# Signing outgoing email with S/MIME Notification emails sent by GitLab can be signed with S/MIME for improved security. > **Note:** Please be aware that S/MIME certificates and TLS/SSL certificates are not the same and are used for different purposes: TLS creates a secure channel, whereas S/MIME signs and/or encrypts the message itself ## Enable S/MIME signing This setting must be explicitly enabled and a single pair of key and certificate files must be provided: - Both files must be PEM-encoded. - The key file must be unencrypted so that GitLab can read it without user intervention. - Only RSA keys are supported. NOTE: **Note:** Be mindful of the access levels for your private keys and visibility to third parties. **For Omnibus installations:** 1. Edit `/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb` and adapt the file paths: ```ruby gitlab_rails['gitlab_email_smime_enabled'] = true gitlab_rails['gitlab_email_smime_key_file'] = '/etc/gitlab/ssl/gitlab_smime.key' gitlab_rails['gitlab_email_smime_cert_file'] = '/etc/gitlab/ssl/gitlab_smime.crt' ``` 1. Save the file and [reconfigure GitLab](restart_gitlab.md#omnibus-gitlab-reconfigure) for the changes to take effect. NOTE: **Note:** The key needs to be readable by the GitLab system user (`git` by default). **For installations from source:** 1. Edit `config/gitlab.yml`: ```yaml email_smime: # Uncomment and set to true if you need to enable email S/MIME signing (default: false) enabled: true # S/MIME private key file in PEM format, unencrypted # Default is '.gitlab_smime_key' relative to Rails.root (i.e. root of the GitLab app). key_file: /etc/pki/smime/private/gitlab.key # S/MIME public certificate key in PEM format, will be attached to signed messages # Default is '.gitlab_smime_cert' relative to Rails.root (i.e. root of the GitLab app). cert_file: /etc/pki/smime/certs/gitlab.crt ``` 1. Save the file and [restart GitLab](restart_gitlab.md#installations-from-source) for the changes to take effect. NOTE: **Note:** The key needs to be readable by the GitLab system user (`git` by default). ### How to convert S/MIME PKCS#12 / PFX format to PEM encoding Typically S/MIME certificates are handled in binary PKCS#12 format (`.pfx` or `.p12` extensions), which contain the following in a single encrypted file: - Public certificate - Intermediate certificates (if any) - Private key In order to export the required files in PEM encoding from the PKCS#12 file, the `openssl` command can be used: ```bash #-- Extract private key in PEM encoding (no password, unencrypted) $ openssl pkcs12 -in gitlab.p12 -nocerts -nodes -out gitlab.key #-- Extract certificates in PEM encoding (full certs chain including CA) $ openssl pkcs12 -in gitlab.p12 -nokeys -out gitlab.crt ```