Commit graph

86 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Bodo Möller
4d94ae00d5 ECDSA support
Submitted by: Nils Larsch <nla@trustcenter.de>
2002-02-13 18:21:51 +00:00
Richard Levitte
ba2cad19cf Add aep and sureware implementations and clean up some error reasons
that were never part of the engine framework.

The aep and sureware implementations are taken directly from 0.9.6c
[engine] and have been modified to fit the newer engine framework and
to be possible to build shared libraries of.

The aep implementation has gone through quite a bunch of tests and is
cleaned up (there were some misunderstandings in it about how to use
locks).

The sureware hasn't been tested at all in this incarnation and is
basically a quick hack to get it to compile properly.
2002-02-07 20:44:14 +00:00
Bodo Möller
957b6db3b1 fix formatting of automatically generated error section 2002-01-24 16:20:42 +00:00
Dr. Stephen Henson
f78d4a35f8 Constification. 2002-01-22 02:06:33 +00:00
Dr. Stephen Henson
df5eaa8a52 default_algorithms option in ENGINE config. 2002-01-22 01:40:18 +00:00
Dr. Stephen Henson
c9501c223f Initial ENGINE config module, docs to follow.
Fix buffer overrun errors in OPENSSL_conf().
2002-01-21 03:02:36 +00:00
Richard Levitte
2aa9043ad3 Because there's chances we clash with the system's types.h, rename our
types.h to ossl_typ.h.
2001-10-04 07:32:46 +00:00
Geoff Thorpe
b370230b78 This change adds cipher and digest support into ENGINE using the
ENGING_TABLE mechanism. The necessary hooks from crypto/evp/ to use this
will be committed shortly.
2001-09-25 21:28:40 +00:00
Geoff Thorpe
b6d1e52d45 This change replaces the ENGINE's underlying mechanics with the new
ENGINE_TABLE-based stuff - as described in crypto/engine/README.

Associated miscellaneous changes;
 - the previous cipher/digest hooks that hardwired directly to EVP's
   OBJ_NAME-based storage have been backed out. New cipher/digest support
   has been constructed and will be committed shortly.
 - each implementation defines its own ENGINE_load_<name> function now.
 - the "openssl" ENGINE isn't needed or loaded any more.
 - core (not algorithm or class specific) ENGINE code has been split into
   multiple files to increase readability and decrease linker bloat.
 - ENGINE_cpy() has been removed as it wasn't really a good idea in the
   first place and now, because of registration issues, can't be
   meaningfully defined any more.
 - BN_MOD_EXP[_CRT] support is removed as per the README.
 - a bug in enginetest.c has been fixed.

NB: This commit almost certainly breaks compilation until subsequent
changes are committed.
2001-09-25 20:00:51 +00:00
Geoff Thorpe
2b67158673 Some of the ENGINE file names were changed for 8.3 filename uniqueness
recently. So comments including file names have been fixed, and copyright
notices brought up to "2001" at the same time.
2001-09-14 18:31:57 +00:00
Geoff Thorpe
1a1422643b ENGINE uses a very opaque design, so we can predeclare the structure type
in "types.h" so that very few headers will need to include engine.h,
generally only C files using API functions will need it (reducing
the header dependencies quite a lot).
2001-09-12 02:34:20 +00:00
Geoff Thorpe
f524ddbe04 ENGINE's init() and finish() handler functions are used when the ENGINE is
being enabled or disabled (respectively) for operation. Additionally, each
ENGINE has a constructor function where it can do more 'structural' level
intialisations such as loading error strings, creating "ex_data" indices,
etc. This change introduces a handler function that gives an ENGINE a
corresponding opportunity to cleanup when the ENGINE is being destroyed. It
also adds the "get/set" API functions that control this "destroy" handler
function in an ENGINE.
2001-09-05 18:32:23 +00:00
Geoff Thorpe
e5e6a94fbf Make the 'dynamic' ENGINE bundle up the loading application/library's
locking callbacks to pass to the loaded library (in addition to the
existing mem, ex_data, and err callbacks). Also change the default
implementation of the "bind_engine" function to apply those callbacks, ie.
the IMPLEMENT_DYNAMIC_BIND_FN macro.
2001-09-04 21:25:17 +00:00
Geoff Thorpe
2dc5383a20 This changes the existing hardware ENGINE implementations to dynamically
declare their own error strings so that they can be more easily compiled as
external shared-libraries if desired. Also, each implementation has been
given canonical "dynamic" support at the base of each file and is only
built if the ENGINE_DYNAMIC_SUPPORT symbol is defined.

