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STUNNEL(8)                                                                                STUNNEL(8)



NAME
       stunnel - universal SSL tunnel

SYNOPSIS
       stunnel [-c ⎪ -T] [-D [facility.]level] [-O a⎪l⎪r:option=value[:value]] [-o file] [-C ci‐
       pherlist] [-p pemfile] [-v level] [-A certfile] [-S sources] [-a directory] [-t timeout]
       [-u ident_username] [-s setuid_user] [-g setgid_group] [-n protocol] [-P { filename ⎪ '' } ]
       [-B bytes] [-R randfile] [-W] [-E socket] [-I host] [-d [host:]port [-f] ]
       [ -r [host:]port ⎪ { -l ⎪ -L } program [-- progname args] ]

DESCRIPTION
       The stunnel program is designed to work as SSL encryption wrapper between remote clients and
       local (inetd-startable) or remote servers. The concept is that having non-SSL aware daemons
       running on your system you can easily set them up to communicate with clients over secure SSL
       channels.

       stunnel can be used to add SSL 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 AT cryptsoft.com)

OPTIONS
       -h  Print stunnel help menu

       -D level
           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 -D debug or -D 7 for greatest
           debugging output.  The default is notice (5).

           The syslog facility 'daemon' will be used unless a facility name is supplied.  (Facili‐
           ties are not supported on windows.)

           Case is ignored for both facilities and levels.

       -O a⎪l⎪r:option=value[:value]
           Set an option on accept/local/remote socket

           The values for linger option are l_onof:l_linger. The values for time are tv_sec:tv_usec.

           Examples:

           -O l:SO_LINGER=1:60 - set one minute timeout for closing local socket

           -O r:TCP_NODELAY=1 - turn off the Nagle algorithm for remote sockets

           -O r:SO_OOBINLINE=1 - place out-of-band data directly into the receive data stream for
           remote sockets

           -O a:SO_REUSEADDR=0 - disable address reuse (enabled by default)

           -O a:SO_BINDTODEVICE=lo - only accept connections on loopback interface

           The available options and their defaults are:
               Option          Accept    Local     Remote    OS default
               SO_DEBUG            --        --        --             0
               SO_DONTROUTE        --        --        --             0
               SO_KEEPALIVE        --        --        --             0
               SO_LINGER           --        --        --    0:0
               SO_OOBINLINE        --        --        --             0
               SO_RCVBUF           --        --        --         87380
               SO_SNDBUF           --        --        --         16384
               SO_RCVLOWAT         --        --        --             1
               SO_SNDLOWAT         --        --        --             1
               SO_RCVTIMEO         --        --        --         0:0
               SO_SNDTIMEO         --        --        --         0:0
               SO_REUSEADDR             1    --        --             0
               SO_BINDTODEVICE     --        --        --        --
               IP_TOS              --        --        --             0
               IP_TTL              --        --        --            64
               TCP_NODELAY         --        --        --             0

       -o file
           Append log messages to a file.

       -C cipherlist
           Select permitted SSL ciphers

           A colon delimited list of the ciphers to allow in the SSL connection.  For example
           DES-CBC3-SHA:IDEA-CBC-MD5

       -c  client mode (remote service uses SSL)

           default: server mode

       -T  transparent proxy mode

           Re-write address to appear as if wrapped daemon is connecting from the SSL client machine
           instead of the machine running stunnel. Available only on some operating systems (Linux
           only, we believe) and then only in server mode. Note that this option will not combine
           with proxy mode (-r) unless the client's default route to the target machine lies through
           the host running stunnel, which cannot be localhost.

       -p pemfile
           private key and certificate chain PEM file name

           A PEM is always needed in server mode (by default located in /etc/stunnel/stunnel.pem).
           Specifying this flag in client mode will use this key and certificate chain as a client
           side certificate chain.  Using client side certs is optional. The certificates must be in
           PEM format and must be sorted starting with the certificate to the highest level (root
           CA).

       -v level
           verify peer certificate

           •       level 1 - verify peer certificate if present

           •       level 2 - verify peer certificate

           •       level 3 - verify peer with locally installed certificate

           •       default - no verify

       -a directory
           client certificate directory

           This is the directory in which stunnel will look for certificates when using the -v op‐
           tions. Note that the certificates in this directory should be named XXXXXXXX.0 where
           XXXXXXXX is the hash value of the cert.

       -A certfile
           Certificate Authority file

           This file contains multiple CA certificates, used with the -v options.

       -t timeout
           session cache timeout

           default: 300 seconds.

       -N servicename
           Service name to use for tcpwrappers. If not specified then a tcpwrapper service name will
           be generated automatically for you. This will also be used when auto-generating pid file‐
           names.

       -u ident_username
           Use IDENT (RFC 1413) username checking

       -n proto
           Negotiate SSL with specified protocol

           currently supported: smtp, pop3, nntp

       -E socket
           Entropy Gathering Daemon socket to use to feed OpenSSL random number generator.  (Avail‐
           able only if compiled with OpenSSL 0.9.5a or higher)

       -R filename
           File containing random input.  The SSL library will use data from this file first to seed
           the random number generator.

       -W  Do not overwrite the random seed files with new random data.

