Coverage Report

Created: 2023-09-24 16:05

/src/openssl/include/openssl/engine.h
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Source (jump to first uncovered line)
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/*
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 * Copyright 2000-2018 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
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 * Copyright (c) 2002, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved
4
 *
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 * Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License").  You may not use
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 * this file except in compliance with the License.  You can obtain a copy
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 * in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at
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 * https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html
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 */
10
11
#ifndef OPENSSL_ENGINE_H
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# define OPENSSL_ENGINE_H
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# pragma once
14
15
# include <openssl/macros.h>
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# ifndef OPENSSL_NO_DEPRECATED_3_0
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#  define HEADER_ENGINE_H
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# endif
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# include <openssl/opensslconf.h>
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# ifndef OPENSSL_NO_ENGINE
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# ifndef OPENSSL_NO_DEPRECATED_1_1_0
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#  include <openssl/bn.h>
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#  include <openssl/rsa.h>
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#  include <openssl/dsa.h>
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#  include <openssl/dh.h>
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#  include <openssl/ec.h>
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#  include <openssl/rand.h>
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#  include <openssl/ui.h>
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#  include <openssl/err.h>
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# endif
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# include <openssl/types.h>
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# include <openssl/symhacks.h>
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# include <openssl/x509.h>
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# include <openssl/engineerr.h>
37
# ifdef  __cplusplus
38
extern "C" {
39
# endif
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/*
42
 * These flags are used to control combinations of algorithm (methods) by
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 * bitwise "OR"ing.
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 */
45
0
# define ENGINE_METHOD_RSA               (unsigned int)0x0001
46
0
# define ENGINE_METHOD_DSA               (unsigned int)0x0002
47
0
# define ENGINE_METHOD_DH                (unsigned int)0x0004
48
0
# define ENGINE_METHOD_RAND              (unsigned int)0x0008
49
0
# define ENGINE_METHOD_CIPHERS           (unsigned int)0x0040
50
0
# define ENGINE_METHOD_DIGESTS           (unsigned int)0x0080
51
0
# define ENGINE_METHOD_PKEY_METHS        (unsigned int)0x0200
52
0
# define ENGINE_METHOD_PKEY_ASN1_METHS   (unsigned int)0x0400
53
0
# define ENGINE_METHOD_EC                (unsigned int)0x0800
54
/* Obvious all-or-nothing cases. */
55
0
# define ENGINE_METHOD_ALL               (unsigned int)0xFFFF
56
# define ENGINE_METHOD_NONE              (unsigned int)0x0000
57
58
/*
59
 * This(ese) flag(s) controls behaviour of the ENGINE_TABLE mechanism used
60
 * internally to control registration of ENGINE implementations, and can be
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 * set by ENGINE_set_table_flags(). The "NOINIT" flag prevents attempts to
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 * initialise registered ENGINEs if they are not already initialised.
63
 */
64
0
# define ENGINE_TABLE_FLAG_NOINIT        (unsigned int)0x0001
65
66
/* ENGINE flags that can be set by ENGINE_set_flags(). */
67
/* Not used */
68
/* #define ENGINE_FLAGS_MALLOCED        0x0001 */
69
70
/*
71
 * This flag is for ENGINEs that wish to handle the various 'CMD'-related
72
 * control commands on their own. Without this flag, ENGINE_ctrl() handles
73
 * these control commands on behalf of the ENGINE using their "cmd_defns"
74
 * data.
75
 */
76
0
# define ENGINE_FLAGS_MANUAL_CMD_CTRL    (int)0x0002
77
78
/*
79
 * This flag is for ENGINEs who return new duplicate structures when found
80
 * via "ENGINE_by_id()". When an ENGINE must store state (eg. if
81
 * ENGINE_ctrl() commands are called in sequence as part of some stateful
82
 * process like key-generation setup and execution), it can set this flag -
83
 * then each attempt to obtain the ENGINE will result in it being copied into
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 * a new structure. Normally, ENGINEs don't declare this flag so
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 * ENGINE_by_id() just increments the existing ENGINE's structural reference
86
 * count.
87
 */
88
1.09k
# define ENGINE_FLAGS_BY_ID_COPY         (int)0x0004
89
90
/*
91
 * This flag if for an ENGINE that does not want its methods registered as
92
 * part of ENGINE_register_all_complete() for example if the methods are not
93
 * usable as default methods.
94
 */
95
96
4.38k
# define ENGINE_FLAGS_NO_REGISTER_ALL    (int)0x0008
97
98
/*
99
 * ENGINEs can support their own command types, and these flags are used in
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 * ENGINE_CTRL_GET_CMD_FLAGS to indicate to the caller what kind of input
101
 * each command expects. Currently only numeric and string input is
102
 * supported. If a control command supports none of the _NUMERIC, _STRING, or
103
 * _NO_INPUT options, then it is regarded as an "internal" control command -
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 * and not for use in config setting situations. As such, they're not
105
 * available to the ENGINE_ctrl_cmd_string() function, only raw ENGINE_ctrl()
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 * access. Changes to this list of 'command types' should be reflected
107
 * carefully in ENGINE_cmd_is_executable() and ENGINE_ctrl_cmd_string().
