mod_gnutls
is a module for the Apache web server that provides HTTPS
(HTTP over Transport Layer Security (TLS)) using the GnuTLS library.
More information about the module can be found at
the project's website.
mod_gnutls
uses the ./configure && make && make install
mechanism
common to many Open Source programs. Most of the dirty work is
handled by either ./configure
or Apache's apxs
utility. If you have
built Apache modules before, there shouldn't be any surprises for you.
The interesting options you can pass to configure are:
--with-apxs=PATH
: This option is used to specify the location of the apxs utility that
was installed as part of apache. Specify the location of the
binary, not the directory it is located in.
--with-apu-config=PATH
: Path to APR Utility Library config tool (apu-1-config
)
--help
: Provides a list of all available configure options.
It is recommended to run make check
before installation. If your
system doesn't have a loopback device with IPv6 and IPv4 support or
localhost
does not resolve to at least one of [::1]
and
127.0.0.1
, you may have to set the TEST_HOST
or TEST_IP
environment variables when running ./configure
to make the test
suite work correctly.
To activate mod_gnutls
just add the following line to your httpd.conf
and restart Apache:
LoadModule gnutls_module modules/mod_gnutls.so
mod_gnutls
uses the Apache HTTPD Shared Object
Cache to cache
OCSP responses for OCSP stapling and TLS
sessions. To use either cache you need to load a
suitable mod_socache_PROVIDER
module, which should be provided by
your Apache installation.
It is recommended to load at least mod_socache_shmcb
. If that module
is loaded mod_gnutls
will enable OCSP stapling by
default, without needing any further
configuration other than a certificate chain
with OCSP support.
Enable GnuTLS for this virtual host
GnuTLSEnable [on|off]
Default: off
Context: virtual host
This directive enables SSL/TLS Encryption for a Virtual Host.
Configure TLS Session Cache
GnuTLSCache (shmcb|dbm|memcache|...|none)[:PARAMETERS]
Default: GnuTLSCache none
Context: server config
This directive configures the TLS session cache for mod_gnutls
. The
TLS session cache is used both as a server side session cache if not
using session tickets (for TLS 1.2 and earlier), and if mod_gnutls
is configured as a HTTPS reverse proxy also to cache client sessions
to backend servers (for TLS 1.3 only).
A cache accessed over network (e.g. memcache) may be shared between
machines of different architectures. If the selected cache
implementation is not thread-safe, access is serialized using the
gnutls-cache
mutex.
Which cache implementations are available depends on your Apache
installation and configuration, mod_gnutls
can use any socache
provider. In general you will need to load a mod_socache_PROVIDER
module. Common options are described below, please check the Apache
HTTPD documentation for details on available providers and their
configuration.
shmcb
: Uses a shared memory segment. This is a high performance local
cache. The parameter is a relative or absolute path to be used if
the local shared memory implementation requires one, followed by
the cache size in bytes enclosed in parentheses.
Example: `shmcb:cache/gnutls_cache(65536)`
dbm
: Uses a DBM cache file. The parameter is a relative or absolute
path to be used as the DBM cache file. Note that the dbm cache has
a size limitation for entries that is too small for OCSP responses
or proxy session data.
Example: `dbm:cache/gnutls_cache`
memcache
: Uses memcached server(s) to cache TLS session data. The parameter
is a comma separated list of servers (host:port). This can be used
to share a session cache between all servers in a cluster.
Example: `memcache:memcache.example.com:12345,memcache2.example.com:12345`
none
: Turns off all caching of TLS sessions.
This can reduce the performance of `mod_gnutls` since every
followup connection by a client must perform a full TLS
handshake. This is the default because it requires no
configuration.
Session tickets are an alternative to using a session cache,
please see `GnuTLSSessionTickets`. Note that for TLS 1.3 GnuTLS
supports resumption using session tickets only as of version
3.6.4.
Timeout for TLS Session Cache expiration
GnuTLSCacheTimeout SECONDS
Default: GnuTLSCacheTimeout 300
Context: server config, virtual host
Sets the expiration timeout for cached TLS sessions.
