yuezonghe | 824eb0c | 2024-06-27 02:32:26 -0700 | [diff] [blame^] | 1 | =pod |
| 2 | |
| 3 | =head1 NAME |
| 4 | |
| 5 | ENGINE_get_DH, ENGINE_get_DSA, |
| 6 | ENGINE_by_id, ENGINE_get_cipher_engine, ENGINE_get_default_DH, |
| 7 | ENGINE_get_default_DSA, |
| 8 | ENGINE_get_default_RAND, |
| 9 | ENGINE_get_default_RSA, ENGINE_get_digest_engine, ENGINE_get_first, |
| 10 | ENGINE_get_last, ENGINE_get_next, ENGINE_get_prev, ENGINE_new, |
| 11 | ENGINE_get_ciphers, ENGINE_get_ctrl_function, ENGINE_get_digests, |
| 12 | ENGINE_get_destroy_function, ENGINE_get_finish_function, |
| 13 | ENGINE_get_init_function, ENGINE_get_load_privkey_function, |
| 14 | ENGINE_get_load_pubkey_function, ENGINE_load_private_key, |
| 15 | ENGINE_load_public_key, ENGINE_get_RAND, ENGINE_get_RSA, ENGINE_get_id, |
| 16 | ENGINE_get_name, ENGINE_get_cmd_defns, ENGINE_get_cipher, |
| 17 | ENGINE_get_digest, ENGINE_add, ENGINE_cmd_is_executable, |
| 18 | ENGINE_ctrl, ENGINE_ctrl_cmd, ENGINE_ctrl_cmd_string, |
| 19 | ENGINE_finish, ENGINE_free, ENGINE_get_flags, ENGINE_init, |
| 20 | ENGINE_register_DH, ENGINE_register_DSA, |
| 21 | ENGINE_register_RAND, ENGINE_register_RSA, |
| 22 | ENGINE_register_all_complete, ENGINE_register_ciphers, |
| 23 | ENGINE_register_complete, ENGINE_register_digests, ENGINE_remove, |
| 24 | ENGINE_set_DH, ENGINE_set_DSA, |
| 25 | ENGINE_set_RAND, ENGINE_set_RSA, ENGINE_set_ciphers, |
| 26 | ENGINE_set_cmd_defns, ENGINE_set_ctrl_function, ENGINE_set_default, |
| 27 | ENGINE_set_default_DH, ENGINE_set_default_DSA, |
| 28 | ENGINE_set_default_RAND, ENGINE_set_default_RSA, |
| 29 | ENGINE_set_default_ciphers, ENGINE_set_default_digests, |
| 30 | ENGINE_set_default_string, ENGINE_set_destroy_function, |
| 31 | ENGINE_set_digests, ENGINE_set_finish_function, ENGINE_set_flags, |
| 32 | ENGINE_set_id, ENGINE_set_init_function, ENGINE_set_load_privkey_function, |
| 33 | ENGINE_set_load_pubkey_function, ENGINE_set_name, ENGINE_up_ref, |
| 34 | ENGINE_get_table_flags, ENGINE_cleanup, |
| 35 | ENGINE_load_builtin_engines, ENGINE_register_all_DH, |
| 36 | ENGINE_register_all_DSA, |
| 37 | ENGINE_register_all_RAND, |
| 38 | ENGINE_register_all_RSA, ENGINE_register_all_ciphers, |
| 39 | ENGINE_register_all_digests, ENGINE_set_table_flags, ENGINE_unregister_DH, |
| 40 | ENGINE_unregister_DSA, |
| 41 | ENGINE_unregister_RAND, ENGINE_unregister_RSA, ENGINE_unregister_ciphers, |
| 42 | ENGINE_unregister_digests |
| 43 | - ENGINE cryptographic module support |
| 44 | |
| 45 | =head1 SYNOPSIS |
| 46 | |
| 47 | #include <openssl/engine.h> |
| 48 | |
| 49 | ENGINE *ENGINE_get_first(void); |
| 50 | ENGINE *ENGINE_get_last(void); |
| 51 | ENGINE *ENGINE_get_next(ENGINE *e); |
| 52 | ENGINE *ENGINE_get_prev(ENGINE *e); |
| 53 | |
| 54 | int ENGINE_add(ENGINE *e); |
| 55 | int ENGINE_remove(ENGINE *e); |
| 56 | |
| 57 | ENGINE *ENGINE_by_id(const char *id); |
| 58 | |
| 59 | int ENGINE_init(ENGINE *e); |
| 60 | int ENGINE_finish(ENGINE *e); |
| 61 | |
| 62 | void ENGINE_load_builtin_engines(void); |
| 63 | |
| 64 | ENGINE *ENGINE_get_default_RSA(void); |
| 65 | ENGINE *ENGINE_get_default_DSA(void); |
| 66 | ENGINE *ENGINE_get_default_DH(void); |
| 67 | ENGINE *ENGINE_get_default_RAND(void); |
| 68 | ENGINE *ENGINE_get_cipher_engine(int nid); |
| 69 | ENGINE *ENGINE_get_digest_engine(int nid); |
| 70 | |
| 71 | int ENGINE_set_default_RSA(ENGINE *e); |
| 72 | int ENGINE_set_default_DSA(ENGINE *e); |
| 73 | int ENGINE_set_default_DH(ENGINE *e); |
| 74 | int ENGINE_set_default_RAND(ENGINE *e); |
| 75 | int ENGINE_set_default_ciphers(ENGINE *e); |
| 76 | int ENGINE_set_default_digests(ENGINE *e); |
| 77 | int ENGINE_set_default_string(ENGINE *e, const char *list); |
| 78 | |
| 79 | int ENGINE_set_default(ENGINE *e, unsigned int flags); |
| 80 | |
| 81 | unsigned int ENGINE_get_table_flags(void); |
| 82 | void ENGINE_set_table_flags(unsigned int flags); |
| 83 | |
| 84 | int ENGINE_register_RSA(ENGINE *e); |
| 85 | void ENGINE_unregister_RSA(ENGINE *e); |
| 86 | void ENGINE_register_all_RSA(void); |
| 87 | int ENGINE_register_DSA(ENGINE *e); |
| 88 | void ENGINE_unregister_DSA(ENGINE *e); |
| 89 | void ENGINE_register_all_DSA(void); |
| 90 | int ENGINE_register_DH(ENGINE *e); |
| 91 | void ENGINE_unregister_DH(ENGINE *e); |
| 92 | void ENGINE_register_all_DH(void); |
| 93 | int ENGINE_register_RAND(ENGINE *e); |
| 94 | void ENGINE_unregister_RAND(ENGINE *e); |
| 95 | void ENGINE_register_all_RAND(void); |
| 96 | int ENGINE_register_ciphers(ENGINE *e); |
| 97 | void ENGINE_unregister_ciphers(ENGINE *e); |
| 98 | void ENGINE_register_all_ciphers(void); |
| 99 | int ENGINE_register_digests(ENGINE *e); |
