1 /* Copyright (C) 1995-1998 Eric Young (eay (at) cryptsoft.com) 2 * All rights reserved. 3 * 4 * This package is an SSL implementation written 5 * by Eric Young (eay (at) cryptsoft.com). 6 * The implementation was written so as to conform with Netscapes SSL. 7 * 8 * This library is free for commercial and non-commercial use as long as 9 * the following conditions are aheared to. The following conditions 10 * apply to all code found in this distribution, be it the RC4, RSA, 11 * lhash, DES, etc., code; not just the SSL code. The SSL documentation 12 * included with this distribution is covered by the same copyright terms 13 * except that the holder is Tim Hudson (tjh (at) cryptsoft.com). 14 * 15 * Copyright remains Eric Young's, and as such any Copyright notices in 16 * the code are not to be removed. 17 * If this package is used in a product, Eric Young should be given attribution 18 * as the author of the parts of the library used. 19 * This can be in the form of a textual message at program startup or 20 * in documentation (online or textual) provided with the package. 21 * 22 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 23 * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 24 * are met: 25 * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the copyright 26 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 27 * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 28 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the 29 * documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 30 * 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software 31 * must display the following acknowledgement: 32 * "This product includes cryptographic software written by 33 * Eric Young (eay (at) cryptsoft.com)" 34 * The word 'cryptographic' can be left out if the rouines from the library 35 * being used are not cryptographic related :-). 36 * 4. If you include any Windows specific code (or a derivative thereof) from 37 * the apps directory (application code) you must include an acknowledgement: 38 * "This product includes software written by Tim Hudson (tjh (at) cryptsoft.com)" 39 * 40 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY ERIC YOUNG ``AS IS'' AND 41 * ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE 42 * IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE 43 * ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE 44 * FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL 45 * DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS 46 * OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) 47 * HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT 48 * LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY 49 * OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 50 * SUCH DAMAGE. 51 * 52 * The licence and distribution terms for any publically available version or 53 * derivative of this code cannot be changed. i.e. this code cannot simply be 54 * copied and put under another distribution licence 55 * [including the GNU Public Licence.] 56 */ 57 /* ==================================================================== 58 * Copyright (c) 1998-2001 The OpenSSL Project. All rights reserved. 59 * 60 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 61 * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 62 * are met: 63 * 64 * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 65 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 66 * 67 * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 68 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in 69 * the documentation and/or other materials provided with the 70 * distribution. 