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Full Discussion: libcrypto.so.0.9.7
Operating Systems Solaris libcrypto.so.0.9.7 Post 302444113 by hergp on Wednesday 11th of August 2010 01:36:40 AM
Old 08-11-2010
Maybe the documentation of libcrypto at OpenSSL: Documents, crypto(3) helps.
 

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crypto(3openssl)						      OpenSSL							  crypto(3openssl)

NAME
crypto - OpenSSL cryptographic library SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
The OpenSSL crypto library implements a wide range of cryptographic algorithms used in various Internet standards. The services provided by this library are used by the OpenSSL implementations of SSL, TLS and S/MIME, and they have also been used to implement SSH, OpenPGP, and other cryptographic standards. OVERVIEW
libcrypto consists of a number of sub-libraries that implement the individual algorithms. The functionality includes symmetric encryption, public key cryptography and key agreement, certificate handling, cryptographic hash func- tions and a cryptographic pseudo-random number generator. SYMMETRIC CIPHERS blowfish(3), cast(3), des(3), idea(3), rc2(3), rc4(3), rc5(3) PUBLIC KEY CRYPTOGRAPHY AND KEY AGREEMENT dsa(3), dh(3), rsa(3) CERTIFICATES x509(3), x509v3(3) AUTHENTICATION CODES, HASH FUNCTIONS hmac(3), md2(3), md4(3), md5(3), mdc2(3), ripemd(3), sha(3) AUXILIARY FUNCTIONS err(3), threads(3), rand(3), OPENSSL_VERSION_NUMBER(3) INPUT/OUTPUT, DATA ENCODING asn1(3), bio(3), evp(3), pem(3), pkcs7(3), pkcs12(3) INTERNAL FUNCTIONS bn(3), buffer(3), lhash(3), objects(3), stack(3), txt_db(3) NOTES
Some of the newer functions follow a naming convention using the numbers 0 and 1. For example the functions: int X509_CRL_add0_revoked(X509_CRL *crl, X509_REVOKED *rev); int X509_add1_trust_object(X509 *x, ASN1_OBJECT *obj); The 0 version uses the supplied structure pointer directly in the parent and it will be freed up when the parent is freed. In the above example crl would be freed but rev would not. The 1 function uses a copy of the supplied structure pointer (or in some cases increases its link count) in the parent and so both (x and obj above) should be freed up. SEE ALSO
openssl(1), ssl(3) OpenSSL-0.9.8 Oct 11 2005 crypto(3openssl)
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