Provided by: openssl_3.5.0-2ubuntu1_amd64 bug

NAME

       openssl-pkeyutl - asymmetric key command

SYNOPSIS

       openssl pkeyutl [-help] [-in file] [-rawin] [-digest algorithm] [-out file] [-secret file] [-sigfile
       file] [-inkey filename|uri] [-keyform DER|PEM|P12|ENGINE] [-passin arg] [-pubin] [-certin] [-rev] [-sign]
       [-verify] [-verifyrecover] [-encrypt] [-decrypt] [-derive] [-peerkey file] [-peerform DER|PEM|P12|ENGINE]
       [-encap] [-decap] [-kdf algorithm] [-kdflen length] [-kemop mode] [-pkeyopt opt:value] [-pkeyopt_passin
       opt[:passarg]] [-hexdump] [-asn1parse] [-engine id] [-engine_impl] [-rand files] [-writerand file]
       [-provider name] [-provider-path path] [-provparam [name:]key=value] [-propquery propq] [-config
       configfile]

DESCRIPTION

       This command can be used to perform low-level operations on asymmetric (public or private) keys using any
       supported algorithm.

       By default the signing operation (see -sign option) is assumed.

OPTIONS

       -help
           Print out a usage message.

       -in filename
           This  specifies  the  input  filename  to  read  data  from  or  standard input if this option is not
           specified.

       -rawin
           This indicates that the signature or verification input data is raw data, which is not hashed by  any
           message  digest  algorithm.   Except with EdDSA, the user can specify a digest algorithm by using the
           -digest option.  For signature algorithms like RSA, DSA and ECDSA, the default  digest  algorithm  is
           SHA256. For SM2, it is SM3.

           This  option  can  only be used with -sign and -verify.  For EdDSA (the Ed25519 and Ed448 algorithms)
           this option is implied since OpenSSL 3.5, and required in earlier versions.

           The -digest option implies -rawin since OpenSSL 3.5.

       -digest algorithm
           This option can only be used with -sign and -verify.  It specifies the digest algorithm that is  used
           to  hash  the  input  data  before  signing  or verifying it with the input key. This option could be
           omitted if the signature algorithm does not require preprocessing the input through a pluggable  hash
           function  before signing (for instance, EdDSA). If this option is omitted but the signature algorithm
           requires one and the -rawin option is given, a default value will be used (see -rawin  for  details).
           If  this  option  is  present,  then  the -rawin option is implied since OpenSSL 3.5, and required in
           earlier versions.

           At this time, HashEdDSA (the ph or "prehash" variant of EdDSA)  is  not  supported,  so  the  -digest
           option cannot be used with EdDSA.

       -out filename
           Specifies the output filename to write to or standard output by default.

       -secret filename
           Specifies  the  shared-secret output filename for when performing encapsulation via the -encap option
           or decapsulation via the -decap  option.   The  -encap  option  also  produces  a  separate  (public)
           ciphertext  output which is by default written to standard output, but being binary non-text data, is
           typically also redirected to a file selected via the -out option.

       -sigfile file
           Signature file, required and allowed for -verify operations only.

       -inkey filename|uri
           The input key, by default it should be a private key.

       -keyform DER|PEM|P12|ENGINE
           The key format; unspecified by default.  See openssl-format-options(1) for details.

       -passin arg
           The  input  key  password  source.   For   more   information   about   the   format   of   arg   see
           openssl-passphrase-options(1).

       -pubin
           By  default a private key is read from the key input.  With this option a public key is read instead.
           If the input contains no public key but a private key, its public part is used.

       -certin
           The input is a certificate containing a public key.

       -rev
           Reverse the order of the input buffer. This is useful for some libraries (such  as  CryptoAPI)  which
           represent the buffer in little-endian format.  This cannot be used in conjunction with -rawin.

