| =pod |
| |
| =head1 NAME |
| |
| RSA_public_encrypt, RSA_private_decrypt - RSA public key cryptography |
| |
| =head1 SYNOPSIS |
| |
| #include <openssl/rsa.h> |
| |
| The following functions have been deprecated since OpenSSL 3.0, and can be |
| hidden entirely by defining B<OPENSSL_API_COMPAT> with a suitable version value, |
| see L<openssl_user_macros(7)>: |
| |
| int RSA_public_encrypt(int flen, const unsigned char *from, |
| unsigned char *to, RSA *rsa, int padding); |
| |
| int RSA_private_decrypt(int flen, const unsigned char *from, |
| unsigned char *to, RSA *rsa, int padding); |
| |
| =head1 DESCRIPTION |
| |
| Both of the functions described on this page are deprecated. |
| Applications should instead use L<EVP_PKEY_encrypt_init_ex(3)>, |
| L<EVP_PKEY_encrypt(3)>, L<EVP_PKEY_decrypt_init_ex(3)> and |
| L<EVP_PKEY_decrypt(3)>. |
| |
| RSA_public_encrypt() encrypts the B<flen> bytes at B<from> (usually a |
| session key) using the public key B<rsa> and stores the ciphertext in |
| B<to>. B<to> must point to RSA_size(B<rsa>) bytes of memory. |
| |
| B<padding> denotes one of the following modes: |
| |
| =over 4 |
| |
| =item RSA_PKCS1_PADDING |
| |
| PKCS #1 v1.5 padding. This currently is the most widely used mode. |
| However, it is highly recommended to use RSA_PKCS1_OAEP_PADDING in |
| new applications. SEE WARNING BELOW. |
| |
| =item RSA_PKCS1_OAEP_PADDING |
| |
| EME-OAEP as defined in PKCS #1 v2.0 with SHA-1, MGF1 and an empty |
| encoding parameter. This mode is recommended for all new applications. |
| |
| =item RSA_NO_PADDING |
| |
| Raw RSA encryption. This mode should I<only> be used to implement |
| cryptographically sound padding modes in the application code. |
| Encrypting user data directly with RSA is insecure. |
| |
| =back |
| |
| B<flen> must not be more than RSA_size(B<rsa>) - 11 for the PKCS #1 v1.5 |
| based padding modes, not more than RSA_size(B<rsa>) - 42 for |
| RSA_PKCS1_OAEP_PADDING and exactly RSA_size(B<rsa>) for RSA_NO_PADDING. |
| When a padding mode other than RSA_NO_PADDING is in use, then |
| RSA_public_encrypt() will include some random bytes into the ciphertext |
| and therefore the ciphertext will be different each time, even if the |
| plaintext and the public key are exactly identical. |
| The returned ciphertext in B<to> will always be zero padded to exactly |
| RSA_size(B<rsa>) bytes. |
| B<to> and B<from> may overlap. |
| |
| RSA_private_decrypt() decrypts the B<flen> bytes at B<from> using the |
| private key B<rsa> and stores the plaintext in B<to>. B<flen> should |
| be equal to RSA_size(B<rsa>) but may be smaller, when leading zero |
| bytes are in the ciphertext. Those are not important and may be removed, |
| but RSA_public_encrypt() does not do that. B<to> must point |
| to a memory section large enough to hold the maximal possible decrypted |
| data (which is equal to RSA_size(B<rsa>) for RSA_NO_PADDING, |
| RSA_size(B<rsa>) - 11 for the PKCS #1 v1.5 based padding modes and |
| RSA_size(B<rsa>) - 42 for RSA_PKCS1_OAEP_PADDING). |
| B<padding> is the padding mode that was used to encrypt the data. |
| B<to> and B<from> may overlap. |
| |
| =head1 RETURN VALUES |
| |
| RSA_public_encrypt() returns the size of the encrypted data (i.e., |
| RSA_size(B<rsa>)). RSA_private_decrypt() returns the size of the |
| recovered plaintext. A return value of 0 is not an error and |
| means only that the plaintext was empty. |
| |
| On error, -1 is returned; the error codes can be |
| obtained by L<ERR_get_error(3)>. |
| |
| =head1 WARNINGS |
| |
| Decryption failures in the RSA_PKCS1_PADDING mode leak information |
| which can potentially be used to mount a Bleichenbacher padding oracle |
| attack. This is an inherent weakness in the PKCS #1 v1.5 padding |
| design. Prefer RSA_PKCS1_OAEP_PADDING. |
| |
| =head1 CONFORMING TO |
| |
| SSL, PKCS #1 v2.0 |
| |
| =head1 SEE ALSO |
| |
| L<ERR_get_error(3)>, L<RAND_bytes(3)>, |
| L<RSA_size(3)> |
| |
| =head1 HISTORY |
| |
| Both of these functions were deprecated in OpenSSL 3.0. |
| |
| =head1 COPYRIGHT |
| |
| Copyright 2000-2021 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved. |
| |
| Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License"). You may not use |
| this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy |
| in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at |
| L<https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>. |
| |
| =cut |