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ASN1_INTEGER_GET(3) Library Functions Manual ASN1_INTEGER_GET(3)

ASN1_INTEGER_get_uint64, ASN1_INTEGER_get_int64, ASN1_INTEGER_get, ASN1_INTEGER_set_uint64, ASN1_INTEGER_set_int64, ASN1_INTEGER_set, ASN1_INTEGER_cmp, ASN1_INTEGER_dup, BN_to_ASN1_INTEGER, ASN1_INTEGER_to_BN, ASN1_ENUMERATED_get_int64, ASN1_ENUMERATED_get, ASN1_ENUMERATED_set_int64, ASN1_ENUMERATED_set, BN_to_ASN1_ENUMERATED, ASN1_ENUMERATED_to_BNASN.1 INTEGER and ENUMERATED utilities

#include <openssl/asn1.h>

int
ASN1_INTEGER_get_uint64(uint64_t *out_val, const ASN1_INTEGER *a);

int
ASN1_INTEGER_get_int64(int64_t *out_val, const ASN1_INTEGER *a);

long
ASN1_INTEGER_get(const ASN1_INTEGER *a);

int
ASN1_INTEGER_set_uint64(ASN1_INTEGER *a, uint64_t v);

int
ASN1_INTEGER_set_int64(ASN1_INTEGER *a, int64_t v;);

int
ASN1_INTEGER_set(ASN1_INTEGER *a, long v);

int
ASN1_INTEGER_cmp(const ASN1_INTEGER *a1, const ASN1_INTEGER *a2);

ASN1_INTEGER *
ASN1_INTEGER_dup(const ASN1_INTEGER *a);

ASN1_INTEGER *
BN_to_ASN1_INTEGER(const BIGNUM *bn, ASN1_INTEGER *ai);

BIGNUM *
ASN1_INTEGER_to_BN(const ASN1_INTEGER *ai, BIGNUM *bn);

int
ASN1_ENUMERATED_get_int64(int64_t *out_val, const ASN1_ENUMERATED *a);

long
ASN1_ENUMERATED_get(const ASN1_ENUMERATED *a);

int
ASN1_ENUMERATED_set_int64(ASN1_ENUMERATED *a, int64_t v);

int
ASN1_ENUMERATED_set(ASN1_ENUMERATED *a, long v);

ASN1_ENUMERATED *
BN_to_ASN1_ENUMERATED(const BIGNUM *bn, ASN1_ENUMERATED *ai);

BIGNUM *
ASN1_ENUMERATED_to_BN(const ASN1_ENUMERATED *ai, BIGNUM *bn);

These functions convert to and from ASN1_INTEGER and ASN1_ENUMERATED objects.

() and () store the value of a in *out_val if successful.

The deprecated function () converts a to the long type.

(), (), and () set the type of a to V_ASN1_INTEGER or V_ASN1_NEG_INTEGER depending on the sign of v and set the value of a to v.

() compares the signed integer numbers represented by a1 and a2.

() does exactly the same as ASN1_STRING_dup(3) without providing any type safety, except that it fails if the ASN1_STRING_length(3) of a is 0.

() converts bn to an ASN1_INTEGER. If ai is NULL, a new ASN1_INTEGER object is returned. Otherwise, the existing object ai is used instead.

() converts ai into a BIGNUM. If bn is NULL, a new BIGNUM object is returned. Otherwise, the existing object bn is used instead.

(), (), (), (), (), and () behave like their ASN1_INTEGER counterparts except that they operate on an ASN1_ENUMERATED object.

ASN1_INTEGER_get_uint64() returns 1 in case of success or 0 if a is not of the type V_ASN1_INTEGER or greater than UINT64_MAX.

ASN1_INTEGER_get_int64() returns 1 in case of success or 0 if a is not of the type V_ASN1_INTEGER or V_ASN1_NEG_INTEGER, less than INT64_MIN, or greater than INT64_MAX.

ASN1_INTEGER_get() and ASN1_ENUMERATED_get() return the converted value, 0 if a is NULL, or -1 on error, which is ambiguous because -1 is a legitimate value for an ASN1_INTEGER.

ASN1_INTEGER_set_uint64(), ASN1_INTEGER_set_int64(), ASN1_INTEGER_set(), ASN1_ENUMERATED_set_int64(), and ASN1_ENUMERATED_set() return 1 for success or 0 for failure. They only fail if a memory allocation error occurs.

ASN1_INTEGER_cmp() returns a value greater than, equal to, or less than 0 if the signed integer number represented by a1 is greater than, equal to, or less than the signed integer number represented by a2, respectively.

ASN1_INTEGER_dup() returns a pointer to a newly allocated ASN1_STRING structure or NULL if a is a NULL pointer, if the length of a is 0, or if memory allocation fails.

BN_to_ASN1_INTEGER() and BN_to_ASN1_ENUMERATED() return an ASN1_INTEGER or ASN1_ENUMERATED object, respectively, or NULL if an error occurs. They only fail due to memory allocation errors.

ASN1_INTEGER_to_BN() and ASN1_ENUMERATED_to_BN() return a BIGNUM object of NULL if an error occurs. They can fail if the passed type is incorrect (due to a programming error) or due to memory allocation failures.

ASN1_INTEGER_new(3), ASN1_STRING_length(3)

ASN1_INTEGER_set() first appeared in SSLeay 0.5.1. ASN1_INTEGER_get(), BN_to_ASN1_INTEGER(), and ASN1_INTEGER_to_BN() first appeared in SSLeay 0.6.0. ASN1_INTEGER_cmp() and ASN1_INTEGER_dup() first appeared in SSLeay 0.6.5. These functions have been available since OpenBSD 2.3.

ASN1_ENUMERATED_get(), ASN1_ENUMERATED_set(), BN_to_ASN1_ENUMERATED(), and ASN1_ENUMERATED_to_BN() first appeared in OpenSSL 0.9.2b and have been available since OpenBSD 2.6.

ASN1_INTEGER_get_uint64(), ASN1_INTEGER_get_int64(), ASN1_INTEGER_set_uint64(), ASN1_INTEGER_set_int64(), ASN1_ENUMERATED_get_int64(), and ASN1_ENUMERATED_set_int64() first appeared in OpenSSL 1.1.0 and have been available since OpenBSD 7.2.

In general an ASN1_INTEGER or ASN1_ENUMERATED type can contain an integer of almost arbitrary size and so cannot always be represented by a C long type. The ambiguous return values of ASN1_INTEGER_get() and ASN1_ENUMERATED_get() imply that these functions should be avoided if possible.

ASN1_INTEGER_cmp(), ASN1_INTEGER_dup(), and ASN1_INTEGER_to_BN() do not check whether their arguments are really of the type V_ASN1_INTEGER or V_ASN1_NEG_INTEGER. They may report success even if their arguments are of a wrong type. Consequently, even in case of success, the return value of ASN1_INTEGER_dup() is not guaranteed to be of the type V_ASN1_INTEGER or V_ASN1_NEG_INTEGER either.

Similarly, ASN1_ENUMERATED_to_BN() does not check whether its argument is really of the type V_ASN1_ENUMERATED or V_ASN1_NEG_ENUMERATED and may report success even if the argument is of a wrong type.

July 9, 2022 OpenBSD-7.3