codesign的help语法
codesign(1) [osx man page]
CODESIGN(1) BSD General Commands Manual CODESIGN(1)
NAME
codesign -- Create and manipulate code signatures
SYNOPSIS
codesign -s identity [-i identifier] [-r requirements] [-fv] [path ...]
codesign -v [-R requirement] [-v] [path|pid ...]
codesign -d [-v] [path|pid ...]
codesign -h [-v] [pid ...]
DESCRIPTION
The codesign command is used to create, check, and display code signatures, as well as inquire into the dynamic status of signed code in the
system.
codesign requires exactly one operation option to determine what action is to be performed, as well as any number of other options to modify
its behavior. It can act on any number of objects per invocation, but performs the same operation on all of them.
codesign accepts single-character (classic) options, as well as GNU-style long options of the form --name and --name=value. Common options
have both forms; less frequent and specialized options have only long form. Note that the form --name value (without equal sign) will not
work as expected on options with optional values.
OPTIONS
The options are as follows:
--all-architectures
When verifying a code signature on code that has a universal ("fat") Mach-O binary, separately verify each architecture contained.
This is the default unless overridden with the -a (--architecture) option.
-a, --architecture architecture
When verifying or displaying signatures, explicitly select the Mach-O architecture given. The architecture can be specified either by
name (e.g. i386) or by number; if by number, a sub-architecture may be appended separated by a comma. This option applies only to
Mach-O binary code and is ignored for other types. If the path uses the Mach-O format and contains no code of the given architec-
ture, the command will fail. The default for verification is --all-architectures, to verify all architectures present. The default
for display is to report on the native architecture of the host system. When signing, codesign will always sign all architectures
contained in a universal Mach-O file.
--bundle-version version-string
When handling versioned bundles such as frameworks, explicitly specify the version to operate on. This must be one of the names in
the "Versions" directory of the bundle. If not specified, codesign uses the bundle's default version. Note that most frameworks
delivered with the system have only one version, and thus this option is irrelevant for them. There is currently no facility for
operating on all versions of a bundle at once.
-d, --display
Display information about the code at the path(s) given. Increasing levels of verbosity produce more output. The format is designed
to be moderately easy to parse by simple scripts while still making sense to human eyes. In addition, the -r, --file-list,
--extract-certificates, and --entitlements options can be used to retrieve additional information.
-D, --detached filename
When signing, designates that a detached signature should be written to the specified file. The code being signed is not modified and
need not be writable. When verifying, designates a file containing a detached signature to be used for verification. Any embedded
signature in the code is ignored.
--deep When signing a bundle, specifies that nested code content such as helpers, frameworks, and plug-ins, should be recursively signed in
turn. Beware that all signing options you specify will apply, in turn, to such nested content.
When verifying a bundle, specifies that any nested code content will be recursively verified as to its full content. By default, ver-
ification of nested content is limited to a shallow investigation that may not detect changes to the nested code.
When displaying a signature, specifies that a list of directly nested code should be written to the display output. This lists only
code directly nested within the subject; anything nested indirectly will require recursive application of the codesign command.
--detached-database
When signing, specifies that a detached signature should be generated as with the --detached option, but that the resulting signature
should be written into a system database, from where it is made automatically available whenever apparently unsigned code is vali-
dated on the system.
Writing to this system database requires elevated process privileges that are not available to ordinary users.
-f, --force
When signing, causes codesign to replace any existing signature on the path(s) given. Without this option, existing signatures will
not be replaced, and the signing operation fails.
-h, --hosting
Constructs and prints the hosting chain of a running program. The pid arguments must denote running code (pids etc.) With verbose
options, this also displays the individual dynamic validity status of each element of the hosting chain.
-i, --identifier identifier
During signing, explicitly specify the unique identifier string that is embedded in code signatures. If this option is omitted, the
identifier is derived from either the Info.plist (if present), or the filename of the executable being signed, possibly modified by
the --prefix option. It is a very bad idea to sign different programs with the same identifier.
-o, --options flag,...