71 * 72 * 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this 73 * software must display the following acknowledgment: 74 * "This product includes software developed by the OpenSSL Project 75 * for use in the OpenSSL Toolkit. (http://www.openssl.org/)" 76 * 77 * 4. The names "OpenSSL Toolkit" and "OpenSSL Project" must not be used to 78 * endorse or promote products derived from this software without 79 * prior written permission. For written permission, please contact 80 * openssl-core (at) openssl.org. 81 * 82 * 5. Products derived from this software may not be called "OpenSSL" 83 * nor may "OpenSSL" appear in their names without prior written 84 * permission of the OpenSSL Project. 85 * 86 * 6. Redistributions of any form whatsoever must retain the following 87 * acknowledgment: 88 * "This product includes software developed by the OpenSSL Project 89 * for use in the OpenSSL Toolkit (http://www.openssl.org/)" 90 * 91 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE OpenSSL PROJECT ``AS IS'' AND ANY 92 * EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE 93 * IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR 94 * PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE OpenSSL PROJECT OR 95 * ITS CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, 96 * SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT 97 * NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; 98 * LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) 99 * HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, 100 * STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) 101 * ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED 102 * OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. 103 * ==================================================================== 104 * 105 * This product includes cryptographic software written by Eric Young 106 * (eay (at) cryptsoft.com). This product includes software written by Tim 107 * Hudson (tjh (at) cryptsoft.com). */ 108 109 #ifndef OPENSSL_HEADER_CRYPTO_INTERNAL_H 110 #define OPENSSL_HEADER_CRYPTO_INTERNAL_H 111 112 #include <openssl/ex_data.h> 113 #include <openssl/thread.h> 114 115 #if defined(OPENSSL_NO_THREADS) 116 #elif defined(OPENSSL_WINDOWS) 117 #pragma warning(push, 3) 118 #include <windows.h> 119 #pragma warning(pop) 120 #else 121 #include <pthread.h> 122 #endif 123 124 #if defined(__cplusplus) 125 extern "C" { 126 #endif 127 128 129 /* MSVC's C4701 warning about the use of *potentially*--as opposed to 130 * *definitely*--uninitialized values sometimes has false positives. Usually 131 * the false positives can and should be worked around by simplifying the 132 * control flow. When that is not practical, annotate the function containing 133 * the code that triggers the warning with 134 * OPENSSL_SUPPRESS_POTENTIALLY_UNINITIALIZED_WARNINGS after its parameters: 135 * 136 * void f() OPENSSL_SUPPRESS_POTENTIALLY_UNINITIALIZED_WARNINGS { 137 * ... 138 * } 139 * 140 * Note that MSVC's control flow analysis seems to operate on a whole-function 141 * basis, so the annotation must be placed on the entire function, not just a 142 * block within the function. */ 143 #if defined(_MSC_VER) 144 #define OPENSSL_SUPPRESS_POTENTIALLY_UNINITIALIZED_WARNINGS \ 145 __pragma(warning(suppress:4701)) 146 #else 147 #define OPENSSL_SUPPRESS_POTENTIALLY_UNINITIALIZED_WARNINGS 148 #endif 149 150 /* MSVC will sometimes correctly detect unreachable code and issue a warning, 151 * which breaks the build since we treat errors as warnings, in some rare cases 152 * where we want to allow the dead code to continue to exist. In these 153 * situations, annotate the function containing the unreachable code with 154 * OPENSSL_SUPPRESS_UNREACHABLE_CODE_WARNINGS after its parameters: 155 * 156 * void f() OPENSSL_SUPPRESS_UNREACHABLE_CODE_WARNINGS { 157 * ... 