This is placed as CORE because the core of libcrypto is the authority
for what is possible to do and what's required to make these abstract
objects work.
In essence, an abstract object is an OSSL_PARAM array with well
defined parameter keys and values:
- an object type, which is a number indicating what kind of
libcrypto structure the object in question can be used with. The
currently possible numbers are defined in <openssl/core_object.h>.
- an object data type, which is a string that indicates more closely
what the contents of the object are.
- the object data, an octet string. The exact encoding used depends
on the context in which it's used. For example, the decoder
sub-system accepts any encoding, as long as there is a decoder
implementation that takes that as input. If central code is to
handle the data directly, DER encoding is assumed. (*)
- an object reference, also an octet string. This octet string is
not the object contents, just a mere reference to a provider-native
object. (**)
- an object description, which is a human readable text string that
can be displayed if some software desires to do so.
The intent is that certain provider-native operations (called X
here) are able to return any sort of object that belong with other
operations, or an object that has no provider support otherwise.
(*) A future extension might be to be able to specify encoding.
(**) The possible mechanisms for dealing with object references are:
- An object loading function in the target operation. The exact
target operation is determined by the object type (for example,
OSSL_OBJECT_PKEY implies that the target operation is a KEYMGMT)
and the implementation to be fetched by its object data type (for
an OSSL_OBJECT_PKEY, that's the KEYMGMT keytype to be fetched).
This loading function is only useful for this if the implementations
that are involved (X and KEYMGMT, for example) are from the same
provider.
- An object exporter function in the operation X implementation.
That exporter function can be used to export the object data in
OSSL_PARAM form that can be imported by a target operation's
import function. This can be used when it's not possible to fetch
the target operation implementation from the same provider.
Reviewed-by: Shane Lontis <shane.lontis@oracle.com>
(Merged from https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/12512)
Fixes#12633
For CMS the Gost engine still requires calls to EVP_get_digestbyname() and EVP_get_cipherbyname() when
EVP_MD_fetch() and EVP_CIPHER_fetch() return NULL.
Reviewed-by: Tomas Mraz <tmraz@fedoraproject.org>
Reviewed-by: Dmitry Belyavskiy <beldmit@gmail.com>
(Merged from https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/12689)
This was added for backward compatability.
Added EC_GROUP_new_from_params() that supports explicit curve parameters.
This fixes the 15-test_genec.t TODO.
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
(Merged from https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/12604)
dsa_algorithmidentifier_encoding(), ecdsa_algorithmidentifier_encoding(),
rsa_algorithmidentifier_encoding() have been replaced with DER writer
functions, so they aren't useful any more.
Reviewed-by: Paul Dale <paul.dale@oracle.com>
(Merged from https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/12693)
Also remove not really to-the-point error message if call fails in apps/cmp.c
Reviewed-by: Shane Lontis <shane.lontis@oracle.com>
(Merged from https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/11808)
Fixes#12630
ec_import requires domain parameters to be part of the selection.
The public and private serialisers were not selecting the correct flags so the import was failing.
Added a test that uses the base provider so that a export/import happens for serialization.
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
(Merged from https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/12681)
The previous commit fixed a bug with mte, stitched ciphersuites and
TLSv1.0. We now add a test for that scenario.
Reviewed-by: Tomas Mraz <tmraz@fedoraproject.org>
(Merged from https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/12670)