| 100 | void ENGINE_unregister_digests(ENGINE *e); |
| 101 | void ENGINE_register_all_digests(void); |
| 102 | int ENGINE_register_complete(ENGINE *e); |
| 103 | int ENGINE_register_all_complete(void); |
| 104 | |
| 105 | int ENGINE_ctrl(ENGINE *e, int cmd, long i, void *p, void (*f)(void)); |
| 106 | int ENGINE_cmd_is_executable(ENGINE *e, int cmd); |
| 107 | int ENGINE_ctrl_cmd(ENGINE *e, const char *cmd_name, |
| 108 | long i, void *p, void (*f)(void), int cmd_optional); |
| 109 | int ENGINE_ctrl_cmd_string(ENGINE *e, const char *cmd_name, const char *arg, |
| 110 | int cmd_optional); |
| 111 | |
| 112 | ENGINE *ENGINE_new(void); |
| 113 | int ENGINE_free(ENGINE *e); |
| 114 | int ENGINE_up_ref(ENGINE *e); |
| 115 | |
| 116 | int ENGINE_set_id(ENGINE *e, const char *id); |
| 117 | int ENGINE_set_name(ENGINE *e, const char *name); |
| 118 | int ENGINE_set_RSA(ENGINE *e, const RSA_METHOD *rsa_meth); |
| 119 | int ENGINE_set_DSA(ENGINE *e, const DSA_METHOD *dsa_meth); |
| 120 | int ENGINE_set_DH(ENGINE *e, const DH_METHOD *dh_meth); |
| 121 | int ENGINE_set_RAND(ENGINE *e, const RAND_METHOD *rand_meth); |
| 122 | int ENGINE_set_destroy_function(ENGINE *e, ENGINE_GEN_INT_FUNC_PTR destroy_f); |
| 123 | int ENGINE_set_init_function(ENGINE *e, ENGINE_GEN_INT_FUNC_PTR init_f); |
| 124 | int ENGINE_set_finish_function(ENGINE *e, ENGINE_GEN_INT_FUNC_PTR finish_f); |
| 125 | int ENGINE_set_ctrl_function(ENGINE *e, ENGINE_CTRL_FUNC_PTR ctrl_f); |
| 126 | int ENGINE_set_load_privkey_function(ENGINE *e, ENGINE_LOAD_KEY_PTR loadpriv_f); |
| 127 | int ENGINE_set_load_pubkey_function(ENGINE *e, ENGINE_LOAD_KEY_PTR loadpub_f); |
| 128 | int ENGINE_set_ciphers(ENGINE *e, ENGINE_CIPHERS_PTR f); |
| 129 | int ENGINE_set_digests(ENGINE *e, ENGINE_DIGESTS_PTR f); |
| 130 | int ENGINE_set_flags(ENGINE *e, int flags); |
| 131 | int ENGINE_set_cmd_defns(ENGINE *e, const ENGINE_CMD_DEFN *defns); |
| 132 | |
| 133 | const char *ENGINE_get_id(const ENGINE *e); |
| 134 | const char *ENGINE_get_name(const ENGINE *e); |
| 135 | const RSA_METHOD *ENGINE_get_RSA(const ENGINE *e); |
| 136 | const DSA_METHOD *ENGINE_get_DSA(const ENGINE *e); |
| 137 | const DH_METHOD *ENGINE_get_DH(const ENGINE *e); |
| 138 | const RAND_METHOD *ENGINE_get_RAND(const ENGINE *e); |
| 139 | ENGINE_GEN_INT_FUNC_PTR ENGINE_get_destroy_function(const ENGINE *e); |
| 140 | ENGINE_GEN_INT_FUNC_PTR ENGINE_get_init_function(const ENGINE *e); |
| 141 | ENGINE_GEN_INT_FUNC_PTR ENGINE_get_finish_function(const ENGINE *e); |
| 142 | ENGINE_CTRL_FUNC_PTR ENGINE_get_ctrl_function(const ENGINE *e); |
| 143 | ENGINE_LOAD_KEY_PTR ENGINE_get_load_privkey_function(const ENGINE *e); |
| 144 | ENGINE_LOAD_KEY_PTR ENGINE_get_load_pubkey_function(const ENGINE *e); |
| 145 | ENGINE_CIPHERS_PTR ENGINE_get_ciphers(const ENGINE *e); |
| 146 | ENGINE_DIGESTS_PTR ENGINE_get_digests(const ENGINE *e); |
| 147 | const EVP_CIPHER *ENGINE_get_cipher(ENGINE *e, int nid); |
| 148 | const EVP_MD *ENGINE_get_digest(ENGINE *e, int nid); |
| 149 | int ENGINE_get_flags(const ENGINE *e); |
| 150 | const ENGINE_CMD_DEFN *ENGINE_get_cmd_defns(const ENGINE *e); |
| 151 | |
| 152 | EVP_PKEY *ENGINE_load_private_key(ENGINE *e, const char *key_id, |
| 153 | UI_METHOD *ui_method, void *callback_data); |
| 154 | EVP_PKEY *ENGINE_load_public_key(ENGINE *e, const char *key_id, |
| 155 | UI_METHOD *ui_method, void *callback_data); |
| 156 | |
| 157 | Deprecated: |
| 158 | |
| 159 | #if OPENSSL_API_COMPAT < 0x10100000L |
| 160 | void ENGINE_cleanup(void) |
| 161 | #endif |
| 162 | |
| 163 | =head1 DESCRIPTION |
| 164 | |
| 165 | These functions create, manipulate, and use cryptographic modules in the |
| 166 | form of B<ENGINE> objects. These objects act as containers for |
| 167 | implementations of cryptographic algorithms, and support a |
| 168 | reference-counted mechanism to allow them to be dynamically loaded in and |
| 169 | out of the running application. |
| 170 | |
| 171 | The cryptographic functionality that can be provided by an B<ENGINE> |
| 172 | implementation includes the following abstractions; |
| 173 | |
| 174 | RSA_METHOD - for providing alternative RSA implementations |
| 175 | DSA_METHOD, DH_METHOD, RAND_METHOD, ECDH_METHOD, ECDSA_METHOD, |
| 176 | - similarly for other OpenSSL APIs |
| 177 | EVP_CIPHER - potentially multiple cipher algorithms (indexed by 'nid') |
| 178 | EVP_DIGEST - potentially multiple hash algorithms (indexed by 'nid') |
| 179 | key-loading - loading public and/or private EVP_PKEY keys |
| 180 | |
| 181 | =head2 Reference counting and handles |
| 182 | |
| 183 | Due to the modular nature of the ENGINE API, pointers to ENGINEs need to be |