Enable Session Tickets for the server
GnuTLSSessionTickets [on|off]
Default: off
Context: server config, virtual host
Session tickets allow TLS session resumption without session state stored on the server, using encrypted tickets provided to the clients instead. Tickets are an alternative to using a session cache, and currently the only session resumption mechanism in TLS 1.3. For a pool of servers this option is not recommended since the tickets are bound to the issuing server only.
If this option is set in the global configuration, virtual hosts
without a GnuTLSSessionTickets
setting will use the global setting.
Warning: The primary key used to encrypt the tickets is generated
while the server loads its configuration. An attacker who is able to
read this key from server RAM may be able to decrypt past TLS 1.2
sessions and impersonate the server to clients trying to resume
sessions using tickets. If you enable session tickets you should
regularly reload
the server to generate fresh keys. Many
distributions automatically do this during log rotation.
Use the provided PKCS #3 encoded Diffie-Hellman parameters
GnuTLSDHFile FILEPATH
Default: none
Context: server config, virtual host
By default mod_gnutls
uses the DH parameters included with GnuTLS
corresponding to the security level of the configured private keys.
If you need to use different DH parameters, you can provide a PEM file
containing them in PKCS #3 encoding using this option. Please see the
"Parameter
generation"
section of the GnuTLS documentation for a short discussion of the
security implications. Note that to use a custom group for DHE you
must also explicitly disable RFC
7919 group negotiation using
GnuTLSPriorities
.
Set the allowed protocol versions, ciphers, key exchange algorithms, MACs and compression methods
GnuTLSPriorities NORMAL:+CIPHER_0:-CIPHER_1:...:+CIPHER_N
Default: NORMAL:-RSA:-VERS-TLS1.0:-VERS-TLS1.1
Context: server config, virtual host
Sets the allowed protocol version(s), ciphers, key exchange methods, message authentication codes, and other TLS parameters for the server. The parameter is a GnuTLS priority string as described in the the GnuTLS documentation.
Plain RSA, without (EC-)DH, is disabled by default because it doesn't provide forward secrecy, TLS 1.0 and 1.1 have been deprecated as insecure for a long time and are now disabled in most modern web browsers.
Load this PKCS #11 module.
GnuTLSP11Module PATH_TO_LIBRARY
Default: none
Context: server config
Load this PKCS #11 provider module, instead of the system defaults. May occur multiple times to load multiple modules.
Set the PIN to be used to access encrypted key files or PKCS #11 objects.
GnuTLSPIN XXXXXX
Default: none
Context: server config, virtual host
Takes a string to be used as a PIN for the protected objects in a security module, or as a key to be used to decrypt PKCS #8, PKCS #12, or openssl encrypted keys.
Set the SRK PIN to be used to access the TPM.
GnuTLSSRKPIN XXXXXX
Default: none
Context: server config, virtual host
Takes a string to be used as a PIN for the protected objects in the TPM module.
Export the PEM encoded certificates to CGIs
GnuTLSExportCertificates [off|on|SIZE]
Default: off
Context: server config, virtual host
This directive configures exporting the full certificates of the
server and the client to CGI scripts via the SSL_SERVER_CERT
and
SSL_CLIENT_CERT
environment variables. The exported certificates
will be PEM-encoded, limited to the given size. The type of the
certificate will be exported in SSL_SERVER_CERT_TYPE
and
SSL_CLIENT_CERT_TYPE
.
SIZE should be an integer number of bytes, or may be written with a
trailing K
to indicate kibibytes. off
means the same thing as
0
, in which case the certificates will not be exported to the
environment. on
is an alias for 16K
. If a non-zero size is
specified for this directive, but a certificate is too large to fit in
the buffer, then the corresponding environment variable will contain
the fixed string GNUTLS_CERTIFICATE_SIZE_LIMIT_EXCEEDED
.
With GnuTLSExportCertificates enabled, mod_gnutls
exports the same
environment variables to the CGI process as mod_ssl
.
Set the PEM encoded server certificate or certificate chain
GnuTLSCertificateFile FILEPATH
Default: none
Context: server config, virtual host
FILEPATH is an absolute or relative path to a file containing the PEM-encoded X.509 certificate to use as this Server's End Entity (EE) certificate, and optionally those of the issuing Certificate Authorities (CAs). If the file contains multiple certificates they must be ordered from EE to the CA closest to the root CA.
