additional configuration documentation

Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
This commit is contained in:
Dr. Stephen Henson 2015-03-01 15:25:39 +00:00
parent 007fd1404f
commit 3d764db7a2
2 changed files with 102 additions and 7 deletions

View file

@ -89,8 +89,7 @@ section containing configuration module specific information. E.g.
... engine stuff here ...
Currently there are two configuration modules. One for ASN1 objects another
for ENGINE configuration.
The features of each configuration module are described below.
=head2 ASN1 OBJECT CONFIGURATION MODULE
@ -191,6 +190,25 @@ For example:
# Supply all default algorithms
default_algorithms = ALL
=head2 EVP CONFIGURATION MODULE
This modules has the name B<alg_section> which points to a section containing
algorithm commands.
Currently the only algorithm command supported is B<fips_mode> whose
value should be a boolean string such as B<on> or B<off>. If the value is
B<on> this attempt to enter FIPS mode. If the call fails or the library is
not FIPS capable then an error occurs.
For example:
alg_section = evp_settings
[evp_settings]
fips_mode = on
=head1 NOTES
If a configuration file attempts to expand a variable that doesn't exist

View file

@ -9,9 +9,9 @@
#include <openssl/conf.h>
int CONF_modules_load_file(const char *filename, const char *appname,
unsigned long flags);
unsigned long flags);
int CONF_modules_load(const CONF *cnf, const char *appname,
unsigned long flags);
unsigned long flags);
=head1 DESCRIPTION
@ -22,7 +22,7 @@ NULL the standard OpenSSL application name B<openssl_conf> is used.
The behaviour can be cutomized using B<flags>.
CONF_modules_load() is idential to CONF_modules_load_file() except it
read configuration information from B<cnf>.
reads configuration information from B<cnf>.
=head1 NOTES
@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ The following B<flags> are currently recognized:
B<CONF_MFLAGS_IGNORE_ERRORS> if set errors returned by individual
configuration modules are ignored. If not set the first module error is
considered fatal and no further modules are loads.
considered fatal and no further modules are loaded.
Normally any modules errors will add error information to the error queue. If
B<CONF_MFLAGS_SILENT> is set no error information is added.
@ -42,7 +42,84 @@ B<CONF_MFLAGS_IGNORE_MISSING_FILE> if set will make CONF_load_modules_file()
ignore missing configuration files. Normally a missing configuration file
return an error.
=head1 RETURN VALUE
B<CONF_MFLAGS_DEFAULT_SECTION> if set and B<appname> is not NULL will use the
default section pointed to by B<openssl_conf> if B<appname> does not exist.
Applications should call these functions after loading builtin modules using
OPENSSL_load_builtin_modules(), any ENGINEs for example using
ENGINE_load_builtin_engines(), any algorithms for example
OPENSSL_add_all_algorithms() and (if the application uses libssl)
SSL_library_init().
By using CONF_modules_load_file() with appropriate flags an application can
customise application configuration to best suit its needs. In some cases the
use of a configuration file is optional and its absence is not an error: in
this case B<CONF_MFLAGS_IGNORE_MISSING_FILE> would be set.
Errors during configuration may also be handled differently by different
applications. For example in some cases an error may simply print out a warning
message and the application continue. In other cases an application might
consider a configuration file error as fatal and exit immediately.
Applications can use the CONF_modules_load() function if they wish to load a
configuration file themselves and have finer control over how errors are
treated.
=head1 EXAMPLES
Load a configuration file and print out any errors and exit (missing file
considered fatal):
if (CONF_modules_load_file(NULL, NULL, 0) <= 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "FATAL: error loading configuration file\n");
ERR_print_errors_fp(stderr);
exit(1);
}
Load default configuration file using the section indicated by "myapp",
tolerate missing files, but exit on other errors:
if (CONF_modules_load_file(NULL, "myapp",
CONF_MFLAGS_IGNORE_MISSING_FILE) <= 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "FATAL: error loading configuration file\n");
ERR_print_errors_fp(stderr);
exit(1);
}
Load custom configuration file and section, only print warnings on error,
missing configuration file ignored:
if (CONF_modules_load_file("/something/app.cnf", "myapp",
CONF_MFLAGS_IGNORE_MISSING_FILE) <= 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "WARNING: error loading configuration file\n");
ERR_print_errors_fp(stderr);
}
Load and parse configuration file manually, custom error handling:
FILE *fp;
CONF *cnf = NULL;
long eline;
fp = fopen("/somepath/app.cnf", "r");
if (fp == NULL) {
fprintf(stderr, "Error opening configuration file\n");
/* Other missing configuration file behaviour */
} else {
cnf = NCONF_new(NULL);
if (NCONF_load_fp(cnf, fp, &eline) == 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "Error on line %ld of configuration file\n", eline);
ERR_print_errors_fp(stderr);
/* Other malformed configuration file behaviour */
} else if (CONF_modules_load(cnf, "appname", 0) <= 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "Error configuring application\n");
ERR_print_errors_fp(stderr);
/* Other configuration error behaviour */
}
fclose(fp);
NCONF_free(cnf);
}
=head1 RETURN VALUES
These functions return 1 for success and a zero or negative value for
failure. If module errors are not ignored the return code will reflect the