Yes, d2i_PUBKEY is sufficient.
--
Mounir IDRASSI
IDRIX
http://www.idrix.fr
Jeremy R. wrote:
Thanks. I switched to using d2i_PUBKEY (it really is hard-coded, so I
don't think there's a reason to use BIO – if I'm mistaken, please tell
me) and it now returns a valid address in memory.
On 20-Ju
Thanks. I switched to using d2i_PUBKEY (it really is hard-coded, so I
don't think there's a reason to use BIO – if I'm mistaken, please tell
me) and it now returns a valid address in memory.
On 20-Jul-09, at 4:59 PM, Mounir IDRASSI wrote:
Hi,
The public key in your source is encoded as a S
Hi,
The public key in your source is encoded as a SubjectPublicKeyInfo, so
you can't use d2i_PublicKey which only handles RSA public keys encoded
in the PKCS#1 format. In your case, you have to use the function
d2i_PUBKEY_bio to read your hard-coded key.
Here is how you can do it using the sa
I'm trying to make a simple application which uses a 4096-bit RSA
public key (encoded in DER format, statically compiled into the
program itself. I generated this key with OpenSSL itself and I am able
to do operations with it from the command-line. And I know I encoded
it in the program cor