108
 */
109
110
/* accepts a 'long' input value (3rd parameter to ENGINE_ctrl) */
111
0
# define ENGINE_CMD_FLAG_NUMERIC         (unsigned int)0x0001
112
/*
113
 * accepts string input (cast from 'void*' to 'const char *', 4th parameter
114
 * to ENGINE_ctrl)
115
 */
116
0
# define ENGINE_CMD_FLAG_STRING          (unsigned int)0x0002
117
/*
118
 * Indicates that the control command takes *no* input. Ie. the control
119
 * command is unparameterised.
120
 */
121
0
# define ENGINE_CMD_FLAG_NO_INPUT        (unsigned int)0x0004
122
/*
123
 * Indicates that the control command is internal. This control command won't
124
 * be shown in any output, and is only usable through the ENGINE_ctrl_cmd()
125
 * function.
126
 */
127
# define ENGINE_CMD_FLAG_INTERNAL        (unsigned int)0x0008
128
129
/*
130
 * NB: These 3 control commands are deprecated and should not be used.
131
 * ENGINEs relying on these commands should compile conditional support for
132
 * compatibility (eg. if these symbols are defined) but should also migrate
133
 * the same functionality to their own ENGINE-specific control functions that
134
 * can be "discovered" by calling applications. The fact these control
135
 * commands wouldn't be "executable" (ie. usable by text-based config)
136
 * doesn't change the fact that application code can find and use them
137
 * without requiring per-ENGINE hacking.
138
 */
139
140
/*
141
 * These flags are used to tell the ctrl function what should be done. All
142
 * command numbers are shared between all engines, even if some don't make
143
 * sense to some engines.  In such a case, they do nothing but return the
144
 * error ENGINE_R_CTRL_COMMAND_NOT_IMPLEMENTED.
145
 */
146
# define ENGINE_CTRL_SET_LOGSTREAM               1
147
# define ENGINE_CTRL_SET_PASSWORD_CALLBACK       2
148
# define ENGINE_CTRL_HUP                         3/* Close and reinitialise
149
                                                   * any handles/connections
150
                                                   * etc. */
151
# define ENGINE_CTRL_SET_USER_INTERFACE          4/* Alternative to callback */
152
# define ENGINE_CTRL_SET_CALLBACK_DATA           5/* User-specific data, used
153
                                                   * when calling the password
154
                                                   * callback and the user
155
                                                   * interface */
156
# define ENGINE_CTRL_LOAD_CONFIGURATION          6/* Load a configuration,
157
                                                   * given a string that
158
                                                   * represents a file name
159
                                                   * or so */
160
# define ENGINE_CTRL_LOAD_SECTION                7/* Load data from a given
161
                                                   * section in the already
162
                                                   * loaded configuration */
163
164
/*
165
 * These control commands allow an application to deal with an arbitrary
166
 * engine in a dynamic way. Warn: Negative return values indicate errors FOR
167
 * THESE COMMANDS because zero is used to indicate 'end-of-list'. Other
168
 * commands, including ENGINE-specific command types, return zero for an
169
 * error. An ENGINE can choose to implement these ctrl functions, and can
170
 * internally manage things however it chooses - it does so by setting the
171
 * ENGINE_FLAGS_MANUAL_CMD_CTRL flag (using ENGINE_set_flags()). Otherwise
172
 * the ENGINE_ctrl() code handles this on the ENGINE's behalf using the
173
 * cmd_defns data (set using ENGINE_set_cmd_defns()). This means an ENGINE's
174
 * ctrl() handler need only implement its own commands - the above "meta"
175
 * commands will be taken care of.
176
 */
177
178
/*
179
 * Returns non-zero if the supplied ENGINE has a ctrl() handler. If "not",
180
 * then all the remaining control commands will return failure, so it is
181
 * worth checking this first if the caller is trying to "discover" the
182
 * engine's capabilities and doesn't want errors generated unnecessarily.
183
 */
184
0
# define ENGINE_CTRL_HAS_CTRL_FUNCTION           10
185
/*
186
 * Returns a positive command number for the first command supported by the
187
 * engine. Returns zero if no ctrl commands are supported.
188
 */
189
0
# define ENGINE_CTRL_GET_FIRST_CMD_TYPE          11
190
/*
191
 * The 'long' argument specifies a command implemented by the engine, and the
192
 * return value is the next command supported, or zero if there are no more.
193
 */
194
0
# define ENGINE_CTRL_GET_NEXT_CMD_TYPE           12
195
/*
196
 * The 'void*' argument is a command name (cast from 'const char *'), and the
197
 * return value is the command that corresponds to it.
198
 */
199
0
# define ENGINE_CTRL_GET_CMD_FROM_NAME           13
200
/*
201
 * The next two allow a command to be converted into its corresponding string
202
 * form. In each case, the 'long' argument supplies the command. In the
203
 * NAME_LEN case, the return value is the length of the command name (not
204
 * counting a trailing EOL). In the NAME case, the 'void*' argument must be a
205
 * string buffer large enough, and it will be populated with the name of the
206
 * command (WITH a trailing EOL).
