=pod =head1 NAME CMS_encrypt_ex, CMS_encrypt - create a CMS envelopedData structure =head1 SYNOPSIS #include CMS_ContentInfo *CMS_encrypt_ex(STACK_OF(X509) *certs, BIO *in, const EVP_CIPHER *cipher, unsigned int flags, OSSL_LIB_CTX *libctx, const char *propq); CMS_ContentInfo *CMS_encrypt(STACK_OF(X509) *certs, BIO *in, const EVP_CIPHER *cipher, unsigned int flags); =head1 DESCRIPTION CMS_encrypt_ex() creates and returns a CMS EnvelopedData or AuthEnvelopedData structure. I is a list of recipient certificates. I is the content to be encrypted. I is the symmetric cipher to use. I is an optional set of flags. The library context I and the property query I are used internally when retrieving algorithms from providers. Only certificates carrying RSA, Diffie-Hellman or EC keys are supported by this function. EVP_des_ede3_cbc() (triple DES) is the algorithm of choice for S/MIME use because most clients will support it. The algorithm passed in the B parameter must support ASN1 encoding of its parameters. If the cipher mode is GCM, then an AuthEnvelopedData structure containing MAC is used. Otherwise an EnvelopedData structure is used. Currently the AES variants with GCM mode are the only supported AEAD algorithms. Many browsers implement a "sign and encrypt" option which is simply an S/MIME envelopedData containing an S/MIME signed message. This can be readily produced by storing the S/MIME signed message in a memory BIO and passing it to CMS_encrypt(). The following flags can be passed in the B parameter. If the B flag is set MIME headers for type B are prepended to the data. Normally the supplied content is translated into MIME canonical format (as required by the S/MIME specifications) if B is set no translation occurs. This option should be used if the supplied data is in binary format otherwise the translation will corrupt it. If B is set then B is ignored. OpenSSL will by default identify recipient certificates using issuer name and serial number. If B is set it will use the subject key identifier value instead. An error occurs if all recipient certificates do not have a subject key identifier extension. If the B flag is set a partial B structure is returned suitable for streaming I/O: no data is read from the BIO B. If the B flag is set a partial B structure is returned to which additional recipients and attributes can be added before finalization. The data being encrypted is included in the CMS_ContentInfo structure, unless B is set in which case it is omitted. This is rarely used in practice and is not supported by SMIME_write_CMS(). If the flag B is set the returned B structure is B complete and outputting its contents via a function that does not properly finalize the B 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 B directly using BIO_new_CMS(). The recipients specified in B use a CMS KeyTransRecipientInfo info structure. KEKRecipientInfo is also supported using the flag B and CMS_add0_recipient_key(). The parameter B may be NULL if B is set and recipients added later using CMS_add1_recipient_cert() or CMS_add0_recipient_key(). CMS_encrypt() is similar to CMS_encrypt_ex() but uses default values of NULL for the library context I and the property query I. =head1 RETURN VALUES CMS_encrypt_ex() and CMS_encrypt() return either a CMS_ContentInfo structure or NULL if an error occurred. The error can be obtained from ERR_get_error(3). =head1 SEE ALSO L, L =head1 HISTORY The function CMS_encrypt_ex() was added in OpenSSL 3.0. The B flag was first supported in OpenSSL 1.0.0. =head1 COPYRIGHT Copyright 2008-2020 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved. Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (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. =cut