Including the full certificate chain is highly recommended because the CA certificates are needed for OCSP stapling.
Since version 0.7 this can be a PKCS #11 URL instead of a file.
On Linux and other Unix-like systems you can create the file with a command like this (assuming "CA 1" issued the server certificate and has been issued by "Root CA" itself):
$ cat server.pem ca-1.pem root-ca.pem >server-chain.pem
Set to the PEM Encoded Server Private Key
GnuTLSKeyFile FILEPATH
Default: none
Context: server config, virtual host
Takes an absolute or relative path to the Server Private Key. Set
GnuTLSPIN
if the key file is encrypted.
Since version 0.7 this can be a PKCS #11 URL.
Security Warning:
This private key must be protected. It is read while Apache is still
running as root, and does not need to be readable by the nobody or
apache user.
Enable client certificate verification
GnuTLSClientVerify [ignore|request|require]
Default: ignore
Context: server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess
This directive controls if clients need to authenticate with a
certificate to access resources. If a mode other than ignore
is used
in a directory context the server may request post-handshake
authentication (TLS 1.3 only, see below). Trusted CAs for certificate
validation are set using GnuTLSClientCAFile
.
ignore
: mod_gnutls
will not request certificates from clients, and allow
any requests.
request
: Client certificates will be requested, but requests are still
allowed if the client does not send one or the provided
certificate is invalid. If the client authenticates, the
certificate validation status will be stored in the
SSL_CLIENT_VERIFY
environment variable and
can be SUCCESS
, FAILED
or NONE
.
require
: Client certificate authentication will be required for access. If
set at server or virtual host level TLS connections from clients
without a valid certificate will be denied. If set at directory
level any requests without a valid client certificate will be
denied with a 403 Forbidden error. The SSL_CLIENT_VERIFY
environment variable will be set to SUCCESS
if access is
allowed, additional environment
variables will hold details on the client
certificate.
When using TLS 1.3 mod_gnutls
will request post-handshake
authentication as
necessary if the client announced support during the handshake. With
TLS versions 1.2 and earlier mod_gnutls
supports client
authentication only during the initial handshake.
If you want clients that do not support TLS 1.3 at all or do not
support the post-handshake authentication extension to have access to
resources that require authentication, you can set GnuTLSClientVerify request
at the server or virtual host level so clients can
authenticate during the initial handshake.
Set the PEM encoded Certificate Authority list to use for X.509 base client authentication
GnuTLSClientCAFile FILEPATH
Default: none Context: server config, virtual host
Takes an absolute or relative path to a PEM Encoded Certificate to use as a Certificate Authority with Client Certificate Authentication. This file may contain a list of trusted authorities.
Set to the SRP password file for SRP ciphersuites
GnuTLSSRPPasswdFile FILEPATH
Default: none
Context: server config, virtual host
Takes an absolute or relative path to an SRP password file. This is
the same format as used in libsrp. You can generate such file using
the command srptool --passwd /etc/tpasswd --passwd-conf /etc/tpasswd.conf -u test
to set a password for user test. This
password file holds the username, a password verifier and the
dependency to the SRP parameters.
Set to the SRP password.conf file for SRP ciphersuites
GnuTLSSRPPasswdConfFile FILEPATH
Default: none
Context: server config, virtual host
Takes an absolute or relative path to an SRP password.conf file. This
is the same format as used in libsrp
. You can generate such file
using the command srptool --create-conf /etc/tpasswd.conf
. This
file holds the SRP parameters and is associate with the password file
(the verifiers depends on these parameters).
Enable TLS proxy connections for this virtual host
GnuTLSProxyEngine [on|off]
Default: off
Context: virtual host
This directive enables support for TLS proxy connections for a virtual host.
Set to the PEM encoded Certificate Authority Certificate
GnuTLSProxyCAFile FILEPATH
Default: none
Context: server config, virtual host
Takes an absolute or relative path to a PEM encoded certificate to use as a Certificate Authority when verifying certificates provided by proxy back end servers. This file may contain a list of trusted authorities. If not set, verification of TLS back end servers will always fail due to lack of a trusted CA.
