FreeBSD manual
download PDF document: PEM_write_PrivateKey.3.pdf
PEM_READ_BIO_PRIVATEKEY(3ossl) OpenSSL PEM_READ_BIO_PRIVATEKEY(3ossl)
NAME
pem_password_cb, PEM_read_bio_PrivateKey_ex, PEM_read_bio_PrivateKey,
PEM_read_PrivateKey_ex, PEM_read_PrivateKey,
PEM_write_bio_PrivateKey_ex, PEM_write_bio_PrivateKey,
PEM_write_bio_PrivateKey_traditional, PEM_write_PrivateKey_ex,
PEM_write_PrivateKey, PEM_write_bio_PKCS8PrivateKey,
PEM_write_PKCS8PrivateKey, PEM_write_bio_PKCS8PrivateKey_nid,
PEM_write_PKCS8PrivateKey_nid, PEM_read_bio_PUBKEY_ex,
PEM_read_bio_PUBKEY, PEM_read_PUBKEY_ex, PEM_read_PUBKEY,
PEM_write_bio_PUBKEY_ex, PEM_write_bio_PUBKEY, PEM_write_PUBKEY_ex,
PEM_write_PUBKEY, PEM_read_bio_RSAPrivateKey, PEM_read_RSAPrivateKey,
PEM_write_bio_RSAPrivateKey, PEM_write_RSAPrivateKey,
PEM_read_bio_RSAPublicKey, PEM_read_RSAPublicKey,
PEM_write_bio_RSAPublicKey, PEM_write_RSAPublicKey,
PEM_read_bio_RSA_PUBKEY, PEM_read_RSA_PUBKEY, PEM_write_bio_RSA_PUBKEY,
PEM_write_RSA_PUBKEY, PEM_read_bio_DSAPrivateKey,
PEM_read_DSAPrivateKey, PEM_write_bio_DSAPrivateKey,
PEM_write_DSAPrivateKey, PEM_read_bio_DSA_PUBKEY, PEM_read_DSA_PUBKEY,
PEM_write_bio_DSA_PUBKEY, PEM_write_DSA_PUBKEY,
PEM_read_bio_Parameters_ex, PEM_read_bio_Parameters,
PEM_write_bio_Parameters, PEM_read_bio_DSAparams, PEM_read_DSAparams,
PEM_write_bio_DSAparams, PEM_write_DSAparams, PEM_read_bio_DHparams,
PEM_read_DHparams, PEM_write_bio_DHparams, PEM_write_DHparams,
PEM_read_bio_X509, PEM_read_X509, PEM_write_bio_X509, PEM_write_X509,
PEM_read_bio_X509_AUX, PEM_read_X509_AUX, PEM_write_bio_X509_AUX,
PEM_write_X509_AUX, PEM_read_bio_X509_REQ, PEM_read_X509_REQ,
PEM_write_bio_X509_REQ, PEM_write_X509_REQ, PEM_write_bio_X509_REQ_NEW,
PEM_write_X509_REQ_NEW, PEM_read_bio_X509_CRL, PEM_read_X509_CRL,
PEM_write_bio_X509_CRL, PEM_write_X509_CRL, PEM_read_bio_PKCS7,
PEM_read_PKCS7, PEM_write_bio_PKCS7, PEM_write_PKCS7 - PEM routines
SYNOPSIS
#include <openssl/pem.h>
typedef int pem_password_cb(char *buf, int size, int rwflag, void *u);
EVP_PKEY *PEM_read_bio_PrivateKey_ex(BIO *bp, EVP_PKEY **x,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u,
OSSL_LIB_CTX *libctx, const char *propq);
EVP_PKEY *PEM_read_bio_PrivateKey(BIO *bp, EVP_PKEY **x,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
EVP_PKEY *PEM_read_PrivateKey_ex(FILE *fp, EVP_PKEY **x, pem_password_cb *cb,
void *u, OSSL_LIB_CTX *libctx,
const char *propq);
EVP_PKEY *PEM_read_PrivateKey(FILE *fp, EVP_PKEY **x,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
int PEM_write_bio_PrivateKey_ex(BIO *bp, const EVP_PKEY *x,
const EVP_CIPHER *enc,
unsigned char *kstr, int klen,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u,
OSSL_LIB_CTX *libctx, const char *propq);
int PEM_write_bio_PrivateKey(BIO *bp, const EVP_PKEY *x, const EVP_CIPHER *enc,
unsigned char *kstr, int klen,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
int PEM_write_bio_PrivateKey_traditional(BIO *bp, EVP_PKEY *x,
const EVP_CIPHER *enc,
unsigned char *kstr, int klen,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
int PEM_write_bio_PKCS8PrivateKey(BIO *bp, EVP_PKEY *x, const EVP_CIPHER *enc,
char *kstr, int klen,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
int PEM_write_PKCS8PrivateKey(FILE *fp, EVP_PKEY *x, const EVP_CIPHER *enc,
char *kstr, int klen,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