Also, use "void" prototypes rather than empty prototypes in engine_int.h.

This does not yet;
  (i) remove error strings when unloading,
 (ii) remove the redundant ENGINE_R_*** codes (though ENGINE_F_*** codes
      have gone), or
(iii) provide any instructions on how to build shared-library ENGINEs or
      use them.

All are on their way.
2001-09-03 21:33:00 +00:00
Geoff Thorpe
9391f97715 This change adds a new ENGINE called "dynamic" that allows new ENGINE
implementations to be loaded from self-contained shared-libraries. It also
provides (in engine.h) definitions and macros to help implement a
self-contained ENGINE. Version control is handled in a way whereby the
loader or loadee can veto the load depending on any objections it has with
each other's declared interface level. The way this is currently
implemented assumes a veto will only take place when one side notices the
other's interface level is too *old*. If the other side is newer, it should
be assumed the newer version knows better whether to veto the load or not.
Version checking (like other "dynamic" settings) can be controlled using
the "dynamic" ENGINE's control commands. Also, the semantics for the
loading allow a shared-library ENGINE implementation to handle differing
interface levels on the fly (eg. loading secondary shared-libraries
depending on the versions required).

Code will be added soon to the existing ENGINEs to illustrate how they can
be built as external libraries rather than building statically into
libcrypto.

NB: Applications wanting to support "dynamic"-loadable ENGINEs will need to
add support for ENGINE "control commands". See apps/engine.c for an example
of this, and use "apps/openssl engine -vvvv" to test or experiment.
2001-09-03 19:15:29 +00:00
Ben Laurie
0e36019977 Add EVP test program. 2001-08-18 13:53:01 +00:00
Ben Laurie
354c3ace73 Add first cut symmetric crypto support. 2001-08-18 10:22:54 +00:00
Ben Laurie
d66ace9da5 Start to reduce some of the header bloat. 2001-08-05 18:02:16 +00:00
Richard Levitte
839590f576 - Add the possibility to control engines through control names but
with arbitrary arguments instead of just a string.
- Change the key loaders to take a UI_METHOD instead of a callback
  function pointer.  NOTE: this breaks binary compatibility with
  earlier versions of OpenSSL [engine].
- Addapt the nCipher code for these new conditions and add a card
  insertion callback.
2001-06-19 16:12:18 +00:00
Richard Levitte
6c1a3e4f58 We had the password callback for ENGINEs pretty much wrong. And
passwords that were given to the key loading functions were completely
ignored, at least in the ncipher code, and then we made the assumption
that the callback wanted a prompt as user argument.

All that is now changed, and the application author is forced to give
a callback function of type pem_callback_cb and possibly an argument
for it, just as for all other functions that want to generate password
prompting.

NOTE: this change creates binary and source incompatibilities with
previous versions of OpenSSL [engine].  It's worth it this time, to
get it right (or at least better and with a chance that it'll work).
2001-05-25 21:08:56 +00:00
Geoff Thorpe
b41f836e5f Some fixes to the reference-counting in ENGINE code. First, there were a
few statements equivalent to "ENGINE_add(ENGINE_openssl())" etc. The inner
call to ENGINE_openssl() (as with other functions like it) orphans a
structural reference count. Second, the ENGINE_cleanup() function also
needs to clean up the functional reference counts held internally as the
list of "defaults" (ie. as used when RSA_new() requires an appropriate
ENGINE reference). So ENGINE_clear_defaults() was created and is called
from within ENGINE_cleanup(). Third, some of the existing code was
logically broken in its treatment of reference counts and locking (my
fault), so the necessary bits have been restructured and tidied up.

To test this stuff, compiling with ENGINE_REF_COUNT_DEBUG will cause every
reference count change (both structural and functional) to log a message to
'stderr'. Using with "openssl engine" for example shows this in action
quite well as the 'engine' sub-command cleans up after itself properly.

