Revision 05f61fb27efaf1a3f4cfa1a8d4d62c34e3c8a0fe authored by Emilia Kasper on 25 August 2014, 10:38:16 UTC, committed by Emilia Kasper on 27 August 2014, 17:42:31 UTC
The old code implicitly relies on the ASN.1 code returning a \0-prefixed buffer when the buffer length is 0. Change this to verify explicitly that the ASN.1 string has positive length. Reviewed-by: Dr Stephen Henson <steve@openssl.org> (cherry picked from commit 82dc08de54ce443c2a9ac478faffe79e76157795)
1 parent 10be715
EVP_VerifyInit.pod
=pod
=head1 NAME
EVP_VerifyInit, EVP_VerifyUpdate, EVP_VerifyFinal - EVP signature verification functions
=head1 SYNOPSIS
#include <openssl/evp.h>
int EVP_VerifyInit_ex(EVP_MD_CTX *ctx, const EVP_MD *type, ENGINE *impl);
int EVP_VerifyUpdate(EVP_MD_CTX *ctx, const void *d, unsigned int cnt);
int EVP_VerifyFinal(EVP_MD_CTX *ctx,unsigned char *sigbuf, unsigned int siglen,EVP_PKEY *pkey);
int EVP_VerifyInit(EVP_MD_CTX *ctx, const EVP_MD *type);
=head1 DESCRIPTION
The EVP signature verification routines are a high level interface to digital
signatures.
EVP_VerifyInit_ex() sets up verification context B<ctx> to use digest
B<type> from ENGINE B<impl>. B<ctx> must be initialized by calling
EVP_MD_CTX_init() before calling this function.
EVP_VerifyUpdate() hashes B<cnt> bytes of data at B<d> into the
verification context B<ctx>. This function can be called several times on the
same B<ctx> to include additional data.
EVP_VerifyFinal() verifies the data in B<ctx> using the public key B<pkey>
and against the B<siglen> bytes at B<sigbuf>.
EVP_VerifyInit() initializes verification context B<ctx> to use the default
implementation of digest B<type>.
=head1 RETURN VALUES
EVP_VerifyInit_ex() and EVP_VerifyUpdate() return 1 for success and 0 for
failure.
EVP_VerifyFinal() returns 1 for a correct signature, 0 for failure and -1 if some
other error occurred.
The error codes can be obtained by L<ERR_get_error(3)|ERR_get_error(3)>.
=head1 NOTES
The B<EVP> interface to digital signatures should almost always be used in
preference to the low level interfaces. This is because the code then becomes
transparent to the algorithm used and much more flexible.
Due to the link between message digests and public key algorithms the correct
digest algorithm must be used with the correct public key type. A list of
algorithms and associated public key algorithms appears in
L<EVP_DigestInit(3)|EVP_DigestInit(3)>.
The call to EVP_VerifyFinal() internally finalizes a copy of the digest context.
This means that calls to EVP_VerifyUpdate() and EVP_VerifyFinal() can be called
later to digest and verify additional data.
Since only a copy of the digest context is ever finalized the context must
be cleaned up after use by calling EVP_MD_CTX_cleanup() or a memory leak
will occur.
=head1 BUGS
Older versions of this documentation wrongly stated that calls to
EVP_VerifyUpdate() could not be made after calling EVP_VerifyFinal().
Since the public key is passed in the call to EVP_SignFinal() any error
relating to the private key (for example an unsuitable key and digest
combination) will not be indicated until after potentially large amounts of
data have been passed through EVP_SignUpdate().
It is not possible to change the signing parameters using these function.
The previous two bugs are fixed in the newer EVP_VerifyDigest*() function.
=head1 SEE ALSO
L<evp(3)|evp(3)>,
L<EVP_SignInit(3)|EVP_SignInit(3)>,
L<EVP_DigestInit(3)|EVP_DigestInit(3)>, L<err(3)|err(3)>,
L<evp(3)|evp(3)>, L<hmac(3)|hmac(3)>, L<md2(3)|md2(3)>,
L<md5(3)|md5(3)>, L<mdc2(3)|mdc2(3)>, L<ripemd(3)|ripemd(3)>,
L<sha(3)|sha(3)>, L<dgst(1)|dgst(1)>
=head1 HISTORY
EVP_VerifyInit(), EVP_VerifyUpdate() and EVP_VerifyFinal() are
available in all versions of SSLeay and OpenSSL.
EVP_VerifyInit_ex() was added in OpenSSL 0.9.7
=cut

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