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//! Bindings to OpenSSL //! //! This crate provides a safe interface to the popular OpenSSL cryptography library. OpenSSL versions 1.0.1 through //! 1.1.1 and LibreSSL versions 2.5 through 2.8 are supported. //! //! # Building //! //! Both OpenSSL libraries and headers are required to build this crate. There are multiple options available to locate //! OpenSSL. //! //! ## Vendored //! //! If the `vendored` Cargo feature is enabled, the `openssl-src` crate will be used to compile and statically link to //! a copy of OpenSSL. The build process requires a C compiler, perl, and make. The OpenSSL version will generally track //! the newest OpenSSL release, and changes to the version are *not* considered breaking changes. //! //! ```toml //! [dependencies] //! openssl = { version = "0.10", features = ["vendored"] } //! ``` //! //! The vendored copy will not be configured to automatically find the system's root certificates, but the //! `openssl-probe` crate can be used to do that instead. //! //! ## Automatic //! //! The `openssl-sys` crate will automatically detect OpenSSL installations via Homebrew on macOS and vcpkg on Windows. //! Additionally, it will use `pkg-config` on Unix-like systems to find the system installation. //! //! ```not_rust //! # macOS //! $ brew install openssl@1.1 //! //! # Arch Linux //! $ sudo pacman -S pkg-config openssl //! //! # Debian and Ubuntu //! $ sudo apt-get install pkg-config libssl-dev //! //! # Fedora //! $ sudo dnf install pkg-config openssl-devel //! ``` //! //! ## Manual //! //! A set of environment variables can be used to point `openssl-sys` towards an OpenSSL installation. They will //! override the automatic detection logic. //! //! * `OPENSSL_DIR` - If specified, the directory of an OpenSSL installation. The directory should contain `lib` and //! `include` subdirectories containing the libraries and headers respectively. //! * `OPENSSL_LIB_DIR` and `OPENSSL_INCLUDE_DIR` - If specified, the directories containing the OpenSSL libraries and //! headers respectively. This can be used if the OpenSSL installation is split in a nonstandard directory layout. //! * `OPENSSL_STATIC` - If set, the crate will statically link to OpenSSL rather than dynamically link. //! * `OPENSSL_LIBS` - If set, a `:`-separated list of library names to link to (e.g. `ssl:crypto`). This can be used //! if nonstandard library names were used for whatever reason. //! //! Additionally, these variables can be prefixed with the upper-cased target architecture (e.g. //! `X86_64_UNKNOWN_LINUX_GNU_OPENSSL_DIR`), which can be useful when cross compiling. //! //! # Feature Detection //! //! APIs have been added to and removed from the various supported OpenSSL versions, and this library exposes the //! functionality available in the version being linked against. This means that methods, constants, and even modules //! will be present when building against one version of OpenSSL but not when building against another! APIs will //! document any version-specific availability restrictions. //! //! A build script can be used to detect the OpenSSL or LibreSSL version at compile time if needed. The `openssl-sys` //! crate propagates the version via the `DEP_OPENSSL_VERSION_NUMBER` and `DEP_OPENSSL_LIBRESSL_VERSION_NUMBER` //! environment variables to build scripts. The version format is a hex-encoding of the OpenSSL release version: //! `0xMNNFFPPS`. For example, version 1.0.2g's encoding is `0x1_00_02_07_0`. //! //! For example, let's say we want to adjust the TLSv1.3 cipher suites used by a client, but also want to compile //! against OpenSSL versions that don't support TLSv1.3: //! //! Cargo.toml: //! //! ```toml //! [dependencies] //! openssl-sys = "0.9" //! openssl = "0.10" //! ``` //! //! build.rs: //! //! ``` //! use std::env; //! //! fn main() { //! if let Ok(v) = env::var("DEP_OPENSSL_VERSION_NUMBER") { //! let version = u64::from_str_radix(&v, 16).unwrap(); //! //! if version >= 0x1_01_01_00_0 { //! println!("cargo:rustc-cfg=openssl111"); //! } //! } //! } //! ``` //! //! lib.rs: //! //! ``` //! use openssl::ssl::{SslConnector, SslMethod}; //! //! let mut ctx = SslConnector::builder(SslMethod::tls()).unwrap(); //! //! // set_ciphersuites was added in OpenSSL 1.1.1, so we can only call it when linking against that version //! #[cfg(openssl111)] //! ctx.set_ciphersuites("TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384:TLS_AES_128_GCM_SHA256").unwrap(); //! ``` #![doc(html_root_url = "https://docs.rs/openssl/0.10")] #[macro_use] extern crate bitflags; #[macro_use] extern crate cfg_if; #[macro_use] extern crate foreign_types; #[macro_use] extern crate lazy_static; extern crate libc; extern crate openssl_sys as ffi; #[cfg(test)] extern crate hex; #[cfg(test)] extern crate tempdir; #[doc(inline)] pub use ffi::init; use libc::c_int; use error::ErrorStack; #[macro_use] mod macros; mod bio; #[macro_use] mod util; pub mod aes; pub mod asn1; pub mod base64; pub mod bn; #[cfg(not(libressl))] pub mod cms; pub mod conf; pub mod derive; pub mod dh; pub mod dsa; pub mod ec; pub mod ecdsa; pub mod envelope; pub mod error; pub mod ex_data; #[cfg(not(libressl))] pub mod fips; pub mod hash; pub mod memcmp; pub mod nid; pub mod ocsp; pub mod pkcs12; pub mod pkcs5; pub mod pkcs7; pub mod pkey; pub mod rand; pub mod rsa; pub mod sha; pub mod sign; pub mod srtp; pub mod ssl; pub mod stack; pub mod string; pub mod symm; pub mod version; pub mod x509; fn cvt_p<T>(r: *mut T) -> Result<*mut T, ErrorStack> { if r.is_null() { Err(ErrorStack::get()) } else { Ok(r) } } fn cvt(r: c_int) -> Result<c_int, ErrorStack> { if r <= 0 { Err(ErrorStack::get()) } else { Ok(r) } } fn cvt_n(r: c_int) -> Result<c_int, ErrorStack> { if r < 0 { Err(ErrorStack::get()) } else { Ok(r) } }