| 184 | treated as handles - i.e. not only as pointers, but also as references to |
| 185 | the underlying ENGINE object. Ie. one should obtain a new reference when |
| 186 | making copies of an ENGINE pointer if the copies will be used (and |
| 187 | released) independently. |
| 188 | |
| 189 | ENGINE objects have two levels of reference-counting to match the way in |
| 190 | which the objects are used. At the most basic level, each ENGINE pointer is |
| 191 | inherently a B<structural> reference - a structural reference is required |
| 192 | to use the pointer value at all, as this kind of reference is a guarantee |
| 193 | that the structure can not be deallocated until the reference is released. |
| 194 | |
| 195 | However, a structural reference provides no guarantee that the ENGINE is |
| 196 | initialised and able to use any of its cryptographic |
| 197 | implementations. Indeed it's quite possible that most ENGINEs will not |
| 198 | initialise at all in typical environments, as ENGINEs are typically used to |
| 199 | support specialised hardware. To use an ENGINE's functionality, you need a |
| 200 | B<functional> reference. This kind of reference can be considered a |
| 201 | specialised form of structural reference, because each functional reference |
| 202 | implicitly contains a structural reference as well - however to avoid |
| 203 | difficult-to-find programming bugs, it is recommended to treat the two |
| 204 | kinds of reference independently. If you have a functional reference to an |
| 205 | ENGINE, you have a guarantee that the ENGINE has been initialised and |
| 206 | is ready to perform cryptographic operations, and will remain initialised |
| 207 | until after you have released your reference. |
| 208 | |
| 209 | I<Structural references> |
| 210 | |
| 211 | This basic type of reference is used for instantiating new ENGINEs, |
| 212 | iterating across OpenSSL's internal linked-list of loaded |
| 213 | ENGINEs, reading information about an ENGINE, etc. Essentially a structural |
| 214 | reference is sufficient if you only need to query or manipulate the data of |
| 215 | an ENGINE implementation rather than use its functionality. |
| 216 | |
| 217 | The ENGINE_new() function returns a structural reference to a new (empty) |
| 218 | ENGINE object. There are other ENGINE API functions that return structural |
| 219 | references such as; ENGINE_by_id(), ENGINE_get_first(), ENGINE_get_last(), |
| 220 | ENGINE_get_next(), ENGINE_get_prev(). All structural references should be |
| 221 | released by a corresponding to call to the ENGINE_free() function - the |
| 222 | ENGINE object itself will only actually be cleaned up and deallocated when |
| 223 | the last structural reference is released. |
| 224 | |
| 225 | It should also be noted that many ENGINE API function calls that accept a |
| 226 | structural reference will internally obtain another reference - typically |
| 227 | this happens whenever the supplied ENGINE will be needed by OpenSSL after |
| 228 | the function has returned. Eg. the function to add a new ENGINE to |
| 229 | OpenSSL's internal list is ENGINE_add() - if this function returns success, |
| 230 | then OpenSSL will have stored a new structural reference internally so the |
| 231 | caller is still responsible for freeing their own reference with |
| 232 | ENGINE_free() when they are finished with it. In a similar way, some |
| 233 | functions will automatically release the structural reference passed to it |
| 234 | if part of the function's job is to do so. Eg. the ENGINE_get_next() and |
| 235 | ENGINE_get_prev() functions are used for iterating across the internal |
| 236 | ENGINE list - they will return a new structural reference to the next (or |
| 237 | previous) ENGINE in the list or NULL if at the end (or beginning) of the |
| 238 | list, but in either case the structural reference passed to the function is |
| 239 | released on behalf of the caller. |
| 240 | |
| 241 | To clarify a particular function's handling of references, one should |
| 242 | always consult that function's documentation "man" page, or failing that |
| 243 | the openssl/engine.h header file includes some hints. |
| 244 | |
| 245 | I<Functional references> |
| 246 | |
| 247 | As mentioned, functional references exist when the cryptographic |
| 248 | functionality of an ENGINE is required to be available. A functional |
| 249 | reference can be obtained in one of two ways; from an existing structural |
| 250 | reference to the required ENGINE, or by asking OpenSSL for the default |
