NAME
d2i_DSAPublicKey
,
i2d_DSAPublicKey
,
d2i_DSA_PUBKEY
,
i2d_DSA_PUBKEY
,
d2i_DSA_PUBKEY_bio
,
d2i_DSA_PUBKEY_fp
,
i2d_DSA_PUBKEY_bio
,
i2d_DSA_PUBKEY_fp
,
d2i_DSAPrivateKey
,
i2d_DSAPrivateKey
,
d2i_DSAPrivateKey_bio
,
d2i_DSAPrivateKey_fp
,
i2d_DSAPrivateKey_bio
,
i2d_DSAPrivateKey_fp
,
d2i_DSAparams
,
i2d_DSAparams
,
d2i_DSAparams_bio
,
i2d_DSAparams_bio
,
d2i_DSAparams_fp
,
i2d_DSAparams_fp
,
DSAparams_dup
, d2i_DSA_SIG
,
i2d_DSA_SIG
—
decode and encode DSA keys
SYNOPSIS
#include
<openssl/dsa.h>
DSA *
d2i_DSAPublicKey
(DSA **val_out,
const unsigned char **der_in, long
length);
int
i2d_DSAPublicKey
(const DSA
*val_in, unsigned char **der_out);
#include
<openssl/x509.h>
DSA *
d2i_DSA_PUBKEY
(DSA **val_out,
const unsigned char **der_in, long
length);
int
i2d_DSA_PUBKEY
(const DSA
*val_in, unsigned char **der_out);
DSA *
d2i_DSA_PUBKEY_bio
(BIO *in_bio,
DSA **val_out);
DSA *
d2i_DSA_PUBKEY_fp
(FILE *in_fp,
DSA **val_out);
int
i2d_DSA_PUBKEY_bio
(BIO *out_bio,
DSA *val_in);
int
i2d_DSA_PUBKEY_fp
(FILE *out_fp,
DSA *val_in);
#include
<openssl/dsa.h>
DSA *
d2i_DSAPrivateKey
(DSA **val_out,
const unsigned char **der_in, long
length);
int
i2d_DSAPrivateKey
(const DSA
*val_in, unsigned char **der_out);
#include
<openssl/x509.h>
DSA *
d2i_DSAPrivateKey_bio
(BIO
*in_bio, DSA **val_out);
DSA *
d2i_DSAPrivateKey_fp
(FILE
*in_fp, DSA **val_out);
int
i2d_DSAPrivateKey_bio
(BIO
*out_bio, DSA *val_in);
int
i2d_DSAPrivateKey_fp
(FILE
*out_fp, DSA *val_in);
#include
<openssl/dsa.h>
DSA *
d2i_DSAparams
(DSA **val_out,
const unsigned char **der_in, long
length);
int
i2d_DSAparams
(const DSA *val_in,
unsigned char **der_out);
DSA *
d2i_DSAparams_bio
(BIO *in_bio,
DSA **val_out);
int
i2d_DSAparams_bio
(BIO *out_bio,
DSA *val_in);
DSA *
d2i_DSAparams_fp
(FILE *in_fp,
DSA **val_out);
int
i2d_DSAparams_fp
(FILE,
*out_fp, DSA *val_in);
DSA *
DSAparams_dup
(DSA *val_in);
DSA_SIG *
d2i_DSA_SIG
(DSA_SIG **val_out,
const unsigned char **der_in, long
length);
int
i2d_DSA_SIG
(const DSA_SIG
*val_in, unsigned char **der_out);
DESCRIPTION
These functions decode and encode DSA keys and parameters. For details about the semantics, examples, caveats, and bugs, see ASN1_item_d2i(3).
d2i_DSAPublicKey
()
and
i2d_DSAPublicKey
()
decode and encode the DSA public key components using a non-standard format,
so consider using d2i_DSA_PUBKEY
() and
i2d_DSA_PUBKEY
() instead. The actual data encoded
depends on the value of val_in->write_params. If
val_in->write_params is zero, only the
val_in->pub_key field is encoded as an ASN.1
INTEGER. If val_in->write_params is 1, then a
SEQUENCE consisting of the val_in->p,
val_in->q, val_in->g, and
val_in->pub_key fields is encoded.
d2i_DSA_PUBKEY
()
and
i2d_DSA_PUBKEY
()
decode and encode a DSA public key using an ASN.1
SubjectPublicKeyInfo structure defined in RFC 5280
section 4.1 and documented in
X509_PUBKEY_new(3).
d2i_DSA_PUBKEY_bio
(),
d2i_DSA_PUBKEY_fp
(),
i2d_DSA_PUBKEY_bio
(),
and
i2d_DSA_PUBKEY_fp
()
are similar except that they decode or encode using a
BIO or FILE pointer.
