openssl Network Stream Driver¶
Driver Name: | ossl |
Author: | Andre Lorbach <alorbach@adiscon.com> |
Available since: | 8.36.0 |
Purpose¶
This network stream driver implements a TLS protected transport via the OpenSSL library.
Supported Driver Modes¶
- 0 - unencrypted trasmission (just like ptcp driver)
- 1 - TLS-protected operation
Note
Mode 0 does not provide any benefit over the ptcp driver. This mode exists for technical reasons, but should not be used. It may be removed in the future.
Supported Authentication Modes¶
- anon - anonymous authentication as described in IETF’s draft-ietf-syslog-transport-tls-12 Internet draft
- x509/fingerprint - certificate fingerprint authentication as described in IETF’s draft-ietf-syslog-transport-tls-12 Internet draft. Even in x509/fingerprint mode, both the client and server certificate currently must be signed by the same root CA.
- x509/certvalid - certificate validation only. x509/certvalid is a nonstandard mode. It validates the remote peers certificate, but does not check the subject name. This is weak authentication that may be useful in scenarios where multiple devices are deployed and it is sufficient proof of authenticity when their certificates are signed by the CA the server trusts. This is better than anon authentication, but still not recommended. Known Problems
- x509/name - certificate validation and subject name authentication as described in IETF’s draft-ietf-syslog-transport-tls-12 Internet draft
Note
“anon” does not permit to authenticate the remote peer. As such, this mode is vulnerable to man in the middle attacks as well as unauthorized access. It is recommended NOT to use this mode. A certificate / key does not need to be configured in this authmode.
Note
Anon mode changes in: v8.190 (or above)
- Anonymous Ciphers (DH and ECDH) are available in ANON mode.
- Server does not require a certificate anymore in anon mode.
- If Server has a certificate and the Client does not, the highest possible ciphers will be selected.
- If both Server and Client do not have a certificate, the highest available anon cipher will be used.
See also
Help with configuring/using Rsyslog
:
- Mailing list - best route for general questions
- GitHub: rsyslog source project - detailed questions, reporting issues
that are believed to be bugs with
Rsyslog
- Stack Exchange (View, Ask) - experimental support from rsyslog community
See also
Contributing to Rsyslog
:
- Source project: rsyslog project README.
- Documentation: rsyslog-doc project README