       -B bytes
           Number of bytes of data read from random seed files.  With SSL versions less than 0.9.5a,
           also determines how many bytes of data are considered sufficient to seed the PRNG.  More
           recent OpenSSL versions have a builtin function to determine when sufficient randomness
           is available.

       -I host
           IP of the outgoing interface is used as source for remote connections.  Use this option
           to bind a static local IP address, instead.

       -d [host:]port
           daemon mode

           Listen for connections on [host:]port. If no host specified, defaults to all IP addresses
           for the local host.

           default: inetd mode

       -f  foreground mode

           Stay in foreground (don't fork) and log to stderr instead of via syslog (unless -o is
           specified).

           default: background in daemon mode

       -l program [-- programname [arg1 arg2 arg3...]  ]
           execute local inetd-type program.

       -L program [-- programname [arg1 arg2 arg3...]  ]
           open local pty and execute program.

       -s username
           setuid() to username in daemon mode

       -g groupname
           setgid() to groupname in daemon mode. Clears all other groups.

       -P { file ⎪ '' }
           Pid file location

           If the argument is a filename, then that filename will be used for the pid. If the argu‐
           ment is empty ('', not missing), then no pid file will be created.

       -r [host:]port
           connect to remote service

           If no host specified, defaults to localhost.

EXAMPLES
       In order to provide SSL encapsulation to your local imapd service, use

         stunnel -d 993 -l /usr/sbin/imapd -- imapd

       In order to let your local e-mail client connect to a SSL-enabled imapd service on another
       server, configure the e-mail client to connect to localhost on port 119 and use:

         stunnel -c -d 143 -r servername:993

       If you want to provide tunneling to your pppd daemon on port 2020, use something like

         stunnel -d 2020 -L /usr/sbin/pppd -- pppd local

ENVIRONMENT
       If Stunnel is used to create local processes using the -l or -L options, it will set the fol‐
       lowing environment variables

       REMOTE_HOST
           The IP address of the remote end of the connection.

       SSL_CLIENT_DN
           The DN (Distinguished Name, aka subject name) of the peer certificate, if a certificate
           was present and verified.

       SSL_CLIENT_I_DN
           The Issuer's DN of the peer's certificate, if a certificate was present and verified.

CERTIFICATES
       •   Each SSL 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 certifi‐
           cate and a key is to generate them with the free openssl package. You can find more in‐
           formation on certificates generation on pages listed below.

           Two things are important when generating certificate-key pairs for stunnel. The private
           key cannot be encrypted, because the server has no way to obtain the password from the
           user. To produce an unencrypted key add the -nodes option when running the req command
           from the openssl kit.

           The order of contents of the .pem file is also important. It should contain the unen‐
           crypted private key first, then a signed certificate (not certificate request). There
           should be also empty lines after certificate and private key. Plaintext certificate in‐
           formation 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]

RANDOMNESSstunnel needs to seed the PRNG (pseudo random number generator) in order for SSL to use
           good randomness.  The following sources are loaded in order until sufficient random data
           has been gathered:

           •       The file specified with the -R 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 -E flag.

           •       The egd socket specified with '--with-egd-sock' at compile time.

           •       The /dev/urandom device.

           With recent (>=OpenSSL 0.9.5a) version of SSL it will stop loading random data automati‐
           cally when sufficient entropy has been gathered.  With previous versions it will continue
           to gather from all the above sources since no SSL function exists to tell when enough
           data is available.

           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 -R flag.

           Note that the file specified with the -R flag should contain random data -- that means it
           should contain different information each time stunnel is run.  This is handled automati‐
           cally unless the -W flag is used.  If you wish to update this file manually, the openssl
           rand command in recent versions of OpenSSL, would be useful.

           One important note -- if /dev/urandom is available, OpenSSL has a habit of seeding the
           PRNG with it even when checking the random state, so on systems with /dev/urandom you're
           likely to use it even though it's listed at the very bottom of the list above.  This
           isn't stunnel's behaviour, it's OpenSSLs.

LIMITATIONSstunnel 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 SSL enabled versions of
           FTP and telnet daemons, however.

SEE ALSO
           tcpd(8) access control facility for internet services

           inetd(8)
                   internet ``super-server''

           https://www.stunnel.org/
                   Stunnel homepage

           https://www.openssl.org/
                   OpenSSL project website

AUTHOR
           Michal Trojnara
                   <Michal.Trojnara AT stunnel.org>



                                             2003-08-01                                   STUNNEL(8)
stunnel3(8)
NAME SYNOPSIS DESCRIPTION OPTIONS
-h Print stunnel help menu -D level -O a⎪l⎪r:option=value[:value] -o file -C cipherlist -c client mode (remote service uses SSL) -T transparent proxy mode -p pemfile -v level -a directory -A certfile -t timeout -N servicename -u ident_username -n proto -E socket -R filename -W Do not overwrite the random seed files with new random data. -B bytes -I host -d [host:]port -f foreground mode -l program [-- programname [arg1 arg2 arg3...] ] -L program [-- programname [arg1 arg2 arg3...] ] -s username -g groupname -P { file ⎪ '' } -r [host:]port
EXAMPLES ENVIRONMENT CERTIFICATES RANDOMNESS LIMITATIONS SEE ALSO AUTHOR

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