158 * } 159 * 160 * Note that MSVC's reachability analysis seems to operate on a whole-function 161 * basis, so the annotation must be placed on the entire function, not just a 162 * block within the function. */ 163 #if defined(_MSC_VER) 164 #define OPENSSL_SUPPRESS_UNREACHABLE_CODE_WARNINGS \ 165 __pragma(warning(suppress:4702)) 166 #else 167 #define OPENSSL_SUPPRESS_UNREACHABLE_CODE_WARNINGS 168 #endif 169 170 171 #if defined(OPENSSL_X86) || defined(OPENSSL_X86_64) || defined(OPENSSL_ARM) || \ 172 defined(OPENSSL_AARCH64) 173 /* OPENSSL_cpuid_setup initializes OPENSSL_ia32cap_P. */ 174 void OPENSSL_cpuid_setup(void); 175 #endif 176 177 #if !defined(inline) 178 #define inline __inline 179 #endif 180 181 182 /* Constant-time utility functions. 183 * 184 * The following methods return a bitmask of all ones (0xff...f) for true and 0 185 * for false. This is useful for choosing a value based on the result of a 186 * conditional in constant time. For example, 187 * 188 * if (a < b) { 189 * c = a; 190 * } else { 191 * c = b; 192 * } 193 * 194 * can be written as 195 * 196 * unsigned int lt = constant_time_lt(a, b); 197 * c = constant_time_select(lt, a, b); */ 198 199 /* constant_time_msb returns the given value with the MSB copied to all the 200 * other bits. */ 201 static inline unsigned int constant_time_msb(unsigned int a) { 202 return (unsigned int)((int)(a) >> (sizeof(int) * 8 - 1)); 203 } 204 205 /* constant_time_lt returns 0xff..f if a < b and 0 otherwise. */ 206 static inline unsigned int constant_time_lt(unsigned int a, unsigned int b) { 207 /* Consider the two cases of the problem: 208 * msb(a) == msb(b): a < b iff the MSB of a - b is set. 209 * msb(a) != msb(b): a < b iff the MSB of b is set. 210 * 211 * If msb(a) == msb(b) then the following evaluates as: 212 * msb(a^((a^b)|((a-b)^a))) == 213 * msb(a^((a-b) ^ a)) == (because msb(a^b) == 0) 214 * msb(a^a^(a-b)) == (rearranging) 215 * msb(a-b) (because x. x^x == 0) 216 * 217 * Else, if msb(a) != msb(b) then the following evaluates as: 218 * msb(a^((a^b)|((a-b)^a))) == 219 * msb(a^( | ((a-b)^a))) == (because msb(a^b) == 1 and 220 * represents a value s.t. msb() = 1) 221 * msb(a^) == (because ORing with 1 results in 1) 222 * msb(b) 223 * 224 * 225 * Here is an SMT-LIB verification of this formula: 226 * 227 * (define-fun lt ((a (_ BitVec 32)) (b (_ BitVec 32))) (_ BitVec 32) 228 * (bvxor a (bvor (bvxor a b) (bvxor (bvsub a b) a))) 229 * ) 230 * 231 * (declare-fun a () (_ BitVec 32)) 232 * (declare-fun b () (_ BitVec 32)) 233 * 234 * (assert (not (= (= #x00000001 (bvlshr (lt a b) #x0000001f)) (bvult a b)))) 235 * (check-sat) 236 * (get-model) 237 */ 238 return constant_time_msb(a^((a^b)|((a-b)^a))); 239 } 240 241 /* constant_time_lt_8 acts like |constant_time_lt| but returns an 8-bit mask. */ 242 static inline uint8_t constant_time_lt_8(unsigned int a, unsigned int b) { 243 return (uint8_t)(constant_time_lt(a, b)); 244 } 245 246 /* constant_time_gt returns 0xff..f if a >= b and 0 otherwise. */ 247 static inline unsigned int constant_time_ge(unsigned int a, unsigned int b) { 248 return ~constant_time_lt(a, b); 249 } 250 251 /* constant_time_ge_8 acts like |constant_time_ge| but returns an 8-bit mask. */ 252 static inline uint8_t constant_time_ge_8(unsigned int a, unsigned int b) { 253 return (uint8_t)(constant_time_ge(a, b)); 254 } 255 256 /* constant_time_is_zero returns 0xff..f if a == 0 and 0 otherwise. */ 257 static inline unsigned int constant_time_is_zero(unsigned int a) { 258 /* Here is an SMT-LIB verification of this formula: 259 * 260 * (define-fun is_zero ((a (_ BitVec 32))) (_ BitVec 32) 261 * (bvand (bvnot a) (bvsub a #x00000001)) 262 * ) 263 * 264 * (declare-fun a () (_ BitVec 32)) 265 * 266 * (assert (not (= (= #x00000001 (bvlshr (is_zero a) #x0000001f)) (= a #x00000000)))) 267 * (check-sat) 268 * (get-model) 269 */ 270 return constant_time_msb(~a & (a - 1)); 271 } 272 273 /* constant_time_is_zero_8 acts like constant_time_is_zero but returns an 8-bit 274 * mask. */ 275 static inline uint8_t constant_time_is_zero_8(unsigned int a) { 276 return (uint8_t)(constant_time_is_zero(a)); 277 } 278 279 /* constant_time_eq returns 0xff..f if a == b and 0 otherwise. */ 