During signing, specifies a set of option flags to be embedded in the code signature. The value takes the form of a comma-separated
list of names (with no spaces). Alternatively, a numeric value can be used to directly specify the option mask (CodeDirectory flag
word). See OPTION FLAGS below.
-P, --pagesize pagesize
Indicates the granularity of code signing. Pagesize must be a power of two. Chunks of pagesize bytes are separately signed and can
thus be independently verified as needed. As a special case, a pagesize of zero indicates that the entire code should be signed and
verified as a single, possibly gigantic page. This option only applies to the main executable and has no effect on the sealing of
associated data, including resources.
-r, --requirements requirements
During signing, indicates that internal requirements should be embedded in the code path(s) as specified. See "specifying require-
ments" below. Defaults will be applied to requirement types that are not explicitly specified; if you want to defeat such a default,
specify "never" for that type.
During display, indicates where to write the code's internal requirements. Use -r- to write them to standard output.
-R, --test-requirement requirement
During verification, indicates that the path(s) given should be verified against the code requirement specified. If this option is
omitted, the code is verified only for internal integrity and against its own designated requirement.
-s, --sign identity
Sign the code at the path(s) given using this identity. See SIGNING IDENTITIES below.
-v, --verbose
Sets (with a numeric value) or increments the verbosity level of output. Without the verbose option, no output is produced upon suc-
cess, in the classic UNIX style. If no other options request a different action, the first -v encountered will be interpreted as
--verify instead (and does not increase verbosity).
-v, --verify
Requests verification of code signatures. If other actions (sign, display, etc.) are also requested, -v is interpreted to mean
--verbose.
--continue
Instructs codesign to continue processing path arguments even if processing one fails. If this option is given, exit due to opera-
tional errors is deferred until all path arguments have been considered. The exit code will then indicate the most severe failure
(or, with equal severity, the first such failure encountered).
--dryrun
During signing, performs almost all signing operations, but does not actually write the result anywhere. Cryptographic signatures are
still generated, actually using the given signing identity and triggering any access control checks normally, though the resulting
signature is then discarded.
--entitlements path
When signing, take the file at the given path and embed its contents in the signature as entitlement data. If the data at path does
not already begin with a suitable binary ("blob") header, one is attached automatically.
When displaying a signature, extract any entitlement data from the signature and write it to the path given. Use "-" to write to
standard output. By default, the binary "blob" header is returned intact; prefix the path with a colon ":" to automatically strip it
off. If the signature has no entitlement data, nothing is written (this is not an error).
--extract-certificates prefix
When displaying a signature, extract the certificates in the embedded certificate chain and write them to individual files. The
prefix argument is appended with numbers 0, 1, ... to form the filenames, which can be relative or absolute. Certificate 0 is the
leaf (signing) certificate, and as many files are written as there are certificates in the signature. The files are in ASN.1 (DER)
form. If prefix is omitted, the default prefix is "codesign" in the current directory.
--file-list path
When signing or displaying a signature, codesign writes to the given path a list of files that may have been modified as part of the
signing process. This is useful for installer or patcher programs that need to know what was changed or what files are needed to make
up the "signature" of a program. The file given is appended-to, with one line per absolute path written. An argument of "-" (single
dash) denotes standard output. Note that the list may be somewhat pessimistic - all files not listed are guaranteed to be unchanged
by the signing process, but some of the listed files may not actually have changed. Also note that changes may have been made to
extended attributes of these files.
--ignore-resources
During static validation, do not validate the contents of the code's resources. In effect, this will pass validation on code whose
resources have been corrupted (or inappropriately signed). On large programs, it will also substantially speed up static validation,
since all the resources will not be read into memory. Obviously, the outcome of such a validation should be considered on its mer-
its.
--keychain filename
During signing, only search for the signing identity in the keychain file specified. This can be used to break any matching ties if
you have multiple similarly-named identities in several keychains on the user's search list. Note that the standard keychain search
path is still consulted while constructing the certificate chain being embedded in the signature.
Note that filename will not be searched to resolve the signing identity's certificate chain unless it is also on the user's keychain
search list.
