Commit graph

4 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Geoff Thorpe
bcfea9fb25 Allow RSA key-generation to specify an arbitrary public exponent. Jelte
proposed the change and submitted the patch, I jiggled it slightly and
adjusted the other parts of openssl that were affected.

PR: 867
Submitted by: Jelte Jansen
Reviewed by: Geoff Thorpe
2004-04-26 15:31:35 +00:00
Geoff Thorpe
9d473aa2e4 When OPENSSL_NO_DEPRECATED is defined, deprecated functions are (or should
be) precompiled out in the API headers. This change is to ensure that if
it is defined when compiling openssl, the deprecated functions aren't
implemented either.
2003-10-29 04:06:50 +00:00
Geoff Thorpe
e189872486 Nils Larsch submitted;
- a patch to fix a memory leak in rsa_gen.c
  - a note about compiler warnings with unions
  - a note about improving structure element names

This applies his patch and implements a solution to the notes.
2002-12-08 16:45:26 +00:00
Geoff Thorpe
e9224c7177 This is a first-cut at improving the callback mechanisms used in
key-generation and prime-checking functions. Rather than explicitly passing
callback functions and caller-defined context data for the callbacks, a new
structure BN_GENCB is defined that encapsulates this; a pointer to the
structure is passed to all such functions instead.

This wrapper structure allows the encapsulation of "old" and "new" style
callbacks - "new" callbacks return a boolean result on the understanding
that returning FALSE should terminate keygen/primality processing.  The
BN_GENCB abstraction will allow future callback modifications without
needing to break binary compatibility nor change the API function
prototypes. The new API functions have been given names ending in "_ex" and
the old functions are implemented as wrappers to the new ones.  The
OPENSSL_NO_DEPRECATED symbol has been introduced so that, if defined,
declaration of the older functions will be skipped. NB: Some
openssl-internal code will stick with the older callbacks for now, so
appropriate "#undef" logic will be put in place - this is in case the user
is *building* openssl (rather than *including* its headers) with this
symbol defined.

There is another change in the new _ex functions; the key-generation
functions do not return key structures but operate on structures passed by
the caller, the return value is a boolean. This will allow for a smoother
transition to having key-generation as "virtual function" in the various
***_METHOD tables.
2002-12-08 05:24:31 +00:00