stunnel

stunnel
Developer(s) Michał Trojnara
Stable release 5.16 (April 19, 2015 (2015-04-19)[1]) [±]
Operating system Multi-platform
Type Proxy, Encryption
License GNU General Public License
Website www.stunnel.org/index.html

The stunnel is an open-source multi-platform computer program, used to provide universal TLS/SSL tunneling service.

The stunnel can be used to provide secure encrypted connections for clients or servers that do not speak TLS or SSL natively.[2] It runs on a variety of operating systems,[3] including most Unix-like operating systems and Windows. Stunnel relies on a separate library, such as OpenSSL or SSLeay, to implement the underlying TLS or SSL protocol.

The stunnel uses public-key cryptography with X.509 digital certificates to secure the SSL connection. Clients can optionally be authenticated via a certificate too.[4]

If linked against libwrap, it can be configured to act as a proxy-firewall service as well.

The stunnel is maintained by Michał Trojnara. Released under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL) with OpenSSL exception.

Example scenario

For example, one could use stunnel to provide a secure SSL connection to an existing non-SSL-aware SMTP mail server. Assume the SMTP server expects TCP connections on port 25. One would configure stunnel to map the SSL port 465 to non-SSL port 25. A mail client connects via SSL to port 465. Network traffic from the client initially passes over SSL to the stunnel application, which transparently encrypts/decrypts traffic and forwards unsecured traffic to port 25 locally. The mail server sees a non-SSL mail client.

The stunnel process could be running on the same or a different server from the unsecured mail application; however, both machines would typically be behind a firewall on a secure internal network (so that an intruder could not make its own unsecured connection directly to port 25).

Another typical example is to use it to bypass an over secure firewall: You're on a LAN with no SSH access to the Web. But the SSL protocol (port 443) can get through. Using stunnel you can encapsulate your SSH connection in SSL.

References

  1. "stunnel: ChangeLog". Retrieved 2015-04-22.
  2. O'Donovan, Barry Secure Communication with Stunnel, Linux Gazette, Issue 107, October 2004
  3. Stunnel Ports
  4. stunnel(8) manual

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, March 30, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.