--prefix string
If no explicit unique identifier is specified (using the -i option), and if the implicitly generated identifier does not contain any
dot (.) characters, then the given string is prefixed to the identifier before use. If the implicit identifier contains a dot, it is
used as-is. Typically, this is used to deal with command tools without Info.plists, whose default identifier is simply the command's
filename; the conventional prefix used is com.domain. (note that the final dot needs to be explicit).
--preserve-metadata=list
When re-signing code that is already signed, reuse some information from the old signature. If new data is specified explicitly, it
is preferred. You still need to specify the -f (--force) option to enable overwriting signatures at all. If this option is absent,
any old signature has no effect on the signing process.
This option takes a comma-separated list of names, which you may reasonably abbreviate:
identifier Preserve the signing identifier (--identifier) instead of generating a default identifier.
entitlements Preserve the entitlement data (--entitlements).
resource-rules Preserve and reuse the resource rules (--resource-rules).
requirements Preserve the internal requirements (--requirements option), including any explicit Designated Requirement. Note that
all internal requirements are preserved or regenerated as a whole; you cannot pick and choose individual elements
with this option.
For historical reasons, this option can be given without a value, which preserves all of these values as presently known. This use is
deprecated and will eventually be removed; always specify an explicit list of preserved items.
--resource-rules filename
During signing, this option overrides the default rules for identifying and collecting bundle resources and nested code to be sealed
into the signature. The argument is the path to a property list (plist) file containing scanning and qualification instructions. See
the code signing documentation for details.
--timestamp [=URL]
During signing, requests that a timestamp authority server be contacted to authenticate the time of signing. The server contacted is
given by the URL value. If this option is given without a value, a default server provided by Apple is used. Note that this server
may not support signatures made with identities not furnished by Apple. If the timestamp authority service cannot be contacted over
the Internet, or it malfunctions or refuses service, the signing operation will fail.
If this option is not given at all, a system-specific default behavior is invoked. This may result in some but not all code signa-
tures being timestamped.
The special value none explicitly disables the use of timestamp services.
OPERATION
In the first synopsis form, codesign attempts to sign the code objects at the path(s) given, using the identity provided. Internal
requirements and entitlements are embedded if requested. Internal requirements not specified may be assigned suitable default values.
Defaulting applies separately to each type of internal requirement. If an identifier is explicitly given, it is sealed into all path(s).
Otherwise, each path derives its identifier independently from its Info.plist or pathname. Code nested within bundle directories (as identi-
fied from the applicable Resource Rules) must already be signed or the signing operation will fail, unless the --deep option is given, in
which case any unsigned nested code will be recursively signed before proceeding, using the same signing options and parameters. If the
--force option is given, any existing top-level signature is replaced, subject to any --preserve-metadata options also present. Combining the
--force and --deep options results in forcible replacement of all signatures within the target bundle, as long as the resource rules identify
them.
In the second synopsis form, codesign verifies the code signatures on all the path(s) given. The verification confirms that the code at those
path(s) is signed, that the signature is valid, and that all sealed components are unaltered. If a requirement is given, each path is also
checked against this requirement (but see DIAGNOSTICS below). If verbose verification is requested, the program is also checked against its
own designated requirement, which should never fail for a properly signed program.
If a path begins with a decimal digit, it is interpreted as the process id of a running process in the system, and dynamic validation is per-
formed on that process instead. This checks the code's dynamic status and just enough static data to close the nominal security envelope.
Add at least one level of verbosity to also perform a full static check.
In the third synopsis form, codesign displays the contents of the signatures on the path(s) given. More information is displayed as the ver-
bosity level increases. This form may not completely verify the signatures on the path(s); though it may perform some verification steps in
the process of obtaining information about the path(s). If the -r path option is given, internal requirements will be extracted from the
path(s) and written to path; specify a dash "-" to write to standard output. If the code does not contain an explicit designated requirement,
the implied one will be retrieved and written out as a source comment. If the --entitlements path option is given, embedded entitlement data
will be extracted likewise and written to the file specified.
