/* crypto/ui/ui.h -*- mode:C; c-file-style: "eay" -*- */
-/* Written by Richard Levitte (levitte@stacken.kth.se) for the OpenSSL
- * project 2000.
+/*
+ * Written by Richard Levitte (richard@levitte.org) for the OpenSSL project
+ * 2001.
*/
/* ====================================================================
- * Copyright (c) 1998-2000 The OpenSSL Project. All rights reserved.
+ * Copyright (c) 2001 The OpenSSL Project. All rights reserved.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
*
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
- * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
+ * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
*
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in
*/
#ifndef HEADER_UI_H
-#define HEADER_UI_H
+# define HEADER_UI_H
-#include <openssl/crypto.h>
-#include <openssl/safestack.h>
+# ifndef OPENSSL_NO_DEPRECATED
+# include <openssl/crypto.h>
+# endif
+# include <openssl/safestack.h>
+# include <openssl/ossl_typ.h>
#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif
-/* The UI type is a holder for a specific user interface session. It can
- contain an illimited number of informational or error strings as well
- as things to prompt for, both passwords (noecho mode) and others (echo
- mode), and verification of the same. All of these are called strings,
- and are further described below. */
-typedef struct ui_st UI;
+/* Declared already in ossl_typ.h */
+/* typedef struct ui_st UI; */
+/* typedef struct ui_method_st UI_METHOD; */
-/* All instances of UI have a reference to a method structure, which is a
- ordered vector of functions that implement the lower level things to do.
- There is an instruction on the implementation further down, in the section
- for method implementors. */
-typedef struct ui_method_st UI_METHOD;
-
-
-/* All the following functions return -1 or NULL on error. When everything is
- fine, they return 0, a positive value or a non-NULL pointer, all depending
- on their purpose. */
+/*
+ * All the following functions return -1 or NULL on error and in some cases
+ * (UI_process()) -2 if interrupted or in some other way cancelled. When
+ * everything is fine, they return 0, a positive value or a non-NULL pointer,
+ * all depending on their purpose.
+ */
/* Creators and destructor. */
UI *UI_new(void);
UI *UI_new_method(const UI_METHOD *method);
void UI_free(UI *ui);
-/* The following functions are used to add strings to be printed and prompt
- strings to prompt for data. The names are UI_{add,dup}_<function>_string,
- with the following meanings:
- add add a text or prompt string. The pointers given to these
- functions are used verbatim, no copying is done.
- dup make a copy of the text or prompt string, then add the copy
- to the collection of strings in the user interface.
- <function>
- The function is a name for the functionality that the given
- string shall be used for. It can be one of:
- input use the string as data prompt.
- verify use the string as verification prompt. This
- is used to verify a previous input.
- info use the string for informational output.
- error use the string for error output.
+/*-
+ The following functions are used to add strings to be printed and prompt
+ strings to prompt for data. The names are UI_{add,dup}_<function>_string
+ and UI_{add,dup}_input_boolean.
+
+ UI_{add,dup}_<function>_string have the following meanings:
+ add add a text or prompt string. The pointers given to these
+ functions are used verbatim, no copying is done.
+ dup make a copy of the text or prompt string, then add the copy
+ to the collection of strings in the user interface.
+ <function>
+ The function is a name for the functionality that the given
+ string shall be used for. It can be one of:
+ input use the string as data prompt.
+ verify use the string as verification prompt. This
+ is used to verify a previous input.
+ info use the string for informational output.
+ error use the string for error output.
Honestly, there's currently no difference between info and error for the
moment.
- All of the functions in this group take a UI and a string. The input and
- verify addition functions also take an echo flag, a buffer for the result
- to end up with, a minimum input size and a maximum input size (the result
- buffer MUST be large enough to be able to contain the maximum number of
- characters). Additionally, the verify addition functions takes another
- buffer to compare the result against.
+ UI_{add,dup}_input_boolean have the same semantics for "add" and "dup",
+ and are typically used when one wants to prompt for a yes/no response.
+
+ All of the functions in this group take a UI and a prompt string.
+ The string input and verify addition functions also take a flag argument,
+ a buffer for the result to end up with, a minimum input size and a maximum
+ input size (the result buffer MUST be large enough to be able to contain
+ the maximum number of characters). Additionally, the verify addition
+ functions takes another buffer to compare the result against.