Set to the PEM encoded Certificate Revocation List
GnuTLSProxyCRLFile FILEPATH
Default: none
Context: server config, virtual host
Takes an absolute or relative path to a PEM encoded Certificate Revocation List to use when verifying certificates provided by proxy back end servers. The file may contain a list of CRLs.
Set to the PEM encoded Client Certificate
GnuTLSProxyCertificateFile FILEPATH
Default: none
Context: server config, virtual host
Takes an absolute or relative path to a PEM encoded X.509 certificate to use as this Server's End Entity (EE) client certificate for TLS client authentication in proxy TLS connections. If you need to supply certificates for intermediate Certificate Authorities (iCAs), they should be listed in sequence in the file, from EE to the iCA closest to the root CA. Optionally, you can also include the root CA's certificate as the last certificate in the list.
If not set, TLS client authentication will be disabled for TLS proxy
connections. If set, GnuTLSProxyKeyFile
must be set as well to
provide the matching private key.
Set to the PEM encoded Private Key
GnuTLSProxyKeyFile FILEPATH
Default: none
Context: server config, virtual host
Takes an absolute or relative path to the Private Key matching the
certificate configured using the GnuTLSProxyCertificateFile
directive. This key cannot currently be password protected.
Security Warning:
This private key must be protected. It is read while Apache is still
running as root, and does not need to be readable by the nobody or
apache user.
Set the allowed ciphers, key exchange algorithms, MACs and compression methods for proxy connections
GnuTLSProxyPriorities NORMAL:+CIPHER_0:-CIPHER_1:...:+CIPHER_N
Default: NORMAL:-RSA:-VERS-TLS1.0:-VERS-TLS1.1
Context: server config, virtual host
Sets the allowed protocol version(s), ciphers, key exchange methods,
message authentication codes, and other TLS parameters for TLS proxy
connections. Like for GnuTLSPriorities
the parameter is a GnuTLS
priority string as described in the
the GnuTLS documentation.
OCSP stapling, formally known as the TLS Certificate Status Request extension, allows the server to provide the client with a cached OCSP response for its certificate during the handshake. With OCSP stapling the client does not have to send an OCSP request to the issuer CA to check the certificate status, which offers privacy and performance advantages, and avoids the security issue of how to handle errors that prevent the client from getting a response.
With TLS 1.2 stapling can be used only for the server certificate. TLS 1.3 supports stapling for all transmitted certificates. Mod_gnutls will staple for as many consecutive certificates in the certificate chain as possible, ideally all except the root CA.
Mod_gnutls enables OCSP stapling by default if possible. The following requirements must be met:
-
OCSP responses are verified using the issuer CAs of the certificates being checked, so the CAs must be included in
GnuTLSCertificateFile
. Providing the whole certificate chain (including the root CA) is recommended. -
Mod_gnutls needs a cache to store OCSP responses for stapling. If mod_socache_shmcb is loaded mod_gnutls can set up the cache without additional configuration, for other options see
GnuTLSOCSPCache
. -
The certificates must contain OCSP access URIs using HTTP so mod_gnutls can fetch responses, alternatively you may provide responses using
GnuTLSOCSPResponseFile
.
If a server certificate contains the "must-staple" extension (X.509 TLS Feature extension defined in RFC 7633) and the configuration does not support stapling mod_gnutls will refuse to start.
By default mod_gnutls regularly refreshes the cached OCSP responses
in the background, see
GnuTLSOCSPAutoRefresh
for details.
Enable OCSP stapling for this (virtual) host.
GnuTLSOCSPStapling [On|Off]
Default: on if requirements are met, off otherwise
Context: server config, virtual host
Stapling is activated by default if the requirements listed above are met.
If the server certificate requires stapling ("must-staple") or
GnuTLSOCSPStapling
is explicitly set to on
unmet requirements are
an error.
OCSP cache updates are serialized using the gnutls-ocsp
mutex.
OCSP stapling cache configuration
GnuTLSOCSPCache (shmcb|memcache|...|none)[:PARAMETERS]
Default: shmcb:gnutls_ocsp_cache
Context: server config
This directive configures the OCSP stapling cache, and uses the same
syntax as GnuTLSCache
. Please check there for
details.
