/* * Copyright (c) 2016 Thomas Pornin * * Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining * a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the * "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including * without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, * distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to * permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to * the following conditions: * * The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be * included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. * * THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, * EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF * MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND * NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS * BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN * ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN * CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE * SOFTWARE. */ #ifndef BR_BEARSSL_H__ #define BR_BEARSSL_H__ #include #include /** \mainpage BearSSL API * * # API Layout * * The functions and structures defined by the BearSSL API are located * in various header files: * * | Header file | Elements | * | :-------------- | :------------------------------------------------ | * | bearssl_hash.h | Hash functions | * | bearssl_hmac.h | HMAC | * | bearssl_kdf.h | Key Derivation Functions | * | bearssl_rand.h | Pseudorandom byte generators | * | bearssl_prf.h | PRF implementations (for SSL/TLS) | * | bearssl_block.h | Symmetric encryption | * | bearssl_aead.h | AEAD algorithms (combined encryption + MAC) | * | bearssl_rsa.h | RSA encryption and signatures | * | bearssl_ec.h | Elliptic curves support (including ECDSA) | * | bearssl_ssl.h | SSL/TLS engine interface | * | bearssl_x509.h | X.509 certificate decoding and validation | * | bearssl_pem.h | Base64/PEM decoding support functions | * * Applications using BearSSL are supposed to simply include `bearssl.h` * as follows: * * #include * * The `bearssl.h` file itself includes all the other header files. It is * possible to include specific header files, but it has no practical * advantage for the application. The API is separated into separate * header files only for documentation convenience. * * * # Conventions * * ## MUST and SHALL * * In all descriptions, the usual "MUST", "SHALL", "MAY",... terminology * is used. Failure to meet requirements expressed with a "MUST" or * "SHALL" implies undefined behaviour, which means that segmentation * faults, buffer overflows, and other similar adverse events, may occur. * * In general, BearSSL is not very forgiving of programming errors, and * does not include much failsafes or error reporting when the problem * does not arise from external transient conditions, and can be fixed * only in the application code. This is done so in order to make the * total code footprint lighter. * * * ## `NULL` values * * Function parameters with a pointer type shall not be `NULL` unless * explicitly authorised by the documentation. As an exception, when * the pointer aims at a sequence of bytes and is accompanied with * a length parameter, and the length is zero (meaning that there is * no byte at all to retrieve), then the pointer may be `NULL` even if * not explicitly allowed. * * * ## Memory Allocation * * BearSSL does not perform dynamic memory allocation. This implies that * for any functionality that requires a non-transient state, the caller * is responsible for allocating the relevant context structure. Such * allocation can be done in any appropriate area, including static data * segments, the heap, and the stack, provided that proper alignment is * respected. The header files define these context structures * (including size and contents), so the C compiler should handle * alignment automatically. * * Since there is no dynamic resource allocation, there is also nothing to * release. When the calling code is done with a BearSSL feature, it * may simple release the context structures it allocated itself, with * no "close function" to call. If the context structures were allocated * on the stack (as local variables), then even that release operation is * implicit. * * * ## Structure Contents * * Except when explicitly indicated, structure contents are opaque: they * are included in the header files so that calling code may know the * structure sizes and alignment requirements, but callers SHALL NOT * access individual fields directly. For fields that are supposed to * be read from or written to, the API defines accessor functions (the * simplest of these accessor functions are defined as `static inline` * functions, and the C compiler will optimise them away). * * * # API Usage * * BearSSL usage for running a SSL/TLS client or server is described * on the [BearSSL Web site](https://www.bearssl.org/api1.html). The * BearSSL source archive also comes with sample code. */ #include "bearssl_hash.h" #include "bearssl_hmac.h" #include "bearssl_kdf.h" #include "bearssl_rand.h" #include "bearssl_prf.h" #include "bearssl_block.h" #include "bearssl_aead.h" #include "bearssl_rsa.h" #include "bearssl_ec.h" #include "bearssl_ssl.h" #include "bearssl_x509.h" #include "bearssl_pem.h" /** \brief Type for a configuration option. * * A "configuration option" is a value that is selected when the BearSSL * library itself is compiled. Most options are boolean; their value is * then either 1 (option is enabled) or 0 (option is disabled). Some * values have other integer values. Option names correspond to macro * names. Some of the options can be explicitly set in the internal * `"config.h"` file. */ typedef struct { /** \brief Configurable option name. */ const char *name; /** \brief Configurable option value. */ long value; } br_config_option; /** \brief Get configuration report. * * This function returns compiled configuration options, each as a * 'long' value. Names match internal macro names, in particular those * that can be set in the `"config.h"` inner file. For boolean options, * the numerical value is 1 if enabled, 0 if disabled. For maximum * key sizes, values are expressed in bits. * * The returned array is terminated by an entry whose `name` is `NULL`. * * \return the configuration report. */ const br_config_option *br_get_config(void); #endif