| 251 | operational ENGINE for a given cryptographic purpose. |
| 252 | |
| 253 | To obtain a functional reference from an existing structural reference, |
| 254 | call the ENGINE_init() function. This returns zero if the ENGINE was not |
| 255 | already operational and couldn't be successfully initialised (e.g. lack of |
| 256 | system drivers, no special hardware attached, etc), otherwise it will |
| 257 | return nonzero to indicate that the ENGINE is now operational and will |
| 258 | have allocated a new B<functional> reference to the ENGINE. All functional |
| 259 | references are released by calling ENGINE_finish() (which removes the |
| 260 | implicit structural reference as well). |
| 261 | |
| 262 | The second way to get a functional reference is by asking OpenSSL for a |
| 263 | default implementation for a given task, e.g. by ENGINE_get_default_RSA(), |
| 264 | ENGINE_get_default_cipher_engine(), etc. These are discussed in the next |
| 265 | section, though they are not usually required by application programmers as |
| 266 | they are used automatically when creating and using the relevant |
| 267 | algorithm-specific types in OpenSSL, such as RSA, DSA, EVP_CIPHER_CTX, etc. |
| 268 | |
| 269 | =head2 Default implementations |
| 270 | |
| 271 | For each supported abstraction, the ENGINE code maintains an internal table |
| 272 | of state to control which implementations are available for a given |
| 273 | abstraction and which should be used by default. These implementations are |
| 274 | registered in the tables and indexed by an 'nid' value, because |
| 275 | abstractions like EVP_CIPHER and EVP_DIGEST support many distinct |
| 276 | algorithms and modes, and ENGINEs can support arbitrarily many of them. |
| 277 | In the case of other abstractions like RSA, DSA, etc, there is only one |
| 278 | "algorithm" so all implementations implicitly register using the same 'nid' |
| 279 | index. |
| 280 | |
| 281 | When a default ENGINE is requested for a given abstraction/algorithm/mode, (e.g. |
| 282 | when calling RSA_new_method(NULL)), a "get_default" call will be made to the |
| 283 | ENGINE subsystem to process the corresponding state table and return a |
| 284 | functional reference to an initialised ENGINE whose implementation should be |
| 285 | used. If no ENGINE should (or can) be used, it will return NULL and the caller |
| 286 | will operate with a NULL ENGINE handle - this usually equates to using the |
| 287 | conventional software implementation. In the latter case, OpenSSL will from |
| 288 | then on behave the way it used to before the ENGINE API existed. |
| 289 | |
| 290 | Each state table has a flag to note whether it has processed this |
| 291 | "get_default" query since the table was last modified, because to process |
| 292 | this question it must iterate across all the registered ENGINEs in the |
| 293 | table trying to initialise each of them in turn, in case one of them is |
| 294 | operational. If it returns a functional reference to an ENGINE, it will |
| 295 | also cache another reference to speed up processing future queries (without |
| 296 | needing to iterate across the table). Likewise, it will cache a NULL |
| 297 | response if no ENGINE was available so that future queries won't repeat the |
| 298 | same iteration unless the state table changes. This behaviour can also be |
| 299 | changed; if the ENGINE_TABLE_FLAG_NOINIT flag is set (using |
| 300 | ENGINE_set_table_flags()), no attempted initialisations will take place, |
| 301 | instead the only way for the state table to return a non-NULL ENGINE to the |
| 302 | "get_default" query will be if one is expressly set in the table. Eg. |
| 303 | ENGINE_set_default_RSA() does the same job as ENGINE_register_RSA() except |
| 304 | that it also sets the state table's cached response for the "get_default" |
| 305 | query. In the case of abstractions like EVP_CIPHER, where implementations are |
| 306 | indexed by 'nid', these flags and cached-responses are distinct for each 'nid' |
| 307 | value. |
| 308 | |
| 309 | =head2 Application requirements |
| 310 | |
| 311 | This section will explain the basic things an application programmer should |
| 312 | support to make the most useful elements of the ENGINE functionality |
| 313 | available to the user. The first thing to consider is whether the |
| 314 | programmer wishes to make alternative ENGINE modules available to the |
| 315 | application and user. OpenSSL maintains an internal linked list of |
| 316 | "visible" ENGINEs from which it has to operate - at start-up, this list is |
| 317 | empty and in fact if an application does not call any ENGINE API calls and |