The default should be reasonable for most servers and requires
mod_socache_shmcb
to be loaded. Servers with very many virtual hosts may need to
increase the default cache size via the parameters string, those with
few virtual hosts and memory constraints could save a few KB by reducing
it. Note that mod_socache_dbm
has a size constraint for entries that
is generally too small for OCSP responses.
If the selected cache implementation is not thread-safe, access
is serialized using the gnutls-ocsp-cache
mutex.
Regularly refresh cached OCSP responses independent of TLS handshakes?
GnuTLSOCSPAutoRefresh [On|Off]
Default: on
Context: server config, virtual host
By default mod_gnutls
will regularly refresh the cached OCSP
responses, regardless of whether they are used. This has advantages
over updating OCSP responses only when a TLS handshake needs them:
-
Handshakes are not delayed by updating the OCSP response cache first.
-
Updating the cached response before it expires can hide short unavailability of the OCSP responder, if a repeated request is successful before the cache expires (see below).
The interval to the next request is determined as follows: After a
successful OCSP request the next one is scheduled for a random period
between GnuTLSOCSPFuzzTime
and half of it before
GnuTLSOCSPCacheTimeout
expires. For example, if the cache timeout is
3600 seconds and the fuzz time 600 seconds, the next request will be
sent after 3000 to 3300 seconds. If the validity period of the
response expires before then, the selected interval is halved until it
is smaller than the time until expiry. If an OCSP request fails, it is
retried after GnuTLSOCSPFailureTimeout
.
Regularly updating the OCSP cache requires mod_watchdog
,
mod_gnutls
will fall back to updating the OCSP cache during
handshakes if mod_watchdog
is not available or this option is set to
Off
.
Send nonces in OCSP requests and verify them in responses.
GnuTLSOCSPCheckNonce [On|Off]
Default: off
Context: server config, virtual host
If GnuTLSOCSPCheckNonce
is enabled, mod_gnutls
will send nonces in
OCSP requests and verify them in responses. Responses without a nonce
or with a mismatching one will be considered invalid and discarded.
This option is disabled by default because many CAs do not support the OCSP nonce extension. The likely reason for that is the use of pre-produced responses, as described in RFC 6960, Section 2.5.
Read OCSP responses for stapling from these files (one or more) instead of sending a request over HTTP.
GnuTLSOCSPResponseFile /path/to/response.der [...]
Default: empty
Context: server config, virtual host
The first listed file must contain a response for the server
certificate, responses for intermediate CAs may be added in the order
they appear in GnuTLSCertificateFile. You
can revert to the default fetch mechanism for a specific certificate
(including the server certificate) by giving the empty string (""
)
instead of a file path.
The response files must be updated externally, for example using a cron job. This option is an alternative to the server fetching OCSP responses over HTTP. Reasons to use this option include:
- Performing OCSP requests separate from the web server (e.g. to share responses across a server cluster).
- The issuer CA uses an access method other than HTTP, or doesn't include an OCSP URL in the certificate.
- Testing
You can use a GnuTLS ocsptool
command like the following to create
and update the response file:
ocsptool --ask --nonce --load-issuer ca_cert.pem \
--load-cert server_cert.pem --outfile ocsp_response.der
Additional error checking is highly recommended. You may have to
remove the --nonce
option if the OCSP responder of your CA does not
support nonces.
Cache timeout for OCSP responses
GnuTLSOCSPCacheTimeout SECONDS
Default: 3600
Context: server config, virtual host
Cached OCSP responses will be refreshed after the configured number of
seconds. How long this timeout should reasonably be depends on your
CA, namely how often its OCSP responder is updated and how long
responses are valid. Note that a response will not be cached beyond
its lifetime as denoted in the nextUpdate
field of the response.
Wait this many seconds before retrying a failed OCSP request.
GnuTLSOCSPFailureTimeout SECONDS
Default: 300
Context: server config, virtual host
Retries of failed OCSP requests must be rate limited to avoid
overloading both the server using mod_gnutls and the CA's OCSP
responder. A shorter value increases the load on both sides, a longer
one means that stapling will remain disabled for longer after a failed
request. The auto-refresh mechanism updates OCSP responses before they
expire and can cover short unavailability of OCSP responders, see
GnuTLSOCSPAutoRefresh
for details.
