table of contents
RSA_SET_METHOD(3) | Library Functions Manual | RSA_SET_METHOD(3) |
NAME¶
RSA_set_default_method
,
RSA_get_default_method
,
RSA_set_method
,
RSA_get_method
,
RSA_PKCS1_SSLeay
, RSA_flags
,
RSA_new_method
— select RSA
method
SYNOPSIS¶
#include
<openssl/rsa.h>
void
RSA_set_default_method
(const
RSA_METHOD *meth);
const RSA_METHOD *
RSA_get_default_method
(void);
int
RSA_set_method
(RSA *rsa,
const RSA_METHOD *meth);
const RSA_METHOD *
RSA_get_method
(const RSA
*rsa);
const RSA_METHOD *
RSA_PKCS1_SSLeay
(void);
int
RSA_flags
(const RSA *rsa);
RSA *
RSA_new_method
(ENGINE
*engine);
DESCRIPTION¶
An RSA_METHOD object contains pointers to
the functions used for RSA operations. By default, the internal
implementation returned by
RSA_PKCS1_SSLeay
()
is used. By selecting another method, alternative implementations such as
hardware accelerators may be used.
RSA_set_default_method
()
selects meth as the default method for all
RSA structures created later.
RSA_get_default_method
()
returns a pointer to the current default method.
RSA_set_method
()
selects meth to perform all operations using the key
rsa. This replaces the previous
RSA_METHOD used by the RSA key, calling the
finish function set up with
RSA_meth_set_finish(3) if any. If
meth contains an init function
set up with RSA_meth_set_init(3), that function is called
just before returning from RSA_set_method
().
It is possible to have RSA keys that only work with certain RSA_METHOD implementations, and in such cases attempting to change the RSA_METHOD for the key can have unexpected results.
RSA_get_method
()
returns a pointer to the RSA_METHOD being used by
rsa.
The misleadingly named function
RSA_flags
()
returns the flags that are set for the current
RSA_METHOD of rsa. The flags
used by rsa itself can instead be tested with
RSA_test_flags(3). See the
BUGS section for more details.
RSA_new_method
()
allocates and initializes an RSA structure. The
engine argument is ignored and the default method
controlled by RSA_set_default_method
() is used.
The initial flags are
copied from the RSA_METHOD object used and will not be
affected by later changes to that object, but may be modified by the
optional init function which may have been set up with
RSA_meth_set_init(3) and which is called just before
returning from
RSA_new_method
().
RETURN VALUES¶
RSA_PKCS1_SSLeay
(),
RSA_get_default_method
(), and
RSA_get_method
() return pointers to the respective
RSA_METHOD.
RSA_set_method
() returns 1 on success or 0
on failure. Currently, it cannot fail.
RSA_new_method
() returns
NULL
and sets an error code that can be obtained by
ERR_get_error(3) if the allocation fails. Otherwise it
returns a pointer to the newly allocated structure.
SEE ALSO¶
HISTORY¶
RSA_set_default_method
(),
RSA_PKCS1_SSLeay
(), and
RSA_new_method
() first appeared in SSLeay 0.8.0.
RSA_flags
() first appeared in SSLeay 0.9.0. These
functions have been available since OpenBSD 2.4.
RSA_get_default_method
(),
RSA_set_method
(), and
RSA_get_method
() as well as the
rsa_sign and rsa_verify
components of RSA_METHOD first appeared in OpenSSL
0.9.4 and have been available since OpenBSD 2.6.
BUGS¶
The behaviour of RSA_flags
() is a
misfeature that is left as-is for now to avoid creating compatibility
problems. RSA functionality, such as the encryption functions, are
controlled by the flags value in the
RSA key itself, not by the flags
value in the RSA_METHOD attached to the RSA key (which
is what this function returns). If the flags element of an
RSA key is changed, the changes will be honoured by
RSA functionality but will not be reflected in the return value of the
RSA_flags
() function - in effect
RSA_flags
() behaves more like an
RSA_default_flags
() function, which does not
currently exist.
November 19, 2023 | Linux 6.4.0-150600.23.25-default |