In the fourth synopsis form, codesign constructs the hosting path for each pid given and writes it, one host per line, to standard output.
The hosting path is the chain of code signing hosts starting with the most specific code known to be running, and ending with the root of
trust (the kernel). If the --verbose option is given, the dynamic validity status of each host is also displayed, separated from the path by
a tab character. Note that hosting chains can at times be constructed for invalid or even unsigned code, and the output of this form of the
codesign command should not be taken as a statement of formal code validity. Only codesign --verify can do that; and in fact, formal verifi-
cation constructs the hosting chain as part of its operation (but does not display it).
SIGNING IDENTITIES
To be used for code signing, a digital identity must be stored in a keychain that is on the calling user's keychain search list. All key-
chain sources are supported if properly configured. In particular, it is possible to sign code with an identity stored on a supported smart
card. If your signing identity is stored in a different form, you need to make it available in keychain form to sign code with it.
If the --keychain argument is used, identity is only looked-for in the specific keychain given. This is meant to help disambiguate references
to identities. Even in that case, the full keychain search list is still consulted for additional certificates needed to complete the signa-
ture.
The identity is first considered as the full name of a keychain identity preference. If such a preference exists, it directly names the
identity used. Otherwise, the identity is located by searching all keychains for a certificate whose subject common name (only) contains the
identity string given. If there are multiple matches, the operation fails and no signing is performed; however, an exact match is preferred
over a partial match. These comparisons are case sensitive. Multiple instances of the exactly same certificate in multiple keychains are
tolerated as harmless.
If identity consists of exactly forty hexadecimal digits, it is instead interpreted as the SHA-1 hash of the certificate part of the desired
identity. In this case, the identity's subject name is not considered.
Both identity preferences and certificate hashes can be used to identify a particular signing identity regardless of name. Identity prefer-
ences are global settings for each user and provide a layer of indirection. Certificate hashes are very explicit and local. These choices,
combined with what is placed into Xcode project and target build variables and/or script settings, allows for very flexible designation of
signing identities.
If identity is the single letter "-" (dash), ad-hoc signing is performed. Ad-hoc signing does not use an identity at all, and identifies
exactly one instance of code. Significant restrictions apply to the use of ad-hoc signed code; consult documentation before using this.
codesign will attempt to embed the entire certificate chain documenting the signing identity in the code signature it generates, including
any intermediate certificates and the anchor certificate. It looks for those in the keychain search list of the user performing the signing
operation. If it cannot generate the entire certificate chain, signing may still succeed, but verification may fail if the verifying code
does not have an independent source for the missing certificates (from its keychains).
SPECIFYING REQUIREMENTS
The requirement(s) arguments (-r and -R) can be given in various forms. A plain text argument is taken to be a path to a file containing the
requirement(s). codesign will accept both binary files containing properly compiled requirements code, and source files that are automati-
cally compiled before use. An argument of "-" requests that the requirement(s) are read from standard input. Finally, an argument that
begins with an equal sign "=" is taken as a literal requirements source text, and is compiled accordingly for use.
OPTION FLAGS
When signing, a set of option flags can be specified to change the behavior of the system when using the signed code. The following flags are
recognized by codesign; other flags may exist at the API level. Note that you can specify any valid flags by giving a (single) numeric value
instead of a list of option names.
kill Forces the signed code's kill flag to be set when the code begins execution. Code with the kill flag set will die when it becomes
dynamically invalid. It is therefore safe to assume that code marked this way, once validated, will have continue to have a valid
identity while alive.
hard Forces the signed code's hard flag to be set when the code begins execution. The hard flag is a hint to the system that the code
prefers to be denied access to resources if gaining such access would invalidate its identity.
host Marks the code as capable of hosting guest code. You must set this option if you want the code to act as a code signing host, con-
trolling subsidiary ("guest") code. This flag is set automatically if you specify an internal guest requirement.
expires Forces any validation of the code to consider expiration of the certificates involved. Code signatures generated with this flag will
fail to verify once any of the certificates in the chain has expired, regardless of the intentions of the verifier. Note that this
flag does not affect any other checks that may cause signature validation to fail, including checks for certificate revocation.
