form '#if defined(...) || defined(...) || ...' and '#if !defined(...)
&& !defined(...) && ...'. This also avoids the growing number of
special cases it was previously handling (some of them wrongly).
sure they are available in opensslconf.h, by giving them names starting
with "OPENSSL_" to avoid conflicts with other packages and by making
sure e_os2.h will cover all platform-specific cases together with
opensslconf.h.
I've checked fairly well that nothing breaks with this (apart from
external software that will adapt if they have used something like
NO_KRB5), but I can't guarantee it completely, so a review of this
change would be a good thing.
Remove the old broken bio read of serial numbers in the 'ca' index
file. This would choke if a revoked certificate was specified with
a negative serial number.
Fix typo in uid.c
Make ca.c correctly initialize the revocation date.
Make ASN1_UTCTIME_set_string() and ASN1_GENERALIZEDTIME_set_string() set the
string type: so they can initialize ASN1_TIME structures properly.
client code certificates to use to only check response signatures.
I'm not entirely sure if the way I just implemented the verification
is the right way to do it, and would be happy if someone would like to
review this.
Bleichenbacher's DSA attack. With this implementation, the expected
number of iterations never exceeds 2.
New semantics for BN_rand_range():
BN_rand_range(r, min, range) now generates r such that
min <= r < min+range.
(Previously, BN_rand_range(r, min, max) generated r such that
min <= r < max.
It is more convenient to have the range; also the previous
prototype was misleading because max was larger than
the actual maximum.)
certificates.
One is a valid CA which has no basicConstraints
but does have certSign keyUsage.
Other is S/MIME signer with nonRepudiation but
no digitalSignature.
OCSP requests. It can also query reponders and parse or
print out responses.
Still needs some more work: OCSP response checks and
of course documentation.
but will verify the signatures on a response
and locate the signers certifcate.
Still needs to implement a proper OCSP certificate
verify.
Fix warning in RAND_egd().
allocation callbacks so that it is no longer visible to applications
that these live at a different call level than conventional memory
allocation callbacks.
handling routines that need file name and line number information,
I've added a call level to our memory handling routines to allow that
kind of hooking.
only queried when the /dev/[u]random devices did not return enough
entropy. Only the amount of entropy missing to reach the required minimum
is queried, as EGD may be drained.
Queried locations are: /etc/entropy, /var/run/egd-pool
"doall" functions to using type-safe wrappers. As and where required, this
can be replaced by redeclaring the underlying callbacks to use the
underlying "void"-based prototypes (eg. if performance suffers from an
extra level of function invocation).
them for a short period of time (actually, poll them with select(),
then read() whatever is there), which is about 10ms (hard-coded value)
each.
Separate Windows and Unixly code, and start on a VMS variant that
currently just returns 0.
Remove extensions argument from various functions
because it is not needed with the new extension
code.
New function OCSP_cert_to_id() to convert a pair
of certificates into an OCSP_CERTID.
New simple OCSP HTTP function. This is rather primitive
but just about adequate to send OCSP requests and
parse the response.
Fix typo in CRL distribution points extension.
Fix ASN1 code so it adds a final null to constructed
strings.
horrible macros.
Fix two evil ASN1 bugs. Attempt to use 'ctx' when
NULL if input is indefinite length constructed
in asn1_check_tlen() and invalid pointer to ASN1_TYPE
when reusing existing structure (this took *ages* to
find because the new PKCS#12 code triggered it).
most of the old wrappers. A few of the old versions remain
because they are non standard and the corresponding ASN1
code has not been reimplemented yet.
* detect "unknown" algorithms (any C macro starting with NO_ that is
not explicitely mentioned in mkdef.pl as a known algorithm) and
report.
* add a number of algorithms that can be deselected.
* look in ssl/kssl.h as well.
* accept multiple whitespace (not just one SPC) in preprocessor lines.
currently OpenSSL itself wont compile with this set
because some old style stuff remains.
Change old functions X509_sign(), X509_verify() etc
to use new item based functions.
Replace OCSP function declarations with DECLARE macros.
Don't try to print request certificates if signature is not present.
Remove unnecessary test for certificates being NULL.
Fix typos in printed output.
Tidy up output.
Fix for typo in OCSP_SERVICELOC ASN1 template.
Also give a bit more info in CHANGES about the ASN1 revision.
from the print routines.
