparent destination may look like this:
[transparent]
client = yes
accept = <stunnel_port>
transparent = destination
This configuration requires iptables setup to work, possibly in /etc/rc.local or equivalent file.
For a connect target installed on the same host:
/sbin/iptables -t nat -I OUTPUT -p tcp --dport <redirected_port> \
-m ! --uid-owner <stunnel_user_id> \
-j DNAT --to-destination <local_ip>:<stunnel_port>
For a connect target installed on a remote host:
/sbin/iptables -I INPUT -i eth0 -p tcp --dport <stunnel_port> -j ACCEPT
/sbin/iptables -t nat -I PREROUTING -p tcp --dport <redirected_port> \
-i eth0 -j DNAT --to-destination <local_ip>:<stunnel_port>
The transparent destination option is currently only supported on Linux.
Use both source and destination transparent proxy.
Two legacy options are also supported for backward compatibility:
This option has been renamed to source.
This option has been renamed to none.
verify the peer certificate
This option is obsolete and should be replaced with the verifyChain and verifyPeer options.
Request and ignore the peer certificate.
Verify the peer certificate if present.
Verify the peer certificate.
Verify the peer against a locally installed certificate.
Ignore the chain and only verify the peer certificate.
No verify.
verify the peer certificate chain starting from the root CA
For server certificate verification it is essential to also require a specific certificate with checkHost or checkIP.
The self-signed root CA certificate needs to be stored either in the file specified with CAfile, or in the directory specified with CApath.
default: no
verify the peer certificate
The peer certificate needs to be stored either in the file specified with CAfile, or in the directory specified with CApath.
default: no
stunnel returns zero on success, non-zero on error.
The following signals can be used to control stunnel in Unix environment:
Force a reload of the configuration file.
Some global options will not be reloaded:
chroot
foreground
pid
setgid
setuid
The use of the 'setuid' option will also prevent stunnel from binding to privileged (<1024) ports during configuration reloading.
When the 'chroot' option is used, stunnel will look for all its files (including the configuration file, certificates, the log file and the pid file) within the chroot jail.
Close and reopen the stunnel log file. This function can be used for log rotation.
Shut stunnel down.
The result of sending any other signals to the server is undefined.
In order to provide TLS encapsulation to your local imapd service, use:
[imapd]
accept = 993
exec = /usr/sbin/imapd
execArgs = imapd
or in remote mode:
[imapd]
accept = 993
connect = 143
In order to let your local e-mail client connect to a TLS-enabled imapd service on another server, configure the e-mail client to connect to localhost on port 119 and use:
[imap]
client = yes
accept = 143
connect = servername:993
If you want to provide tunneling to your pppd daemon on port 2020, use something like:
[vpn]
accept = 2020
exec = /usr/sbin/pppd
execArgs = pppd local
pty = yes
If you want to use stunnel in inetd mode to launch your imapd process, you'd use this stunnel.conf. Note there must be no [service_name] section.
exec = /usr/sbin/imapd
execArgs = imapd
To setup SOCKS VPN configure the following client service:
[socks_client]
client = yes
accept = 127.0.0.1:1080
connect = vpn_server:9080
verifyPeer = yes
CAfile = stunnel.pem
The corresponding configuration on the vpn_server host:
[socks_server]
protocol = socks
accept = 9080
cert = stunnel.pem
key = stunnel.key
Now test your configuration on the client machine with:
curl --socks4a localhost http://www.example.com/
An example server mode SNI configuration:
[virtual]
; master service
accept = 443
cert = default.pem
connect = default.internal.mydomain.com:8080
[sni1]
; slave service 1
sni = virtual:server1.mydomain.com
cert = server1.pem
connect = server1.internal.mydomain.com:8081
[sni2]
; slave service 2
sni = virtual:server2.mydomain.com
cert = server2.pem
connect = server2.internal.mydomain.com:8082
verifyPeer = yes
CAfile = server2-allowed-clients.pem
An example of advanced engine configuration allows for authentication with private keys stored in the Windows certificate store (Windows only). With the CAPI engine you don't need to manually select the client key to use. The client key is automatically selected based on the list of CAs trusted by the server.
