|  | Notes: 2001-09-24 | 
|  | ----------------- | 
|  |  | 
|  | This "description" (if one chooses to call it that) needed some major updating | 
|  | so here goes. This update addresses a change being made at the same time to | 
|  | OpenSSL, and it pretty much completely restructures the underlying mechanics of | 
|  | the "ENGINE" code. So it serves a double purpose of being a "ENGINE internals | 
|  | for masochists" document *and* a rather extensive commit log message. (I'd get | 
|  | lynched for sticking all this in CHANGES or the commit mails :-). | 
|  |  | 
|  | ENGINE_TABLE underlies this restructuring, as described in the internal header | 
|  | "eng_local.h", implemented in eng_table.c, and used in each of the "class" files; | 
|  | tb_rsa.c, tb_dsa.c, etc. | 
|  |  | 
|  | However, "EVP_CIPHER" underlies the motivation and design of ENGINE_TABLE so | 
|  | I'll mention a bit about that first. EVP_CIPHER (and most of this applies | 
|  | equally to EVP_MD for digests) is both a "method" and a algorithm/mode | 
|  | identifier that, in the current API, "lingers". These cipher description + | 
|  | implementation structures can be defined or obtained directly by applications, | 
|  | or can be loaded "en masse" into EVP storage so that they can be catalogued and | 
|  | searched in various ways, ie. two ways of encrypting with the "des_cbc" | 
|  | algorithm/mode pair are; | 
|  |  | 
|  | (i) directly; | 
|  | const EVP_CIPHER *cipher = EVP_des_cbc(); | 
|  | EVP_EncryptInit(&ctx, cipher, key, iv); | 
|  | [ ... use EVP_EncryptUpdate() and EVP_EncryptFinal() ...] | 
|  |  | 
|  | (ii) indirectly; | 
|  | OpenSSL_add_all_ciphers(); | 
|  | cipher = EVP_get_cipherbyname("des_cbc"); | 
|  | EVP_EncryptInit(&ctx, cipher, key, iv); | 
|  | [ ... etc ... ] | 
|  |  | 
|  | The latter is more generally used because it also allows ciphers/digests to be | 
|  | looked up based on other identifiers which can be useful for automatic cipher | 
|  | selection, eg. in SSL/TLS, or by user-controllable configuration. | 
|  |  | 
|  | The important point about this is that EVP_CIPHER definitions and structures are | 
|  | passed around with impunity and there is no safe way, without requiring massive | 
|  | rewrites of many applications, to assume that EVP_CIPHERs can be reference | 
|  | counted. One an EVP_CIPHER is exposed to the caller, neither it nor anything it | 
|  | comes from can "safely" be destroyed. Unless of course the way of getting to | 
|  | such ciphers is via entirely distinct API calls that didn't exist before. | 
|  | However existing API usage cannot be made to understand when an EVP_CIPHER | 
|  | pointer, that has been passed to the caller, is no longer being used. | 
|  |  | 
|  | The other problem with the existing API w.r.t. to hooking EVP_CIPHER support | 
|  | into ENGINE is storage - the OBJ_NAME-based storage used by EVP to register | 
|  | ciphers simultaneously registers cipher *types* and cipher *implementations* - | 
|  | they are effectively the same thing, an "EVP_CIPHER" pointer. The problem with | 
|  | hooking in ENGINEs is that multiple ENGINEs may implement the same ciphers. The | 
|  | solution is necessarily that ENGINE-provided ciphers simply are not registered, | 
|  | stored, or exposed to the caller in the same manner as existing ciphers. This is | 
|  | especially necessary considering the fact ENGINE uses reference counts to allow | 
|  | for cleanup, modularity, and DSO support - yet EVP_CIPHERs, as exposed to | 
|  | callers in the current API, support no such controls. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Another sticking point for integrating cipher support into ENGINE is linkage. | 
|  | Already there is a problem with the way ENGINE supports RSA, DSA, etc whereby | 
|  | they are available *because* they're part of a giant ENGINE called "openssl". | 
