i2d_X509 (3)
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NAME
d2i_X509, i2d_X509, d2i_X509_bio, d2i_X509_fp, i2d_X509_bio, i2d_X509_fp - X509 encode and decode functionsSYNOPSIS
#include <openssl/x509.h> X509 *d2i_X509(X509 **px, const unsigned char **in, int len); int i2d_X509(X509 *x, unsigned char **out); X509 *d2i_X509_bio(BIO *bp, X509 **x); X509 *d2i_X509_fp(FILE *fp, X509 **x); int i2d_X509_bio(BIO *bp, X509 *x); int i2d_X509_fp(FILE *fp, X509 *x); int i2d_re_X509_tbs(X509 *x, unsigned char **out);
DESCRIPTION
The X509 encode and decode routines encode and parse an X509 structure, which represents an X509 certificate.d2i_X509() attempts to decode len bytes at *in. If successful a pointer to the X509 structure is returned. If an error occurred then
If the call is successful *in is incremented to the byte following the parsed data.
i2d_X509() encodes the structure pointed to by x into
For OpenSSL 0.9.7 and later if *out is
d2i_X509_bio() is similar to d2i_X509() except it attempts to parse data from
d2i_X509_fp() is similar to d2i_X509() except it attempts to parse data from
i2d_X509_bio() is similar to i2d_X509() except it writes the encoding of the structure x to
i2d_X509_fp() is similar to i2d_X509() except it writes the encoding of the structure x to
i2d_re_X509_tbs() is similar to i2d_X509() except it encodes only the TBSCertificate portion of the certificate.
NOTES
The letters i and d in for example i2d_X509 stand for ``internal'' (that is an internal C structure) and ``The functions can also understand
The actual X509 structure passed to i2d_X509() must be a valid populated X509 structure it can not simply be fed with an empty structure such as that returned by X509_new().
The encoded data is in binary form and may contain embedded zeroes. Therefore any
The ways that *in and *out are incremented after the operation can trap the unwary. See the
The reason for the auto increment behaviour is to reflect a typical usage of
EXAMPLES
Allocate and encode the
int len; unsigned char *buf, *p; len = i2d_X509(x, NULL); buf = OPENSSL_malloc(len); if (buf == NULL) /* error */ p = buf; i2d_X509(x, &p);
If you are using OpenSSL 0.9.7 or later then this can be simplified to:
int len; unsigned char *buf; buf = NULL; len = i2d_X509(x, &buf); if (len < 0) /* error */
Attempt to decode a buffer:
X509 *x; unsigned char *buf, *p; int len; /* Something to setup buf and len */ p = buf; x = d2i_X509(NULL, &p, len); if (x == NULL) /* Some error */
Alternative technique:
X509 *x; unsigned char *buf, *p; int len; /* Something to setup buf and len */ p = buf; x = NULL; if(!d2i_X509(&x, &p, len)) /* Some error */
WARNINGS
The use of temporary variable is mandatory. A common mistake is to attempt to use a buffer directly as follows:
int len; unsigned char *buf; len = i2d_X509(x, NULL); buf = OPENSSL_malloc(len); if (buf == NULL) /* error */ i2d_X509(x, &buf); /* Other stuff ... */ OPENSSL_free(buf);
This code will result in buf apparently containing garbage because it was incremented after the call to point after the data just written. Also buf will no longer contain the pointer allocated by OPENSSL_malloc() and the subsequent call to OPENSSL_free() may well crash.
The auto allocation feature (setting buf to
Another trap to avoid is misuse of the xp argument to d2i_X509():
X509 *x; if (!d2i_X509(&x, &p, len)) /* Some error */
This will probably crash somewhere in d2i_X509(). The reason for this is that the variable x is uninitialized and an attempt will be made to interpret its (invalid) value as an X509 structure, typically causing a segmentation violation. If x is set to
BUGS
In some versions of OpenSSL the ``reuse'' behaviour of d2i_X509() when *px is valid is broken and some parts of the reused structure may persist if they are not present in the new one. As a result the use of this ``reuse'' behaviour is strongly discouraged.i2d_X509() will not return an error in many versions of OpenSSL, if mandatory fields are not initialized due to a programming error then the encoded structure may contain invalid data or omit the fields entirely and will not be parsed by d2i_X509(). This may be fixed in future so code should not assume that i2d_X509() will always succeed.
The encoding of the TBSCertificate portion of a certificate is cached in the X509 structure internally to improve encoding performance and to ensure certificate signatures are verified correctly in some certificates with broken (non-DER) encodings.
Any function which encodes an X509 structure such as i2d_X509(), i2d_X509_fp() or i2d_X509_bio() may return a stale encoding if the X509 structure has been modified after deserialization or previous serialization.
If, after modification, the X509 object is re-signed with X509_sign(), the encoding is automatically renewed. Otherwise, the encoding of the TBSCertificate portion of the X509 can be manually renewed by calling i2d_re_X509_tbs().
RETURN VALUES
d2i_X509(), d2i_X509_bio() and d2i_X509_fp() return a valid X509 structure ori2d_X509() returns the number of bytes successfully encoded or a negative value if an error occurs. The error code can be obtained by ERR_get_error(3).
i2d_X509_bio() and i2d_X509_fp() return 1 for success and 0 if an error occurs The error code can be obtained by ERR_get_error(3).