+ The boolean input functions take an action description string (which should
+ be safe to ignore if the expected user action is obvious, for example with
+ a dialog box with an OK button and a Cancel button), a string of acceptable
+ characters to mean OK and to mean Cancel. The two last strings are checked
+ to make sure they don't have common characters. Additionally, the same
+ flag argument as for the string input is taken, as well as a result buffer.
+ The result buffer is required to be at least one byte long. Depending on
+ the answer, the first character from the OK or the Cancel character strings
+ will be stored in the first byte of the result buffer. No NUL will be
+ added, so the result is *not* a string.
On success, the all return an index of the added information. That index
is usefull when retrieving results with UI_get0_result(). */
-int UI_add_input_string(UI *ui, const char *prompt, int echo_p,
- char *result_buf, int minsize, int maxsize);
-int UI_dup_input_string(UI *ui, const char *prompt, int echo_p,
- char *result_buf, int minsize, int maxsize);
-int UI_add_verify_string(UI *ui, const char *prompt, int echo_p,
- char *result_buf, int minsize, int maxsize, const char *test_buf);
-int UI_dup_verify_string(UI *ui, const char *prompt, int echo_p,
- char *result_buf, int minsize, int maxsize, const char *test_buf);
+int UI_add_input_string(UI *ui, const char *prompt, int flags,
+ char *result_buf, int minsize, int maxsize);
+int UI_dup_input_string(UI *ui, const char *prompt, int flags,
+ char *result_buf, int minsize, int maxsize);
+int UI_add_verify_string(UI *ui, const char *prompt, int flags,
+ char *result_buf, int minsize, int maxsize,
+ const char *test_buf);
+int UI_dup_verify_string(UI *ui, const char *prompt, int flags,
+ char *result_buf, int minsize, int maxsize,
+ const char *test_buf);
+int UI_add_input_boolean(UI *ui, const char *prompt, const char *action_desc,
+ const char *ok_chars, const char *cancel_chars,
+ int flags, char *result_buf);
+int UI_dup_input_boolean(UI *ui, const char *prompt, const char *action_desc,
+ const char *ok_chars, const char *cancel_chars,
+ int flags, char *result_buf);
int UI_add_info_string(UI *ui, const char *text);
int UI_dup_info_string(UI *ui, const char *text);
int UI_add_error_string(UI *ui, const char *text);
int UI_dup_error_string(UI *ui, const char *text);
-/* The following function is used to store a pointer to user-specific data.
- Any previous such pointer will be returned and replaced.
-
- For callback purposes, this function makes a lot more sense than using
- ex_data, since the latter requires that different parts of OpenSSL or
- applications share the same ex_data index.
+/* These are the possible flags. They can be or'ed together. */
+/* Use to have echoing of input */
+# define UI_INPUT_FLAG_ECHO 0x01
+/*
+ * Use a default password. Where that password is found is completely up to
+ * the application, it might for example be in the user data set with
+ * UI_add_user_data(). It is not recommended to have more than one input in
+ * each UI being marked with this flag, or the application might get
+ * confused.
+ */
+# define UI_INPUT_FLAG_DEFAULT_PWD 0x02
+
+/*-
+ * The user of these routines may want to define flags of their own. The core
+ * UI won't look at those, but will pass them on to the method routines. They
+ * must use higher bits so they don't get confused with the UI bits above.
+ * UI_INPUT_FLAG_USER_BASE tells which is the lowest bit to use. A good
+ * example of use is this:
+ *
+ * #define MY_UI_FLAG1 (0x01 << UI_INPUT_FLAG_USER_BASE)
+ *
+*/
+# define UI_INPUT_FLAG_USER_BASE 16
+
+/*-
+ * The following function helps construct a prompt. object_desc is a
+ * textual short description of the object, for example "pass phrase",
+ * and object_name is the name of the object (might be a card name or
+ * a file name.
+ * The returned string shall always be allocated on the heap with
+ * OPENSSL_malloc(), and need to be free'd with OPENSSL_free().
