The stunnel package contains a program that allows you to encrypt arbitrary TCP connections inside SSL (Secure Sockets Layer) so you can easily communicate with clients over secure channels. stunnel can also be used to tunnel PPP over network sockets without changes to the server package source code.
This package is known to build and work properly using an LFS 12.1 platform.
Download (HTTP): https://www.stunnel.org/downloads/archive/5.x/stunnel-5.72.tar.gz
Download MD5 sum: 61d35d2df1b96b23ed6fb20cf5ddb613
Download size: 880 KB
Estimated disk space required: 7.5 MB
Estimated build time: less than 0.1 SBU
libnsl-2.0.1, netcat (required for tests), tcpwrappers, and TOR
The stunnel daemon
will be run in a chroot jail by an unprivileged
user. Create the new user and group using the following commands as
the root
user:
groupadd -g 51 stunnel && useradd -c "stunnel Daemon" -d /var/lib/stunnel \ -g stunnel -s /bin/false -u 51 stunnel
A signed SSL Certificate and a Private Key is necessary to run
the stunnel daemon.
After the package is installed, there are instructions to
generate them. However, if you own or have already created a
signed SSL Certificate you wish to use, copy it to /etc/stunnel/stunnel.pem
before starting the
build (ensure only root
has read
and write access). The .pem
file
must be formatted as shown below:
-----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----
<many encrypted lines of private key>
-----END PRIVATE KEY-----
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
<many encrypted lines of certificate>
-----END CERTIFICATE-----
-----BEGIN DH PARAMETERS-----
<encrypted lines of dh parms>
-----END DH PARAMETERS-----
Install stunnel by running the following commands:
./configure --prefix=/usr \ --sysconfdir=/etc \ --localstatedir=/var \ --disable-systemd && make
If you have installed the optional netcat application, the regression tests can be run with make check.
Now, as the root
user:
make docdir=/usr/share/doc/stunnel-5.72 install
If you do not already have a signed SSL Certificate and Private
Key, create the stunnel.pem
file in
the /etc/stunnel
directory using the
command below. You will be prompted to enter the necessary
information. Ensure you reply to the
Common Name (FQDN of your server) [localhost]:
prompt with the name or IP address you will be using to access the service(s).
To generate a certificate, as the root
user, issue:
make cert
--disable-systemd
: This
switch disables systemd socket activation support which is not
available in BLFS.
make docdir=... install: This command installs the package and changes the documentation installation directory to standard naming conventions.
As the root
user, create the
directory used for the .pid
file
created when the stunnel daemon
starts:
install -v -m750 -o stunnel -g stunnel -d /var/lib/stunnel/run && chown stunnel:stunnel /var/lib/stunnel
Next, create a basic /etc/stunnel/stunnel.conf
configuration file
using the following commands as the root
user:
cat > /etc/stunnel/stunnel.conf << "EOF"
; File: /etc/stunnel/stunnel.conf
; Note: The pid and output locations are relative to the chroot location.
pid = /run/stunnel.pid
chroot = /var/lib/stunnel
client = no
setuid = stunnel
setgid = stunnel
cert = /etc/stunnel/stunnel.pem
;debug = 7
;output = stunnel.log
;[https]
;accept = 443
;connect = 80
;; "TIMEOUTclose = 0" is a workaround for a design flaw in Microsoft SSL
;; Microsoft implementations do not use SSL close-notify alert and thus
;; they are vulnerable to truncation attacks
;TIMEOUTclose = 0
EOF
Finally, add the service(s) you wish to encrypt to the configuration file. The format is as follows:
[<service>
]
accept = <hostname:portnumber>
connect = <hostname:portnumber>
For a full explanation of the commands and syntax used in the configuration file, issue man stunnel.
To automatically start the stunnel daemon when the system
is booted, install the /etc/rc.d/init.d/stunnel
bootscript from the
blfs-bootscripts-20240209 package.
make install-stunnel