Update the cached OCSP response up to this time before the cache expires
GnuTLSOCSPFuzzTime SECONDS
Default: larger of GnuTLSOCSPCacheTimeout / 8 and GnuTLSOCSPFailureTimeout * 2
Context: server config, virtual host
Refreshing the cached response before it expires hides short OCSP
responder unavailability. See GnuTLSOCSPAutoRefresh
for how this
value is used, using at least twice GnuTLSOCSPFailureTimeout
is
recommended.
Timeout for TCP sockets used to send OCSP requests
GnuTLSOCSPFailureTimeout SECONDS
Default: 6
Context: server config, virtual host
Stalled OCSP requests must time out after a while to prevent stalling the server too much. However, if the timeout is too short requests may fail with a slow OCSP responder or high latency network connection. This parameter allows you to adjust the timeout if necessary.
Note that this is not an upper limit for the completion of an OCSP request but a socket timeout. The connection will time out if there is no activity (successful send or receive) at all for the configured time.
A minimal server configuration using mod_gnutls might look like this (other than the default setup):
# Load mod_gnutls into Apache.
LoadModule gnutls_module modules/mod_gnutls.so
Listen 192.0.2.1:443
<VirtualHost _default_:443>
# Standard virtual host stuff
DocumentRoot /www/site1.example.com/html
ServerName site1.example.com:443
# Minimal mod_gnutls setup: enable, and set credentials
GnuTLSEnable on
GnuTLSCertificateFile conf/tls/site1_cert_chain.pem
GnuTLSKeyFile conf/tls/site1_key.pem
</VirtualHost>
This gives you an HTTPS site using the default set of cipher suites
(see GnuTLSPriorities
). OCSP stapling will be
enabled if the server certificate contains an OCSP URI,
conf/tls/site1_cert_chain.pem
contains the issuer certificate in
addition to the server's, and
mod_socache_shmcb
is loaded.
mod_gnutls
supports Server Name Indication (SNI), as specified in
RFC 6066, Section 3.
This allows hosting many TLS websites with a single IP address, you
can just add virtual host configurations. All recent browsers support
this standard. Here is an example using SNI:
# Load the module into Apache.
LoadModule gnutls_module modules/mod_gnutls.so
# This example server uses session tickets, no cache.
GnuTLSSessionTickets on
# SNI allows hosting multiple sites using one IP address. This
# could also be 'Listen *:443', just like '*:80' is common for
# non-HTTPS
Listen 198.51.100.1:443
<VirtualHost _default_:443>
GnuTLSEnable on
DocumentRoot /www/site1.example.com/html
ServerName site1.example.com:443
GnuTLSCertificateFile conf/tls/site1.crt
GnuTLSKeyFile conf/tls/site1.key
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost _default_:443>
GnuTLSEnable on
DocumentRoot /www/site2.example.com/html
ServerName site2.example.com:443
GnuTLSCertificateFile conf/tls/site2.crt
GnuTLSKeyFile conf/tls/site2.key
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost _default_:443>
GnuTLSEnable on
DocumentRoot /www/site3.example.com/html
ServerName site3.example.com:443
GnuTLSCertificateFile conf/tls/site3.crt
GnuTLSKeyFile conf/tls/site3.key
# Enable HTTP/2
Protocols h2 http/1.1
</VirtualHost>
If you need to support clients that do not use SNI, you have to use a unique IP address/port combination for each virtual host. In this example all virtual hosts use the default port for HTTPS (443) and different IP addresses.