+ *
+ * If the ui_method doesn't contain a pointer to a user-defined prompt
+ * constructor, a default string is built, looking like this:
+ *
+ * "Enter {object_desc} for {object_name}:"
+ *
+ * So, if object_desc has the value "pass phrase" and object_name has
+ * the value "foo.key", the resulting string is:
+ *
+ * "Enter pass phrase for foo.key:"
+*/
+char *UI_construct_prompt(UI *ui_method,
+ const char *object_desc, const char *object_name);
- Note that the UI_OpenSSL() method completely ignores the user data.
- Other methods may not, however. */
+/*
+ * The following function is used to store a pointer to user-specific data.
+ * Any previous such pointer will be returned and replaced.
+ *
+ * For callback purposes, this function makes a lot more sense than using
+ * ex_data, since the latter requires that different parts of OpenSSL or
+ * applications share the same ex_data index.
+ *
+ * Note that the UI_OpenSSL() method completely ignores the user data. Other
+ * methods may not, however.
+ */
void *UI_add_user_data(UI *ui, void *user_data);
/* We need a user data retrieving function as well. */
void *UI_get0_user_data(UI *ui);
/* When all strings have been added, process the whole thing. */
int UI_process(UI *ui);
+/*
+ * Give a user interface parametrised control commands. This can be used to
+ * send down an integer, a data pointer or a function pointer, as well as be
+ * used to get information from a UI.
+ */
+int UI_ctrl(UI *ui, int cmd, long i, void *p, void (*f) (void));
+
+/* The commands */
+/*
+ * Use UI_CONTROL_PRINT_ERRORS with the value 1 to have UI_process print the
+ * OpenSSL error stack before printing any info or added error messages and
+ * before any prompting.
+ */
+# define UI_CTRL_PRINT_ERRORS 1
+/*
+ * Check if a UI_process() is possible to do again with the same instance of
+ * a user interface. This makes UI_ctrl() return 1 if it is redoable, and 0
+ * if not.
+ */
+# define UI_CTRL_IS_REDOABLE 2
+
/* Some methods may use extra data */
-#define UI_set_app_data(s,arg) UI_set_ex_data(s,0,arg)
-#define UI_get_app_data(s) UI_get_ex_data(s,0)
+# define UI_set_app_data(s,arg) UI_set_ex_data(s,0,arg)
+# define UI_get_app_data(s) UI_get_ex_data(s,0)
int UI_get_ex_new_index(long argl, void *argp, CRYPTO_EX_new *new_func,
- CRYPTO_EX_dup *dup_func, CRYPTO_EX_free *free_func);
-int UI_set_ex_data(UI *r,int idx,void *arg);
+ CRYPTO_EX_dup *dup_func, CRYPTO_EX_free *free_func);
+int UI_set_ex_data(UI *r, int idx, void *arg);
void *UI_get_ex_data(UI *r, int idx);
/* Use specific methods instead of the built-in one */
/* The method with all the built-in thingies */
UI_METHOD *UI_OpenSSL(void);
-
/* ---------- For method writers ---------- */
-/* A method contains a number of functions that implement the low level
+/*-
+ A method contains a number of functions that implement the low level
of the User Interface. The functions are:
- an opener This function starts a session, maybe by opening
- a channel to a tty, or by opening a window.
- a writer This function is called to write a given string,
- maybe to the tty, maybe as a field label in a
- window.
- a reader This function is called to read a given prompt,
- maybe from the tty, maybe from a field in a
- window. Note that it's called wth all string
- structures, not only the prompt ones, so it must
- check such things itself.
- a closer This function closes the session, maybe by closing
- the channel to the tty, or closing the window.
+ an opener This function starts a session, maybe by opening
+ a channel to a tty, or by opening a window.
+ a writer This function is called to write a given string,
+ maybe to the tty, maybe as a field label in a
+ window.
+ a flusher This function is called to flush everything that
+ has been output so far. It can be used to actually
+ display a dialog box after it has been built.
+ a reader This function is called to read a given prompt,
+ maybe from the tty, maybe from a field in a
+ window. Note that it's called wth all string
+ structures, not only the prompt ones, so it must
+ check such things itself.
+ a closer This function closes the session, maybe by closing
+ the channel to the tty, or closing the window.
+
+ All these functions are expected to return:
+
+ 0 on error.
+ 1 on success.
+ -1 on out-of-band events, for example if some prompting has
+ been canceled (by pressing Ctrl-C, for example). This is
+ only checked when returned by the flusher or the reader.
