xref: /freebsd/crypto/openssl/doc/man3/OBJ_nid2obj.pod (revision aa1a8ff2d6dbc51ef058f46f3db5a8bb77967145)
1=pod
2
3=head1 NAME
4
5i2t_ASN1_OBJECT,
6OBJ_length, OBJ_get0_data, OBJ_nid2obj, OBJ_nid2ln,
7OBJ_nid2sn, OBJ_obj2nid, OBJ_txt2nid, OBJ_ln2nid, OBJ_sn2nid, OBJ_cmp,
8OBJ_dup, OBJ_txt2obj, OBJ_obj2txt, OBJ_create, OBJ_cleanup, OBJ_add_sigid
9- ASN1 object utility functions
10
11=head1 SYNOPSIS
12
13 #include <openssl/objects.h>
14
15 ASN1_OBJECT *OBJ_nid2obj(int n);
16 const char *OBJ_nid2ln(int n);
17 const char *OBJ_nid2sn(int n);
18
19 int OBJ_obj2nid(const ASN1_OBJECT *o);
20 int OBJ_ln2nid(const char *ln);
21 int OBJ_sn2nid(const char *sn);
22
23 int OBJ_txt2nid(const char *s);
24
25 ASN1_OBJECT *OBJ_txt2obj(const char *s, int no_name);
26 int OBJ_obj2txt(char *buf, int buf_len, const ASN1_OBJECT *a, int no_name);
27
28 int i2t_ASN1_OBJECT(char *buf, int buf_len, const ASN1_OBJECT *a);
29
30 int OBJ_cmp(const ASN1_OBJECT *a, const ASN1_OBJECT *b);
31 ASN1_OBJECT *OBJ_dup(const ASN1_OBJECT *o);
32
33 int OBJ_create(const char *oid, const char *sn, const char *ln);
34
35 size_t OBJ_length(const ASN1_OBJECT *obj);
36 const unsigned char *OBJ_get0_data(const ASN1_OBJECT *obj);
37
38 int OBJ_add_sigid(int signid, int dig_id, int pkey_id);
39
40The following function has been deprecated since OpenSSL 1.1.0, and can be
41hidden entirely by defining B<OPENSSL_API_COMPAT> with a suitable version value,
42see L<openssl_user_macros(7)>:
43
44 void OBJ_cleanup(void);
45
46=head1 DESCRIPTION
47
48The ASN1 object utility functions process ASN1_OBJECT structures which are
49a representation of the ASN1 OBJECT IDENTIFIER (OID) type.
50For convenience, OIDs are usually represented in source code as numeric
51identifiers, or B<NID>s.  OpenSSL has an internal table of OIDs that
52are generated when the library is built, and their corresponding NIDs
53are available as defined constants.  For the functions below, application
54code should treat all returned values -- OIDs, NIDs, or names -- as
55constants.
56
57OBJ_nid2obj(), OBJ_nid2ln() and OBJ_nid2sn() convert the NID I<n> to
58an ASN1_OBJECT structure, its long name and its short name respectively,
59or B<NULL> if an error occurred.
60
61OBJ_obj2nid(), OBJ_ln2nid(), OBJ_sn2nid() return the corresponding NID
62for the object I<o>, the long name I<ln> or the short name I<sn> respectively
63or NID_undef if an error occurred.
64
65OBJ_txt2nid() returns NID corresponding to text string I<s>. I<s> can be
66a long name, a short name or the numerical representation of an object.
67
68OBJ_txt2obj() converts the text string I<s> into an ASN1_OBJECT structure.
69If I<no_name> is 0 then long names and short names will be interpreted
70as well as numerical forms. If I<no_name> is 1 only the numerical form
71is acceptable.
72
73OBJ_obj2txt() converts the B<ASN1_OBJECT> I<a> into a textual representation.
74Unless I<buf> is NULL,
75the representation is written as a NUL-terminated string to I<buf>, where
76at most I<buf_len> bytes are written, truncating the result if necessary.
77In any case it returns the total string length, excluding the NUL character,
78required for non-truncated representation, or -1 on error.
79If I<no_name> is 0 then if the object has a long or short name
80then that will be used, otherwise the numerical form will be used.
81If I<no_name> is 1 then the numerical form will always be used.
82
83i2t_ASN1_OBJECT() is the same as OBJ_obj2txt() with the I<no_name> set to zero.
84
85OBJ_cmp() compares I<a> to I<b>. If the two are identical 0 is returned.
86
87OBJ_dup() returns a copy of I<o>.
