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Updated README to reflect the changes in cipherscan.

This commit is contained in:
Pepi Zawodsky 2014-02-08 17:07:54 +01:00
parent 490c86c43e
commit 0d93b5d37e

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@ -2,30 +2,37 @@ CipherScan
==========
A very simple way to find out which SSL ciphersuites are supported by a target.
Run: ./cipherscan www.google.com:443
And watch.
On Linux x86_64 run: ./cipherscan www.google.com:443
On any other *nix or *tux run: ./cipherscan -o /path/to/openssl www.google.com:443
and watch.
The newer your version of openssl, the better results you'll get. Versions
of OpenSSL below 1.0.1 don't support TLS1.2 ciphers, elliptic curves, etc... Build your own or test what your system's OpenSSL supports.
Cipherscan should work fine on Linux, Mac OS X, Solaris, Illumos, SmartOS, OpenIndiana if you specify a an openssl binary with -o.
The newer your version of openssl, the better results you'll get. Older versions
of OpenSSL don't support TLS1.2 ciphers, elliptic curves, etc... Build Your Own!
Options
-------
Enable benchmarking by setting DOBENCHMARK to 1 at the top of the script.
Enable benchmarking by passing -b|--benchmark
You can use one of the options below (only one. yes, I know...)
You can the options below.
Use '-v' to get more stuff to read.
-a | --allciphers Test all known ciphers individually at the end.
-b | --benchmark Activate benchmark mode.
-h | --help Shows this help text.
-j | --json Output results in JSON format.
-o | --openssl /path/to/the/openssl binary you want to use.
-v | --verbose Increase verbosity.
Use '-a' to force openssl to test every single cipher it know.
Use '-json' to output the results in json format
```
$ ./cipherscan -json www.google.com:443
linux $ ./cipherscan -json www.google.com:443
```
Example
-------
Testing plain SSL/TLS:
```
$ ./cipherscan www.google.com:443
...................
@ -48,6 +55,10 @@ prio ciphersuite protocols pfs_keysize
16 ECDHE-RSA-AES128-SHA256 SSLv3,TLSv1,TLSv1.1,TLSv1.2 ECDH,P-256,256bits
17 AES128-SHA256 SSLv3,TLSv1,TLSv1.1,TLSv1.2
18 AES128-SHA SSLv3,TLSv1,TLSv1.1,TLSv1.2
```
Testing STARTTLS:
```
$ ./cipherscan -starttls xmpp jabber.ccc.de:5222
.........
prio ciphersuite protocols pfs_keysize