=pod =head1 NAME X509_sign, X509_sign_ctx, X509_REQ_sign, X509_REQ_sign_ctx, X509_CRL_sign, X509_CRL_sign_ctx - sign certificate, certificate request, or CRL signature =head1 SYNOPSIS #include int X509_sign(X509 *x, EVP_PKEY *pkey, const EVP_MD *md); int X509_sign_ctx(X509 *x, EVP_MD_CTX *ctx); int X509_REQ_sign(X509_REQ *x, EVP_PKEY *pkey, const EVP_MD *md); int X509_REQ_sign_ctx(X509_REQ *x, EVP_MD_CTX *ctx); int X509_CRL_sign(X509_CRL *x, EVP_PKEY *pkey, const EVP_MD *md); int X509_CRL_sign_ctx(X509_CRL *x, EVP_MD_CTX *ctx); =head1 DESCRIPTION X509_sign() signs certificate I using private key I and message digest I and sets the signature in I. X509_sign_ctx() also signs certificate I but uses the parameters contained in digest context I. If the certificate information includes X.509 extensions, these two functions make sure that the certificate bears X.509 version 3. X509_REQ_sign(), X509_REQ_sign_ctx(), X509_CRL_sign(), and X509_CRL_sign_ctx() sign certificate requests and CRLs, respectively. =head1 NOTES X509_sign_ctx() is used where the default parameters for the corresponding public key and digest are not suitable. It can be used to sign keys using RSA-PSS for example. For efficiency reasons and to work around ASN.1 encoding issues the encoding of the signed portion of a certificate, certificate request and CRL is cached internally. If the signed portion of the structure is modified the encoding is not always updated meaning a stale version is sometimes used. This is not normally a problem because modifying the signed portion will invalidate the signature and signing will always update the encoding. =head1 RETURN VALUES All functions return the size of the signature in bytes for success and zero for failure. =head1 SEE ALSO L, L, L, L, L, L, L, L =head1 HISTORY The X509_sign(), X509_REQ_sign() and X509_CRL_sign() functions are available in all versions of OpenSSL. The X509_sign_ctx(), X509_REQ_sign_ctx() and X509_CRL_sign_ctx() functions were added in OpenSSL 1.0.1. =head1 COPYRIGHT Copyright 2015-2020 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved. Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (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. =cut