d2i_DSAPrivateKey
()
and
i2d_DSAPrivateKey
()
decode and encode the DSA private key components. The
DSA object passed to the private key encoding
functions should have all the private key components present. These
functions use a non-standard structure consisting of a SEQUENCE containing
the val_in->p, val_in->q,
val_in->g,
val_in->pub_key, and
val_in->priv_key fields. This data format is
unencrypted. For private key security when writing private keys to files,
consider using
PEM_write_DSAPrivateKey(3) instead.
d2i_DSAPrivateKey_bio
(),
d2i_DSAPrivateKey_fp
(),
i2d_DSAPrivateKey_bio
(),
and
i2d_DSAPrivateKey_fp
()
are similar except that they decode or encode using a
BIO or FILE pointer.
d2i_DSAparams
()
and
i2d_DSAparams
()
decode and encode the DSA parameters using an ASN.1
Dss-Parms structure defined in RFC 3279 section 2.3.2
and used for the parameters field of the ASN.1
AlgorithmIdentifier structure defined in RFC 5280
section 4.1.1.2.
d2i_DSAparams_bio
(),
i2d_DSAparams_bio
(),
d2i_DSAparams_fp
(),
i2d_DSAparams_fp
()
are similar except that they decode or encode using a
BIO or FILE pointer.
DSAparams_dup
()
allocates and initializes an empty DSA object and
copies the DSA parameters from val_in to it by calling
i2d_DSAparams
()
and d2i_DSAparams
(). If a private or public key are
present in val_in, they are not copied.
d2i_DSA_SIG
()
and
i2d_DSA_SIG
()
decode and encode a DSA signature using an ASN.1
Dss-Sig-Value structure as defined in RFC 3279 section
2.2.2 and used for the signatureValue field of the ASN.1
Certificate structure described in RFC 5280 sections
4.1.1.3 and 5.1.1.3.
RETURN VALUES
d2i_DSAPublicKey
(),
d2i_DSA_PUBKEY
(),
d2i_DSA_PUBKEY_bio
(),
d2i_DSA_PUBKEY_fp
(),
d2i_DSAPrivateKey
(),
d2i_DSAPrivateKey_bio
(),
d2i_DSAPrivateKey_fp
(),
d2i_DSAparams
(),
d2i_DSAparams_bio
(),
d2i_DSAparams_fp
(), and
DSAparams_dup
() return a valid
DSA object or NULL
if an error
occurs.
d2i_DSA_SIG
() returns a valid
DSA_SIG object or NULL
if an
error occurs.
SEE ALSO
ASN1_item_d2i(3), DSA_new(3), DSA_SIG_new(3), EVP_PKEY_set1_DSA(3), PEM_write_DSAPrivateKey(3), X509_PUBKEY_new(3)
STANDARDS
RFC 5280: Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure Certificate and Certificate Revocation List (CRL) Profile, section 4.1: Basic Certificate Fields
RFC 3279: Algorithms and Identifiers for the Internet X.509 Public Key Infrastructure Certificate and Certificate Revocation List (CRL) Profile:
- section 2.2.2: DSA Signature Algorithm
- section 2.3.2: DSA Signature Keys
HISTORY
d2i_DSAPublicKey
(),
i2d_DSAPublicKey
(),
d2i_DSAPrivateKey
(), and
i2d_DSAPrivateKey
() first appeared in SSLeay 0.6.0.
d2i_DSAPrivateKey_bio
(),
d2i_DSAPrivateKey_fp
(),
i2d_DSAPrivateKey_bio
(),
i2d_DSAPrivateKey_fp
(),
d2i_DSAparams
(),
i2d_DSAparams
(),
d2i_DSAparams_bio
(),
i2d_DSAparams_bio
(),
d2i_DSAparams_fp
(),
i2d_DSAparams_fp
(), and
DSAparams_dup
() first appeared in SSLeay 0.8.0.
These functions have been available since OpenBSD
2.4.
d2i_DSA_SIG
() and
i2d_DSA_SIG
() first appeared in OpenSSL 0.9.3 and
have been available since OpenBSD 2.6.
d2i_DSA_PUBKEY
(),
i2d_DSA_PUBKEY
(),
d2i_DSA_PUBKEY_bio
(),
d2i_DSA_PUBKEY_fp
(),
i2d_DSA_PUBKEY_bio
(), and
i2d_DSA_PUBKEY_fp
() first appeared in OpenSSL 0.9.5
and have been available since OpenBSD 2.7.