The way this is used, the opener is first called, then the writer for all
- strings, then the reader for all strings and finally the closer. Note that
- if you want to prompt from a terminal or other command line interface, the
- best is to have the reader also write the prompts instead of having the
- writer do it.
- All method functions take a UI as argument. Additionally, the writer and
- the reader take a UI_STRING. */
+ strings, then the flusher, then the reader for all strings and finally the
+ closer. Note that if you want to prompt from a terminal or other command
+ line interface, the best is to have the reader also write the prompts
+ instead of having the writer do it. If you want to prompt from a dialog
+ box, the writer can be used to build up the contents of the box, and the
+ flusher to actually display the box and run the event loop until all data
+ has been given, after which the reader only grabs the given data and puts
+ them back into the UI strings.
-/* The UI_STRING type is the data structure that contains all the needed info
- about a string or a prompt, including test data for a verification prompt.
+ All method functions take a UI as argument. Additionally, the writer and
+ the reader take a UI_STRING.
*/
-DECLARE_STACK_OF(UI_STRING)
+
+/*
+ * The UI_STRING type is the data structure that contains all the needed info
+ * about a string or a prompt, including test data for a verification prompt.
+ */
typedef struct ui_string_st UI_STRING;
+DECLARE_STACK_OF(UI_STRING)
-/* The different types of strings that are currently supported.
- This is only needed by method authors. */
-enum UI_string_types
- {
- UI_NONE=0,
- UI_STRING_ECHO, /* Prompt for a string */
- UI_STRING_NOECHO, /* Prompt for a hidden string */
- UI_VERIFY_ECHO, /* Prompt for a string and verify */
- UI_VERIFY_NOECHO, /* Prompt for a hidden string and verify */
- UI_INFO, /* Send info to the user */
- UI_ERROR /* Send an error message to the user */
- };
+/*
+ * The different types of strings that are currently supported. This is only
+ * needed by method authors.
+ */
+enum UI_string_types {
+ UIT_NONE = 0,
+ UIT_PROMPT, /* Prompt for a string */
+ UIT_VERIFY, /* Prompt for a string and verify */
+ UIT_BOOLEAN, /* Prompt for a yes/no response */
+ UIT_INFO, /* Send info to the user */
+ UIT_ERROR /* Send an error message to the user */
+};
/* Create and manipulate methods */
-UI_METHOD *UI_create_method(void);
-int UI_method_set_opener(UI_METHOD *method, int (*opener)(UI *ui));
-int UI_method_set_writer(UI_METHOD *method, int (*writer)(UI *ui, UI_STRING *uis));
-int UI_method_set_reader(UI_METHOD *method, int (*reader)(UI *ui, UI_STRING *uis));
-int UI_method_set_closer(UI_METHOD *method, int (*closer)(UI *ui));
-int (*UI_method_get_opener(UI_METHOD *method))(UI*);
-int (*UI_method_get_writer(UI_METHOD *method))(UI*,UI_STRING*);
-int (*UI_method_get_reader(UI_METHOD *method))(UI*,UI_STRING*);
-int (*UI_method_get_closer(UI_METHOD *method))(UI*);
-
-/* The following functions are helpers for method writers to access relevant
- data from a UI_STRING. */
-
-/* Return type type of the UI_STRING */
+UI_METHOD *UI_create_method(char *name);
+void UI_destroy_method(UI_METHOD *ui_method);
+int UI_method_set_opener(UI_METHOD *method, int (*opener) (UI *ui));
+int UI_method_set_writer(UI_METHOD *method,
+ int (*writer) (UI *ui, UI_STRING *uis));
+int UI_method_set_flusher(UI_METHOD *method, int (*flusher) (UI *ui));
+int UI_method_set_reader(UI_METHOD *method,
+ int (*reader) (UI *ui, UI_STRING *uis));
+int UI_method_set_closer(UI_METHOD *method, int (*closer) (UI *ui));
+int UI_method_set_prompt_constructor(UI_METHOD *method,
+ char *(*prompt_constructor) (UI *ui,
+ const char
+ *object_desc,
+ const char
+ *object_name));
+int (*UI_method_get_opener(UI_METHOD *method)) (UI *);
+int (*UI_method_get_writer(UI_METHOD *method)) (UI *, UI_STRING *);
+int (*UI_method_get_flusher(UI_METHOD *method)) (UI *);
+int (*UI_method_get_reader(UI_METHOD *method)) (UI *, UI_STRING *);
+int (*UI_method_get_closer(UI_METHOD *method)) (UI *);
+char *(*UI_method_get_prompt_constructor(UI_METHOD *method)) (UI *,
+ const char *,
+ const char *);
+
+/*
+ * The following functions are helpers for method writers to access relevant
+ * data from a UI_STRING.
