CMS_sign(3)
CMS_sign(3) OpenSSL CMS_sign(3)
NAME
CMS_sign - create a CMS SignedData structure
SYNOPSIS
#include <openssl/cms.h>
CMS_ContentInfo *CMS_sign(X509 *signcert, EVP_PKEY *pkey, STACK_OF(X509) *certs, BIO *data, unsigned int flags);
DESCRIPTION
CMS_sign() creates and returns a CMS SignedData structure.
signcert is the certificate to sign with, pkey is the
corresponding private key. certs is an optional additional
set of certificates to include in the CMS structure (for
example any intermediate CAs in the chain). Any or all of
these parameters can be NULL, see NOTES below.
The data to be signed is read from BIO data.
flags is an optional set of flags.
NOTES
Any of the following flags (ored together) can be passed in
the flags parameter.
Many S/MIME clients expect the signed content to include
valid MIME headers. If the CMS_TEXT flag is set MIME headers
for type text/plain are prepended to the data.
If CMS_NOCERTS is set the signer's certificate will not be
included in the CMS_ContentInfo structure, the signer's
certificate must still be supplied in the signcert parameter
though. This can reduce the size of the signature if the
signers certificate can be obtained by other means: for
example a previously signed message.
The data being signed is included in the CMS_ContentInfo
structure, unless CMS_DETACHED is set in which case it is
omitted. This is used for CMS_ContentInfo detached
signatures which are used in S/MIME plaintext signed
messages for example.
Normally the supplied content is translated into MIME
canonical format (as required by the S/MIME specifications)
if CMS_BINARY is set no translation occurs. This option
should be used if the supplied data is in binary format
otherwise the translation will corrupt it.
The SignedData structure includes several CMS
signedAttributes including the signing time, the CMS content
type and the supported list of ciphers in an
SMIMECapabilities attribute. If CMS_NOATTR is set then no
signedAttributes will be used. If CMS_NOSMIMECAP is set then
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CMS_sign(3) OpenSSL CMS_sign(3)
just the SMIMECapabilities are omitted.
If present the SMIMECapabilities attribute indicates support
for the following algorithms in preference order: 256 bit
AES, Gost R3411-94, Gost 28147-89, 192 bit AES, 128 bit AES,
triple DES, 128 bit RC2, 64 bit RC2, DES and 40 bit RC2. If
any of these algorithms is not available then it will not be
included: for example the GOST algorithms will not be
included if the GOST ENGINE is not loaded.
OpenSSL will by default identify signing certificates using
issuer name and serial number. If CMS_USE_KEYID is set it
will use the subject key identifier value instead. An error
occurs if the signing certificate does not have a subject
key identifier extension.
If the flags CMS_STREAM is set then the returned
CMS_ContentInfo structure is just initialized ready to
perform the signing operation. The signing is however not
performed and the data to be signed is not read from the
data parameter. Signing is deferred until after the data has
been written. In this way data can be signed in a single
pass.
If the CMS_PARTIAL flag is set a partial CMS_ContentInfo
structure is output to which additional signers and
capabilities can be added before finalization.
If the flag CMS_STREAM is set the returned CMS_ContentInfo
structure is not complete and outputting its contents via a
function that does not properly finalize the CMS_ContentInfo
structure will give unpredictable results.
Several functions including SMIME_write_CMS(),
i2d_CMS_bio_stream(), PEM_write_bio_CMS_stream() finalize
the structure. Alternatively finalization can be performed
by obtaining the streaming ASN1 BIO directly using
BIO_new_CMS().
If a signer is specified it will use the default digest for
the signing algorithm. This is SHA1 for both RSA and DSA
keys.
If signcert and pkey are NULL then a certificates only CMS
structure is output.
The function CMS_sign() is a basic CMS signing function
whose output will be suitable for many purposes. For finer
control of the output format the certs, signcert and pkey
parameters can all be NULL and the CMS_PARTIAL flag set.
Then one or more signers can be added using the function
CMS_sign_add1_signer(), non default digests can be used and
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CMS_sign(3) OpenSSL CMS_sign(3)
custom attributes added. CCMMSS_ffiinnaall(()) must then be called to
finalize the structure if streaming is not enabled.
BUGS
Some attributes such as counter signatures are not
supported.
RETURN VALUES
CMS_sign() returns either a valid CMS_ContentInfo structure
or NULL if an error occurred. The error can be obtained from
ERR_get_error(3).
SEE ALSO
ERR_get_error(3), CMS_verify(3)
HISTORY
CMS_sign() was added to OpenSSL 0.9.8
The CMS_STREAM flag is only supported for detached data in
OpenSSL 0.9.8, it is supported for embedded data in OpenSSL
1.0.0 and later.
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