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- =pod
- =head1 NAME
- RAND_add, RAND_seed, RAND_status, RAND_event, RAND_screen - add
- entropy to the PRNG
- =head1 SYNOPSIS
- #include <openssl/rand.h>
- void RAND_seed(const void *buf, int num);
- void RAND_add(const void *buf, int num, double entropy);
- int RAND_status(void);
- int RAND_event(UINT iMsg, WPARAM wParam, LPARAM lParam);
- void RAND_screen(void);
- =head1 DESCRIPTION
- RAND_add() mixes the B<num> bytes at B<buf> into the PRNG state. Thus,
- if the data at B<buf> are unpredictable to an adversary, this
- increases the uncertainty about the state and makes the PRNG output
- less predictable. Suitable input comes from user interaction (random
- key presses, mouse movements) and certain hardware events. The
- B<entropy> argument is (the lower bound of) an estimate of how much
- randomness is contained in B<buf>, measured in bytes. Details about
- sources of randomness and how to estimate their entropy can be found
- in the literature, e.g. RFC 1750.
- RAND_add() may be called with sensitive data such as user entered
- passwords. The seed values cannot be recovered from the PRNG output.
- OpenSSL makes sure that the PRNG state is unique for each thread. On
- systems that provide C</dev/urandom>, the randomness device is used
- to seed the PRNG transparently. However, on all other systems, the
- application is responsible for seeding the PRNG by calling RAND_add(),
- L<RAND_egd(3)|RAND_egd(3)>
- or L<RAND_load_file(3)|RAND_load_file(3)>.
- RAND_seed() is equivalent to RAND_add() when B<num == entropy>.
- RAND_event() collects the entropy from Windows events such as mouse
- movements and other user interaction. It should be called with the
- B<iMsg>, B<wParam> and B<lParam> arguments of I<all> messages sent to
- the window procedure. It will estimate the entropy contained in the
- event message (if any), and add it to the PRNG. The program can then
- process the messages as usual.
- The RAND_screen() function is available for the convenience of Windows
- programmers. It adds the current contents of the screen to the PRNG.
- For applications that can catch Windows events, seeding the PRNG by
- calling RAND_event() is a significantly better source of
- randomness. It should be noted that both methods cannot be used on
- servers that run without user interaction.
- =head1 RETURN VALUES
- RAND_status() and RAND_event() return 1 if the PRNG has been seeded
- with enough data, 0 otherwise.
- The other functions do not return values.
- =head1 SEE ALSO
- L<rand(3)|rand(3)>, L<RAND_egd(3)|RAND_egd(3)>,
- L<RAND_load_file(3)|RAND_load_file(3)>, L<RAND_cleanup(3)|RAND_cleanup(3)>
- =head1 HISTORY
- RAND_seed() and RAND_screen() are available in all versions of SSLeay
- and OpenSSL. RAND_add() and RAND_status() have been added in OpenSSL
- 0.9.5, RAND_event() in OpenSSL 0.9.5a.
- =cut
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