Also replaced some spaces with tabs.
2001-04-26 23:04:30 +00:00
Geoff Thorpe
0ce5f3e4f5 This adds 2 things to the ENGINE code.
* "ex_data" - a CRYPTO_EX_DATA structure in the ENGINE structure itself
   that allows an ENGINE to store its own information there rather than in
   global variables. It follows the declarations and implementations used
   in RSA code, for better or worse. However there's a problem when storing
   state with ENGINEs because, unlike related structure types in OpenSSL,
   there is no ENGINE-vs-ENGINE_METHOD separation. Because of what ENGINE
   is, it has method pointers as its structure elements ...  which leads
   to;

 * ENGINE_FLAGS_BY_ID_COPY - if an ENGINE should not be used just as a
   reference to an "implementation" (eg. to get to a hardware device), but
   should also be able to maintain state, then this flag can be set by the
   ENGINE implementation. The result is that any call to ENGINE_by_id()
   will not result in the existing ENGINE being returned (with its
   structural reference count incremented) but instead a new copy of the
   ENGINE will be returned that can maintain its own state independantly of
   any other copies returned in the past or future. Eg. key-generation
   might involve a series of ENGINE-specific control commands to set
   algorithms, sizes, module-keys, ids, ACLs, etc. A final command could
   generate the key. An ENGINE doing this would *have* to declare
   ENGINE_FLAGS_BY_ID_COPY so that the state of that process can be
   maintained "per-handle" and unaffected by other code having a reference
   to the same ENGINE structure.
2001-04-26 19:35:44 +00:00
Richard Levitte
a679116f6f Provide the possibility to clean up internal ENGINE structures. This
takes care of what would otherwise be seen as a memory leak.
2001-04-26 16:07:08 +00:00
Richard Levitte
9e78e6c3f8 Check for OPENSSL_NO_RSA, OPENSSL_NO_DSA and OPENSSL_NO_DH and disable
appropriate code if any of them is defined.
2001-04-26 15:45:12 +00:00
Geoff Thorpe
e2f3ae1252 Some more tweaks to ENGINE code.
This change adds some basic control commands to the existing ENGINEs
(except the software 'openssl' engine). All these engines currently load
shared-libraries for hardware APIs, so they've all been given "SO_PATH"
commands that will configure the chosen ENGINE to load its shared library
from the given path. Eg. by calling;
    ENGINE_ctrl_cmd_string(e, "SO_PATH", <path>, 0).

The nCipher 'chil' ENGINE has also had "FORK_CHECK" and "THREAD_LOCKING"
commands added so these settings could be handled via application-level
configuration rather than in application source code.

Changes to "openssl engine" to test and examine these control commands will
be made shortly. It will also provide the necessary tips to application
programs wanting to support these dynamic control commands.
2001-04-19 01:45:40 +00:00
Geoff Thorpe
40fcda292f Some BIG tweaks to ENGINE code.
This change adds some new functionality to the ENGINE code and API to
make it possible for ENGINEs to describe and implement their own control
commands that can be interrogated and used by calling applications at
run-time. The source code includes numerous comments explaining how it all
works and some of the finer details. But basically, an ENGINE will normally
declare an array of ENGINE_CMD_DEFN entries in its ENGINE - and the various
new ENGINE_CTRL_*** command types take care of iterating through this list
of definitions, converting command numbers to names, command names to
numbers, getting descriptions, getting input flags, etc. These
administrative commands are handled directly in the base ENGINE code rather
than in each ENGINE's ctrl() handler, unless they specify the
ENGINE_FLAGS_MANUAL_CMD_CTRL flag (ie. if they're doing something clever or
dynamic with the command definitions).

There is also a new function, ENGINE_cmd_is_executable(), that will
determine if an ENGINE control command is of an "executable" type that
can be used in another new function, ENGINE_ctrl_cmd_string(). If not, the
control command is not supposed to be exposed out to user/config level
access - eg. it could involve the exchange of binary data, returning
results to calling code, etc etc. If the command is executable then
ENGINE_ctrl_cmd_string() can be called using a name/arg string pair. The
control command's input flags will be used to determine necessary
conversions before the control command is called, and commands of this
form will always return zero or one (failure or success, respectively).
This is set up so that arbitrary applications can support control commands
in a consistent way so that tweaking particular ENGINE behaviour is
specific to the ENGINE and the host environment, and independant of the
application or OpenSSL.