engine = capi
[service]
engineId = capi
client = yes
accept = 127.0.0.1:8080
connect = example.com:8443
An example of advanced engine configuration to use the certificate and the corresponding private key from a pkcs11 engine:
engine = pkcs11
engineCtrl = MODULE_PATH:opensc-pkcs11.so
engineCtrl = PIN:123456
[service]
engineId = pkcs11
client = yes
accept = 127.0.0.1:8080
connect = example.com:843
cert = pkcs11:token=MyToken;object=MyCert
key = pkcs11:token=MyToken;object=MyKey
An example of advanced engine configuration to use the certificate and the corresponding private key from a SoftHSM token:
engine = pkcs11
engineCtrl = MODULE_PATH:softhsm2.dll
engineCtrl = PIN:12345
[service]
engineId = pkcs11
client = yes
accept = 127.0.0.1:8080
connect = example.com:843
cert = pkcs11:token=MyToken;object=KeyCert
stunnel cannot be used for the FTP daemon because of the nature of the FTP protocol which utilizes multiple ports for data transfers. There are available TLS-enabled versions of FTP and telnet daemons, however.
The most common use of stunnel is to listen on a network port and establish communication with either a new port via the connect option, or a new program via the exec option. However there is a special case when you wish to have some other program accept incoming connections and launch stunnel, for example with inetd, xinetd, or tcpserver.
For example, if you have the following line in inetd.conf:
imaps stream tcp nowait root /usr/bin/stunnel stunnel /etc/stunnel/imaps.conf
In these cases, the inetd-style program is responsible for binding a network socket (imaps above) and handing it to stunnel when a connection is received. Thus you do not want stunnel to have any accept option. All the Service Level Options should be placed in the global options section, and no [service_name] section will be present. See the EXAMPLES section for example configurations.
Each TLS-enabled daemon needs to present a valid X.509 certificate to the peer. It also needs a private key to decrypt the incoming data. The easiest way to obtain a certificate and a key is to generate them with the free OpenSSL package. You can find more information on certificates generation on pages listed below.
The order of contents of the .pem file is important. It should contain the unencrypted private key first, then a signed certificate (not certificate request). There should also be empty lines after the certificate and the private key. Any plaintext certificate information appended on the top of generated certificate should be discarded. So the file should look like this:
-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
[encoded key]
-----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
[empty line]
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
[encoded certificate]
-----END CERTIFICATE-----
[empty line]
stunnel needs to seed the PRNG (pseudo-random number generator) in order for TLS to use good randomness. The following sources are loaded in order until sufficient random data has been gathered:
The file specified with the RNDfile flag.
The file specified by the RANDFILE environment variable, if set.
The file .rnd in your home directory, if RANDFILE not set.
The file specified with '--with-random' at compile time.
The contents of the screen if running on Windows.
The egd socket specified with the EGD flag.
The egd socket specified with '--with-egd-sock' at compile time.
The /dev/urandom device.
Note that on Windows machines that do not have console user interaction (mouse movements, creating windows, etc.) the screen contents are not variable enough to be sufficient, and you should provide a random file for use with the RNDfile flag.
Note that the file specified with the RNDfile flag should contain random data -- that means it should contain different information each time stunnel is run. This is handled automatically unless the RNDoverwrite flag is used. If you wish to update this file manually, the openssl rand command in recent versions of OpenSSL, would be useful.
Important note: If /dev/urandom is available, OpenSSL often seeds the PRNG with it while checking the random state. On systems with /dev/urandom OpenSSL is likely to use it even though it is listed at the very bottom of the list above. This is the behaviour of OpenSSL and not stunnel.
stunnel 4.40 and later contains hardcoded 2048-bit DH parameters. Starting with stunnel 5.18, these hardcoded DH parameters are replaced every 24 hours with autogenerated temporary DH parameters. DH parameter generation may take several minutes.
Alternatively, it is possible to specify static DH parameters in the certificate file, which disables generating temporary DH parameters:
openssl dhparam 2048 >> stunnel.pem
stunnel configuration file
The execArgs option and the Win32 command line do not support quoting.
access control facility for internet services
internet 'super-server'
stunnel homepage
OpenSSL project website
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