|  | Ie. all implementations *have* to come from an ENGINE, but we get round that by | 
|  | having a giant ENGINE with all the software support encapsulated. This creates | 
|  | linker hassles if nothing else - linking a 1-line application that calls 2 basic | 
|  | RSA functions (eg. "RSA_free(RSA_new());") will result in large quantities of | 
|  | ENGINE code being linked in *and* because of that DSA, DH, and RAND also. If we | 
|  | continue with this approach for EVP_CIPHER support (even if it *was* possible) | 
|  | we would lose our ability to link selectively by selectively loading certain | 
|  | implementations of certain functionality. Touching any part of any kind of | 
|  | crypto would result in massive static linkage of everything else. So the | 
|  | solution is to change the way ENGINE feeds existing "classes", ie. how the | 
|  | hooking to ENGINE works from RSA, DSA, DH, RAND, as well as adding new hooking | 
|  | for EVP_CIPHER, and EVP_MD. | 
|  |  | 
|  | The way this is now being done is by mostly reverting back to how things used to | 
|  | work prior to ENGINE :-). Ie. RSA now has a "RSA_METHOD" pointer again - this | 
|  | was previously replaced by an "ENGINE" pointer and all RSA code that required | 
|  | the RSA_METHOD would call ENGINE_get_RSA() each time on its ENGINE handle to | 
|  | temporarily get and use the ENGINE's RSA implementation. Apart from being more | 
|  | efficient, switching back to each RSA having an RSA_METHOD pointer also allows | 
|  | us to conceivably operate with *no* ENGINE. As we'll see, this removes any need | 
|  | for a fallback ENGINE that encapsulates default implementations - we can simply | 
|  | have our RSA structure pointing its RSA_METHOD pointer to the software | 
|  | implementation and have its ENGINE pointer set to NULL. | 
|  |  | 
|  | A look at the EVP_CIPHER hooking is most explanatory, the RSA, DSA (etc) cases | 
|  | turn out to be degenerate forms of the same thing. The EVP storage of ciphers, | 
|  | and the existing EVP API functions that return "software" implementations and | 
|  | descriptions remain untouched. However, the storage takes more meaning in terms | 
|  | of "cipher description" and less meaning in terms of "implementation". When an | 
|  | EVP_CIPHER_CTX is actually initialised with an EVP_CIPHER method and is about to | 
|  | begin en/decryption, the hooking to ENGINE comes into play. What happens is that | 
|  | cipher-specific ENGINE code is asked for an ENGINE pointer (a functional | 
|  | reference) for any ENGINE that is registered to perform the algo/mode that the | 
|  | provided EVP_CIPHER structure represents. Under normal circumstances, that | 
|  | ENGINE code will return NULL because no ENGINEs will have had any cipher | 
|  | implementations *registered*. As such, a NULL ENGINE pointer is stored in the | 
|  | EVP_CIPHER_CTX context, and the EVP_CIPHER structure is left hooked into the | 
|  | context and so is used as the implementation. Pretty much how things work now | 
|  | except we'd have a redundant ENGINE pointer set to NULL and doing nothing. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Conversely, if an ENGINE *has* been registered to perform the algorithm/mode | 
|  | combination represented by the provided EVP_CIPHER, then a functional reference | 
|  | to that ENGINE will be returned to the EVP_CIPHER_CTX during initialisation. | 
|  | That functional reference will be stored in the context (and released on | 
|  | cleanup) - and having that reference provides a *safe* way to use an EVP_CIPHER | 
|  | definition that is private to the ENGINE. Ie. the EVP_CIPHER provided by the | 
|  | application will actually be replaced by an EVP_CIPHER from the registered | 
|  | ENGINE - it will support the same algorithm/mode as the original but will be a | 
|  | completely different implementation. Because this EVP_CIPHER isn't stored in the | 
