openssl/doc/man3/SSL_get_client_random.pod
Matt Caswell 5eb7273669 Document SSL_SESSION_set1_master_key()
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
(Merged from https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/3670)
2017-06-21 14:45:35 +01:00

104 lines
4.1 KiB
Text

=pod
=head1 NAME
SSL_get_client_random,
SSL_get_server_random,
SSL_SESSION_get_master_key,
SSL_SESSION_set1_master_key
- get internal TLS/SSL random values and get/set master key
=head1 SYNOPSIS
#include <openssl/ssl.h>
size_t SSL_get_client_random(const SSL *ssl, unsigned char *out, size_t outlen);
size_t SSL_get_server_random(const SSL *ssl, unsigned char *out, size_t outlen);
size_t SSL_SESSION_get_master_key(const SSL_SESSION *session,
unsigned char *out, size_t outlen);
int SSL_SESSION_set1_master_key(SSL_SESSION *sess, unsigned char *in,
size_t len);
=head1 DESCRIPTION
SSL_get_client_random() extracts the random value sent from the client
to the server during the initial SSL/TLS handshake. It copies as many
bytes as it can of this value into the buffer provided in B<out>,
which must have at least B<outlen> bytes available. It returns the
total number of bytes that were actually copied. If B<outlen> is
zero, SSL_get_client_random() copies nothing, and returns the
total size of the client_random value.
SSL_get_server_random() behaves the same, but extracts the random value
sent from the server to the client during the initial SSL/TLS handshake.
SSL_SESSION_get_master_key() behaves the same, but extracts the master
secret used to guarantee the security of the SSL/TLS session. This one
can be dangerous if misused; see NOTES below.
SSL_SESSION_set1_master_key() sets the master key value associated with the
SSL_SESSION B<sess>. For example, this could be used to set up a session based
PSK (see L<SSL_CTX_set_psk_use_session_callback(3)>). The master key of length
B<len> should be provided at B<in>. A copy of the supplied master key is taken
by the function, so the caller is responsible for freeing and cleaning any
memory associated with B<in>. The caller must ensure that the length of the ke
is suitable for the ciphersuite associated with the SSL_SESSION.
=head1 NOTES
You probably shouldn't use these functions.
These functions expose internal values from the TLS handshake, for
use in low-level protocols. You probably should not use them, unless
you are implementing something that needs access to the internal protocol
details.
Despite the names of SSL_get_client_random() and SSL_get_server_random(), they
ARE NOT random number generators. Instead, they return the mostly-random values that
were already generated and used in the TLS protocol. Using them
in place of RAND_bytes() would be grossly foolish.
The security of your TLS session depends on keeping the master key secret:
do not expose it, or any information about it, to anybody.
If you need to calculate another secret value that depends on the master
secret, you should probably use SSL_export_keying_material() instead, and
forget that you ever saw these functions.
In current versions of the TLS protocols, the length of client_random
(and also server_random) is always SSL3_RANDOM_SIZE bytes. Support for
other outlen arguments to the SSL_get_*_random() functions is provided
in case of the unlikely event that a future version or variant of TLS
uses some other length there.
Finally, though the "client_random" and "server_random" values are called
"random", many TLS implementations will generate four bytes of those
values based on their view of the current time.
=head1 RETURN VALUES
SSL_SESSION_set1_master_key() returns 1 on success or 0 on failure.
For the other functions, if B<outlen> is greater than 0 then these functions
return the number of bytes actually copied, which will be less than or equal to
B<outlen>. If B<outlen> is 0 then these functions return the maximum number
of bytes they would copy -- that is, the length of the underlying field.
=head1 SEE ALSO
L<ssl(7)>,
L<RAND_bytes(3)>,
L<SSL_export_keying_material(3)>,
L<SSL_CTX_set_psk_use_session_callback(3)>
=head1 COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2015-2017 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
Licensed under the OpenSSL license (the "License"). You may not use
this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy
in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at
L<https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>.
=cut