| =pod |
| |
| =head1 NAME |
| |
| crypto - OpenSSL cryptographic library |
| |
| =head1 SYNOPSIS |
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| =head1 DESCRIPTION |
| |
| The OpenSSL B<crypto> library implements a wide range of cryptographic |
| algorithms used in various Internet standards. The services provided |
| by this library are used by the OpenSSL implementations of SSL, TLS |
| and S/MIME, and they have also been used to implement SSH, OpenPGP, and |
| other cryptographic standards. |
| |
| =head1 OVERVIEW |
| |
| B<libcrypto> consists of a number of sub-libraries that implement the |
| individual algorithms. |
| |
| The functionality includes symmetric encryption, public key |
| cryptography and key agreement, certificate handling, cryptographic |
| hash functions and a cryptographic pseudo-random number generator. |
| |
| =over 4 |
| |
| =item SYMMETRIC CIPHERS |
| |
| L<blowfish(3)|blowfish(3)>, L<cast(3)|cast(3)>, L<des(3)|des(3)>, |
| L<idea(3)|idea(3)>, L<rc2(3)|rc2(3)>, L<rc4(3)|rc4(3)>, L<rc5(3)|rc5(3)> |
| |
| =item PUBLIC KEY CRYPTOGRAPHY AND KEY AGREEMENT |
| |
| L<dsa(3)|dsa(3)>, L<dh(3)|dh(3)>, L<rsa(3)|rsa(3)> |
| |
| =item CERTIFICATES |
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| L<x509(3)|x509(3)>, L<x509v3(3)|x509v3(3)> |
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| =item AUTHENTICATION CODES, HASH FUNCTIONS |
| |
| L<hmac(3)|hmac(3)>, L<md2(3)|md2(3)>, L<md4(3)|md4(3)>, |
| L<md5(3)|md5(3)>, L<mdc2(3)|mdc2(3)>, L<ripemd(3)|ripemd(3)>, |
| L<sha(3)|sha(3)> |
| |
| =item AUXILIARY FUNCTIONS |
| |
| L<err(3)|err(3)>, L<threads(3)|threads(3)>, L<rand(3)|rand(3)>, |
| L<OPENSSL_VERSION_NUMBER(3)|OPENSSL_VERSION_NUMBER(3)> |
| |
| =item INPUT/OUTPUT, DATA ENCODING |
| |
| L<asn1(3)|asn1(3)>, L<bio(3)|bio(3)>, L<evp(3)|evp(3)>, L<pem(3)|pem(3)>, |
| L<pkcs7(3)|pkcs7(3)>, L<pkcs12(3)|pkcs12(3)> |
| |
| =item INTERNAL FUNCTIONS |
| |
| L<bn(3)|bn(3)>, L<buffer(3)|buffer(3)>, L<ec(3)|ec(3)>, L<lhash(3)|lhash(3)>, |
| L<objects(3)|objects(3)>, L<stack(3)|stack(3)>, |
| L<txt_db(3)|txt_db(3)> |
| |
| =back |
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| =head1 NOTES |
| |
| Some of the newer functions follow a naming convention using the numbers |
| B<0> and B<1>. For example the functions: |
| |
| int X509_CRL_add0_revoked(X509_CRL *crl, X509_REVOKED *rev); |
| int X509_add1_trust_object(X509 *x, ASN1_OBJECT *obj); |
| |
| The B<0> version uses the supplied structure pointer directly |
| in the parent and it will be freed up when the parent is freed. |
| In the above example B<crl> would be freed but B<rev> would not. |
| |
| The B<1> function uses a copy of the supplied structure pointer |
| (or in some cases increases its link count) in the parent and |
| so both (B<x> and B<obj> above) should be freed up. |
| |
| =head1 SEE ALSO |
| |
| L<openssl(1)|openssl(1)>, L<ssl(3)|ssl(3)> |
| |
| =cut |