207
 */
208
0
# define ENGINE_CTRL_GET_NAME_LEN_FROM_CMD       14
209
0
# define ENGINE_CTRL_GET_NAME_FROM_CMD           15
210
/* The next two are similar but give a "short description" of a command. */
211
0
# define ENGINE_CTRL_GET_DESC_LEN_FROM_CMD       16
212
0
# define ENGINE_CTRL_GET_DESC_FROM_CMD           17
213
/*
214
 * With this command, the return value is the OR'd combination of
215
 * ENGINE_CMD_FLAG_*** values that indicate what kind of input a given
216
 * engine-specific ctrl command expects.
217
 */
218
0
# define ENGINE_CTRL_GET_CMD_FLAGS               18
219
220
/*
221
 * ENGINE implementations should start the numbering of their own control
222
 * commands from this value. (ie. ENGINE_CMD_BASE, ENGINE_CMD_BASE + 1, etc).
223
 */
224
0
# define ENGINE_CMD_BASE                         200
225
226
/*
227
 * NB: These 2 nCipher "chil" control commands are deprecated, and their
228
 * functionality is now available through ENGINE-specific control commands
229
 * (exposed through the above-mentioned 'CMD'-handling). Code using these 2
230
 * commands should be migrated to the more general command handling before
231
 * these are removed.
232
 */
233
234
/* Flags specific to the nCipher "chil" engine */
235
# define ENGINE_CTRL_CHIL_SET_FORKCHECK          100
236
        /*
237
         * Depending on the value of the (long)i argument, this sets or
238
         * unsets the SimpleForkCheck flag in the CHIL API to enable or
239
         * disable checking and workarounds for applications that fork().
240
         */
241
# define ENGINE_CTRL_CHIL_NO_LOCKING             101
242
        /*
243
         * This prevents the initialisation function from providing mutex
244
         * callbacks to the nCipher library.
245
         */
246
247
/*
248
 * If an ENGINE supports its own specific control commands and wishes the
249
 * framework to handle the above 'ENGINE_CMD_***'-manipulation commands on
250
 * its behalf, it should supply a null-terminated array of ENGINE_CMD_DEFN
251
 * entries to ENGINE_set_cmd_defns(). It should also implement a ctrl()
252
 * handler that supports the stated commands (ie. the "cmd_num" entries as
253
 * described by the array). NB: The array must be ordered in increasing order
254
 * of cmd_num. "null-terminated" means that the last ENGINE_CMD_DEFN element
255
 * has cmd_num set to zero and/or cmd_name set to NULL.
256
 */
257
typedef struct ENGINE_CMD_DEFN_st {
258
    unsigned int cmd_num;       /* The command number */
259
    const char *cmd_name;       /* The command name itself */
260
    const char *cmd_desc;       /* A short description of the command */
261
    unsigned int cmd_flags;     /* The input the command expects */
262
} ENGINE_CMD_DEFN;
263
264
/* Generic function pointer */
265
typedef int (*ENGINE_GEN_FUNC_PTR) (void);
266
/* Generic function pointer taking no arguments */
267
typedef int (*ENGINE_GEN_INT_FUNC_PTR) (ENGINE *);
268
/* Specific control function pointer */
269
typedef int (*ENGINE_CTRL_FUNC_PTR) (ENGINE *, int, long, void *,
270
                                     void (*f) (void));
271
/* Generic load_key function pointer */
272
typedef EVP_PKEY *(*ENGINE_LOAD_KEY_PTR)(ENGINE *, const char *,
273
                                         UI_METHOD *ui_method,
274
                                         void *callback_data);
275
typedef int (*ENGINE_SSL_CLIENT_CERT_PTR) (ENGINE *, SSL *ssl,
276
                                           STACK_OF(X509_NAME) *ca_dn,
277
                                           X509 **pcert, EVP_PKEY **pkey,
278
                                           STACK_OF(X509) **pother,
279
                                           UI_METHOD *ui_method,
280
                                           void *callback_data);
281
/*-
282
 * These callback types are for an ENGINE's handler for cipher and digest logic.
283
 * These handlers have these prototypes;
284
 *   int foo(ENGINE *e, const EVP_CIPHER **cipher, const int **nids, int nid);
285
 *   int foo(ENGINE *e, const EVP_MD **digest, const int **nids, int nid);
286
 * Looking at how to implement these handlers in the case of cipher support, if
287
 * the framework wants the EVP_CIPHER for 'nid', it will call;
288
 *   foo(e, &p_evp_cipher, NULL, nid);    (return zero for failure)
289
 * If the framework wants a list of supported 'nid's, it will call;
290
 *   foo(e, NULL, &p_nids, 0); (returns number of 'nids' or -1 for error)
291
 */
292
/*
293
 * Returns to a pointer to the array of supported cipher 'nid's. If the
294
 * second parameter is non-NULL it is set to the size of the returned array.