int PEM_write_bio_PKCS8PrivateKey_nid(BIO *bp, const EVP_PKEY *x, int nid,
char *kstr, int klen,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
int PEM_write_PKCS8PrivateKey_nid(FILE *fp, const EVP_PKEY *x, int nid,
char *kstr, int klen,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
EVP_PKEY *PEM_read_bio_PUBKEY_ex(BIO *bp, EVP_PKEY **x,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u,
OSSL_LIB_CTX *libctx, const char *propq);
EVP_PKEY *PEM_read_bio_PUBKEY(BIO *bp, EVP_PKEY **x,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
EVP_PKEY *PEM_read_PUBKEY_ex(FILE *fp, EVP_PKEY **x,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u,
OSSL_LIB_CTX *libctx, const char *propq);
EVP_PKEY *PEM_read_PUBKEY(FILE *fp, EVP_PKEY **x,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
int PEM_write_bio_PUBKEY_ex(BIO *bp, EVP_PKEY *x,
OSSL_LIB_CTX *libctx, const char *propq);
int PEM_write_bio_PUBKEY(BIO *bp, EVP_PKEY *x);
int PEM_write_PUBKEY_ex(FILE *fp, EVP_PKEY *x,
OSSL_LIB_CTX *libctx, const char *propq);
int PEM_write_PUBKEY(FILE *fp, EVP_PKEY *x);
EVP_PKEY *PEM_read_bio_Parameters_ex(BIO *bp, EVP_PKEY **x,
OSSL_LIB_CTX *libctx, const char *propq);
EVP_PKEY *PEM_read_bio_Parameters(BIO *bp, EVP_PKEY **x);
int PEM_write_bio_Parameters(BIO *bp, const EVP_PKEY *x);
X509 *PEM_read_bio_X509(BIO *bp, X509 **x, pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
X509 *PEM_read_X509(FILE *fp, X509 **x, pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
int PEM_write_bio_X509(BIO *bp, X509 *x);
int PEM_write_X509(FILE *fp, X509 *x);
X509 *PEM_read_bio_X509_AUX(BIO *bp, X509 **x, pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
X509 *PEM_read_X509_AUX(FILE *fp, X509 **x, pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
int PEM_write_bio_X509_AUX(BIO *bp, X509 *x);
int PEM_write_X509_AUX(FILE *fp, X509 *x);
X509_REQ *PEM_read_bio_X509_REQ(BIO *bp, X509_REQ **x,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
X509_REQ *PEM_read_X509_REQ(FILE *fp, X509_REQ **x,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
int PEM_write_bio_X509_REQ(BIO *bp, X509_REQ *x);
int PEM_write_X509_REQ(FILE *fp, X509_REQ *x);
int PEM_write_bio_X509_REQ_NEW(BIO *bp, X509_REQ *x);
int PEM_write_X509_REQ_NEW(FILE *fp, X509_REQ *x);
X509_CRL *PEM_read_bio_X509_CRL(BIO *bp, X509_CRL **x,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
X509_CRL *PEM_read_X509_CRL(FILE *fp, X509_CRL **x,
int PEM_write_PKCS7(FILE *fp, PKCS7 *x);
The following functions have been deprecated since OpenSSL 3.0, and can
be hidden entirely by defining OPENSSL_API_COMPAT with a suitable
version value, see openssl_user_macros(7):
RSA *PEM_read_bio_RSAPrivateKey(BIO *bp, RSA **x,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
RSA *PEM_read_RSAPrivateKey(FILE *fp, RSA **x,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
int PEM_write_bio_RSAPrivateKey(BIO *bp, RSA *x, const EVP_CIPHER *enc,
unsigned char *kstr, int klen,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
int PEM_write_RSAPrivateKey(FILE *fp, RSA *x, const EVP_CIPHER *enc,
unsigned char *kstr, int klen,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
RSA *PEM_read_bio_RSAPublicKey(BIO *bp, RSA **x,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
RSA *PEM_read_RSAPublicKey(FILE *fp, RSA **x,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