|  | EVP storage, nor is it returned to applications from traditional API functions, | 
|  | there is no associated problem with it not having reference counts. And of | 
|  | course, when one of these "private" cipher implementations is hooked into | 
|  | EVP_CIPHER_CTX, it is done whilst the EVP_CIPHER_CTX holds a functional | 
|  | reference to the ENGINE that owns it, thus the use of the ENGINE's EVP_CIPHER is | 
|  | safe. | 
|  |  | 
|  | The "cipher-specific ENGINE code" I mentioned is implemented in tb_cipher.c but | 
|  | in essence it is simply an instantiation of "ENGINE_TABLE" code for use by | 
|  | EVP_CIPHER code. tb_digest.c is virtually identical but, of course, it is for | 
|  | use by EVP_MD code. Ditto for tb_rsa.c, tb_dsa.c, etc. These instantiations of | 
|  | ENGINE_TABLE essentially provide linker-separation of the classes so that even | 
|  | if ENGINEs implement *all* possible algorithms, an application using only | 
|  | EVP_CIPHER code will link at most code relating to EVP_CIPHER, tb_cipher.c, core | 
|  | ENGINE code that is independent of class, and of course the ENGINE | 
|  | implementation that the application loaded. It will *not* however link any | 
|  | class-specific ENGINE code for digests, RSA, etc nor will it bleed over into | 
|  | other APIs, such as the RSA/DSA/etc library code. | 
|  |  | 
|  | ENGINE_TABLE is a little more complicated than may seem necessary but this is | 
|  | mostly to avoid a lot of "init()"-thrashing on ENGINEs (that may have to load | 
|  | DSOs, and other expensive setup that shouldn't be thrashed unnecessarily) *and* | 
|  | to duplicate "default" behaviour. Basically an ENGINE_TABLE instantiation, for | 
|  | example tb_cipher.c, implements a hash-table keyed by integer "nid" values. | 
|  | These nids provide the uniquenness of an algorithm/mode - and each nid will hash | 
|  | to a potentially NULL "ENGINE_PILE". An ENGINE_PILE is essentially a list of | 
|  | pointers to ENGINEs that implement that particular 'nid'. Each "pile" uses some | 
|  | caching tricks such that requests on that 'nid' will be cached and all future | 
|  | requests will return immediately (well, at least with minimal operation) unless | 
|  | a change is made to the pile, eg. perhaps an ENGINE was unloaded. The reason is | 
|  | that an application could have support for 10 ENGINEs statically linked | 
|  | in, and the machine in question may not have any of the hardware those 10 | 
|  | ENGINEs support. If each of those ENGINEs has a "des_cbc" implementation, we | 
|  | want to avoid every EVP_CIPHER_CTX setup from trying (and failing) to initialise | 
|  | each of those 10 ENGINEs. Instead, the first such request will try to do that | 
|  | and will either return (and cache) a NULL ENGINE pointer or will return a | 
|  | functional reference to the first that successfully initialised. In the latter | 
|  | case it will also cache an extra functional reference to the ENGINE as a | 
|  | "default" for that 'nid'. The caching is acknowledged by a 'uptodate' variable | 
|  | that is unset only if un/registration takes place on that pile. Ie. if | 
|  | implementations of "des_cbc" are added or removed. This behaviour can be | 
|  | tweaked; the ENGINE_TABLE_FLAG_NOINIT value can be passed to | 
|  | ENGINE_set_table_flags(), in which case the only ENGINEs that tb_cipher.c will | 
|  | try to initialise from the "pile" will be those that are already initialised | 
|  | (ie. it's simply an increment of the functional reference count, and no real | 
|  | "initialisation" will take place). | 
|  |  | 
|  | RSA, DSA, DH, and RAND all have their own ENGINE_TABLE code as well, and the | 
|  | difference is that they all use an implicit 'nid' of 1. Whereas EVP_CIPHERs are | 
|  | actually qualitatively different depending on 'nid' (the "des_cbc" EVP_CIPHER is | 
|  | not an interoperable implementation of "aes_256_cbc"), RSA_METHODs are | 