88
89OBJ_create() adds a new object to the internal table. I<oid> is the
90numerical form of the object, I<sn> the short name and I<ln> the
91long name. A new NID is returned for the created object in case of
92success and NID_undef in case of failure.
93
94OBJ_length() returns the size of the content octets of I<obj>.
95
96OBJ_get0_data() returns a pointer to the content octets of I<obj>.
97The returned pointer is an internal pointer which B<must not> be freed.
98
99OBJ_add_sigid() creates a new composite "Signature Algorithm" that associates a
100given NID with two other NIDs - one representing the underlying signature
101algorithm and the other representing a digest algorithm to be used in
102conjunction with it. I<signid> represents the NID for the composite "Signature
103Algorithm", I<dig_id> is the NID for the digest algorithm and I<pkey_id> is the
104NID for the underlying signature algorithm. As there are signature algorithms
105that do not require a digest, NID_undef is a valid I<dig_id>.
106
107OBJ_cleanup() releases any resources allocated by creating new objects.
108
109=head1 NOTES
110
111Objects in OpenSSL can have a short name, a long name and a numerical
112identifier (NID) associated with them. A standard set of objects is
113represented in an internal table. The appropriate values are defined
114in the header file B<objects.h>.
115
116For example the OID for commonName has the following definitions:
117
118 #define SN_commonName                   "CN"
119 #define LN_commonName                   "commonName"
120 #define NID_commonName                  13
121
122New objects can be added by calling OBJ_create().
123
124Table objects have certain advantages over other objects: for example
125their NIDs can be used in a C language switch statement. They are
126also static constant structures which are shared: that is there
127is only a single constant structure for each table object.
128
129Objects which are not in the table have the NID value NID_undef.
130
131Objects do not need to be in the internal tables to be processed,
132the functions OBJ_txt2obj() and OBJ_obj2txt() can process the numerical
133form of an OID.
134
135Some objects are used to represent algorithms which do not have a
136corresponding ASN.1 OBJECT IDENTIFIER encoding (for example no OID currently
137exists for a particular algorithm). As a result they B<cannot> be encoded or
138decoded as part of ASN.1 structures. Applications can determine if there
139is a corresponding OBJECT IDENTIFIER by checking OBJ_length() is not zero.
140
141These functions cannot return B<const> because an B<ASN1_OBJECT> can
142represent both an internal, constant, OID and a dynamically-created one.
143The latter cannot be constant because it needs to be freed after use.
144
145=head1 RETURN VALUES
146
147OBJ_nid2obj() returns an B<ASN1_OBJECT> structure or B<NULL> is an
148error occurred.
149
150OBJ_nid2ln() and OBJ_nid2sn() returns a valid string or B<NULL>
151on error.
152
153OBJ_obj2nid(), OBJ_ln2nid(), OBJ_sn2nid() and OBJ_txt2nid() return
154a NID or B<NID_undef> on error.
155
156OBJ_add_sigid() returns 1 on success or 0 on error.
157
158i2t_ASN1_OBJECT() an OBJ_obj2txt() return -1 on error.
159On success, they return the length of the string written to I<buf> if I<buf> is
160not NULL and I<buf_len> is big enough, otherwise the total string length.
161Note that this does not count the trailing NUL character.
162
163=head1 EXAMPLES
164
165Create an object for B<commonName>:
166
167 ASN1_OBJECT *o = OBJ_nid2obj(NID_commonName);
168
169Check if an object is B<commonName>
170
171 if (OBJ_obj2nid(obj) == NID_commonName)
172     /* Do something */
173
174Create a new NID and initialize an object from it:
175
176 int new_nid = OBJ_create("1.2.3.4", "NewOID", "New Object Identifier");
177 ASN1_OBJECT *obj = OBJ_nid2obj(new_nid);
178
179Create a new object directly:
180
181 obj = OBJ_txt2obj("1.2.3.4", 1);
182
183=head1 BUGS
184
185Neither OBJ_create() nor OBJ_add_sigid() do any locking and are thus not
186thread safe.  Moreover, none of the other functions should be called while
187concurrent calls to these two functions are possible.
188
189=head1 SEE ALSO
190
191L<ERR_get_error(3)>
192
193=head1 HISTORY
194
195OBJ_cleanup() was deprecated in OpenSSL 1.1.0 by L<OPENSSL_init_crypto(3)>
196and should not be used.
197
198=head1 COPYRIGHT
199
200Copyright 2002-2021 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
201
202Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License").  You may not use
203this file except in compliance with the License.  You can obtain a copy
204in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at
205L<https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>.
206
207=cut
208