table of contents
OPENSSL_SK_NEW(3) | Library Functions Manual | OPENSSL_SK_NEW(3) |
NAME¶
sk_new_null
,
sk_new
, sk_set_cmp_func
,
sk_dup
, sk_free
,
sk_pop_free
, sk_num
,
sk_value
, sk_find
,
sk_sort
, sk_is_sorted
,
sk_push
, sk_unshift
,
sk_insert
, sk_set
,
sk_pop
, sk_shift
,
sk_delete
, sk_delete_ptr
,
sk_zero
— variable-sized
arrays of void pointers, called OpenSSL stacks
SYNOPSIS¶
#include
<openssl/stack.h>
_STACK *
sk_new_null
(void);
_STACK *
sk_new
(int (*compfunc)(const void *,
const void *));
old_function_pointer
sk_set_cmp_func
(_STACK *stack,
int (*compfunc)(const void *, const void *));
_STACK *
sk_dup
(_STACK *stack);
void
sk_free
(_STACK *stack);
void
sk_pop_free
(_STACK *stack,
void (*freefunc)(void *));
int
sk_num
(const _STACK *stack);
void *
sk_value
(const _STACK *stack,
int index);
int
sk_find
(_STACK *stack,
void *wanted);
void
sk_sort
(_STACK *stack);
int
sk_is_sorted
(const _STACK
*stack);
int
sk_push
(_STACK *stack,
void *new_item);
int
sk_unshift
(_STACK *stack,
void *new_item);
int
sk_insert
(_STACK *stack,
void *new_item, int index);
void *
sk_set
(_STACK *stack,
int index, void *new_item);
void *
sk_pop
(_STACK *stack);
void *
sk_shift
(_STACK *stack);
void *
sk_delete
(_STACK *stack,
int index);
void *
sk_delete_ptr
(_STACK *stack,
void *wanted);
void
sk_zero
(_STACK *stack);
DESCRIPTION¶
OpenSSL introduced an idiosyncratic concept of variable sized arrays of pointers and somewhat misleadingly called such an array a “stack”. Intrinsically, and as documented in this manual page, OpenSSL stacks are not type safe but only handle void * function arguments and return values.
OpenSSL also provides a fragile, unusually complicated system of macro-generated wrappers that offers superficial type safety at the expense of extensive obfuscation, implemented using large amounts of autogenerated code involving exceedingly ugly, nested cpp(1) macros; see the STACK_OF(3) manual page for details.
The fundamental data type is the _STACK structure. It stores a variable number of void pointers and remembers the number of pointers currently stored. It can optionally hold a pointer to a comparison function. As long as no comparison function is installed, the order of pointers is meaningful; as soon as a comparison function is installed, it becomes ill-defined.
sk_new_null
()
allocates and initializes a new, empty stack.
sk_new
()
is identical except that it also installs compfunc as
the comparison function for the new stack object.
sk_set_cmp_func
()
installs compfunc for the existing
stack. The compfunc is allowed
to be NULL
, but the stack is
not.
sk_dup
()
creates a shallow copy of the given stack, which must
not be a NULL
pointer. It neither copies the objects
pointed to from the stack nor increases their reference counts, but merely
copies the pointers. Extreme care must be taken in order to avoid freeing
the memory twice, for example by calling sk_free
()
on one copy and only calling sk_pop_free
() on the
other.
sk_free
()
frees the given stack. It does not free any of the
pointers stored on the stack. Unless these pointers are merely copies of
pointers owned by other objects, they must be freed before calling
sk_free
(), in order to avoid leaking memory. If
stack is a NULL
pointer, no
action occurs.
sk_pop_free
()
is severely misnamed. It does not at all do what one would expect from a
function called “pop”. Instead, it does the same as
sk_free
(), except that it also calls the function
freefunc on each of the pointers contained in the
stack. If the calls to freefunc
are intended to free the memory in use by the objects on the stack, ensure
that no other pointers to the same objects remain elsewhere.
sk_find
()
searches the stack for the
wanted pointer. If the stack
contains more than one copy of the wanted pointer,
only the first match is found. If a comparison function is installed for the
stack, the stack is first sorted with sk_sort
(), and
instead of comparing pointers, two pointers are considered to match if the
comparison function returns 0.
sk_sort
()
sorts the stack using qsort(3) and
the installed comparison function. If stack is a
NULL
pointer or already considered sorted, no action
occurs. This function can only be called if a comparison function is
installed.
sk_is_sorted
()
reports whether the stack is considered sorted.
