1UI_NEW(3ossl) OpenSSL UI_NEW(3ossl)
2
3
4
6 UI, UI_new, UI_new_method, UI_free, UI_add_input_string,
7 UI_dup_input_string, UI_add_verify_string, UI_dup_verify_string,
8 UI_add_input_boolean, UI_dup_input_boolean, UI_add_info_string,
9 UI_dup_info_string, UI_add_error_string, UI_dup_error_string,
10 UI_construct_prompt, UI_add_user_data, UI_dup_user_data,
11 UI_get0_user_data, UI_get0_result, UI_get_result_length, UI_process,
12 UI_ctrl, UI_set_default_method, UI_get_default_method, UI_get_method,
13 UI_set_method, UI_OpenSSL, UI_null - user interface
14
16 #include <openssl/ui.h>
17
18 typedef struct ui_st UI;
19
20 UI *UI_new(void);
21 UI *UI_new_method(const UI_METHOD *method);
22 void UI_free(UI *ui);
23
24 int UI_add_input_string(UI *ui, const char *prompt, int flags,
25 char *result_buf, int minsize, int maxsize);
26 int UI_dup_input_string(UI *ui, const char *prompt, int flags,
27 char *result_buf, int minsize, int maxsize);
28 int UI_add_verify_string(UI *ui, const char *prompt, int flags,
29 char *result_buf, int minsize, int maxsize,
30 const char *test_buf);
31 int UI_dup_verify_string(UI *ui, const char *prompt, int flags,
32 char *result_buf, int minsize, int maxsize,
33 const char *test_buf);
34 int UI_add_input_boolean(UI *ui, const char *prompt, const char *action_desc,
35 const char *ok_chars, const char *cancel_chars,
36 int flags, char *result_buf);
37 int UI_dup_input_boolean(UI *ui, const char *prompt, const char *action_desc,
38 const char *ok_chars, const char *cancel_chars,
39 int flags, char *result_buf);
40 int UI_add_info_string(UI *ui, const char *text);
41 int UI_dup_info_string(UI *ui, const char *text);
42 int UI_add_error_string(UI *ui, const char *text);
43 int UI_dup_error_string(UI *ui, const char *text);
44
45 char *UI_construct_prompt(UI *ui_method,
46 const char *phrase_desc, const char *object_name);
47
48 void *UI_add_user_data(UI *ui, void *user_data);
49 int UI_dup_user_data(UI *ui, void *user_data);
50 void *UI_get0_user_data(UI *ui);
51
52 const char *UI_get0_result(UI *ui, int i);
53 int UI_get_result_length(UI *ui, int i);
54
55 int UI_process(UI *ui);
56
57 int UI_ctrl(UI *ui, int cmd, long i, void *p, void (*f)());
58
59 void UI_set_default_method(const UI_METHOD *meth);
60 const UI_METHOD *UI_get_default_method(void);
61 const UI_METHOD *UI_get_method(UI *ui);
62 const UI_METHOD *UI_set_method(UI *ui, const UI_METHOD *meth);
63
64 UI_METHOD *UI_OpenSSL(void);
65 const UI_METHOD *UI_null(void);
66
68 UI stands for User Interface, and is general purpose set of routines to
69 prompt the user for text-based information. Through user-written
70 methods (see UI_create_method(3)), prompting can be done in any way
71 imaginable, be it plain text prompting, through dialog boxes or from a
72 cell phone.
73
74 All the functions work through a context of the type UI. This context
75 contains all the information needed to prompt correctly as well as a
76 reference to a UI_METHOD, which is an ordered vector of functions that
77 carry out the actual prompting.
78
79 The first thing to do is to create a UI with UI_new() or
80 UI_new_method(), then add information to it with the UI_add or UI_dup
81 functions. Also, user-defined random data can be passed down to the
82 underlying method through calls to UI_add_user_data() or
83 UI_dup_user_data(). The default UI method doesn't care about these
84 data, but other methods might. Finally, use UI_process() to actually
85 perform the prompting and UI_get0_result() and UI_get_result_length()
86 to find the result to the prompt and its length.
87
88 A UI can contain more than one prompt, which are performed in the given
89 sequence. Each prompt gets an index number which is returned by the
90 UI_add and UI_dup functions, and has to be used to get the
91 corresponding result with UI_get0_result() and UI_get_result_length().
92
93 UI_process() can be called more than once on the same UI, thereby
94 allowing a UI to have a long lifetime, but can just as well have a
95 short lifetime.
96
97 The functions are as follows:
98
99 UI_new() creates a new UI using the default UI method. When done with
100 this UI, it should be freed using UI_free().
101
102 UI_new_method() creates a new UI using the given UI method. When done
103 with this UI, it should be freed using UI_free().
104
105 UI_OpenSSL() returns the built-in UI method (note: not necessarily the
106 default one, since the default can be changed. See further on). This
107 method is the most machine/OS dependent part of OpenSSL and normally
108 generates the most problems when porting.
109
110 UI_null() returns a UI method that does nothing. Its use is to avoid
111 getting internal defaults for passed UI_METHOD pointers.
112
113 UI_free() removes a UI from memory, along with all other pieces of
114 memory that's connected to it, like duplicated input strings, results
115 and others. If ui is NULL nothing is done.
116
117 UI_add_input_string() and UI_add_verify_string() add a prompt to the
118 UI, as well as flags and a result buffer and the desired minimum and
119 maximum sizes of the result, not counting the final NUL character. The
120 given information is used to prompt for information, for example a
121 password, and to verify a password (i.e. having the user enter it twice
122 and check that the same string was entered twice).