295
 */
296
typedef int (*ENGINE_CIPHERS_PTR) (ENGINE *, const EVP_CIPHER **,
297
                                   const int **, int);
298
typedef int (*ENGINE_DIGESTS_PTR) (ENGINE *, const EVP_MD **, const int **,
299
                                   int);
300
typedef int (*ENGINE_PKEY_METHS_PTR) (ENGINE *, EVP_PKEY_METHOD **,
301
                                      const int **, int);
302
typedef int (*ENGINE_PKEY_ASN1_METHS_PTR) (ENGINE *, EVP_PKEY_ASN1_METHOD **,
303
                                           const int **, int);
304
/*
305
 * STRUCTURE functions ... all of these functions deal with pointers to
306
 * ENGINE structures where the pointers have a "structural reference". This
307
 * means that their reference is to allowed access to the structure but it
308
 * does not imply that the structure is functional. To simply increment or
309
 * decrement the structural reference count, use ENGINE_by_id and
310
 * ENGINE_free. NB: This is not required when iterating using ENGINE_get_next
311
 * as it will automatically decrement the structural reference count of the
312
 * "current" ENGINE and increment the structural reference count of the
313
 * ENGINE it returns (unless it is NULL).
314
 */
315
316
/* Get the first/last "ENGINE" type available. */
317
ENGINE *ENGINE_get_first(void);
318
ENGINE *ENGINE_get_last(void);
319
/* Iterate to the next/previous "ENGINE" type (NULL = end of the list). */
320
ENGINE *ENGINE_get_next(ENGINE *e);
321
ENGINE *ENGINE_get_prev(ENGINE *e);
322
/* Add another "ENGINE" type into the array. */
323
int ENGINE_add(ENGINE *e);
324
/* Remove an existing "ENGINE" type from the array. */
325
int ENGINE_remove(ENGINE *e);
326
/* Retrieve an engine from the list by its unique "id" value. */
327
ENGINE *ENGINE_by_id(const char *id);
328
329
#ifndef OPENSSL_NO_DEPRECATED_1_1_0
330
# define ENGINE_load_openssl() \
331
    OPENSSL_init_crypto(OPENSSL_INIT_ENGINE_OPENSSL, NULL)
332
# define ENGINE_load_dynamic() \
333
    OPENSSL_init_crypto(OPENSSL_INIT_ENGINE_DYNAMIC, NULL)
334
# ifndef OPENSSL_NO_STATIC_ENGINE
335
#  define ENGINE_load_padlock() \
336
    OPENSSL_init_crypto(OPENSSL_INIT_ENGINE_PADLOCK, NULL)
337
#  define ENGINE_load_capi() \
338
    OPENSSL_init_crypto(OPENSSL_INIT_ENGINE_CAPI, NULL)
339
#  define ENGINE_load_afalg() \
340
    OPENSSL_init_crypto(OPENSSL_INIT_ENGINE_AFALG, NULL)
341
# endif
342
# define ENGINE_load_cryptodev() \
343
    OPENSSL_init_crypto(OPENSSL_INIT_ENGINE_CRYPTODEV, NULL)
344
# define ENGINE_load_rdrand() \
345
    OPENSSL_init_crypto(OPENSSL_INIT_ENGINE_RDRAND, NULL)
346
#endif
347
void ENGINE_load_builtin_engines(void);
348
349
/*
350
 * Get and set global flags (ENGINE_TABLE_FLAG_***) for the implementation
351
 * "registry" handling.
352
 */
353
unsigned int ENGINE_get_table_flags(void);
354
void ENGINE_set_table_flags(unsigned int flags);
355
356
/*- Manage registration of ENGINEs per "table". For each type, there are 3
357
 * functions;
358
 *   ENGINE_register_***(e) - registers the implementation from 'e' (if it has one)
359
 *   ENGINE_unregister_***(e) - unregister the implementation from 'e'
360
 *   ENGINE_register_all_***() - call ENGINE_register_***() for each 'e' in the list
361
 * Cleanup is automatically registered from each table when required.
362
 */
363
364
int ENGINE_register_RSA(ENGINE *e);
365
void ENGINE_unregister_RSA(ENGINE *e);
366
void ENGINE_register_all_RSA(void);
367
368
int ENGINE_register_DSA(ENGINE *e);
369
void ENGINE_unregister_DSA(ENGINE *e);
370
void ENGINE_register_all_DSA(void);
371
372
int ENGINE_register_EC(ENGINE *e);
373
void ENGINE_unregister_EC(ENGINE *e);
374
void ENGINE_register_all_EC(void);
375
376
int ENGINE_register_DH(ENGINE *e);
377
void ENGINE_unregister_DH(ENGINE *e);
378
void ENGINE_register_all_DH(void);
379
380
int ENGINE_register_RAND(ENGINE *e);
381
void ENGINE_unregister_RAND(ENGINE *e);
382
void ENGINE_register_all_RAND(void);
383
384
int ENGINE_register_ciphers(ENGINE *e);
385
void ENGINE_unregister_ciphers(ENGINE *e);
386
void ENGINE_register_all_ciphers(void);
387
388
int ENGINE_register_digests(ENGINE *e);
389
void ENGINE_unregister_digests(ENGINE *e);
390
void ENGINE_register_all_digests(void);
391
392
int ENGINE_register_pkey_meths(ENGINE *e);
393
void ENGINE_unregister_pkey_meths(ENGINE *e);
394
void ENGINE_register_all_pkey_meths(void);
395
396
int ENGINE_register_pkey_asn1_meths(ENGINE *e);
397
void ENGINE_unregister_pkey_asn1_meths(ENGINE *e);
398
void ENGINE_register_all_pkey_asn1_meths(void);
399
400
/*
401
 * These functions register all support from the above categories. Note, use
402
 * of these functions can result in static linkage of code your application
403
 * may not need. If you only need a subset of functionality, consider using
404
 * more selective initialisation.