       -sign
           Sign  the  input  data  and  output  the signed result. This requires a private key.  Using a message
           digest operation along with this is recommended, when applicable, see the -rawin and -digest  options
           for  details.  Otherwise, the input data given with the -in option is assumed to already be a digest,
           but this may then require an additional -pkeyopt "digest:"md  in  some  cases  (e.g.,  RSA  with  the
           default  PKCS#1  padding  mode).  Even for other algorithms like ECDSA, where the additional -pkeyopt
           option does not affect signature output, it is recommended, as it enables  checking  that  the  input
           length is consistent with the intended digest.

       -verify
           Verify  the  input  data  against  the  signature  given with the -sigfile option and indicate if the
           verification succeeded or failed.  The input data given with the -in option is assumed to be  a  hash
           value  unless  the  -rawin option is specified or implied.  With raw data, when a digest algorithm is
           applicable, though it may be inferred from the signature or take a default value, it should  also  be
           specified.

       -verifyrecover
           Verify  the  given signature and output the recovered data (signature payload).  For example, in case
           of RSA PKCS#1 the recovered data is the EMSA-PKCS-v1_5 DER encoding of the digest algorithm  OID  and
           value           as           specified           in           RFC8017           Section           9.2
           <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc8017#section-9.2>.

           Note that here the input given with the -in option is not a signature input (as with  the  -sign  and
           -verify options) but a signature output value, typically produced using the -sign option.

           This option is available only for use with RSA keys.

       -encrypt
           Encrypt the input data using a public key.

       -decrypt
           Decrypt the input data using a private key.

       -derive
           Derive a shared secret using own private (EC)DH key and peer key.

       -peerkey file
           File  containing  the  peer  public  or private (EC)DH key to use with the key derivation (agreement)
           operation.  Its type must match the type of the own private key given with -inkey.

       -peerform DER|PEM|P12|ENGINE
           The peer key format; unspecified by default.  See openssl-format-options(1) for details.

       -encap
           Use a Key Encapsulation Mechanism (KEM) to encapsulate a shared-secret to a peer's public  key.   The
           encapsulated  result  (or ciphertext, non-text binary data) is written to standard output by default,
           or else to the file specified with -out.  The -secret option must also be  provided  to  specify  the
           output   file   for   the  derived  shared-secret  value  generated  in  the  encapsulation  process.
           Encapsulation is supported with a number of public key algorithms, currently: ML-KEM,  X25519,  X449,
           and  EC.   The  ECX  and EC algorithms use the RFC9180 <https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc9180> DHKEM
           construction.  Encapsulation is also supported with RSA keys via the RSASVE construction.

           At the API level, encapsulation and decapsulation are also supported  for  a  few  hybrid  ECDHE  (no
           DHKEM)  plus  ML-KEM  algorithms, but these are intended primarily for use with TLS and should not be
           used standalone.  There are in any case no standard public and private key  formats  for  the  hybrid
           algorithms, so it is not possible to provide the required key material.

       -decap
           Decode  an  encapsulated  secret, with the use of a -private key, to derive the same shared-secret as
           that obtained when the secret was encapsulated to the corresponding  public  key.   The  encapsulated
           secret  is  by  default  read from the standard input, or else from the file specified with -in.  The
           derived shared-secret is written to the file specified with the -secret option, which  must  also  be
           provided.   Decapsulation  is  supported  with  a number of public key algorithms, currently: ML-KEM,
           X25519,  X448,  and  EC.   The  ECX   and   EC   algorithms   use   the   RFC9180   <https://www.rfc-
           editor.org/rfc/rfc9180>  DHKEM  construction.   Decapsulation is also supported with RSA keys via the
           RSASVE construction.

       -kemop mode
           This option is used with the -encap/-decap commands and specifies the KEM mode specific for  the  key
           algorithm  when there is no default way to encapsulate and decapsulate shared secrets with the chosen
           key type.  All the supported algorithms presently support only their default mode, and  this  option,
           though available, is not required.

       -kdf algorithm
           Use  key  derivation  function algorithm.  The supported algorithms are at present TLS1-PRF and HKDF.
           Note: additional parameters and the KDF output length will normally have to be set for this to  work.
           See   EVP_PKEY_CTX_set_hkdf_md(3)   and  EVP_PKEY_CTX_set_tls1_prf_md(3)  for  the  supported  string
           parameters of each algorithm.