|  | necessarily interoperable and don't have different flavours, only different | 
|  | implementations. In other words, the ENGINE_TABLE for RSA will either be empty, | 
|  | or will have a single ENGINE_PILE hashed to by the 'nid' 1 and that pile | 
|  | represents ENGINEs that implement the single "type" of RSA there is. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Cleanup - the registration and unregistration may pose questions about how | 
|  | cleanup works with the ENGINE_PILE doing all this caching nonsense (ie. when the | 
|  | application or EVP_CIPHER code releases its last reference to an ENGINE, the | 
|  | ENGINE_PILE code may still have references and thus those ENGINEs will stay | 
|  | hooked in forever). The way this is handled is via "unregistration". With these | 
|  | new ENGINE changes, an abstract ENGINE can be loaded and initialised, but that | 
|  | is an algorithm-agnostic process. Even if initialised, it will not have | 
|  | registered any of its implementations (to do so would link all class "table" | 
|  | code despite the fact the application may use only ciphers, for example). This | 
|  | is deliberately a distinct step. Moreover, registration and unregistration has | 
|  | nothing to do with whether an ENGINE is *functional* or not (ie. you can even | 
|  | register an ENGINE and its implementations without it being operational, you may | 
|  | not even have the drivers to make it operate). What actually happens with | 
|  | respect to cleanup is managed inside eng_lib.c with the "engine_cleanup_***" | 
|  | functions. These functions are internal-only and each part of ENGINE code that | 
|  | could require cleanup will, upon performing its first allocation, register a | 
|  | callback with the "engine_cleanup" code. The other part of this that makes it | 
|  | tick is that the ENGINE_TABLE instantiations (tb_***.c) use NULL as their | 
|  | initialised state. So if RSA code asks for an ENGINE and no ENGINE has | 
|  | registered an implementation, the code will simply return NULL and the tb_rsa.c | 
|  | state will be unchanged. Thus, no cleanup is required unless registration takes | 
|  | place. ENGINE_cleanup() will simply iterate across a list of registered cleanup | 
|  | callbacks calling each in turn, and will then internally delete its own storage | 
|  | (a STACK). When a cleanup callback is next registered (eg. if the cleanup() is | 
|  | part of a graceful restart and the application wants to cleanup all state then | 
|  | start again), the internal STACK storage will be freshly allocated. This is much | 
|  | the same as the situation in the ENGINE_TABLE instantiations ... NULL is the | 
|  | initialised state, so only modification operations (not queries) will cause that | 
|  | code to have to register a cleanup. | 
|  |  | 
|  | What else? The bignum callbacks and associated ENGINE functions have been | 
|  | removed for two obvious reasons; (i) there was no way to generalise them to the | 
|  | mechanism now used by RSA/DSA/..., because there's no such thing as a BIGNUM | 
|  | method, and (ii) because of (i), there was no meaningful way for library or | 
|  | application code to automatically hook and use ENGINE supplied bignum functions | 
|  | anyway. Also, ENGINE_cpy() has been removed (although an internal-only version | 
|  | exists) - the idea of providing an ENGINE_cpy() function probably wasn't a good | 
|  | one and now certainly doesn't make sense in any generalised way. Some of the | 
|  | RSA, DSA, DH, and RAND functions that were fiddled during the original ENGINE | 
|  | changes have now, as a consequence, been reverted back. This is because the | 
|  | hooking of ENGINE is now automatic (and passive, it can internally use a NULL | 
|  | ENGINE pointer to simply ignore ENGINE from then on). | 
|  |  | 
|  | Hell, that should be enough for now ... comments welcome. | 
|  |  |