rpc.tlsclntd
— Sun
RPC over TLS Client Daemon
rpc.tlsclntd |
[-2 ] [-C
available_ciphers] [-D
certdir] [-d ]
[-l CAfile]
[-m ] [-p
CApath] [-r
CRLfile] [-v ] |
The rpc.tlsclntd
program provides support
for the client side of the kernel Sun RPC over TLS implementation. This
daemon must be running for the kernel RPC to be able to do a TLS connection
to a server for an NFS over TLS mount. This daemon requires that the kernel
be built with “options KERNEL_TLS” and be running on an
architecture such as “amd64” that supports a direct map (not
i386) with
ktls(4)
enabled.
If either of the -l
or
-p
options have been specified, the daemon will
require the server's certificate to verify and have a Fully Qualified Domain
Name (FQDN) in it. This FQDN must match the reverse DNS name for the IP
address that the server is using for the TCP connection. The FQDN may be in
either the DNS field of the subjectAltName or the CN field of the
subjectName in the certificate and cannot have a wildcard “*”
in it.
If a SIGHUP signal is sent to the daemon it will reload the
“CRLfile” and will shut down any extant connections that
presented certificates during TLS handshake that have been revoked. If the
-r
option was not specified, the SIGHUP signal will
be ignored.
The daemon will log failed certificate verifications via
syslogd(8)
using LOG_INFO | LOG_DAEMON when the -l
or
-p
option has been specified.
The options are as follows:
-2
,
--usetls1_2
- Specify the use of TLS version 1.2. By default, the client will use TLS
version 1.3, as required by the RFC. However, early
FreeBSD (13.0 and 13.1) servers require this
option, since they only support TLS version 1.2.
-C
available_ciphers,
--ciphers=
available_ciphers
- Specify which ciphers are available during TLS handshake. If this option
is specified, “SSL_CTX_set_ciphersuites()” will be called
with “available_ciphers” as the argument. If this option is
not specified, the cipher will be chosen by
ssl(7),
which should be adequate for most cases. The format for the available
ciphers is a simple ‘:’ separated list, in order of
preference. The command “openssl ciphers -s -tls1_3” lists
available ciphers.
-D
certdir,
--certdir=
certdir
- Use “certdir” instead of /etc/rpc.tlsclntd for the
-m
option.
-d
,
--debuglevel
- Run in debug mode. In this mode,
rpc.tlsclntd
will
not fork when it starts.
-l
CAfile,
--verifylocs=
CAfile
- This specifies the path name of a CAfile which holds the information for
server certificate verification. This path name is used in
“SSL_CTX_load_verify_locations(ctx,CAfile,NULL)” and
“SSL_CTX_set0_CA_list(ctx,SSL_load_client_CA_file(CAfile))”
openssl library calls. Note that this is a path name for the file and is
not assumed to be in “certdir”.
-m
,
--mutualverf
- Enable support for mutual authentication. A certificate and associated key
must be found in /etc/rpc.tlsclntd (or the directory specified by the
-D
option) in case a server requests a peer
certificate. The first certificate needs to be in a file named
“cert.pem” and the associated key in a file named
“certkey.pem”. The
mount_nfs(8)
option -tlscertname
can be used to override the
default certificate for a given NFS mount, where the files use the
alternate naming specified by the option. If there is a passphrase on the
“certkey.pem” file, this daemon will prompt for the
passphrase during startup. The keys for alternate certificates cannot have
passphrases.
-p
CApath,
--verifydir=
CApath
- This option is similar to the
-l
option, but
specifies the path of a directory with CA certificates in it. When this
option is used,
“SSL_CTX_set0_CA_list(ctx,SSL_load_client_CA_file())” is not
called, so a list of CA names is not be passed to the server during the
TLS handshake. The openssl documentation indicates this call is rarely
needed.
-r
CRLfile,
--crl=
CRLfile
- This option specifies a Certificate Revocation List (CRL) file that is to
be loaded into the verify certificate store and checked during
verification of the server's certificate. This option is meaningless
unless either the
-l
or -p
have been specified.
-v
,
--verbose
- Run in verbose mode. In this mode,
rpc.tlsclntd
will log activity messages to syslog using LOG_INFO | LOG_DAEMON or to
stderr, if the -d
option has also been
specified.
The rpc.tlsclntd
utility exits 0 on
success, and >0 if an error occurs.
The implementation is based on the specification in
Towards Remote Procedure Call Encryption
By Default, RFC 9289.
The rpc.tlsclntd
manual page first
appeared in FreeBSD 13.0.
This daemon cannot be safely shut down and restarted if there are
any active RPC-over-TLS connections. Doing so will orphan the KERNEL_TLS
connections, so that they can no longer do upcalls successfully, since the
“SSL *” structures in userspace have been lost.