1SSL_CTX_SET_CERT_CB(3) OpenSSL SSL_CTX_SET_CERT_CB(3)
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6 SSL_CTX_set_cert_cb, SSL_set_cert_cb - handle certificate callback
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10 #include <openssl/ssl.h>
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12 void SSL_CTX_set_cert_cb(SSL_CTX *c, int (*cert_cb)(SSL *ssl, void *arg),
13 void *arg);
14 void SSL_set_cert_cb(SSL *s, int (*cert_cb)(SSL *ssl, void *arg), void *arg);
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16 int (*cert_cb)(SSL *ssl, void *arg);
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19 SSL_CTX_set_cert_cb() and SSL_set_cert_cb() sets the cert_cb()
20 callback, arg value is pointer which is passed to the application
21 callback.
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23 When cert_cb() is NULL, no callback function is used.
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25 cert_cb() is the application defined callback. It is called before a
26 certificate will be used by a client or server. The callback can then
27 inspect the passed ssl structure and set or clear any appropriate
28 certificates. If the callback is successful it MUST return 1 even if no
29 certificates have been set. A zero is returned on error which will
30 abort the handshake with a fatal internal error alert. A negative
31 return value will suspend the handshake and the handshake function will
32 return immediately. SSL_get_error(3) will return
33 SSL_ERROR_WANT_X509_LOOKUP to indicate, that the handshake was
34 suspended. The next call to the handshake function will again lead to
35 the call of cert_cb(). It is the job of the cert_cb() to store
36 information about the state of the last call, if required to continue.
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39 An application will typically call SSL_use_certificate() and
40 SSL_use_PrivateKey() to set the end entity certificate and private key.
41 It can add intermediate and optionally the root CA certificates using
42 SSL_add1_chain_cert().
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44 It might also call SSL_certs_clear() to delete any certificates
45 associated with the SSL object.
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47 The certificate callback functionality supersedes the (largely broken)
48 functionality provided by the old client certificate callback
49 interface. It is always called even is a certificate is already set so
50 the callback can modify or delete the existing certificate.
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52 A more advanced callback might examine the handshake parameters and set
53 whatever chain is appropriate. For example a legacy client supporting
54 only TLSv1.0 might receive a certificate chain signed using SHA1
55 whereas a TLSv1.2 or later client which advertises support for SHA256
56 could receive a chain using SHA256.
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58 Normal server sanity checks are performed on any certificates set by
59 the callback. So if an EC chain is set for a curve the client does not
60 support it will not be used.
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63 SSL_CTX_set_cert_cb() and SSL_set_cert_cb() do not return values.
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66 ssl(7), SSL_use_certificate(3), SSL_add1_chain_cert(3),
67 SSL_get_client_CA_list(3), SSL_clear(3), SSL_free(3)
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70 Copyright 2014-2018 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
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72 Licensed under the OpenSSL license (the "License"). You may not use
73 this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy
74 in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at
75 <https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>.
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791.1.1 2018-09-11 SSL_CTX_SET_CERT_CB(3)