280 static inline unsigned int constant_time_eq(unsigned int a, unsigned int b) { 281 return constant_time_is_zero(a ^ b); 282 } 283 284 /* constant_time_eq_8 acts like |constant_time_eq| but returns an 8-bit mask. */ 285 static inline uint8_t constant_time_eq_8(unsigned int a, unsigned int b) { 286 return (uint8_t)(constant_time_eq(a, b)); 287 } 288 289 /* constant_time_eq_int acts like |constant_time_eq| but works on int values. */ 290 static inline unsigned int constant_time_eq_int(int a, int b) { 291 return constant_time_eq((unsigned)(a), (unsigned)(b)); 292 } 293 294 /* constant_time_eq_int_8 acts like |constant_time_eq_int| but returns an 8-bit 295 * mask. */ 296 static inline uint8_t constant_time_eq_int_8(int a, int b) { 297 return constant_time_eq_8((unsigned)(a), (unsigned)(b)); 298 } 299 300 /* constant_time_select returns (mask & a) | (~mask & b). When |mask| is all 1s 301 * or all 0s (as returned by the methods above), the select methods return 302 * either |a| (if |mask| is nonzero) or |b| (if |mask| is zero). */ 303 static inline unsigned int constant_time_select(unsigned int mask, 304 unsigned int a, unsigned int b) { 305 return (mask & a) | (~mask & b); 306 } 307 308 /* constant_time_select_8 acts like |constant_time_select| but operates on 309 * 8-bit values. */ 310 static inline uint8_t constant_time_select_8(uint8_t mask, uint8_t a, 311 uint8_t b) { 312 return (uint8_t)(constant_time_select(mask, a, b)); 313 } 314 315 /* constant_time_select_int acts like |constant_time_select| but operates on 316 * ints. */ 317 static inline int constant_time_select_int(unsigned int mask, int a, int b) { 318 return (int)(constant_time_select(mask, (unsigned)(a), (unsigned)(b))); 319 } 320 321 322 /* Thread-safe initialisation. */ 323 324 #if defined(OPENSSL_NO_THREADS) 325 typedef uint32_t CRYPTO_once_t; 326 #define CRYPTO_ONCE_INIT 0 327 #elif defined(OPENSSL_WINDOWS) 328 typedef LONG CRYPTO_once_t; 329 #define CRYPTO_ONCE_INIT 0 330 #else 331 typedef pthread_once_t CRYPTO_once_t; 332 #define CRYPTO_ONCE_INIT PTHREAD_ONCE_INIT 333 #endif 334 335 /* CRYPTO_once calls |init| exactly once per process. This is thread-safe: if 336 * concurrent threads call |CRYPTO_once| with the same |CRYPTO_once_t| argument 337 * then they will block until |init| completes, but |init| will have only been 338 * called once. 339 * 340 * The |once| argument must be a |CRYPTO_once_t| that has been initialised with 341 * the value |CRYPTO_ONCE_INIT|. */ 342 OPENSSL_EXPORT void CRYPTO_once(CRYPTO_once_t *once, void (*init)(void)); 343 344 345 /* Reference counting. */ 346 347 /* CRYPTO_REFCOUNT_MAX is the value at which the reference count saturates. */ 348 #define CRYPTO_REFCOUNT_MAX 0xffffffff 349 350 /* CRYPTO_refcount_inc atomically increments the value at |*count| unless the 351 * value would overflow. It's safe for multiple threads to concurrently call 352 * this or |CRYPTO_refcount_dec_and_test_zero| on the same 353 * |CRYPTO_refcount_t|. */ 354 OPENSSL_EXPORT void CRYPTO_refcount_inc(CRYPTO_refcount_t *count); 355 356 /* CRYPTO_refcount_dec_and_test_zero tests the value at |*count|: 357 * if it's zero, it crashes the address space. 358 * if it's the maximum value, it returns zero. 359 * otherwise, it atomically decrements it and returns one iff the resulting 360 * value is zero. 361 * 362 * It's safe for multiple threads to concurrently call this or 363 * |CRYPTO_refcount_inc| on the same |CRYPTO_refcount_t|. */ 364 OPENSSL_EXPORT int CRYPTO_refcount_dec_and_test_zero(CRYPTO_refcount_t *count); 365 366 367 /* Locks. 368 * 369 * Two types of locks are defined: |CRYPTO_MUTEX|, which can be used in 370 * structures as normal, and |struct CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX|, which can be used as 371 * a global lock. A global lock must be initialised to the value 372 * |CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX_INIT|. 