Manual Page Result
0
Command: X509_ATTRIBUTE_new | Section: 3 | Source: OpenBSD | File: X509_ATTRIBUTE_new.3
X509_ATTRIBUTE_NEW(3) FreeBSD Library Functions Manual X509_ATTRIBUTE_NEW(3)
NAME
X509_ATTRIBUTE_new, X509_ATTRIBUTE_create, X509_ATTRIBUTE_dup,
X509_ATTRIBUTE_free - generic X.501 Attribute
SYNOPSIS
#include <openssl/x509.h>
X509_ATTRIBUTE *
X509_ATTRIBUTE_new(void);
X509_ATTRIBUTE *
X509_ATTRIBUTE_create(int nid, int type, void *value);
X509_ATTRIBUTE *
X509_ATTRIBUTE_dup(X509_ATTRIBUTE *attr);
void
X509_ATTRIBUTE_free(X509_ATTRIBUTE *attr);
DESCRIPTION
In the X.501 standard, an Attribute is the fundamental ASN.1 data type
used to represent any kind of property of any kind of directory entry.
In OpenSSL, very few objects use it directly, most notably the
X509_REQ_INFO object used for PKCS#10 certification requests described in
X509_REQ_new(3), the PKCS8_PRIV_KEY_INFO object used for PKCS#8 private
key information described in PKCS8_PRIV_KEY_INFO_new(3), and the
PKCS12_SAFEBAG container object described in PKCS12_SAFEBAG_new(3).
X509_ATTRIBUTE_new() allocates and initializes an empty X509_ATTRIBUTE
object.
X509_ATTRIBUTE_create() allocates a new multi-valued X509_ATTRIBUTE
object of the type nid and initializes its set of values to contain one
new ASN.1 ANY object with the given value and type. The type usually is
one of the V_ASN1_* constants defined in <openssl/asn1.h>; it is stored
without validating it. If the function succeeds, ownership of the value
is transferred to the new X509_ATTRIBUTE object.
Be careful to not confuse the type of the attribute and the type of the
value.
X509_ATTRIBUTE_dup() creates a deep copy of attr.
X509_ATTRIBUTE_free() frees attr.
RETURN VALUES
X509_ATTRIBUTE_new(), X509_ATTRIBUTE_create(), and X509_ATTRIBUTE_dup()
return the new X509_ATTRIBUTE object or NULL if an error occurs.
In particular, these functions fail if memory allocation fails.
X509_ATTRIBUTE_create() also fails if OBJ_nid2obj(3) fails on nid.
SEE ALSO
d2i_X509_ATTRIBUTE(3), OBJ_nid2obj(3), PKCS12_SAFEBAG_new(3),
PKCS7_add_attribute(3), PKCS8_pkey_get0_attrs(3),
PKCS8_PRIV_KEY_INFO_new(3), X509_ATTRIBUTE_get0_object(3),
X509_ATTRIBUTE_set1_object(3), X509_EXTENSION_new(3), X509_new(3),
X509_REQ_add1_attr(3), X509_REQ_new(3)
STANDARDS
For the general definition of the Attribute data type:
ITU-T Recommendation X.501, also known as ISO/IEC 9594-2: Information
Technology - Open Systems Interconnection - The Directory: Models,
section 8.2: Overall structure
For the specific definition in the context of certification requests:
RFC 2986: PKCS #10: Certification Request Syntax Specification, section
4.1: CertificationRequestInfo
For the specific use in the context of private key information:
RFC 5208: Public-Key Cryptography Standards (PKCS) #8: Private-Key
Information Syntax Specification
For the specific definition in the context of PFX:
RFC 7292: PKCS #12: Personal Information Exchange Syntax, section 4.2:
The SafeBag Type
HISTORY
X509_ATTRIBUTE_new() and X509_ATTRIBUTE_free() first appeared in SSLeay
0.5.1 and have been available since OpenBSD 2.4.
X509_ATTRIBUTE_create() and X509_ATTRIBUTE_dup() first appeared in SSLeay
0.9.1 and have been available since OpenBSD 2.6.
BUGS
A data type designed to hold arbitrary data is an oxymoron.
While it may occasionally be useful for abstract syntax specification or
for generic container objects, using it for the representation of
specific data in a specific data structure feels like dubious design.
Having two distinct data types to hold arbitrary data - in this case,
X509_ATTRIBUTE on the X.501 language level and X509_EXTENSION as
described in X509_EXTENSION_new(3) on the X.509 language level - feels
even more questionable, in particular considering that Attributes in
certification requests can be used to ask for Extensions in certificates.
At the very least, the direct use of the low-level generic X509_ATTRIBUTE
type in specific data types like certification requests or private key
information looks like a layering violation and appears to put type
safety into jeopardy.
FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE-p8 September 2, 2024 FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE-p8