405
 */
406
int ENGINE_register_complete(ENGINE *e);
407
int ENGINE_register_all_complete(void);
408
409
/*
410
 * Send parameterised control commands to the engine. The possibilities to
411
 * send down an integer, a pointer to data or a function pointer are
412
 * provided. Any of the parameters may or may not be NULL, depending on the
413
 * command number. In actuality, this function only requires a structural
414
 * (rather than functional) reference to an engine, but many control commands
415
 * may require the engine be functional. The caller should be aware of trying
416
 * commands that require an operational ENGINE, and only use functional
417
 * references in such situations.
418
 */
419
int ENGINE_ctrl(ENGINE *e, int cmd, long i, void *p, void (*f) (void));
420
421
/*
422
 * This function tests if an ENGINE-specific command is usable as a
423
 * "setting". Eg. in an application's config file that gets processed through
424
 * ENGINE_ctrl_cmd_string(). If this returns zero, it is not available to
425
 * ENGINE_ctrl_cmd_string(), only ENGINE_ctrl().
426
 */
427
int ENGINE_cmd_is_executable(ENGINE *e, int cmd);
428
429
/*
430
 * This function works like ENGINE_ctrl() with the exception of taking a
431
 * command name instead of a command number, and can handle optional
432
 * commands. See the comment on ENGINE_ctrl_cmd_string() for an explanation
433
 * on how to use the cmd_name and cmd_optional.
434
 */
435
int ENGINE_ctrl_cmd(ENGINE *e, const char *cmd_name,
436
                    long i, void *p, void (*f) (void), int cmd_optional);
437
438
/*
439
 * This function passes a command-name and argument to an ENGINE. The
440
 * cmd_name is converted to a command number and the control command is
441
 * called using 'arg' as an argument (unless the ENGINE doesn't support such
442
 * a command, in which case no control command is called). The command is
443
 * checked for input flags, and if necessary the argument will be converted
444
 * to a numeric value. If cmd_optional is non-zero, then if the ENGINE
445
 * doesn't support the given cmd_name the return value will be success
446
 * anyway. This function is intended for applications to use so that users
447
 * (or config files) can supply engine-specific config data to the ENGINE at
448
 * run-time to control behaviour of specific engines. As such, it shouldn't
449
 * be used for calling ENGINE_ctrl() functions that return data, deal with
450
 * binary data, or that are otherwise supposed to be used directly through
451
 * ENGINE_ctrl() in application code. Any "return" data from an ENGINE_ctrl()
452
 * operation in this function will be lost - the return value is interpreted
453
 * as failure if the return value is zero, success otherwise, and this
454
 * function returns a boolean value as a result. In other words, vendors of
455
 * 'ENGINE'-enabled devices should write ENGINE implementations with
456
 * parameterisations that work in this scheme, so that compliant ENGINE-based
457
 * applications can work consistently with the same configuration for the
458
 * same ENGINE-enabled devices, across applications.
459
 */
460
int ENGINE_ctrl_cmd_string(ENGINE *e, const char *cmd_name, const char *arg,
461
                           int cmd_optional);
462
463
/*
464
 * These functions are useful for manufacturing new ENGINE structures. They
465
 * don't address reference counting at all - one uses them to populate an
466
 * ENGINE structure with personalised implementations of things prior to
467
 * using it directly or adding it to the builtin ENGINE list in OpenSSL.
468
 * These are also here so that the ENGINE structure doesn't have to be
469
 * exposed and break binary compatibility!