| 318 | it uses static linking against openssl, then the resulting application |
| 319 | binary will not contain any alternative ENGINE code at all. So the first |
| 320 | consideration is whether any/all available ENGINE implementations should be |
| 321 | made visible to OpenSSL - this is controlled by calling the various "load" |
| 322 | functions. |
| 323 | |
| 324 | The fact that ENGINEs are made visible to OpenSSL (and thus are linked into |
| 325 | the program and loaded into memory at run-time) does not mean they are |
| 326 | "registered" or called into use by OpenSSL automatically - that behaviour |
| 327 | is something for the application to control. Some applications |
| 328 | will want to allow the user to specify exactly which ENGINE they want used |
| 329 | if any is to be used at all. Others may prefer to load all support and have |
| 330 | OpenSSL automatically use at run-time any ENGINE that is able to |
| 331 | successfully initialise - i.e. to assume that this corresponds to |
| 332 | acceleration hardware attached to the machine or some such thing. There are |
| 333 | probably numerous other ways in which applications may prefer to handle |
| 334 | things, so we will simply illustrate the consequences as they apply to a |
| 335 | couple of simple cases and leave developers to consider these and the |
| 336 | source code to openssl's builtin utilities as guides. |
| 337 | |
| 338 | If no ENGINE API functions are called within an application, then OpenSSL |
| 339 | will not allocate any internal resources. Prior to OpenSSL 1.1.0, however, |
| 340 | if any ENGINEs are loaded, even if not registered or used, it was necessary to |
| 341 | call ENGINE_cleanup() before the program exits. |
| 342 | |
| 343 | I<Using a specific ENGINE implementation> |
| 344 | |
| 345 | Here we'll assume an application has been configured by its user or admin |
| 346 | to want to use the "ACME" ENGINE if it is available in the version of |
| 347 | OpenSSL the application was compiled with. If it is available, it should be |
| 348 | used by default for all RSA, DSA, and symmetric cipher operations, otherwise |
| 349 | OpenSSL should use its builtin software as per usual. The following code |
| 350 | illustrates how to approach this; |
| 351 | |
| 352 | ENGINE *e; |
| 353 | const char *engine_id = "ACME"; |
| 354 | ENGINE_load_builtin_engines(); |
| 355 | e = ENGINE_by_id(engine_id); |
| 356 | if (!e) |
| 357 | /* the engine isn't available */ |
| 358 | return; |
| 359 | if (!ENGINE_init(e)) { |
| 360 | /* the engine couldn't initialise, release 'e' */ |
| 361 | ENGINE_free(e); |
| 362 | return; |
| 363 | } |
| 364 | if (!ENGINE_set_default_RSA(e)) |
| 365 | /* |
| 366 | * This should only happen when 'e' can't initialise, but the previous |
| 367 | * statement suggests it did. |
| 368 | */ |
| 369 | abort(); |
| 370 | ENGINE_set_default_DSA(e); |
| 371 | ENGINE_set_default_ciphers(e); |
| 372 | /* Release the functional reference from ENGINE_init() */ |
| 373 | ENGINE_finish(e); |
| 374 | /* Release the structural reference from ENGINE_by_id() */ |
| 375 | ENGINE_free(e); |
| 376 | |
| 377 | I<Automatically using builtin ENGINE implementations> |
| 378 | |
| 379 | Here we'll assume we want to load and register all ENGINE implementations |
| 380 | bundled with OpenSSL, such that for any cryptographic algorithm required by |
| 381 | OpenSSL - if there is an ENGINE that implements it and can be initialised, |
| 382 | it should be used. The following code illustrates how this can work; |
| 383 | |
| 384 | /* Load all bundled ENGINEs into memory and make them visible */ |
| 385 | ENGINE_load_builtin_engines(); |
| 386 | /* Register all of them for every algorithm they collectively implement */ |
| 387 | ENGINE_register_all_complete(); |
| 388 | |
| 389 | That's all that's required. Eg. the next time OpenSSL tries to set up an |
| 390 | RSA key, any bundled ENGINEs that implement RSA_METHOD will be passed to |
| 391 | ENGINE_init() and if any of those succeed, that ENGINE will be set as the |
| 392 | default for RSA use from then on. |
| 393 | |
| 394 | =head2 Advanced configuration support |
| 395 | |
| 396 | There is a mechanism supported by the ENGINE framework that allows each |
| 397 | ENGINE implementation to define an arbitrary set of configuration |
| 398 | "commands" and expose them to OpenSSL and any applications based on |
| 399 | OpenSSL. This mechanism is entirely based on the use of name-value pairs |
| 400 | and assumes ASCII input (no unicode or UTF for now!), so it is ideal if |
