d2i_X509Named2i_X509, i2d_X509, d2i_X509_bio, d2i_X509_fp, i2d_X509_bio,
i2d_X509_fp -- X509 encode and decode functions Synopsis#include <openssl/x509.h> |
X509 *d2i_X509(X509 **px, const unsigned char **in, int len);
int i2d_X509(X509 *x, unsigned char **out); |
X509 *d2i_X509_bio(BIO *bp, X509 **x);
X509 *d2i_X509_fp(FILE *fp, X509 **x); |
int i2d_X509_bio(BIO *bp, X509 *x);
int i2d_X509_fp(FILE *fp, X509 *x); |
DESCRIPTION The X509 encode and decode routines encode and parse an X509 structure, which represents an X509
certificate.
d2i_X509() attempts to decode len
bytes at *in. If successful a
pointer to the X509 structure is
returned. If an error occurred then NULL is returned. If px is not NULL then the returned structure is written to
*px. If *px is not NULL then it is assumed that *px contains a valid X509 structure and an attempt is made to reuse
it. If the call is successful *in is
incremented to the byte following the parsed data.
i2d_X509() encodes the structure pointed to by x into DER format. If out is not NULL is writes the DER encoded data to the
buffer at *out, and increments it to
point after the data just written. If the return value is negative an
error occurred, otherwise it returns the length of the encoded data.
For OpenSSL 0.9.7 and later if *out
is NULL memory will be allocated for
a buffer and the encoded data written to it. In this case *out is not incremented and it points to the
start of the data just written.
d2i_X509_bio() is similar to d2i_X509() except it attempts to parse
data from BIO bp.
d2i_X509_fp() is similar to d2i_X509() except it attempts to parse
data from FILE pointer fp.
i2d_X509_bio() is similar to i2d_X509() except it writes the encoding
of the structure x to BIO bp and it returns 1 for success and 0 for
failure.
i2d_X509_fp() is similar to i2d_X509() except it writes the encoding
of the structure x to BIO bp and it returns 1 for success and 0 for
failure.
NOTES The letters i and d in for example i2d_X509 stand for "internal" (that is an
internal C structure) and "DER". So that i2d_X509 converts from internal to DER.
The functions can also understand BER forms.
The actual X509 structure passed to i2d_X509() must be a valid
populated X509 structure it can
not simply be fed with an empty
structure such as that returned by X509_new().
The encoded data is in binary form and may contain embedded zeroes.
Therefore any FILE pointers or BIOs should be opened in binary mode.
Functions such as strlen() will
not return the correct length of the
encoded structure.
The ways that *in and *out are incremented after the operation can
trap the unwary. See the WARNINGS
section for some common errors.
The reason for the auto increment behaviour is to reflect a typical
usage of ASN1 functions: after one structure is encoded or decoded
another will processed after it.
EXAMPLES Allocate and encode the DER encoding of an X509 structure:
int len;
unsigned char *buf, *p;
len = i2d_X509(x, NULL);
buf = OPENSSL_malloc(len);
if (buf == NULL)
/* error */
p = buf;
i2d_X509(x, &p); |
If you are using OpenSSL 0.9.7 or later then this can be simplified
to:
int len;
unsigned char *buf;
buf = NULL;
len = i2d_X509(x, &buf);
if (len < 0)
/* error */ |
Attempt to decode a buffer:
X509 *x;
unsigned char *buf, *p;
int len;
/* Something to setup buf and len */
p = buf;
x = d2i_X509(NULL, &p, len);
if (x == NULL)
/* Some error */ |
Alternative technique:
X509 *x;
unsigned char *buf, *p;
int len;
/* Something to setup buf and len */
p = buf;
x = NULL;
if(!d2i_X509(&x, &p, len))
/* Some error */ |
WARNINGS The use of temporary variable is mandatory. A common mistake is to
attempt to use a buffer directly as follows:
int len;
unsigned char *buf;
len = i2d_X509(x, NULL);
buf = OPENSSL_malloc(len);
if (buf == NULL)
/* error */
i2d_X509(x, &buf);
/* Other stuff ... */
OPENSSL_free(buf); |
This code will result in buf
apparently containing garbage because it was incremented after the
call to point after the data just written. Also buf will no longer contain the pointer
allocated by OPENSSL_malloc() and
the subsequent call to OPENSSL_free() may well crash.
The auto allocation feature (setting buf to NULL) only works on
OpenSSL 0.9.7 and later. Attempts to use it on earlier versions will
typically cause a segmentation violation.
Another trap to avoid is misuse of the xp argument to d2i_X509():
X509 *x;
if (!d2i_X509(&x, &p, len))
/* Some error */ |
This will probably crash somewhere in d2i_X509(). The reason for this is that the
variable x is uninitialized and an
attempt will be made to interpret its (invalid) value as an X509 structure, typically causing a
segmentation violation. If x is set
to NULL first then this will not happen.
BUGS In some versions of OpenSSL the "reuse" behaviour of d2i_X509() when
*px is valid is broken and some
parts of the reused structure may persist if they are not present in
the new one. As a result the use of this "reuse" behaviour is
strongly discouraged.
i2d_X509() will not return an error in many versions of OpenSSL, if
mandatory fields are not initialized due to a programming error then
the encoded structure may contain invalid data or omit the fields
entirely and will not be parsed by d2i_X509(). This may be fixed in
future so code should not assume that i2d_X509() will always succeed.
RETURN VALUES d2i_X509(), d2i_X509_bio() and d2i_X509_fp() return a valid X509 structure or NULL if an error occurs. The error code that
can be obtained by ERR_get_error(3).
i2d_X509() returns the number of bytes successfully encoded or a
negative value if an error occurs. The error code can be obtained by
ERR_get_error(3).
i2d_X509_bio() and i2d_X509_fp() return 1 for success and 0 if an
error occurs The error code can be obtained by ERR_get_error(3).
HISTORY d2i_X509, i2d_X509, d2i_X509_bio, d2i_X509_fp, i2d_X509_bio and
i2d_X509_fp are available in all versions of SSLeay and OpenSSL.
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