Mercurial > trustbridge > nss-cmake-static
diff nss/lib/pkcs7/secmime.h @ 0:1e5118fa0cb1
This is NSS with a Cmake Buildsyste
To compile a static NSS library for Windows we've used the
Chromium-NSS fork and added a Cmake buildsystem to compile
it statically for Windows. See README.chromium for chromium
changes and README.trustbridge for our modifications.
author | Andre Heinecke <andre.heinecke@intevation.de> |
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date | Mon, 28 Jul 2014 10:47:06 +0200 |
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--- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 +++ b/nss/lib/pkcs7/secmime.h Mon Jul 28 10:47:06 2014 +0200 @@ -0,0 +1,161 @@ +/* This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public + * License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this + * file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/. */ + +/* + * Header file for routines specific to S/MIME. Keep things that are pure + * pkcs7 out of here; this is for S/MIME policy, S/MIME interoperability, etc. + */ + +#ifndef _SECMIME_H_ +#define _SECMIME_H_ 1 + +#include "secpkcs7.h" + + +/************************************************************************/ +SEC_BEGIN_PROTOS + +/* + * Initialize the local recording of the user S/MIME cipher preferences. + * This function is called once for each cipher, the order being + * important (first call records greatest preference, and so on). + * When finished, it is called with a "which" of CIPHER_FAMILID_MASK. + * If the function is called again after that, it is assumed that + * the preferences are being reset, and the old preferences are + * discarded. + * + * XXX This is for a particular user, and right now the storage is + * XXX local, static. The preference should be stored elsewhere to allow + * XXX for multiple uses of one library? How does SSL handle this; + * XXX it has something similar? + * + * - The "which" values are defined in ciferfam.h (the SMIME_* values, + * for example SMIME_DES_CBC_56). + * - If "on" is non-zero then the named cipher is enabled, otherwise + * it is disabled. (It is not necessary to call the function for + * ciphers that are disabled, however, as that is the default.) + * + * If the cipher preference is successfully recorded, SECSuccess + * is returned. Otherwise SECFailure is returned. The only errors + * are due to failure allocating memory or bad parameters/calls: + * SEC_ERROR_XXX ("which" is not in the S/MIME cipher family) + * SEC_ERROR_XXX (function is being called more times than there + * are known/expected ciphers) + */ +extern SECStatus SECMIME_EnableCipher(long which, int on); + +/* + * Initialize the local recording of the S/MIME policy. + * This function is called to enable/disable a particular cipher. + * (S/MIME encryption or decryption using a particular cipher is only + * allowed if that cipher is currently enabled.) At startup, all S/MIME + * ciphers are disabled. From that point, this function can be called + * to enable a cipher -- it is not necessary to call this to disable + * a cipher unless that cipher was previously, explicitly enabled via + * this function. + * + * XXX This is for a the current module, I think, so local, static storage + * XXX is okay. Is that correct, or could multiple uses of the same + * XXX library expect to operate under different policies? + * + * - The "which" values are defined in ciferfam.h (the SMIME_* values, + * for example SMIME_DES_CBC_56). + * - If "on" is non-zero then the named cipher is enabled, otherwise + * it is disabled. + * + * If the cipher is successfully enabled/disabled, SECSuccess is + * returned. Otherwise SECFailure is returned. The only errors + * are due to bad parameters: + * SEC_ERROR_XXX ("which" is not in the S/MIME cipher family) + * SEC_ERROR_XXX ("which" exceeds expected maximum cipher; this is + * really an internal error) + */ +extern SECStatus SECMIME_SetPolicy(long which, int on); + +/* + * Does the current policy allow S/MIME decryption of this particular + * algorithm and keysize? + */ +extern PRBool SECMIME_DecryptionAllowed(SECAlgorithmID *algid, PK11SymKey *key); + +/* + * Does the current policy allow *any* S/MIME encryption (or decryption)? + * + * This tells whether or not *any* S/MIME encryption can be done, + * according to policy. Callers may use this to do nicer user interface + * (say, greying out a checkbox so a user does not even try to encrypt + * a message when they are not allowed to) or for any reason they want + * to check whether S/MIME encryption (or decryption, for that matter) + * may be done. + * + * It takes no arguments. The return value is a simple boolean: + * PR_TRUE means encryption (or decryption) is *possible* + * (but may still fail due to other reasons, like because we cannot + * find all the necessary certs, etc.; PR_TRUE is *not* a guarantee) + * PR_FALSE means encryption (or decryption) is not permitted + * + * There are no errors from this routine. + */ +extern PRBool SECMIME_EncryptionPossible(void); + +/* + * Start an S/MIME encrypting context. + * + * "scert" is the cert for the sender. It will be checked for validity. + * "rcerts" are the certs for the recipients. They will also be checked. + * + * "certdb" is the cert database to use for verifying the certs. + * It can be NULL if a default database is available (like in the client). + * + * This function already does all of the stuff specific to S/MIME protocol + * and local policy; the return value just needs to be passed to + * SEC_PKCS7Encode() or to SEC_PKCS7EncoderStart() to create the encoded data, + * and finally to SEC_PKCS7DestroyContentInfo(). + * + * An error results in a return value of NULL and an error set. + * (Retrieve specific errors via PORT_GetError()/XP_GetError().) + */ +extern SEC_PKCS7ContentInfo *SECMIME_CreateEncrypted(CERTCertificate *scert, + CERTCertificate **rcerts, + CERTCertDBHandle *certdb, + SECKEYGetPasswordKey pwfn, + void *pwfn_arg); + +/* + * Start an S/MIME signing context. + * + * "scert" is the cert that will be used to sign the data. It will be + * checked for validity. + * + * "certdb" is the cert database to use for verifying the cert. + * It can be NULL if a default database is available (like in the client). + * + * "digestalg" names the digest algorithm. (It should be SEC_OID_SHA1; + * XXX There should be SECMIME functions for hashing, or the hashing should + * be built into this interface, which we would like because we would + * support more smartcards that way, and then this argument should go away.) + * + * "digest" is the actual digest of the data. It must be provided in + * the case of detached data or NULL if the content will be included. + * + * This function already does all of the stuff specific to S/MIME protocol + * and local policy; the return value just needs to be passed to + * SEC_PKCS7Encode() or to SEC_PKCS7EncoderStart() to create the encoded data, + * and finally to SEC_PKCS7DestroyContentInfo(). + * + * An error results in a return value of NULL and an error set. + * (Retrieve specific errors via PORT_GetError()/XP_GetError().) + */ +extern SEC_PKCS7ContentInfo *SECMIME_CreateSigned(CERTCertificate *scert, + CERTCertificate *ecert, + CERTCertDBHandle *certdb, + SECOidTag digestalg, + SECItem *digest, + SECKEYGetPasswordKey pwfn, + void *pwfn_arg); + +/************************************************************************/ +SEC_END_PROTOS + +#endif /* _SECMIME_H_ */