| 401 | applications want to provide a transparent way for users to provide |
| 402 | arbitrary configuration "directives" directly to such ENGINEs. It is also |
| 403 | possible for the application to dynamically interrogate the loaded ENGINE |
| 404 | implementations for the names, descriptions, and input flags of their |
| 405 | available "control commands", providing a more flexible configuration |
| 406 | scheme. However, if the user is expected to know which ENGINE device he/she |
| 407 | is using (in the case of specialised hardware, this goes without saying) |
| 408 | then applications may not need to concern themselves with discovering the |
| 409 | supported control commands and simply prefer to pass settings into ENGINEs |
| 410 | exactly as they are provided by the user. |
| 411 | |
| 412 | Before illustrating how control commands work, it is worth mentioning what |
| 413 | they are typically used for. Broadly speaking there are two uses for |
| 414 | control commands; the first is to provide the necessary details to the |
| 415 | implementation (which may know nothing at all specific to the host system) |
| 416 | so that it can be initialised for use. This could include the path to any |
| 417 | driver or config files it needs to load, required network addresses, |
| 418 | smart-card identifiers, passwords to initialise protected devices, |
| 419 | logging information, etc etc. This class of commands typically needs to be |
| 420 | passed to an ENGINE B<before> attempting to initialise it, i.e. before |
| 421 | calling ENGINE_init(). The other class of commands consist of settings or |
| 422 | operations that tweak certain behaviour or cause certain operations to take |
| 423 | place, and these commands may work either before or after ENGINE_init(), or |
| 424 | in some cases both. ENGINE implementations should provide indications of |
| 425 | this in the descriptions attached to builtin control commands and/or in |
| 426 | external product documentation. |
| 427 | |
| 428 | I<Issuing control commands to an ENGINE> |
| 429 | |
| 430 | Let's illustrate by example; a function for which the caller supplies the |
| 431 | name of the ENGINE it wishes to use, a table of string-pairs for use before |
| 432 | initialisation, and another table for use after initialisation. Note that |
| 433 | the string-pairs used for control commands consist of a command "name" |
| 434 | followed by the command "parameter" - the parameter could be NULL in some |
| 435 | cases but the name can not. This function should initialise the ENGINE |
| 436 | (issuing the "pre" commands beforehand and the "post" commands afterwards) |
| 437 | and set it as the default for everything except RAND and then return a |
| 438 | boolean success or failure. |
| 439 | |
| 440 | int generic_load_engine_fn(const char *engine_id, |
| 441 | const char **pre_cmds, int pre_num, |
| 442 | const char **post_cmds, int post_num) |
| 443 | { |
| 444 | ENGINE *e = ENGINE_by_id(engine_id); |
| 445 | if (!e) return 0; |
| 446 | while (pre_num--) { |
| 447 | if (!ENGINE_ctrl_cmd_string(e, pre_cmds[0], pre_cmds[1], 0)) { |
| 448 | fprintf(stderr, "Failed command (%s - %s:%s)\n", engine_id, |
| 449 | pre_cmds[0], pre_cmds[1] ? pre_cmds[1] : "(NULL)"); |
| 450 | ENGINE_free(e); |
| 451 | return 0; |
| 452 | } |
| 453 | pre_cmds += 2; |
| 454 | } |
| 455 | if (!ENGINE_init(e)) { |
| 456 | fprintf(stderr, "Failed initialisation\n"); |
| 457 | ENGINE_free(e); |
| 458 | return 0; |
| 459 | } |
| 460 | /* |
| 461 | * ENGINE_init() returned a functional reference, so free the structural |
| 462 | * reference from ENGINE_by_id(). |
| 463 | */ |
| 464 | ENGINE_free(e); |
| 465 | while (post_num--) { |
| 466 | if (!ENGINE_ctrl_cmd_string(e, post_cmds[0], post_cmds[1], 0)) { |
| 467 | fprintf(stderr, "Failed command (%s - %s:%s)\n", engine_id, |
| 468 | post_cmds[0], post_cmds[1] ? post_cmds[1] : "(NULL)"); |
| 469 | ENGINE_finish(e); |
| 470 | return 0; |
| 471 | } |
| 472 | post_cmds += 2; |
| 473 | } |
| 474 | ENGINE_set_default(e, ENGINE_METHOD_ALL & ~ENGINE_METHOD_RAND); |
| 475 | /* Success */ |
| 476 | return 1; |
| 477 | } |
| 478 | |
| 479 | Note that ENGINE_ctrl_cmd_string() accepts a boolean argument that can |
| 480 | relax the semantics of the function - if set nonzero it will only return |
| 481 | failure if the ENGINE supported the given command name but failed while |
| 482 | executing it, if the ENGINE doesn't support the command name it will simply |
| 483 | return success without doing anything. In this case we assume the user is |
| 484 | only supplying commands specific to the given ENGINE so we set this to |
| 485 | FALSE. |
