In cryptography, PKCS #7 ("PKCS #7: Cryptographic Message Syntax", "CMS") is a standard syntax for storing signed and/or encrypted data. PKCS #7 is one of the family of standards called Public-Key Cryptography Standards (PKCS) created by RSA Laboratories.
Standard
The latest version, 1.5, is available as RFC 2315.[1]
An update to PKCS #7 is described in RFC 2630,[2] which was replaced in turn by RFC 3369,[3] RFC 3852[4] and then by RFC 5652.[5]
PKCS #7 files may be stored both as raw DER format or as PEM format. PEM format is the same as DER format but wrapped inside Base64 encoding and sandwiched in between ‑‑‑‑‑BEGIN PKCS7‑‑‑‑‑ and ‑‑‑‑‑END PKCS7‑‑‑‑‑. Windows uses the .p7b file name extension[6] for both these encodings.
Here's an example of how to first download a certificate, then wrap it inside a PKCS #7 archive and then read from that archive:
$ echo''|openssls_client-connectexample.org:443-hostexample.org2>/dev/null|opensslx509>example.org.cer2>/dev/null
$ opensslcrl2pkcs7-nocrl-certfileexample.org.cer-outexample.org.cer.pem.p7b
$ opensslpkcs7-inexample.org.cer.pem.p7b-noout-print_certs
subject=C = US, ST = California, L = Los Angeles, O = Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, OU = Technology, CN = www.example.org issuer=C = US, O = DigiCert Inc, CN = DigiCert SHA2 Secure Server CA
File types
.p7r – response to CSR. Contains the newly-signed certificate, and the CA's own cert.
.p7s - Digital Signature. May contain the original signed file or message. Used in S/MIME for email signing. Defined in RFC 2311.
.p7m - Message (SignedData, EnvelopedData) e.g. encrypted ("enveloped") file, message or MIME email letter. Defined in RFC 2311.
.p7c - degenerated SignedData "certs-only" structure, without any data to sign. Defined in RFC 2311.
.p7b - SignedData structure without data, just certificate(s) bundle and/or CRLs (rarely) but not a private key. Uses DER form or BER or PEM that starts with -----BEGIN PKCS7-----. The format used by Windows for certificate interchange. Supported by Java but often has .keystore as an extension instead. Unlike .pem style certificates, this format has a defined way to include certification-path certificates.
References
^RFC2315 - Public-Key Cryptography Standards (PKCS) #7: Cryptographic Message Syntax Specification Version 1.5, March 1998
^RFC2630 - Cryptographic Message Syntax, June 1999
^RFC3369 - Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS), August 2002
^RFC3852 - Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS), July 2004
^RFC5652 - Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS), September 2009