123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141 |
- =pod
- =head1 NAME
- OPENSSL_NO_DEPRECATED_3_2, OSSL_DEPRECATEDIN_3_2,
- OPENSSL_NO_DEPRECATED_3_0, OSSL_DEPRECATEDIN_3_0,
- OPENSSL_NO_DEPRECATED_1_1_1, OSSL_DEPRECATEDIN_1_1_1,
- OPENSSL_NO_DEPRECATED_1_1_0, OSSL_DEPRECATEDIN_1_1_0,
- OPENSSL_NO_DEPRECATED_1_0_2, OSSL_DEPRECATEDIN_1_0_2,
- OPENSSL_NO_DEPRECATED_1_0_1, OSSL_DEPRECATEDIN_1_0_1,
- OPENSSL_NO_DEPRECATED_1_0_0, OSSL_DEPRECATEDIN_1_0_0,
- OPENSSL_NO_DEPRECATED_0_9_8, OSSL_DEPRECATEDIN_0_9_8,
- deprecation - How to do deprecation
- =head1 DESCRIPTION
- Deprecation of a symbol is adding an attribute to the declaration of that
- symbol (function, type, variable, but we currently only do that for
- functions in our public header files, F<< <openssl/*.h> >>).
- Removal of a symbol is not the same thing as deprecation, as it actually
- explicitly removes the symbol from public view.
- OpenSSL configuration supports deprecation as well as simulating removal of
- symbols from public view (with the configuration option C<no-deprecated>, or
- if the user chooses to do so, with L<OPENSSL_NO_DEPRECATED(7)>), and also
- supports doing this in terms of a specified OpenSSL version (with the
- configuration option C<--api>, or if the user chooses to do so, with
- L<OPENSSL_API_COMPAT(7)>).
- Deprecation is done using attribute macros named
- B<OSSL_DEPRECATEDIN_I<version>>, used with any declaration it applies to.
- Simulating removal is done with C<#ifndef> preprocessor guards using macros
- named B<OPENSSL_NO_DEPRECATED_I<version>>.
- B<OSSL_DEPRECATEDIN_I<version>> and B<OPENSSL_NO_DEPRECATED_I<version>> are
- defined in F<< <openssl/macros.h> >>.
- In those macro names, B<I<version>> corresponds to the OpenSSL release since
- which the deprecation applies, with underscores instead of periods. Because
- of the change in version scheme with OpenSSL 3.0, the B<I<version>> for
- versions before that are three numbers (such as C<1_1_0>), while they are
- two numbers (such as C<3_0>) from 3.0 and on.
- The implementation of a deprecated symbol is kept for one of two reasons:
- =over 4
- =item Planned to be removed
- The symbol and its implementation are planned to be removed some time in the
- future, but needs to remain available until that time.
- Such an implementation needs to be guarded appropriately, as shown in
- L</Implementations to be removed> below.
- =item Planned to remain internally
- The symbol is planned to be removed from public view, but will otherwise
- remain for internal purposes. In this case, the implementation doesn't need
- to change or be guarded.
- However, it's necessary to ensure that the declaration remains available for
- the translation unit where the symbol is used or implemented, even when the
- symbol is publicly unavailable through simulated removal. That's done by
- including an internal header file very early in the affected translation
- units. See L</Implementations to remain internally> below.
- In the future, when the deprecated declaration is to actually be removed
- from public view, it should be moved to an internal header file, with the
- deprecation attribute removed, and the translation units that implement or
- use that symbol should adjust their header inclusions accordingly.
- =back
- =head1 EXAMPLES
- =head2 Header files
- In public header files (F<< <openssl/*.h> >>), this is what a deprecation is
- expected to look like, including the preprocessor wrapping for simulated
- removal:
- # ifndef OPENSSL_NO_DEPRECATED_3_0
- /* ... */
- OSSL_DEPRECATEDIN_3_0 RSA *RSA_new_method(ENGINE *engine);
- /* ... */
- # endif
- =head2 Implementations to be removed
- For a deprecated function that we plan to remove in the future, for example
- RSA_new_method(), the following should be found very early (before including
- any OpenSSL header file) in the translation unit that implements it and in
- any translation unit that uses it:
- /*
- * Suppress deprecation warnings for RSA low level implementations that are
- * kept until removal.
- */
- #define OPENSSL_SUPPRESS_DEPRECATED
- The RSA_new_method() implementation itself must be guarded the same way as
- its declaration in the public header file is:
- #ifndef OPENSSL_NO_DEPRECATED_3_0
- RSA *RSA_new_method(ENGINE *engine)
- {
- /* ... */
- }
- #endif
- =head2 Implementations to remain internally
- For a deprecated function that we plan to keep internally, for example
- RSA_size(), the following should be found very early (before including any
- other OpenSSL header file) in the translation unit that implements it and in
- any translation unit that uses it:
- /*
- * RSA low level APIs are deprecated for public use, but are kept for
- * internal use.
- */
- #include "internal/deprecated.h"
- =head1 SEE ALSO
- L<openssl_user_macros(7)>
- =head1 COPYRIGHT
- Copyright 2020-2021 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
- Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License"). You may not use
- this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy
- in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at
- L<https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>.
- =cut
|