373 * 374 * |CRYPTO_MUTEX| can appear in public structures and so is defined in 375 * thread.h. 376 * 377 * The global lock is a different type because there's no static initialiser 378 * value on Windows for locks, so global locks have to be coupled with a 379 * |CRYPTO_once_t| to ensure that the lock is setup before use. This is done 380 * automatically by |CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX_lock_*|. */ 381 382 #if defined(OPENSSL_NO_THREADS) 383 struct CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX {}; 384 #define CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX_INIT {} 385 #elif defined(OPENSSL_WINDOWS) 386 struct CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX { 387 CRYPTO_once_t once; 388 CRITICAL_SECTION lock; 389 }; 390 #define CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX_INIT { CRYPTO_ONCE_INIT, { 0 } } 391 #else 392 struct CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX { 393 pthread_rwlock_t lock; 394 }; 395 #define CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX_INIT { PTHREAD_RWLOCK_INITIALIZER } 396 #endif 397 398 /* CRYPTO_MUTEX_init initialises |lock|. If |lock| is a static variable, use a 399 * |CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX|. */ 400 OPENSSL_EXPORT void CRYPTO_MUTEX_init(CRYPTO_MUTEX *lock); 401 402 /* CRYPTO_MUTEX_lock_read locks |lock| such that other threads may also have a 403 * read lock, but none may have a write lock. (On Windows, read locks are 404 * actually fully exclusive.) */ 405 OPENSSL_EXPORT void CRYPTO_MUTEX_lock_read(CRYPTO_MUTEX *lock); 406 407 /* CRYPTO_MUTEX_lock_write locks |lock| such that no other thread has any type 408 * of lock on it. */ 409 OPENSSL_EXPORT void CRYPTO_MUTEX_lock_write(CRYPTO_MUTEX *lock); 410 411 /* CRYPTO_MUTEX_unlock unlocks |lock|. */ 412 OPENSSL_EXPORT void CRYPTO_MUTEX_unlock(CRYPTO_MUTEX *lock); 413 414 /* CRYPTO_MUTEX_cleanup releases all resources held by |lock|. */ 415 OPENSSL_EXPORT void CRYPTO_MUTEX_cleanup(CRYPTO_MUTEX *lock); 416 417 /* CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX_lock_read locks |lock| such that other threads may also 418 * have a read lock, but none may have a write lock. The |lock| variable does 419 * not need to be initialised by any function, but must have been statically 420 * initialised with |CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX_INIT|. */ 421 OPENSSL_EXPORT void CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX_lock_read( 422 struct CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX *lock); 423 424 /* CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX_lock_write locks |lock| such that no other thread has 425 * any type of lock on it. The |lock| variable does not need to be initialised 426 * by any function, but must have been statically initialised with 427 * |CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX_INIT|. */ 428 OPENSSL_EXPORT void CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX_lock_write( 429 struct CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX *lock); 430 431 /* CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX_unlock unlocks |lock|. */ 432 OPENSSL_EXPORT void CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX_unlock( 433 struct CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX *lock); 434 435 436 /* Thread local storage. */ 437 438 /* thread_local_data_t enumerates the types of thread-local data that can be 439 * stored. */ 440 typedef enum { 441 OPENSSL_THREAD_LOCAL_ERR = 0, 442 OPENSSL_THREAD_LOCAL_RAND, 443 OPENSSL_THREAD_LOCAL_URANDOM_BUF, 444 OPENSSL_THREAD_LOCAL_TEST, 445 NUM_OPENSSL_THREAD_LOCALS, 446 } thread_local_data_t; 447 448 /* thread_local_destructor_t is the type of a destructor function that will be 449 * called when a thread exits and its thread-local storage needs to be freed. */ 450 typedef void (*thread_local_destructor_t)(void *); 451 452 /* CRYPTO_get_thread_local gets the pointer value that is stored for the 453 * current thread for the given index, or NULL if none has been set. */ 454 OPENSSL_EXPORT void *CRYPTO_get_thread_local(thread_local_data_t value); 455 456 /* CRYPTO_set_thread_local sets a pointer value for the current thread at the 457 * given index. This function should only be called once per thread for a given 458 * |index|: rather than update the pointer value itself, update the data that 459 * is pointed to. 460 * 461 * The destructor function will be called when a thread exits to free this 462 * thread-local data. All calls to |CRYPTO_set_thread_local| with the same 463 * |index| should have the same |destructor| argument. The destructor may be 464 * called with a NULL argument if a thread that never set a thread-local 465 * pointer for |index|, exits. The destructor may be called concurrently with 466 * different arguments. 467 * 468 * This function returns one on success or zero on error. If it returns zero 469 * then |destructor| has been called with |value| already. */ 470 OPENSSL_EXPORT int CRYPTO_set_thread_local( 471 thread_local_data_t index, void *value, 472 thread_local_destructor_t destructor); 473 474 475 /* ex_data */ 476 477 typedef struct crypto_ex_data_func_st CRYPTO_EX_DATA_FUNCS; 478 479 /* CRYPTO_EX_DATA_CLASS tracks the ex_indices registered for a type which 480 * supports ex_data. It should defined as a static global within the module 481 * which defines that type. */ 482 typedef struct { 483 struct CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX lock; 484 STACK_OF(CRYPTO_EX_DATA_FUNCS) *meth; 485 /* num_reserved is one if the ex_data index zero is reserved for legacy 486 * |TYPE_get_app_data| functions. */ 487 uint8_t num_reserved; 488 } CRYPTO_EX_DATA_CLASS; 489 490 #define CRYPTO_EX_DATA_CLASS_INIT {CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX_INIT, NULL, 0} 491 #define CRYPTO_EX_DATA_CLASS_INIT_WITH_APP_DATA \ 492 {CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX_INIT, NULL, 1} 493 494 /* CRYPTO_get_ex_new_index allocates a new index for |ex_data_class| and writes 495 * it to |*out_index|. Each class of object should provide a wrapper function 496 * that uses the correct |CRYPTO_EX_DATA_CLASS|. It returns one on success and 497 * zero otherwise. */ 498 OPENSSL_EXPORT int CRYPTO_get_ex_new_index(CRYPTO_EX_DATA_CLASS *ex_data_class, 499 int *out_index, long argl, 500 void *argp, CRYPTO_EX_dup *dup_func, 501 CRYPTO_EX_free *free_func); 502 503 /* CRYPTO_set_ex_data sets an extra data pointer on a given object. Each class 504 * of object should provide a wrapper function. */ 505 OPENSSL_EXPORT int CRYPTO_set_ex_data(CRYPTO_EX_DATA *ad, int index, void *val); 506 507 /* CRYPTO_get_ex_data returns an extra data pointer for a given object, or NULL 508 * if no such index exists. Each class of object should provide a wrapper 509 * function. */ 510 OPENSSL_EXPORT void *CRYPTO_get_ex_data(const CRYPTO_EX_DATA *ad, int index); 511 512 /* CRYPTO_new_ex_data initialises a newly allocated |CRYPTO_EX_DATA|. */ 513 OPENSSL_EXPORT void CRYPTO_new_ex_data(CRYPTO_EX_DATA *ad); 514 515 /* CRYPTO_dup_ex_data duplicates |from| into a freshly allocated 516 * |CRYPTO_EX_DATA|, |to|. Both of which are inside objects of the given 517 * class. It returns one on success and zero otherwise. */ 518 OPENSSL_EXPORT int CRYPTO_dup_ex_data(CRYPTO_EX_DATA_CLASS *ex_data_class, 519 CRYPTO_EX_DATA *to, 520 const CRYPTO_EX_DATA *from); 521 522 /* CRYPTO_free_ex_data frees |ad|, which is embedded inside |obj|, which is an 523 * object of the given class. */ 524 OPENSSL_EXPORT void CRYPTO_free_ex_data(CRYPTO_EX_DATA_CLASS *ex_data_class, 525 void *obj, CRYPTO_EX_DATA *ad); 526 527 528 #if defined(__cplusplus) 529 } /* extern C */ 530 #endif 531 532 #endif /* OPENSSL_HEADER_CRYPTO_INTERNAL_H */ 533