Note that code can set the hard and kill flags on itself at any time. The signing options only affect their initial state. Once set by any
means, these flags cannot be cleared for the lifetime of the code. Therefore, specifying such flags as signing options guarantees that they
will be set whenever the signed code runs.
If the code being signed has an Info.plist that contains a key named CSFlags, the value of that key is taken as the default value for the
options. The value of CSFlags can be a string in the same form as the --options option, or an integer number specifying the absolute numeric
value. Note however that while you can abbreviate flag names on the command lines, you must spell them out in the Info.plist.
EXAMPLES
To sign application Terminal.app with a signing identity named "authority":
codesign -s authority Terminal.app
To sign the command-line tool "helper" with the same identity, overwriting any existing signature, using the signing identifier
"com.mycorp.helper", and embedding a custom designated requirement
codesign -f -s authority --prefix=com.mycorp. -r="designated => anchor /tmp/foo" helper
To verify the signature on Terminal.app and produce some verbose output:
codesign --verify --verbose Terminal.app
To verify the dynamic validity of process 666:
codesign --verify 666
To display all information about Terminal.app's code signature:
codesign --display --verbose=4 Terminal.app
To extract the internal requirements from Terminal.app to standard output:
codesign --display -r- Terminal.app
DIAGNOSTICS
codesign exits 0 if all operations succeed. This indicates that all codes were signed, or all codes verified properly as requested. If a
signing or verification operation fails, the exit code is 1. Exit code 2 indicates invalid arguments or parameters. Exit code 3 indicates
that during verification, all path(s) were properly signed but at least one of them failed to satisfy the requirement specified with the -R
option.
For verification, all path arguments are always investigated before the program exits. For all other operations, the program exits upon the
first error encountered, and any further path arguments are ignored, unless the --continue option was specified, in which case codesign will
defer the failure exit until after it has attempted to process all path arguments in turn.
SIGNING ATOMICITY
When a signing operation fails for a particular code, the code may already have been modified in certain ways by adding requisite signature
data. Such information will not change the operation of the code, and the code will not be considered signed even with these pieces in place.
You may repeat the signing operation without difficulty. Note however that a previous valid signature may have been effectively destroyed if
you specified the -f option.
If you require atomicity of signing stricter than provided by codesign, you need to make an explicit copy of your code and sign that.
ENVIRONMENT
If the CODESIGN_ALLOCATE environment variable is set, it identifies a substitute codesign_allocate tool used to allocate space for code sig-
natures in Mach-O binaries. This is used by Xcode SDK distributions to provide architectural support for non-native platforms such as
iPhones. The system will not accept such substitutes unless they are specially signed (by Apple).
FILES
/var/db/DetachedSignatures System-wide database of detached code signatures for unsigned code.
SEE ALSO
csreq(1), xcodebuild(1), codesign_allocate(1)
HISTORY
The codesign command first appeared in Mac OS 10.5.0 (Leopard).
BUGS
Some options only apply to particular operations, and codesign ignores them (without complaining) if you specify them for an operation for
which they have no meaning.
The --preserve-metadata option used to take no value, and varied across releases in what exactly it preserved. The ensuing confusion is still
with you if you need to make backward-compatible scripts.
The dual meaning of the -v option, indicating either verbosity or verification, confuses some people. If you find it confusing, use the unam-
biguous long forms --verbose and --verify instead.
NOTES
The Xcode build system invokes codesign automatically if the CODE_SIGN_IDENTITY build variable is set. You can express any combination of
codesign options with additional build variables there.
codesign is fundamentally a shell around the code signing APIs, and performs nothing of the underlying work. Replacing it with older or
newer versions is unlikely to have a useful effect.
codesign has several operations and options that are purposely left undocumented in this manual page because they are either experimental
(and subject to change at any time), or unadvised to the unwary. The interminably curious are referred to the published source code.
BSD
May 7, 2011 BSD