| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141 | 
							- =pod
 
- =head1 NAME
 
- CMS_verify, CMS_get0_signers - verify a CMS SignedData structure
 
- =head1 SYNOPSIS
 
-  #include <openssl/cms.h>
 
-  int CMS_verify(CMS_ContentInfo *cms, STACK_OF(X509) *certs, X509_STORE *store,
 
-                 BIO *indata, BIO *out, unsigned int flags);
 
-  STACK_OF(X509) *CMS_get0_signers(CMS_ContentInfo *cms);
 
- =head1 DESCRIPTION
 
- CMS_verify() is very similar to L<PKCS7_verify(3)>. It verifies a
 
- B<CMS SignedData> structure contained in a structure of type B<CMS_ContentInfo>.
 
- I<cms> points to the B<CMS_ContentInfo> structure to verify.
 
- The optional I<certs> parameter refers to a set of certificates
 
- in which to search for signing certificates.
 
- I<cms> may contain extra untrusted CA certificates that may be used for
 
- chain building as well as CRLs that may be used for certificate validation.
 
- I<store> may be NULL or point to
 
- the trusted certificate store to use for chain verification.
 
- I<indata> refers to the signed data if the content is detached from I<cms>.
 
- Otherwise I<indata> should be NULL and the signed data must be in I<cms>.
 
- The content is written to the BIO I<out> unless it is NULL.
 
- I<flags> is an optional set of flags, which can be used to modify the operation.
 
- CMS_get0_signers() retrieves the signing certificate(s) from I<cms>, it may only
 
- be called after a successful CMS_verify() operation.
 
- =head1 VERIFY PROCESS
 
- Normally the verify process proceeds as follows.
 
- Initially some sanity checks are performed on I<cms>. The type of I<cms> must
 
- be SignedData. There must be at least one signature on the data and if
 
- the content is detached I<indata> cannot be NULL.
 
- An attempt is made to locate all the signing certificate(s), first looking in
 
- the I<certs> parameter (if it is not NULL) and then looking in any
 
- certificates contained in the I<cms> structure unless B<CMS_NOINTERN> is set.
 
- If any signing certificate cannot be located the operation fails.
 
- Each signing certificate is chain verified using the I<smimesign> purpose and
 
- using the trusted certificate store I<store> if supplied.
 
- Any internal certificates in the message, which may have been added using
 
- L<CMS_add1_cert(3)>, are used as untrusted CAs.
 
- If CRL checking is enabled in I<store> and B<CMS_NOCRL> is not set,
 
- any internal CRLs, which may have been added using L<CMS_add1_crl(3)>,
 
- are used in addition to attempting to look them up in I<store>.
 
- If I<store> is not NULL and any chain verify fails an error code is returned.
 
- Finally the signed content is read (and written to I<out> unless it is NULL)
 
- and the signature is checked.
 
- If all signatures verify correctly then the function is successful.
 
- Any of the following flags (ored together) can be passed in the I<flags>
 
- parameter to change the default verify behaviour.
 
- If B<CMS_NOINTERN> is set the certificates in the message itself are not
 
- searched when locating the signing certificate(s).
 
- This means that all the signing certificates must be in the I<certs> parameter.
 
- If B<CMS_NOCRL> is set and CRL checking is enabled in I<store> then any
 
- CRLs in the message itself are ignored.
 
- If the B<CMS_TEXT> flag is set MIME headers for type B<text/plain> are deleted
 
- from the content. If the content is not of type B<text/plain> then an error is
 
- returned.
 
- If B<CMS_NO_SIGNER_CERT_VERIFY> is set the signing certificates are not
 
- chain verified.
 
- If B<CMS_NO_ATTR_VERIFY> is set the signed attributes signature is not
 
- verified.
 
- If B<CMS_NO_CONTENT_VERIFY> is set then the content digest is not checked.
 
- =head1 NOTES
 
- One application of B<CMS_NOINTERN> is to only accept messages signed by
 
- a small number of certificates. The acceptable certificates would be passed
 
- in the I<certs> parameter. In this case if the signer certificate is not one
 
- of the certificates supplied in I<certs> then the verify will fail because the
 
- signer cannot be found.
 
- In some cases the standard techniques for looking up and validating
 
- certificates are not appropriate: for example an application may wish to
 
- lookup certificates in a database or perform customised verification. This
 
- can be achieved by setting and verifying the signer certificates manually
 
- using the signed data utility functions.
 
- Care should be taken when modifying the default verify behaviour, for example
 
- setting B<CMS_NO_CONTENT_VERIFY> will totally disable all content verification
 
- and any modified content will be considered valid. This combination is however
 
- useful if one merely wishes to write the content to I<out> and its validity
 
- is not considered important.
 
- Chain verification should arguably be performed using the signing time rather
 
- than the current time. However, since the signing time is supplied by the
 
- signer it cannot be trusted without additional evidence (such as a trusted
 
- timestamp).
 
- =head1 RETURN VALUES
 
- CMS_verify() returns 1 for a successful verification and 0 if an error occurred.
 
- CMS_get0_signers() returns all signers or NULL if an error occurred.
 
- The error can be obtained from L<ERR_get_error(3)>
 
- =head1 BUGS
 
- The trusted certificate store is not searched for the signing certificate.
 
- This is primarily due to the inadequacies of the current B<X509_STORE>
 
- functionality.
 
- The lack of single pass processing means that the signed content must all
 
- be held in memory if it is not detached.
 
- =head1 SEE ALSO
 
- L<PKCS7_verify(3)>, L<CMS_add1_cert(3)>, L<CMS_add1_crl(3)>,
 
- L<OSSL_ESS_check_signing_certs(3)>,
 
- L<ERR_get_error(3)>, L<CMS_sign(3)>
 
- =head1 COPYRIGHT
 
- Copyright 2008-2022 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
 
 
  |