| 486 | |
| 487 | I<Discovering supported control commands> |
| 488 | |
| 489 | It is possible to discover at run-time the names, numerical-ids, descriptions |
| 490 | and input parameters of the control commands supported by an ENGINE using a |
| 491 | structural reference. Note that some control commands are defined by OpenSSL |
| 492 | itself and it will intercept and handle these control commands on behalf of the |
| 493 | ENGINE, i.e. the ENGINE's ctrl() handler is not used for the control command. |
| 494 | openssl/engine.h defines an index, ENGINE_CMD_BASE, that all control commands |
| 495 | implemented by ENGINEs should be numbered from. Any command value lower than |
| 496 | this symbol is considered a "generic" command is handled directly by the |
| 497 | OpenSSL core routines. |
| 498 | |
| 499 | It is using these "core" control commands that one can discover the control |
| 500 | commands implemented by a given ENGINE, specifically the commands: |
| 501 | |
| 502 | ENGINE_HAS_CTRL_FUNCTION |
| 503 | ENGINE_CTRL_GET_FIRST_CMD_TYPE |
| 504 | ENGINE_CTRL_GET_NEXT_CMD_TYPE |
| 505 | ENGINE_CTRL_GET_CMD_FROM_NAME |
| 506 | ENGINE_CTRL_GET_NAME_LEN_FROM_CMD |
| 507 | ENGINE_CTRL_GET_NAME_FROM_CMD |
| 508 | ENGINE_CTRL_GET_DESC_LEN_FROM_CMD |
| 509 | ENGINE_CTRL_GET_DESC_FROM_CMD |
| 510 | ENGINE_CTRL_GET_CMD_FLAGS |
| 511 | |
| 512 | Whilst these commands are automatically processed by the OpenSSL framework code, |
| 513 | they use various properties exposed by each ENGINE to process these |
| 514 | queries. An ENGINE has 3 properties it exposes that can affect how this behaves; |
| 515 | it can supply a ctrl() handler, it can specify ENGINE_FLAGS_MANUAL_CMD_CTRL in |
| 516 | the ENGINE's flags, and it can expose an array of control command descriptions. |
| 517 | If an ENGINE specifies the ENGINE_FLAGS_MANUAL_CMD_CTRL flag, then it will |
| 518 | simply pass all these "core" control commands directly to the ENGINE's ctrl() |
| 519 | handler (and thus, it must have supplied one), so it is up to the ENGINE to |
| 520 | reply to these "discovery" commands itself. If that flag is not set, then the |
| 521 | OpenSSL framework code will work with the following rules: |
| 522 | |
| 523 | if no ctrl() handler supplied; |
| 524 | ENGINE_HAS_CTRL_FUNCTION returns FALSE (zero), |
| 525 | all other commands fail. |
| 526 | if a ctrl() handler was supplied but no array of control commands; |
| 527 | ENGINE_HAS_CTRL_FUNCTION returns TRUE, |
| 528 | all other commands fail. |
| 529 | if a ctrl() handler and array of control commands was supplied; |
| 530 | ENGINE_HAS_CTRL_FUNCTION returns TRUE, |
| 531 | all other commands proceed processing ... |
| 532 | |
| 533 | If the ENGINE's array of control commands is empty then all other commands will |
| 534 | fail, otherwise; ENGINE_CTRL_GET_FIRST_CMD_TYPE returns the identifier of |
| 535 | the first command supported by the ENGINE, ENGINE_GET_NEXT_CMD_TYPE takes the |
| 536 | identifier of a command supported by the ENGINE and returns the next command |
| 537 | identifier or fails if there are no more, ENGINE_CMD_FROM_NAME takes a string |
| 538 | name for a command and returns the corresponding identifier or fails if no such |
| 539 | command name exists, and the remaining commands take a command identifier and |
| 540 | return properties of the corresponding commands. All except |
| 541 | ENGINE_CTRL_GET_FLAGS return the string length of a command name or description, |
| 542 | or populate a supplied character buffer with a copy of the command name or |
| 543 | description. ENGINE_CTRL_GET_FLAGS returns a bitwise-OR'd mask of the following |
| 544 | possible values: |
| 545 | |
| 546 | ENGINE_CMD_FLAG_NUMERIC |
| 547 | ENGINE_CMD_FLAG_STRING |
| 548 | ENGINE_CMD_FLAG_NO_INPUT |
| 549 | ENGINE_CMD_FLAG_INTERNAL |
| 550 | |
| 551 | If the ENGINE_CMD_FLAG_INTERNAL flag is set, then any other flags are purely |
| 552 | informational to the caller - this flag will prevent the command being usable |
| 553 | for any higher-level ENGINE functions such as ENGINE_ctrl_cmd_string(). |
| 554 | "INTERNAL" commands are not intended to be exposed to text-based configuration |
| 555 | by applications, administrations, users, etc. These can support arbitrary |
| 556 | operations via ENGINE_ctrl(), including passing to and/or from the control |
| 557 | commands data of any arbitrary type. These commands are supported in the |
| 558 | discovery mechanisms simply to allow applications to determine if an ENGINE |
| 559 | supports certain specific commands it might want to use (e.g. application "foo" |