Reorganisation of OCSP code: initial print routines in ocsp_prn.c. Doesn't
work fully because OCSP extensions aren't reimplemented yet.
Implement some ASN1 functions needed to compile OCSP code.
authenticated attributes: this is used to retain the
original encoding and not break signatures.
Support for a SET OF which reorders the STACK when
encoding a structure. This will be used with the
PKCS7 code.
for its ASN1 operations as well as the old style function
pointers (i2d, d2i, new, free). Change standard extensions
to support this.
Fix a warning in BN_mul(), bn_mul.c about uninitialised 'j'.
One problem that looked like a problem in bn_recp.c at first turned
out to be a BN_mul bug. An example is given in bn_recp.c; finding
the bug responsible for this is left as an exercise.
This caused a segmentation fault in calls to malloc, so I cleaned up
bn_lib.c a little so that it is easier to see what is going on.
The bug turned out to be an off-by-one error in BN_bin2bn.
BN_mul() correctly constified, avoids two realloc()'s that aren't
really necessary and saves memory to boot. This required a small
change in bn_mul_part_recursive() and the addition of variants of
bn_cmp_words(), bn_add_words() and bn_sub_words() that can take arrays
with differing sizes.
The test results show a performance that very closely matches the
original code from before my constification. This may seem like a
very small win from a performance point of view, but if one remembers
that the variants of bn_cmp_words(), bn_add_words() and bn_sub_words()
are not at all optimized for the moment (and there's no corresponding
assembler code), and that their use may be just as non-optimal, I'm
pretty confident there are possibilities...
This code needs reviewing!
two functions that did expansion on in parameters (BN_mul() and
BN_sqr()). The problem was solved by making bn_dup_expand() which is
a mix of bn_expand2() and BN_dup().
full version number and not just 0. This should mark the shared
libraries as not backward compatible. Of course, this should be
changed again when we can guarantee backward binary compatibility.
load the "external" built-in engines (those that require DSO). This
makes linking with libdl or other dso libraries non-mandatory.
Change 'openssl engine' accordingly.
Change the engine header files so some declarations (that differed at
that!) aren't duplicated, and make sure engine_int.h includes
engine.h. That way, there should be no way of missing the needed
info.
implementation is contained in the application, and the capability
string building part should really be part of the engine library.
This is therefore an experimental hack, and will be changed in the
near future.
- Make note of the expected extension for the shared libraries and
if there is a need for symbolic links from for example libcrypto.so.0
to libcrypto.so.0.9.7. There is extended info in Configure for
that.
- Make as few rebuilds of the shared libraries as possible.
- Still avoid linking the OpenSSL programs with the shared libraries.
- When installing, install the shared libraries separately from the
static ones.
record-oriented fashion. That means that every write() will write a
separate record, which will be read separately by the programs trying
to read from it. This can be very confusing.
The solution is to put a BIO filter in the way that will buffer text
until a linefeed is reached, and then write everything a line at a
time, so every record written will be an actual line, not chunks of
lines and not (usually doesn't happen, but I've seen it once) several
lines in one record. Voila, BIO_f_linebuffer() is born.
Since we're so close to release time, I'm making this VMS-only for
now, just to make sure no code is needlessly broken by this. After
the release, this BIO method will be enabled on all other platforms as
well.
BN_mod_mul_montgomery, which calls bn_sqr_recursive
without much preparation.
bn_sqr_recursive requires the length of its argument to be
a power of 2, which is not always the case here.
There's no reason for not using BN_sqr -- if a simpler
approach to squaring made sense, then why not change
BN_sqr? (Using BN_sqr should also speed up DH where g is chosen
such that it becomes small [e.g., 2] when converted
to Montgomery representation.)
Case closed :-)
process when some symbols are missing. Instead, all needed info is
saved in the .num files, including what conditions are needed for a
specific symbol to exist.
This was needed for the work I'm doing with shared libraries under
VMS.
The old code was painfully primitive and couldn't handle
distinct certificates using the same subject name.
The new code performs several tests on a candidate issuer
certificate based on certificate extensions.
It also adds several callbacks to X509_VERIFY_CTX so its
behaviour can be customised.
Unfortunately some hackery was needed to persuade X509_STORE
to tolerate this. This should go away when X509_STORE is
replaced, sometime...
This must have broken something though :-(