470
 */
471
ENGINE *ENGINE_new(void);
472
int ENGINE_free(ENGINE *e);
473
int ENGINE_up_ref(ENGINE *e);
474
int ENGINE_set_id(ENGINE *e, const char *id);
475
int ENGINE_set_name(ENGINE *e, const char *name);
476
int ENGINE_set_RSA(ENGINE *e, const RSA_METHOD *rsa_meth);
477
int ENGINE_set_DSA(ENGINE *e, const DSA_METHOD *dsa_meth);
478
int ENGINE_set_EC(ENGINE *e, const EC_KEY_METHOD *ecdsa_meth);
479
int ENGINE_set_DH(ENGINE *e, const DH_METHOD *dh_meth);
480
int ENGINE_set_RAND(ENGINE *e, const RAND_METHOD *rand_meth);
481
int ENGINE_set_destroy_function(ENGINE *e, ENGINE_GEN_INT_FUNC_PTR destroy_f);
482
int ENGINE_set_init_function(ENGINE *e, ENGINE_GEN_INT_FUNC_PTR init_f);
483
int ENGINE_set_finish_function(ENGINE *e, ENGINE_GEN_INT_FUNC_PTR finish_f);
484
int ENGINE_set_ctrl_function(ENGINE *e, ENGINE_CTRL_FUNC_PTR ctrl_f);
485
int ENGINE_set_load_privkey_function(ENGINE *e,
486
                                     ENGINE_LOAD_KEY_PTR loadpriv_f);
487
int ENGINE_set_load_pubkey_function(ENGINE *e, ENGINE_LOAD_KEY_PTR loadpub_f);
488
int ENGINE_set_load_ssl_client_cert_function(ENGINE *e,
489
                                             ENGINE_SSL_CLIENT_CERT_PTR
490
                                             loadssl_f);
491
int ENGINE_set_ciphers(ENGINE *e, ENGINE_CIPHERS_PTR f);
492
int ENGINE_set_digests(ENGINE *e, ENGINE_DIGESTS_PTR f);
493
int ENGINE_set_pkey_meths(ENGINE *e, ENGINE_PKEY_METHS_PTR f);
494
int ENGINE_set_pkey_asn1_meths(ENGINE *e, ENGINE_PKEY_ASN1_METHS_PTR f);
495
int ENGINE_set_flags(ENGINE *e, int flags);
496
int ENGINE_set_cmd_defns(ENGINE *e, const ENGINE_CMD_DEFN *defns);
497
/* These functions allow control over any per-structure ENGINE data. */
498
#define ENGINE_get_ex_new_index(l, p, newf, dupf, freef) \
499
0
    CRYPTO_get_ex_new_index(CRYPTO_EX_INDEX_ENGINE, l, p, newf, dupf, freef)
500
int ENGINE_set_ex_data(ENGINE *e, int idx, void *arg);
501
void *ENGINE_get_ex_data(const ENGINE *e, int idx);
502
503
#ifndef OPENSSL_NO_DEPRECATED_1_1_0
504
/*
505
 * This function previously cleaned up anything that needs it. Auto-deinit will
506
 * now take care of it so it is no longer required to call this function.
507
 */
508
# define ENGINE_cleanup() while(0) continue
509
#endif
510
511
/*
512
 * These return values from within the ENGINE structure. These can be useful
513
 * with functional references as well as structural references - it depends
514
 * which you obtained. Using the result for functional purposes if you only
515
 * obtained a structural reference may be problematic!
516
 */
517
const char *ENGINE_get_id(const ENGINE *e);
518
const char *ENGINE_get_name(const ENGINE *e);
519
const RSA_METHOD *ENGINE_get_RSA(const ENGINE *e);
520
const DSA_METHOD *ENGINE_get_DSA(const ENGINE *e);
521
const EC_KEY_METHOD *ENGINE_get_EC(const ENGINE *e);
522
const DH_METHOD *ENGINE_get_DH(const ENGINE *e);
523
const RAND_METHOD *ENGINE_get_RAND(const ENGINE *e);
524
ENGINE_GEN_INT_FUNC_PTR ENGINE_get_destroy_function(const ENGINE *e);
525
ENGINE_GEN_INT_FUNC_PTR ENGINE_get_init_function(const ENGINE *e);
526
ENGINE_GEN_INT_FUNC_PTR ENGINE_get_finish_function(const ENGINE *e);
527
ENGINE_CTRL_FUNC_PTR ENGINE_get_ctrl_function(const ENGINE *e);
528
ENGINE_LOAD_KEY_PTR ENGINE_get_load_privkey_function(const ENGINE *e);
529
ENGINE_LOAD_KEY_PTR ENGINE_get_load_pubkey_function(const ENGINE *e);
530
ENGINE_SSL_CLIENT_CERT_PTR ENGINE_get_ssl_client_cert_function(const ENGINE
531
                                                               *e);
532
ENGINE_CIPHERS_PTR ENGINE_get_ciphers(const ENGINE *e);
533
ENGINE_DIGESTS_PTR ENGINE_get_digests(const ENGINE *e);
534
ENGINE_PKEY_METHS_PTR ENGINE_get_pkey_meths(const ENGINE *e);
535
ENGINE_PKEY_ASN1_METHS_PTR ENGINE_get_pkey_asn1_meths(const ENGINE *e);
536
const EVP_CIPHER *ENGINE_get_cipher(ENGINE *e, int nid);
537
const EVP_MD *ENGINE_get_digest(ENGINE *e, int nid);
538
const EVP_PKEY_METHOD *ENGINE_get_pkey_meth(ENGINE *e, int nid);
539
const EVP_PKEY_ASN1_METHOD *ENGINE_get_pkey_asn1_meth(ENGINE *e, int nid);
540
const EVP_PKEY_ASN1_METHOD *ENGINE_get_pkey_asn1_meth_str(ENGINE *e,
541
                                                          const char *str,
542
                                                          int len);
543
const EVP_PKEY_ASN1_METHOD *ENGINE_pkey_asn1_find_str(ENGINE **pe,
544
                                                      const char *str,
545
                                                      int len);
546
const ENGINE_CMD_DEFN *ENGINE_get_cmd_defns(const ENGINE *e);
547
int ENGINE_get_flags(const ENGINE *e);
548
549
/*
550
 * FUNCTIONAL functions. These functions deal with ENGINE structures that
551
 * have (or will) be initialised for use. Broadly speaking, the structural
552
 * functions are useful for iterating the list of available engine types,
553
 * creating new engine types, and other "list" operations. These functions
554
 * actually deal with ENGINEs that are to be used. As such these functions
555
 * can fail (if applicable) when particular engines are unavailable - eg. if
556
 * a hardware accelerator is not attached or not functioning correctly. Each
557
 * ENGINE has 2 reference counts; structural and functional. Every time a
558
 * functional reference is obtained or released, a corresponding structural
559
 * reference is automatically obtained or released too.