Some code demonstrating this stuff in action will applied shortly to the
various ENGINE implementations, as well as "openssl engine" support for
executing arbitrary control commands before and/or after initialising
various ENGINEs.
2001-04-19 00:41:55 +00:00
Geoff Thorpe
404f952aa3 Some more tweaks to ENGINE code.
ENGINE handler functions should take the ENGINE structure as a parameter -
this is because ENGINE structures can be copied, and like other
structure/method setups in OpenSSL, it should be possible for init(),
finish(), ctrl(), etc to adjust state inside the ENGINE structures rather
than globally. This commit includes the dependant changes in the ENGINE
implementations.
2001-04-18 03:57:05 +00:00
Geoff Thorpe
dcd87618ab Some more tweaks to ENGINE code.
Previous changes permanently removed the commented-out old code for where
it was possible to create and use an ENGINE statically, and this code gets
rid of the ENGINE_FLAGS_MALLOCED flag that supported the distinction with
dynamically allocated ENGINEs. It also moves the area for ENGINE_FLAGS_***
values from engine_int.h to engine.h - because it should be possible to
declare ENGINEs just from declarations in exported headers.
2001-04-18 03:03:16 +00:00
Geoff Thorpe
d54bf14559 Some more tweaks to ENGINE code.
* Constify the get/set functions, and add some that functions were missing.

* Add a new 'ENGINE_cpy()' function that will produce a new ENGINE based
  copied from an original (except for the references, ie. the new copy will
  be like an ENGINE returned from 'ENGINE_new()' - a structural reference).

* Removed the "null parameter" checking in the get/set functions - it is
  legitimate to set NULL values as a way of *changing* an ENGINE (ie.
  removing a handler that previously existed). Also, passing a NULL pointer
  for an ENGINE is obviously wrong for these functions, so don't bother
  checking for it. The result is a number of error codes and strings could
  be removed.
2001-04-18 02:01:36 +00:00
Geoff Thorpe
016d7d250a This is an engine contributed by Broadcom - it is meant to support the
BCM5805 and BCM5820 units. So far I've merely taken a skim over the code
and changed a few things from their original contributed source
(de-shadowing variables, removing variables from the header, and
re-constifying some functions to remove warnings). If this gives
compilation problems on any system, please let me know. We will hopefully
know for sure whether this actually functions on a system with the relevant
hardware in a day or two.  :-)
2000-12-14 21:41:55 +00:00
Geoff Thorpe
ef02b10a16 Many applications that use OpenSSL with ENGINE support might face a
situation where they've initialised the ENGINE, loaded keys (which are then
linked to that ENGINE), and performed other checks (such as verifying
certificate chains etc). At that point, if the application goes
multi-threaded or multi-process it creates problems for any ENGINE
implementations that are either not thread/process safe or that perform
optimally when they do not have to perform locking and other contention
management tasks at "run-time".

This defines a new ENGINE_ctrl() command that can be supported by engines
at their discretion. If ENGINE_ctrl(..., ENGINE_CTRL_HUP,...) returns an
error then the caller should check if the *_R_COMMAND_NOT_IMPLEMENTED error
reason was set - it may just be that the engine doesn't support or need the
HUP command, or it could be that the attempted reinitialisation failed. A
crude alternative is to ignore the return value from ENGINE_ctrl() (and
clear any errors with ERR_clear_error()) and perform a test operation
immediately after the "HUP". Very crude indeed.

ENGINEs can support this command to close and reopen connections, files,
handles, or whatever as an alternative to run-time locking when such things
would otherwise be needed. In such a case, it's advisable for the engine
implementations to support locking by default but disable it after the
arrival of a HUP command, or any other indication by the application that
locking is not required. NB: This command exists to allow an ENGINE to
reinitialise without the ENGINE's functional reference count having to sink
down to zero and back up - which is what is normally required for the
finish() and init() handlers to get invoked. It would also be a bad idea
for engine_lib to catch this command itself and interpret it by calling the
engine's init() and finish() handlers directly, because reinitialisation
may need special handling on a case-by-case basis that is distinct from a
finish/init pair - eg. calling a finish() handler may invalidate the state
stored inside individual keys that have already loaded for this engine.
2000-11-16 00:15:50 +00:00
Richard Levitte
f971ccb264 Constify DH-related code. 2000-11-07 14:30:37 +00:00
Richard Levitte
a4aba800d9 Constify DSA-related code. 2000-11-07 13:54:39 +00:00
Richard Levitte
10e473e930 As a consequence of the BIGNUM constification, the ENGINE code needs a
few small constifying changes, and why not throw in a couple of extras
while I'm at it?
2000-11-06 22:15:50 +00:00
Richard Levitte
11c0f1201c Change the engine library so the application writer has to explicitely
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.
2000-11-02 20:33:04 +00:00
Richard Levitte
5270e7025e Merge the engine branch into the main trunk. All conflicts resolved.
At the same time, add VMS support for Rijndael.
2000-10-26 21:07:28 +00:00