Fix PSS signature printing: consistently use 0x prefix for hex values for
padding length and trailer fields.
(cherry picked from commit deb24ad53147f5a8dd63416224a5edd7bbc0e74a)
This change adds CRYPTO_memcmp, which compares two vectors of bytes in
an amount of time that's independent of their contents. It also changes
several MAC compares in the code to use this over the standard memcmp,
which may leak information about the size of a matching prefix.
signatures and MDC2 using EVP or RSA_sign. This has become more apparent
when the dgst utility in OpenSSL 1.0.0 and later switched to using the
EVP_DigestSign functions which call RSA_sign.
This means that the signature format OpenSSL 1.0.0 and later used with
dgst -sign and MDC2 is incompatible with previous versions.
Add detection in RSA_verify so either format works.
Note: MDC2 is disabled by default in OpenSSL and very rarely used in practice.
This meant a slight renumbering in util/libeay.num due to symbols
appearing in 1.0.0-stable. However, since there's been no release on
this branch yet, it should be harmless.
The functions ENGINE_ctrl(), OPENSSL_isservice(), EVP_PKEY_sign(),
CMS_get1_RecipientRequest() and RAND_bytes() can return <=0 on error fix
so the return code is checked correctly.
knock-on work than expected - they've been extracted into a patch
series that can be completed elsewhere, or in a different branch,
before merging back to HEAD.
deprecate the original (numeric-only) scheme, and replace with the
CRYPTO_THREADID object. This hides the platform-specifics and should reduce
the possibility for programming errors (where failing to explicitly check
both thread ID forms could create subtle, platform-specific bugs).
Thanks to Bodo, for invaluable review and feedback.
to 'unsigned long' (ie. odd platforms/compilers), so a pointer-typed
version was added but it required portable code to check *both* modes to
determine equality. This commit maintains the availability of both thread
ID types, but deprecates the type-specific accessor APIs that invoke the
callbacks - instead a single type-independent API is used. This simplifies
software that calls into this interface, and should also make it less
error-prone - as forgetting to call and compare *both* thread ID accessors
could have led to hard-to-debug/infrequent bugs (that might only affect
certain platforms or thread implementations). As the CHANGES note says,
there were corresponding deprecations and replacements in the
thread-related functions for BN_BLINDING and ERR too.