       -kdflen length
           Set the output length for KDF.

       -pkeyopt opt:value
           Public key options specified as opt:value. See NOTES below for more details.

       -pkeyopt_passin opt[:passarg]
           Allows reading a public key option opt from stdin or a password source.  If only  opt  is  specified,
           the  user  will  be  prompted  to enter a password on stdin.  Alternatively, passarg can be specified
           which can be any value supported by openssl-passphrase-options(1).

       -hexdump
           hex dump the output data.

       -asn1parse
           Parse the ASN.1 output data to check its DER encoding and print any errors.  When combined  with  the
           -verifyrecover  option,  this  may  be  useful in case an ASN.1 DER-encoded structure had been signed
           directly (without hashing it) and when checking a signature in PKCS#1 v1.5 format, which  has  a  DER
           encoding.

       -engine id
           See "Engine Options" in openssl(1).  This option is deprecated.

       -engine_impl
           When used with the -engine option, it specifies to also use engine id for crypto operations.

       -rand files, -writerand file
           See "Random State Options" in openssl(1) for details.

       -provider name
       -provider-path path
       -provparam [name:]key=value
       -propquery propq
           See "Provider Options" in openssl(1), provider(7), and property(7).

       -config configfile
           See "Configuration Option" in openssl(1).

NOTES

       The  operations  and  options  supported  vary according to the key algorithm and its implementation. The
       OpenSSL operations and options are indicated below.

       Unless otherwise mentioned, the -pkeyopt option  supports  for  all  public-key  types  the  "digest:"alg
       argument,  which  specifies the digest in use for the signing and verification operations.  The value alg
       should represent a digest name as used in the EVP_get_digestbyname() function for  example  sha256.  This
       value is not used to hash the input data. It is used (by some algorithms) for sanity-checking the lengths
       of  data passed in and for creating the structures that make up the signature (e.g., DigestInfo in RSASSA
       PKCS#1 v1.5 signatures).

       For instance, if the value of  the  -pkeyopt  option  "digest"  argument  is  sha256,  the  signature  or
       verification input should be the 32 bytes long binary value of the SHA256 hash function output.

       Unless  -rawin  is  used or implied, this command does not hash the input data but rather it will use the
       data directly as input to the signature algorithm.  Depending on the key type, signature type,  and  mode
       of  padding, the maximum sensible lengths of input data differ. With RSA the signed data cannot be longer
       than the key modulus. In case of ECDSA and DSA the data  should  not  be  longer  than  the  field  size,
       otherwise  it  will  be  silently  truncated  to the field size.  In any event the input size must not be
       larger than the largest supported digest output size EVP_MAX_MD_SIZE, which currently is 64 bytes.

RSA ALGORITHM

       The RSA algorithm generally supports the encrypt, decrypt, sign,  verify  and  verifyrecover  operations.
       However,  some  padding modes support only a subset of these operations. The following additional pkeyopt
       values are supported:

       rsa_padding_mode:mode
           This sets the RSA padding mode. Acceptable values for mode are pkcs1 for PKCS#1 padding, none for  no
           padding, oaep for OAEP mode, x931 for X9.31 mode and pss for PSS.

           In  PKCS#1  padding,  if  the message digest is not set, then the supplied data is signed or verified
           directly instead of using a DigestInfo structure. If a digest is set, then the  DigestInfo  structure
           is used and its length must correspond to the digest type.

           Note,  for  pkcs1 padding, as a protection against the Bleichenbacher attack, the decryption will not
           fail in case of padding check failures. Use none and manual inspection of the  decrypted  message  to
           verify if the decrypted value has correct PKCS#1 v1.5 padding.

           For oaep mode only encryption and decryption is supported.

           For  x931  if  the digest type is set it is used to format the block data otherwise the first byte is
           used to specify the X9.31 digest ID. Sign, verify and verifyrecover are  can  be  performed  in  this
           mode.