# Load the module into Apache.
LoadModule gnutls_module modules/mod_gnutls.so
# This example server uses a session cache.
GnuTLSCache dbm:/var/cache/www-tls-cache
GnuTLSCacheTimeout 1200
# Without SNI you need one IP Address per site. The IP addresses
# are listed separately for clarity, you could also use "Listen 443"
# to use that port on all available IP addresses.
Listen 192.0.2.1:443
Listen 192.0.2.2:443
Listen 192.0.2.3:443
<VirtualHost 192.0.2.1:443>
GnuTLSEnable on
GnuTLSPriorities SECURE128
DocumentRoot /www/site1.example.com/html
ServerName site1.example.com:443
GnuTLSCertificateFile conf/tls/site1.crt
GnuTLSKeyFile conf/tls/site1.key
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost 192.0.2.2:443>
# This virtual host enables SRP authentication
GnuTLSEnable on
GnuTLSPriorities NORMAL:+SRP
DocumentRoot /www/site2.example.com/html
ServerName site2.example.com:443
GnuTLSSRPPasswdFile conf/tls/tpasswd.site2
GnuTLSSRPPasswdConfFile conf/tls/tpasswd.site2.conf
</VirtualHost>
<VirtualHost 192.0.2.3:443>
# This server enables SRP and X.509 authentication.
GnuTLSEnable on
GnuTLSPriorities NORMAL:+SRP:+SRP-RSA:+SRP-DSS
DocumentRoot /www/site3.example.com/html
ServerName site3.example.com:443
GnuTLSCertificateFile conf/tls/site3.crt
GnuTLSKeyFile conf/tls/site3.key
GnuTLSSRPPasswdFile conf/tls/tpasswd.site3
GnuTLSSRPPasswdConfFile conf/tls/tpasswd.site3.conf
</VirtualHost>
This is an example with a customized OCSP stapling configuration. What is a resonable cache timeout varies depending on how long your CA's OCSP responses are valid. Some CAs provide responses that are valid for multiple days, in that case timeout and fuzz time could be significantly larger.
# Load the module into Apache.
LoadModule gnutls_module modules/mod_gnutls.so
# A 64K cache is more than enough for one response
GnuTLSOCSPCache shmcb:ocsp_cache(65536)
Listen 192.0.2.1:443
<VirtualHost _default_:443>
GnuTLSEnable On
DocumentRoot /www/site1.example.com/html
ServerName site1.example.com:443
GnuTLSCertificateFile conf/tls/site1_cert_chain.pem
GnuTLSKeyFile conf/tls/site1_key.pem
GnuTLSOCSPStapling On
# The cached OCSP response is kept for up to 4 hours,
# with updates scheduled every 3 to 3.5 hours.
GnuTLSOCSPCacheTimeout 21600
GnuTLSOCSPFuzzTime 3600
</VirtualHost>
mod_gnutls
exports the following environment variables to scripts.
These are compatible with mod_ssl
.
Can be on
or off
The version of the GnuTLS library
The version of this module
The SSL or TLS protocol name (such as TLS 1.0
etc.)
The SSL or TLS cipher suite name
The negotiated compression method (NULL
or DEFLATE
)
The SRP username used for authentication (only set when
GnuTLSSRPPasswdFile
and GnuTLSSRPPasswdConfFile
are configured).
The number if bits used in the used cipher algorithm.
This does not fully reflect the security level since the size of RSA or DHE key exchange parameters affect the security level too.
The number if bits in the modulus for the DH group, if DHE or static DH is used.
This will not be set if DH is not used.
True
or False
. Whether the cipher suite negotiated is an export one.
The session ID negotiated in this session. Can be the same during client reloads.
Verification status of the client's certificate, if any. May be
SUCCESS
, FAILED
or NONE
. See
GnuTLSClientVerify
.
The number of days until the client's certificate is expired.
The activation time of client's certificate.
The expiration time of client's certificate.
The distinguished name of client's certificate in RFC2253 format.
The distinguished name of the issuer of the client's certificate in RFC2253 format.
These will contain the alternative names of the client certificate (%
is
a number starting from zero).
The values will be prepended by DNSNAME:
, RFC822NAME:
or URI:
depending on the type.
If it is not supported the value UNSUPPORTED
will be set.
The serial number of the server's certificate.
The version of the server's certificate.
The algorithm used for the signature in server's certificate.
The public key algorithm in server's certificate.
The PEM-encoded (X.509) server certificate (see the
GnuTLSExportCertificates
directive).
The certificate type will be X.509
.
PEM-encoded (X.509) client certificate, if any (see the
GnuTLSExportCertificates
directive).
The certificate type will be X.509
, if any.