Certificate Revocation List
From Just Solve the File Format Problem
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== Sample files == | == Sample files == | ||
− | Most SSL certificates contain a link to a CRL file (in the "CRL Distribution Points" extension | + | Most SSL certificates contain a link to a CRL file (in the "CRL Distribution Points" extension), so live CRL files are easy to find. |
* [http://gtssldv-crl.geotrust.com/crls/gtssldv.crl gtssldv.crl] | * [http://gtssldv-crl.geotrust.com/crls/gtssldv.crl gtssldv.crl] | ||
* [http://crl.thawte.com/ThawteEVCA2006.crl ThawteEVCA2006.crl] | * [http://crl.thawte.com/ThawteEVCA2006.crl ThawteEVCA2006.crl] | ||
* [http://EVSecure-crl.verisign.com/EVSecure2006.crl EVSecure2006.crl] | * [http://EVSecure-crl.verisign.com/EVSecure2006.crl EVSecure2006.crl] |
Revision as of 01:52, 24 October 2013
A Certificate Revocation List (CRL) is a cryptographically-signed list of certificates that a certificate authority has declared to be revoked.
A CRL file may be encoded in PEM format, DER format, or possibly some other format.
CRL files are becoming less widely-used, in favor of the OCSP protocol.
Contents |
Identification
A PEM-encoded CRL file is plain text, with base64-encoded payload data. It contains a line that reads "-----BEGIN X509 CRL -----
".
Examples
To view the contents of a PEM-encoded CRL file, using OpenSSL:
openssl crl -noout -text -in example.crl
To view the contents of a DER-encoded CRL file:
openssl crl -inform DER -noout -text -in example.crl
Software
Sample files
Most SSL certificates contain a link to a CRL file (in the "CRL Distribution Points" extension), so live CRL files are easy to find.