HMAC is a MAC (message authentication code), i.e. a keyed hash
function used for message authentication, which is based on a hash
function.
HMAC() computes the message authentication code of the n bytes at d
using the hash function evp_md and
the key key which is key_len bytes long.
It places the result in md (which
must have space for the output of the hash function, which is no more
than EVP_MAX_MD_SIZE bytes). If
md is NULL, the digest is placed in
a static array. The size of the output is placed in md_len, unless it is NULL.
evp_md can be EVP_sha1(),
EVP_ripemd160() etc.
HMAC_CTX_init() initialises a HMAC_CTX before first use. It must be called.
HMAC_CTX_cleanup() erases the key and other data from the HMAC_CTX and releases any associated
resources. It must be called when an HMAC_CTX is no longer required.
HMAC_cleanup() is an alias for HMAC_CTX_cleanup() included for back
compatibility with 0.9.6b, it is deprecated.
The following functions may be used if the message is not completely
stored in memory:
HMAC_Init() initializes a HMAC_CTX
structure to use the hash function evp_md and the key key which is key_len bytes long. It is deprecated and only
included for backward compatibility with OpenSSL 0.9.6b.
HMAC_Init_ex() initializes or reuses a HMAC_CTX structure to use the function
evp_md and key key. Either can be NULL, in which case the
existing one will be reused. HMAC_CTX_init() must have been called
before the first use of an HMAC_CTX
in this function. N.B. HMAC_Init() had this
undocumented behaviour in previous versions of OpenSSL - failure to
switch to HMAC_Init_ex() in programs that expect it will cause them
to stop working.
HMAC_Update() can be called repeatedly with chunks of the message to
be authenticated (len bytes at
data).
HMAC_Final() places the message authentication code in md, which must have space for the hash
function output.
RETURN VALUES
HMAC() returns a pointer to the message authentication code or NULL
if an error occurred.
HMAC_Init_ex(), HMAC_Update() and HMAC_Final() return 1 for success
or 0 if an error occurred.
HMAC_CTX_init() and HMAC_CTX_cleanup() do not return values.