+ */
+
+/* Return type of the UI_STRING */
enum UI_string_types UI_get_string_type(UI_STRING *uis);
+/* Return input flags of the UI_STRING */
+int UI_get_input_flags(UI_STRING *uis);
/* Return the actual string to output (the prompt, info or error) */
const char *UI_get0_output_string(UI_STRING *uis);
+/*
+ * Return the optional action string to output (the boolean promtp
+ * instruction)
+ */
+const char *UI_get0_action_string(UI_STRING *uis);
/* Return the result of a prompt */
const char *UI_get0_result_string(UI_STRING *uis);
-/* Return the string to test the result against. Only useful with verifies. */
+/*
+ * Return the string to test the result against. Only useful with verifies.
+ */
const char *UI_get0_test_string(UI_STRING *uis);
/* Return the required minimum size of the result */
int UI_get_result_minsize(UI_STRING *uis);
/* Return the required maximum size of the result */
int UI_get_result_maxsize(UI_STRING *uis);
/* Set the result of a UI_STRING. */
-int UI_set_result(UI_STRING *uis, char *result);
+int UI_set_result(UI *ui, UI_STRING *uis, const char *result);
+/* A couple of popular utility functions */
+int UI_UTIL_read_pw_string(char *buf, int length, const char *prompt,
+ int verify);
+int UI_UTIL_read_pw(char *buf, char *buff, int size, const char *prompt,
+ int verify);
/* BEGIN ERROR CODES */
-/* The following lines are auto generated by the script mkerr.pl. Any changes
+/*
+ * The following lines are auto generated by the script mkerr.pl. Any changes
* made after this point may be overwritten when the script is next run.
*/
void ERR_load_UI_strings(void);
/* Error codes for the UI functions. */
/* Function codes. */
-#define UI_F_GENERAL_ALLOCATE_STRING 100
-#define UI_F_UI_DUP_ERROR_STRING 101
-#define UI_F_UI_DUP_INFO_STRING 102
-#define UI_F_UI_DUP_INPUT_STRING 103
-#define UI_F_UI_DUP_VERIFY_STRING 106
-#define UI_F_UI_GET0_RESULT 107
-#define UI_F_UI_NEW_METHOD 104
-#define UI_F_UI_SET_RESULT 105
+# define UI_F_GENERAL_ALLOCATE_BOOLEAN 108
+# define UI_F_GENERAL_ALLOCATE_PROMPT 109
+# define UI_F_GENERAL_ALLOCATE_STRING 100
+# define UI_F_UI_CTRL 111
+# define UI_F_UI_DUP_ERROR_STRING 101
+# define UI_F_UI_DUP_INFO_STRING 102
+# define UI_F_UI_DUP_INPUT_BOOLEAN 110
+# define UI_F_UI_DUP_INPUT_STRING 103
+# define UI_F_UI_DUP_VERIFY_STRING 106
+# define UI_F_UI_GET0_RESULT 107
+# define UI_F_UI_NEW_METHOD 104
+# define UI_F_UI_SET_RESULT 105
/* Reason codes. */
-#define UI_R_INDEX_TOO_LARGE 102
-#define UI_R_INDEX_TOO_SMALL 103
-#define UI_R_RESULT_TOO_LARGE 100
-#define UI_R_RESULT_TOO_SMALL 101
+# define UI_R_COMMON_OK_AND_CANCEL_CHARACTERS 104
+# define UI_R_INDEX_TOO_LARGE 102
+# define UI_R_INDEX_TOO_SMALL 103
+# define UI_R_NO_RESULT_BUFFER 105
+# define UI_R_RESULT_TOO_LARGE 100
+# define UI_R_RESULT_TOO_SMALL 101
+# define UI_R_UNKNOWN_CONTROL_COMMAND 106
#ifdef __cplusplus
}