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- =pod
- =head1 NAME
- SSL_CTX_set_tmp_dh_callback, SSL_CTX_set_tmp_dh, SSL_set_tmp_dh_callback, SSL_set_tmp_dh - handle DH keys for ephemeral key exchange
- =head1 SYNOPSIS
- #include <openssl/ssl.h>
- void SSL_CTX_set_tmp_dh_callback(SSL_CTX *ctx,
- DH *(*tmp_dh_callback)(SSL *ssl, int is_export,
- int keylength));
- long SSL_CTX_set_tmp_dh(SSL_CTX *ctx, DH *dh);
- void SSL_set_tmp_dh_callback(SSL *ctx,
- DH *(*tmp_dh_callback)(SSL *ssl, int is_export,
- int keylength));
- long SSL_set_tmp_dh(SSL *ssl, DH *dh)
- =head1 DESCRIPTION
- SSL_CTX_set_tmp_dh_callback() sets the callback function for B<ctx> to be
- used when a DH parameters are required to B<tmp_dh_callback>.
- The callback is inherited by all B<ssl> objects created from B<ctx>.
- SSL_CTX_set_tmp_dh() sets DH parameters to be used to be B<dh>.
- The key is inherited by all B<ssl> objects created from B<ctx>.
- SSL_set_tmp_dh_callback() sets the callback only for B<ssl>.
- SSL_set_tmp_dh() sets the parameters only for B<ssl>.
- These functions apply to SSL/TLS servers only.
- =head1 NOTES
- When using a cipher with RSA authentication, an ephemeral DH key exchange
- can take place. Ciphers with DSA keys always use ephemeral DH keys as well.
- In these cases, the session data are negotiated using the
- ephemeral/temporary DH key and the key supplied and certified
- by the certificate chain is only used for signing.
- Anonymous ciphers (without a permanent server key) also use ephemeral DH keys.
- Using ephemeral DH key exchange yields forward secrecy, as the connection
- can only be decrypted, when the DH key is known. By generating a temporary
- DH key inside the server application that is lost when the application
- is left, it becomes impossible for an attacker to decrypt past sessions,
- even if he gets hold of the normal (certified) key, as this key was
- only used for signing.
- In order to perform a DH key exchange the server must use a DH group
- (DH parameters) and generate a DH key. The server will always generate
- a new DH key during the negotiation.
- As generating DH parameters is extremely time consuming, an application
- should not generate the parameters on the fly but supply the parameters.
- DH parameters can be reused, as the actual key is newly generated during
- the negotiation. The risk in reusing DH parameters is that an attacker
- may specialize on a very often used DH group. Applications should therefore
- generate their own DH parameters during the installation process using the
- openssl L<dhparam(1)> application. This application
- guarantees that "strong" primes are used.
- Files dh2048.pem, and dh4096.pem in the 'apps' directory of the current
- version of the OpenSSL distribution contain the 'SKIP' DH parameters,
- which use safe primes and were generated verifiably pseudo-randomly.
- These files can be converted into C code using the B<-C> option of the
- L<dhparam(1)> application. Generation of custom DH
- parameters during installation should still be preferred to stop an
- attacker from specializing on a commonly used group. File dh1024.pem
- contains old parameters that must not be used by applications.
- An application may either directly specify the DH parameters or
- can supply the DH parameters via a callback function.
- Previous versions of the callback used B<is_export> and B<keylength>
- parameters to control parameter generation for export and non-export
- cipher suites. Modern servers that do not support export cipher suites
- are advised to either use SSL_CTX_set_tmp_dh() or alternatively, use
- the callback but ignore B<keylength> and B<is_export> and simply
- supply at least 2048-bit parameters in the callback.
- =head1 EXAMPLES
- Setup DH parameters with a key length of 2048 bits. (Error handling
- partly left out.)
- Command-line parameter generation:
- $ openssl dhparam -out dh_param_2048.pem 2048
- Code for setting up parameters during server initialization:
- SSL_CTX ctx = SSL_CTX_new();
- DH *dh_2048 = NULL;
- FILE *paramfile = fopen("dh_param_2048.pem", "r");
- if (paramfile) {
- dh_2048 = PEM_read_DHparams(paramfile, NULL, NULL, NULL);
- fclose(paramfile);
- } else {
- /* Error. */
- }
- if (dh_2048 == NULL)
- /* Error. */
- if (SSL_CTX_set_tmp_dh(ctx, dh_2048) != 1)
- /* Error. */
- ...
- =head1 RETURN VALUES
- SSL_CTX_set_tmp_dh_callback() and SSL_set_tmp_dh_callback() do not return
- diagnostic output.
- SSL_CTX_set_tmp_dh() and SSL_set_tmp_dh() do return 1 on success and 0
- on failure. Check the error queue to find out the reason of failure.
- =head1 SEE ALSO
- L<ssl(7)>, L<SSL_CTX_set_cipher_list(3)>,
- L<SSL_CTX_set_options(3)>,
- L<ciphers(1)>, L<dhparam(1)>
- =head1 COPYRIGHT
- Copyright 2001-2016 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
- Licensed under the OpenSSL license (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
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