123 UI_add_verify_string() takes and extra argument that should be a
124 pointer to the result buffer of the input string that it's supposed to
125 verify, or verification will fail.
126
127 UI_add_input_boolean() adds a prompt to the UI that's supposed to be
128 answered in a boolean way, with a single character for yes and a
129 different character for no. A set of characters that can be used to
130 cancel the prompt is given as well. The prompt itself is divided in
131 two, one part being the descriptive text (given through the prompt
132 argument) and one describing the possible answers (given through the
133 action_desc argument).
134
135 UI_add_info_string() and UI_add_error_string() add strings that are
136 shown at the same time as the prompt for extra information or to show
137 an error string. The difference between the two is only conceptual.
138 With the built-in method, there's no technical difference between them.
139 Other methods may make a difference between them, however.
140
141 The flags currently supported are UI_INPUT_FLAG_ECHO, which is relevant
142 for UI_add_input_string() and will have the users response be echoed
143 (when prompting for a password, this flag should obviously not be used,
144 and UI_INPUT_FLAG_DEFAULT_PWD, which means that a default password of
145 some sort will be used (completely depending on the application and the
146 UI method).
147
148 UI_dup_input_string(), UI_dup_verify_string(), UI_dup_input_boolean(),
149 UI_dup_info_string() and UI_dup_error_string() are basically the same
150 as their UI_add counterparts, except that they make their own copies of
151 all strings.
152
153 UI_construct_prompt() is a helper function that can be used to create a
154 prompt from two pieces of information: a phrase description phrase_desc
155 and an object name object_name, where the latter may be NULL. The
156 default constructor (if there is none provided by the method used)
157 creates a string "Enter phrase_desc for object_name:" where the " for
158 object_name" part is left out if object_name is NULL. With the
159 description "pass phrase" and the filename "foo.key", that becomes
160 "Enter pass phrase for foo.key:". Other methods may create whatever
161 string and may include encodings that will be processed by the other
162 method functions.
163
164 UI_add_user_data() adds a user data pointer for the method to use at
165 any time. The built-in UI method doesn't care about this info. Note
166 that several calls to this function doesn't add data, it replaces the
167 previous blob with the one given as argument.
168
169 UI_dup_user_data() duplicates the user data and works as an alternative
170 to UI_add_user_data() when the user data needs to be preserved for a
171 longer duration, perhaps even the lifetime of the application. The UI
172 object takes ownership of this duplicate and will free it whenever it
173 gets replaced or the UI is destroyed. UI_dup_user_data() returns 0 on
174 success, or -1 on memory allocation failure or if the method doesn't
175 have a duplicator function.
176
177 UI_get0_user_data() retrieves the data that has last been given to the
178 UI with UI_add_user_data() or UI_dup_user_data.
179
180 UI_get0_result() returns a pointer to the result buffer associated with
181 the information indexed by i.
182
183 UI_get_result_length() returns the length of the result buffer
184 associated with the information indexed by i.
185
186 UI_process() goes through the information given so far, does all the
187 printing and prompting and returns the final status, which is -2 on
188 out-of-band events (Interrupt, Cancel, ...), -1 on error and 0 on
189 success.
190
191 UI_ctrl() adds extra control for the application author. For now, it
192 understands two commands: UI_CTRL_PRINT_ERRORS, which makes
193 UI_process() print the OpenSSL error stack as part of processing the
194 UI, and UI_CTRL_IS_REDOABLE, which returns a flag saying if the used UI
195 can be used again or not.
196
197 UI_set_default_method() changes the default UI method to the one given.
198 This function is not thread-safe and should not be called at the same
199 time as other OpenSSL functions.
200
201 UI_get_default_method() returns a pointer to the current default UI
202 method.
203
204 UI_get_method() returns the UI method associated with a given UI.
205
206 UI_set_method() changes the UI method associated with a given UI.
207
209 The resulting strings that the built in method UI_OpenSSL() generate
210 are assumed to be encoded according to the current locale or (for
211 Windows) code page. For applications having different demands, these
212 strings need to be converted appropriately by the caller. For Windows,
213 if the OPENSSL_WIN32_UTF8 environment variable is set, the built-in
214 method UI_OpenSSL() will produce UTF-8 encoded strings instead.
215
217 UI_new() and UI_new_method() return a valid UI structure or NULL if an
218 error occurred.
219
220 UI_add_input_string(), UI_dup_input_string(), UI_add_verify_string(),
221 UI_dup_verify_string(), UI_add_input_boolean(), UI_dup_input_boolean(),
222 UI_add_info_string(), UI_dup_info_string(), UI_add_error_string() and
223 UI_dup_error_string() return a positive number on success or a value
224 which is less than or equal to 0 otherwise.
225
226 UI_construct_prompt() returns a string or NULL if an error occurred.
227
228 UI_dup_user_data() returns 0 on success or -1 on error.
229
230 UI_get0_result() returns a string or NULL on error.
231
232 UI_get_result_length() returns a positive integer or 0 on success;
233 otherwise it returns -1 on error.
234
235 UI_process() returns 0 on success or a negative value on error.
236
237 UI_ctrl() returns a mask on success or -1 on error.
238
239 UI_get_default_method(), UI_get_method(), UI_OpenSSL(), UI_null() and
240 UI_set_method() return either a valid UI_METHOD structure or NULL
241 respectively.
242
244 The UI_dup_user_data() function was added in OpenSSL 1.1.1.
245
247 Copyright 2001-2020 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
248
249 Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License"). You may not use
250 this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy
251 in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at
252 <https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>.
253
254
255
2563.0.5 2022-11-01 UI_NEW(3ossl)