           For pss mode only sign and verify are supported and the digest type must be specified.

       rsa_pss_saltlen:len
           For  pss  mode only this option specifies the salt length. Three special values are supported: digest
           sets the salt length to the digest length, max sets the salt length to the maximum permissible value.
           When verifying auto causes the salt length to be automatically determined  based  on  the  PSS  block
           structure.

       rsa_mgf1_md:digest
           For  PSS  and OAEP padding sets the MGF1 digest. If the MGF1 digest is not explicitly set in PSS mode
           then the signing digest is used.

       rsa_oaep_md:digest
           Sets the digest used for the OAEP hash function. If not explicitly set then SHA256 is used.

       rsa_pkcs1_implicit_rejection:flag
           Disables (when set to 0) or enables (when set to 1) the use of implicit rejection  with  PKCS#1  v1.5
           decryption.  When  enabled  (the default), as a protection against Bleichenbacher attack, the library
           will generate a deterministic random plaintext that it will return to the caller in case  of  padding
           check  failure.   When  disabled, it's the callers' responsibility to handle the returned errors in a
           side-channel free manner.

RSA-PSS ALGORITHM

       The RSA-PSS algorithm is a restricted version of the RSA algorithm  which  only  supports  the  sign  and
       verify operations with PSS padding. The following additional -pkeyopt values are supported:

       rsa_padding_mode:mode, rsa_pss_saltlen:len, rsa_mgf1_md:digest
           These  have the same meaning as the RSA algorithm with some additional restrictions. The padding mode
           can only be set to pss which is the default value.

           If the key has parameter restrictions then the digest, MGF1 digest and salt length  are  set  to  the
           values  specified  in the parameters.  The digest and MG cannot be changed and the salt length cannot
           be set to a value less than the minimum restriction.

DSA ALGORITHM

       The DSA algorithm supports signing and verification operations only. Currently there  are  no  additional
       -pkeyopt options other than digest. The SHA256 digest is assumed by default.

DH ALGORITHM

       The DH algorithm only supports the derivation operation and no additional -pkeyopt options.

EC ALGORITHM

       The  EC  algorithm  supports sign, verify and derive operations. The sign and verify operations use ECDSA
       and derive uses ECDH. SHA256 is assumed by default for the -pkeyopt digest option.

X25519 AND X448 ALGORITHMS

       The X25519 and X448 algorithms support key derivation only. Currently there are no additional options.

ML-DSA-44, ML-DSA-65 AND ML-DSA-87 ALGORITHMS

       The ML-DSA algorithms support signing and verification of "raw"  messages.   No  preliminary  hashing  is
       performed.

       The  signing  operation  supports  a  deterministic:bool  option,  with  bool set to 1 if a deterministic
       signature is to be generated with a fixed all zero random input.  By default, or  if  the  bool  is  0  a
       random  entropy  value  is  used.   A deterministic result can also be obtained by specifying an explicit
       entropy value via the hextest-entropy:value parameter.  Deterministic ML-DSA signing should only be  used
       in tests.

       See EVP_SIGNATURE-ML-DSA(7) for additional options and detail.

ML-KEM-512, ML-KEM-768 AND ML-KEM-1024 ALGORITHMS

       The ML-KEM algorithms support encapsulation and decapsulation only.  The encapsulation operation supports
       a hexikme:entropy option, with entropy the 64 hexadecimal digit encoding of a 32-byte value.  This should
       only be used in tests, known or leaked values of the option may compromise the generated shared secret.

       See EVP_KEM-ML-KEM(7) for additional detail.

ED25519 AND ED448 ALGORITHMS

       These algorithms only support signing and verifying. OpenSSL only implements the "pure" variants of these
       algorithms  so  raw data can be passed directly to them without hashing them first. OpenSSL only supports
       "oneshot" operation with these algorithms. This means that the entire file to be signed/verified must  be
       read  into  memory  before  processing  it.  Signing  or  Verifying  very  large files should be avoided.
       Additionally the size of the file must be known for this to work. If the  size  of  the  file  cannot  be
       determined (for example if the input is stdin) then the sign or verify operation will fail.