560
 */
561
562
/*
563
 * Initialise a engine type for use (or up its reference count if it's
564
 * already in use). This will fail if the engine is not currently operational
565
 * and cannot initialise.
566
 */
567
int ENGINE_init(ENGINE *e);
568
/*
569
 * Free a functional reference to a engine type. This does not require a
570
 * corresponding call to ENGINE_free as it also releases a structural
571
 * reference.
572
 */
573
int ENGINE_finish(ENGINE *e);
574
575
/*
576
 * The following functions handle keys that are stored in some secondary
577
 * location, handled by the engine.  The storage may be on a card or
578
 * whatever.
579
 */
580
EVP_PKEY *ENGINE_load_private_key(ENGINE *e, const char *key_id,
581
                                  UI_METHOD *ui_method, void *callback_data);
582
EVP_PKEY *ENGINE_load_public_key(ENGINE *e, const char *key_id,
583
                                 UI_METHOD *ui_method, void *callback_data);
584
int ENGINE_load_ssl_client_cert(ENGINE *e, SSL *s,
585
                                STACK_OF(X509_NAME) *ca_dn, X509 **pcert,
586
                                EVP_PKEY **ppkey, STACK_OF(X509) **pother,
587
                                UI_METHOD *ui_method, void *callback_data);
588
589
/*
590
 * This returns a pointer for the current ENGINE structure that is (by
591
 * default) performing any RSA operations. The value returned is an
592
 * incremented reference, so it should be free'd (ENGINE_finish) before it is
593
 * discarded.
594
 */
595
ENGINE *ENGINE_get_default_RSA(void);
596
/* Same for the other "methods" */
597
ENGINE *ENGINE_get_default_DSA(void);
598
ENGINE *ENGINE_get_default_EC(void);
599
ENGINE *ENGINE_get_default_DH(void);
600
ENGINE *ENGINE_get_default_RAND(void);
601
/*
602
 * These functions can be used to get a functional reference to perform
603
 * ciphering or digesting corresponding to "nid".
604
 */
605
ENGINE *ENGINE_get_cipher_engine(int nid);
606
ENGINE *ENGINE_get_digest_engine(int nid);
607
ENGINE *ENGINE_get_pkey_meth_engine(int nid);
608
ENGINE *ENGINE_get_pkey_asn1_meth_engine(int nid);
609
610
/*
611
 * This sets a new default ENGINE structure for performing RSA operations. If
612
 * the result is non-zero (success) then the ENGINE structure will have had
613
 * its reference count up'd so the caller should still free their own
614
 * reference 'e'.
615
 */
616
int ENGINE_set_default_RSA(ENGINE *e);
617
int ENGINE_set_default_string(ENGINE *e, const char *def_list);
618
/* Same for the other "methods" */
619
int ENGINE_set_default_DSA(ENGINE *e);
620
int ENGINE_set_default_EC(ENGINE *e);
621
int ENGINE_set_default_DH(ENGINE *e);
622
int ENGINE_set_default_RAND(ENGINE *e);
623
int ENGINE_set_default_ciphers(ENGINE *e);
624
int ENGINE_set_default_digests(ENGINE *e);
625
int ENGINE_set_default_pkey_meths(ENGINE *e);
626
int ENGINE_set_default_pkey_asn1_meths(ENGINE *e);
627
628
/*
629
 * The combination "set" - the flags are bitwise "OR"d from the
630
 * ENGINE_METHOD_*** defines above. As with the "ENGINE_register_complete()"
631
 * function, this function can result in unnecessary static linkage. If your
632
 * application requires only specific functionality, consider using more
633
 * selective functions.
634
 */
635
int ENGINE_set_default(ENGINE *e, unsigned int flags);
636
637
void ENGINE_add_conf_module(void);
638
639
/* Deprecated functions ... */
640
/* int ENGINE_clear_defaults(void); */
641
642
/**************************/
643
/* DYNAMIC ENGINE SUPPORT */
644
/**************************/
645
646
/* Binary/behaviour compatibility levels */
647
0
# define OSSL_DYNAMIC_VERSION            (unsigned long)0x00030000
648
/*
649
 * Binary versions older than this are too old for us (whether we're a loader
650
 * or a loadee)
651
 */
652
0
# define OSSL_DYNAMIC_OLDEST             (unsigned long)0x00030000
653
654
/*
655
 * When compiling an ENGINE entirely as an external shared library, loadable
656
 * by the "dynamic" ENGINE, these types are needed. The 'dynamic_fns'
657
 * structure type provides the calling application's (or library's) error
658
 * functionality and memory management function pointers to the loaded
659
 * library. These should be used/set in the loaded library code so that the
660
 * loading application's 'state' will be used/changed in all operations. The
661
 * 'static_state' pointer allows the loaded library to know if it shares the
662
 * same static data as the calling application (or library), and thus whether
663
 * these callbacks need to be set or not.
