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Demystifying Cryptography with OpenSSL 3.0

You're reading from   Demystifying Cryptography with OpenSSL 3.0 Discover the best techniques to enhance your network security with OpenSSL 3.0

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800560345
Length 342 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Alexei Khlebnikov Alexei Khlebnikov
Author Profile Icon Alexei Khlebnikov
Alexei Khlebnikov
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Toc

Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Introduction
2. Chapter 1: OpenSSL and Other SSL/TLS Libraries FREE CHAPTER 3. Part 2: Symmetric Cryptography
4. Chapter 2: Symmetric Encryption and Decryption 5. Chapter 3: Message Digests 6. Chapter 4: MAC and HMAC 7. Chapter 5: Derivation of an Encryption Key from a Password 8. Part 3: Asymmetric Cryptography and Certificates
9. Chapter 6: Asymmetric Encryption and Decryption 10. Chapter 7: Digital Signatures and Their Verification 11. Chapter 8: X.509 Certificates and PKI 12. Part 4: TLS Connections and Secure Communication
13. Chapter 9: Establishing TLS Connections and Sending Data over Them 14. Chapter 10: Using X.509 Certificates in TLS 15. Chapter 11: Special Usages of TLS 16. Part 5: Running a Mini-CA
17. Chapter 12: Running a Mini-CA 18. Index 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

How to encrypt and decrypt with RSA on the command line

The openssl tool provides two subcommands for encrypting with RSA – pkeyutl and the deprecated, RSA-specific rsautl subcommand. We will, of course, use pkeyutl. Documentation for that subcommand can be found on the openssl-pkeyutl man page:

man openssl-pkeyutl

As explained previously, RSA is usually used for encrypting a session key, which will then be used to encrypt useful data. Let’s generate a 256-bit session key:

$ openssl rand -out session_key.bin 32

Now, let’s use openssl pkeyutl with our public RSA key for encrypting the session key:

$ openssl pkeyutl \
    -encrypt \
    -in session_key.bin \
    -out session_key.bin.encrypted \
    -pubin \
    -inkey rsa_public_key.pem \
    -pkeyopt rsa_padding_mode:oaep

Note the -pkeyopt rsa_padding_mode:oaep switch. It instructs...

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