| 560 | might query various ENGINEs to see if they implement "FOO_GET_VENDOR_LOGO_GIF" - |
| 561 | and ENGINE could therefore decide whether or not to support this "foo"-specific |
| 562 | extension). |
| 563 | |
| 564 | =head1 ENVIRONMENT |
| 565 | |
| 566 | =over 4 |
| 567 | |
| 568 | =item B<OPENSSL_ENGINES> |
| 569 | |
| 570 | The path to the engines directory. |
| 571 | Ignored in set-user-ID and set-group-ID programs. |
| 572 | |
| 573 | =back |
| 574 | |
| 575 | =head1 RETURN VALUES |
| 576 | |
| 577 | ENGINE_get_first(), ENGINE_get_last(), ENGINE_get_next() and ENGINE_get_prev() |
| 578 | return a valid B<ENGINE> structure or NULL if an error occurred. |
| 579 | |
| 580 | ENGINE_add() and ENGINE_remove() return 1 on success or 0 on error. |
| 581 | |
| 582 | ENGINE_by_id() returns a valid B<ENGINE> structure or NULL if an error occurred. |
| 583 | |
| 584 | ENGINE_init() and ENGINE_finish() return 1 on success or 0 on error. |
| 585 | |
| 586 | All ENGINE_get_default_TYPE() functions, ENGINE_get_cipher_engine() and |
| 587 | ENGINE_get_digest_engine() return a valid B<ENGINE> structure on success or NULL |
| 588 | if an error occurred. |
| 589 | |
| 590 | All ENGINE_set_default_TYPE() functions return 1 on success or 0 on error. |
| 591 | |
| 592 | ENGINE_set_default() returns 1 on success or 0 on error. |
| 593 | |
| 594 | ENGINE_get_table_flags() returns an unsigned integer value representing the |
| 595 | global table flags which are used to control the registration behaviour of |
| 596 | B<ENGINE> implementations. |
| 597 | |
| 598 | All ENGINE_register_TYPE() functions return 1 on success or 0 on error. |
| 599 | |
| 600 | ENGINE_register_complete() and ENGINE_register_all_complete() always return 1. |
| 601 | |
| 602 | ENGINE_ctrl() returns a positive value on success or others on error. |
| 603 | |
| 604 | ENGINE_cmd_is_executable() returns 1 if B<cmd> is executable or 0 otherwise. |
| 605 | |
| 606 | ENGINE_ctrl_cmd() and ENGINE_ctrl_cmd_string() return 1 on success or 0 on error. |
| 607 | |
| 608 | ENGINE_new() returns a valid B<ENGINE> structure on success or NULL if an error |
| 609 | occurred. |
| 610 | |
| 611 | ENGINE_free() always returns 1. |
| 612 | |
| 613 | ENGINE_up_ref() returns 1 on success or 0 on error. |
| 614 | |
| 615 | ENGINE_set_id() and ENGINE_set_name() return 1 on success or 0 on error. |
| 616 | |
| 617 | All other B<ENGINE_set_*> functions return 1 on success or 0 on error. |
| 618 | |
| 619 | ENGINE_get_id() and ENGINE_get_name() return a string representing the identifier |
| 620 | and the name of the ENGINE B<e> respectively. |
| 621 | |
| 622 | ENGINE_get_RSA(), ENGINE_get_DSA(), ENGINE_get_DH() and ENGINE_get_RAND() |
| 623 | return corresponding method structures for each algorithms. |
| 624 | |
| 625 | ENGINE_get_destroy_function(), ENGINE_get_init_function(), |
| 626 | ENGINE_get_finish_function(), ENGINE_get_ctrl_function(), |
| 627 | ENGINE_get_load_privkey_function(), ENGINE_get_load_pubkey_function(), |
| 628 | ENGINE_get_ciphers() and ENGINE_get_digests() return corresponding function |
| 629 | pointers of the callbacks. |
| 630 | |
| 631 | ENGINE_get_cipher() returns a valid B<EVP_CIPHER> structure on success or NULL |
| 632 | if an error occurred. |
| 633 | |
| 634 | ENGINE_get_digest() returns a valid B<EVP_MD> structure on success or NULL if an |
| 635 | error occurred. |
| 636 | |
| 637 | ENGINE_get_flags() returns an integer representing the ENGINE flags which are |
| 638 | used to control various behaviours of an ENGINE. |
| 639 | |
| 640 | ENGINE_get_cmd_defns() returns an B<ENGINE_CMD_DEFN> structure or NULL if it's |
| 641 | not set. |
| 642 | |
| 643 | ENGINE_load_private_key() and ENGINE_load_public_key() return a valid B<EVP_PKEY> |
| 644 | structure on success or NULL if an error occurred. |
| 645 | |
| 646 | =head1 SEE ALSO |
| 647 | |
| 648 | L<OPENSSL_init_crypto(3)>, L<RSA_new_method(3)>, L<DSA_new(3)>, L<DH_new(3)>, |
| 649 | L<RAND_bytes(3)>, L<config(5)> |
| 650 | |
| 651 | =head1 HISTORY |
| 652 | |
| 653 | ENGINE_cleanup() was deprecated in OpenSSL 1.1.0 by the automatic cleanup |
| 654 | done by OPENSSL_cleanup() |
| 655 | and should not be used. |
| 656 | |
| 657 | =head1 COPYRIGHT |
| 658 | |
| 659 | Copyright 2002-2021 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved. |
| 660 | |
| 661 | Licensed under the OpenSSL license (the "License"). You may not use |
| 662 | this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy |
| 663 | in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at |
| 664 | L<https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>. |
| 665 | |
| 666 | =cut |