SM2

       The  SM2  algorithm  supports  sign,  verify,  encrypt  and  decrypt  operations. For the sign and verify
       operations, SM2 requires an Distinguishing ID string to be passed in. The  following  -pkeyopt  value  is
       supported:

       distid:string
           This  sets the ID string used in SM2 sign or verify operations. While verifying an SM2 signature, the
           ID string must be the same one used when signing the data.  Otherwise the verification will fail.

       hexdistid:hex_string
           This sets the ID string used in SM2 sign or verify operations. While verifying an SM2 signature,  the
           ID string must be the same one used when signing the data.  Otherwise the verification will fail. The
           ID string provided with this option should be a valid hexadecimal value.

EXAMPLES

       Sign some data using a private key:

        openssl pkeyutl -sign -in file -inkey key.pem -out sig

       Recover the signed data (e.g. if an RSA key is used):

        openssl pkeyutl -verifyrecover -in sig -inkey key.pem

       Verify the signature (e.g. a DSA key):

        openssl pkeyutl -verify -in file -sigfile sig -inkey key.pem

       Sign data using a message digest value (this is currently only valid for RSA):

        openssl pkeyutl -sign -in file -inkey key.pem -out sig -pkeyopt digest:sha256

       Derive a shared secret value:

        openssl pkeyutl -derive -inkey key.pem -peerkey pubkey.pem -out secret

       Hexdump 48 bytes of TLS1 PRF using digest SHA256 and shared secret and seed consisting of the single byte
       0xFF:

        openssl pkeyutl -kdf TLS1-PRF -kdflen 48 -pkeyopt md:SHA256 \
           -pkeyopt hexsecret:ff -pkeyopt hexseed:ff -hexdump

       Derive a key using scrypt where the password is read from command line:

        openssl pkeyutl -kdf scrypt -kdflen 16 -pkeyopt_passin pass \
           -pkeyopt hexsalt:aabbcc -pkeyopt N:16384 -pkeyopt r:8 -pkeyopt p:1

       Derive using the same algorithm, but read key from environment variable MYPASS:

        openssl pkeyutl -kdf scrypt -kdflen 16 -pkeyopt_passin pass:env:MYPASS \
           -pkeyopt hexsalt:aabbcc -pkeyopt N:16384 -pkeyopt r:8 -pkeyopt p:1

       Sign some data using an SM2(7) private key and a specific ID:

        openssl pkeyutl -sign -in file -inkey sm2.key -out sig -rawin -digest sm3 \
           -pkeyopt distid:someid

       Verify some data using an SM2(7) certificate and a specific ID:

        openssl pkeyutl -verify -certin -in file -inkey sm2.cert -sigfile sig \
           -rawin -digest sm3 -pkeyopt distid:someid

       Decrypt some data using a private key with OAEP padding using SHA256:

        openssl pkeyutl -decrypt -in file -inkey key.pem -out secret \
           -pkeyopt rsa_padding_mode:oaep -pkeyopt rsa_oaep_md:sha256

SEE ALSO

       openssl(1),   openssl-genpkey(1),  openssl-pkey(1),  openssl-rsautl(1)  openssl-dgst(1),  openssl-rsa(1),
       openssl-genrsa(1), openssl-kdf(1) EVP_PKEY_CTX_set_hkdf_md(3), EVP_PKEY_CTX_set_tls1_prf_md(3),

HISTORY

       Since OpenSSL 3.5, the -digest option implies -rawin, and these two options are no longer  required  when
       signing or verifying with an Ed25519 or Ed448 key.

       Also  since OpenSSL 3.5, the -kemop option is no longer required for any of the supported algorithms, the
       only supported mode is now the default.

       The -engine option was deprecated in OpenSSL 3.0.

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright 2006-2025 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.

       Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License").  You may not use this file  except  in  compliance
       with  the  License.   You  can  obtain  a  copy  in  the  file  LICENSE  in the source distribution or at
       <https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>.

3.5.0                                              2025-06-04                              OPENSSL-PKEYUTL(1SSL)