664
 */
665
typedef void *(*dyn_MEM_malloc_fn) (size_t, const char *, int);
666
typedef void *(*dyn_MEM_realloc_fn) (void *, size_t, const char *, int);
667
typedef void (*dyn_MEM_free_fn) (void *, const char *, int);
668
typedef struct st_dynamic_MEM_fns {
669
    dyn_MEM_malloc_fn malloc_fn;
670
    dyn_MEM_realloc_fn realloc_fn;
671
    dyn_MEM_free_fn free_fn;
672
} dynamic_MEM_fns;
673
/*
674
 * FIXME: Perhaps the memory and locking code (crypto.h) should declare and
675
 * use these types so we (and any other dependent code) can simplify a bit??
676
 */
677
/* The top-level structure */
678
typedef struct st_dynamic_fns {
679
    void *static_state;
680
    dynamic_MEM_fns mem_fns;
681
} dynamic_fns;
682
683
/*
684
 * The version checking function should be of this prototype. NB: The
685
 * ossl_version value passed in is the OSSL_DYNAMIC_VERSION of the loading
686
 * code. If this function returns zero, it indicates a (potential) version
687
 * incompatibility and the loaded library doesn't believe it can proceed.
688
 * Otherwise, the returned value is the (latest) version supported by the
689
 * loading library. The loader may still decide that the loaded code's
690
 * version is unsatisfactory and could veto the load. The function is
691
 * expected to be implemented with the symbol name "v_check", and a default
692
 * implementation can be fully instantiated with
693
 * IMPLEMENT_DYNAMIC_CHECK_FN().
694
 */
695
typedef unsigned long (*dynamic_v_check_fn) (unsigned long ossl_version);
696
# define IMPLEMENT_DYNAMIC_CHECK_FN() \
697
        OPENSSL_EXPORT unsigned long v_check(unsigned long v); \
698
        OPENSSL_EXPORT unsigned long v_check(unsigned long v) { \
699
                if (v >= OSSL_DYNAMIC_OLDEST) return OSSL_DYNAMIC_VERSION; \
700
                return 0; }
701
702
/*
703
 * This function is passed the ENGINE structure to initialise with its own
704
 * function and command settings. It should not adjust the structural or
705
 * functional reference counts. If this function returns zero, (a) the load
706
 * will be aborted, (b) the previous ENGINE state will be memcpy'd back onto
707
 * the structure, and (c) the shared library will be unloaded. So
708
 * implementations should do their own internal cleanup in failure
709
 * circumstances otherwise they could leak. The 'id' parameter, if non-NULL,
710
 * represents the ENGINE id that the loader is looking for. If this is NULL,
711
 * the shared library can choose to return failure or to initialise a
712
 * 'default' ENGINE. If non-NULL, the shared library must initialise only an
713
 * ENGINE matching the passed 'id'. The function is expected to be
714
 * implemented with the symbol name "bind_engine". A standard implementation
715
 * can be instantiated with IMPLEMENT_DYNAMIC_BIND_FN(fn) where the parameter
716
 * 'fn' is a callback function that populates the ENGINE structure and
717
 * returns an int value (zero for failure). 'fn' should have prototype;
718
 * [static] int fn(ENGINE *e, const char *id);
719
 */
720
typedef int (*dynamic_bind_engine) (ENGINE *e, const char *id,
721
                                    const dynamic_fns *fns);
722
# define IMPLEMENT_DYNAMIC_BIND_FN(fn) \
723
        OPENSSL_EXPORT \
724
        int bind_engine(ENGINE *e, const char *id, const dynamic_fns *fns); \
725
        OPENSSL_EXPORT \
726
        int bind_engine(ENGINE *e, const char *id, const dynamic_fns *fns) { \
727
            if (ENGINE_get_static_state() == fns->static_state) goto skip_cbs; \
728
            CRYPTO_set_mem_functions(fns->mem_fns.malloc_fn, \
729
                                     fns->mem_fns.realloc_fn, \
730
                                     fns->mem_fns.free_fn); \
731
        skip_cbs: \
732
            if (!fn(e, id)) return 0; \
733
            return 1; }
734
735
/*
736
 * If the loading application (or library) and the loaded ENGINE library
737
 * share the same static data (eg. they're both dynamically linked to the
738
 * same libcrypto.so) we need a way to avoid trying to set system callbacks -
739
 * this would fail, and for the same reason that it's unnecessary to try. If
740
 * the loaded ENGINE has (or gets from through the loader) its own copy of
741
 * the libcrypto static data, we will need to set the callbacks. The easiest
742
 * way to detect this is to have a function that returns a pointer to some
743
 * static data and let the loading application and loaded ENGINE compare
744
 * their respective values.
745
 */
746
void *ENGINE_get_static_state(void);
747
748
# if defined(__OpenBSD__) || defined(__FreeBSD__) || defined(__DragonFly__)
749
DEPRECATEDIN_1_1_0(void ENGINE_setup_bsd_cryptodev(void))
750
# endif
751
752
753
#  ifdef  __cplusplus
754
}
755
#  endif
756
# endif
757
#endif