Calling sk_new_null
() or
sk_new
(), successfully calling
sk_push
(), sk_unshift
(),
sk_insert
(), or sk_set
(), or
changing the comparison function sets the state to unsorted. If a comparison
function is installed, calling sk_sort
(), or
sk_find
() sets the state to sorted.
sk_push
()
pushes new_item onto the end of the
stack, increasing the number of pointers by 1. If
stack is a NULL
pointer, no
action occurs.
sk_unshift
()
inserts new_item at the beginning of the
stack, such that it gets the index 0. The number of
pointers increases by 1. If stack is a
NULL
pointer, no action occurs.
sk_insert
()
inserts the new_item into the
stack such that it gets the given
index. If index is less than 0
or greater than or equal to
sk_num
(stack),
the effect is the same as for sk_push
(). If
stack is a NULL
pointer, no
action occurs.
sk_set
()
replaces the pointer with the given index on the
stack with the new_item. The old
pointer is not freed, which may leak memory if no copy of it exists
elsewhere. If stack is a NULL
pointer or if index is less than 0 or greater than or
equal to
sk_num
(stack),
no action occurs.
sk_pop
()
and
sk_shift
()
remove the pointer with the highest or lowest index from the
stack, respectively, reducing the number of pointers
by 1. If stack is a NULL
pointer or if it is empty, no action occurs.
sk_delete
()
removes the pointer with the given index from the
stack, reducing the number of pointers by 1. If
stack is a NULL
pointer or the
index is less than 0 or greater than or equal to
sk_num
(stack),
no action occurs.
sk_delete_ptr
()
removes the wanted pointer from the
stack, reducing the number of pointers by 1 if it is
found. It never uses a comparison function but only compares pointers
themselves. The stack pointer must not be
NULL
.
sk_zero
()
removes all pointers from the stack. It does not free
any of the pointers. Unless these pointers are merely copies of pointers
owned by other objects, they must be freed before calling
sk_zero
(), in order to avoid leaking memory. If
stack is a NULL
pointer, no
action occurs.
RETURN VALUES¶
sk_new_null
(),
sk_new
(), and sk_dup
()
return a pointer to the newly allocated stack object or
NULL
if insufficient memory is available.
sk_set_cmp_func
() returns a pointer to the
comparison function that was previously installed for the
stack or NULL
if none was
installed.
sk_num
() returns the number of pointers
currently stored on the stack, or -1 if
stack is a NULL
pointer.
sk_value
() returns the pointer with the
given index from the stack, or
NULL
if stack is a
NULL
pointer or if the index
is less than 0 or greater than or equal to
sk_num
(stack).
sk_find
() returns the lowest index
considered to match or -1 if stack is a
NULL
pointer or if no match is found.
sk_is_sorted
() returns 1 if the
stack is considered sorted or if it is a
NULL
pointer, or 0 otherwise.
sk_push
(),
sk_unshift
(), and
sk_insert
() return the new number of pointers on the
stack or 0 if stack is a
NULL
pointer or if memory allocation fails.
sk_set
() returns
new_item or NULL
if
stack is a NULL
pointer or if
the index is less than 0 or greater than or equal to
sk_num
(stack).
sk_pop
() and
sk_shift
() return the deleted pointer or
NULL
if stack is a
NULL
pointer or if it is empty.
sk_delete
() returns the deleted pointer or
NULL
if stack is a
NULL
pointer or if the index
is less than 0 or greater than or equal to
sk_num
(stack).
sk_delete_ptr
() returns
wanted or NULL
if it is not
found.
SEE ALSO¶
HISTORY¶
sk_new_null
(),
sk_new
(), sk_free
(),
sk_pop_free
(), sk_num
(),
sk_value
(), sk_find
(),
sk_push
(), sk_unshift
(),
sk_insert
(), sk_pop
(),
sk_shift
(), sk_delete
(), and
sk_delete_ptr
() first appeared in SSLeay 0.5.1.
sk_set_cmp_func
(), sk_dup
(),
and sk_zero
() first appeared in SSLeay 0.8.0. These
functions have been available since OpenBSD 2.4.
sk_set
() first appeared in OpenSSL 0.9.3.
sk_sort
() first appeared in OpenSSL 0.9.4. Both
functions have been available since OpenBSD 2.6.
sk_is_sorted
() first appeared in OpenSSL
0.9.7e and has been available since OpenBSD 3.8.
BUGS¶
Even if a comparison function is installed, empty stacks and stacks containing a single pointer are sometimes considered sorted and sometimes considered unsorted.
If a comparison function is installed, the concept of
“first match” in sk_find
() is
ill-defined because qsort(3) is not a stable sorting
function. It is probably best to only assume that they return an arbitrary
match.
March 4, 2024 | Linux 6.4.0-150600.23.25-default |