int PEM_write_bio_RSAPublicKey(BIO *bp, RSA *x);
int PEM_write_RSAPublicKey(FILE *fp, RSA *x);
RSA *PEM_read_bio_RSA_PUBKEY(BIO *bp, RSA **x,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
RSA *PEM_read_RSA_PUBKEY(FILE *fp, RSA **x,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
int PEM_write_bio_RSA_PUBKEY(BIO *bp, RSA *x);
int PEM_write_RSA_PUBKEY(FILE *fp, RSA *x);
DSA *PEM_read_bio_DSAPrivateKey(BIO *bp, DSA **x,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
DSA *PEM_read_DSAPrivateKey(FILE *fp, DSA **x,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
int PEM_write_bio_DSAPrivateKey(BIO *bp, DSA *x, const EVP_CIPHER *enc,
unsigned char *kstr, int klen,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
int PEM_write_DSAPrivateKey(FILE *fp, DSA *x, const EVP_CIPHER *enc,
unsigned char *kstr, int klen,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
DSA *PEM_read_bio_DSA_PUBKEY(BIO *bp, DSA **x,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
DSA *PEM_read_DSA_PUBKEY(FILE *fp, DSA **x,
pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
int PEM_write_bio_DSA_PUBKEY(BIO *bp, DSA *x);
int PEM_write_DSA_PUBKEY(FILE *fp, DSA *x);
DSA *PEM_read_bio_DSAparams(BIO *bp, DSA **x, pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
DSA *PEM_read_DSAparams(FILE *fp, DSA **x, pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
int PEM_write_bio_DSAparams(BIO *bp, DSA *x);
int PEM_write_DSAparams(FILE *fp, DSA *x);
DH *PEM_read_bio_DHparams(BIO *bp, DH **x, pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
DH *PEM_read_DHparams(FILE *fp, DH **x, pem_password_cb *cb, void *u);
int PEM_write_bio_DHparams(BIO *bp, DH *x);
int PEM_write_DHparams(FILE *fp, DH *x);
DESCRIPTION
For more details about the meaning of arguments see the PEM FUNCTION
ARGUMENTS section.
Each operation has four functions associated with it. For brevity the
term "TTYYPPEE functions" will be used below to collectively refer to the
PEM_read_bio_TTYYPPEE(), PEM_read_TTYYPPEE(), PEM_write_bio_TTYYPPEE(), and
PEM_write_TTYYPPEE() functions.
Some operations have additional variants that take a library context
libctx and a property query string propq. The X509, X509_REQ and
X509_CRL objects may have an associated library context or property
query string but there are no variants of these functions that take a
library context or property query string parameter. In this case it is
possible to set the appropriate library context or property query
string by creating an empty X509, X509_REQ or X509_CRL object using
X509_new_ex(3), X509_REQ_new_ex(3) or X509_CRL_new_ex(3) respectively.
Then pass the empty object as a parameter to the relevant PEM function.
See the "EXAMPLES" section below.
The PrivateKey functions read or write a private key in PEM format
using an EVP_PKEY structure. The write routines use PKCS#8 private key
format and are equivalent to PEM_write_bio_PKCS8PrivateKey(). The read
functions transparently handle traditional and PKCS#8 format encrypted
and unencrypted keys.
PEM_write_bio_PrivateKey_traditional() writes out a private key in the
"traditional" format with a simple private key marker and should only
be used for compatibility with legacy programs.
PEM_write_bio_PKCS8PrivateKey() and PEM_write_PKCS8PrivateKey() write a
private key in an EVP_PKEY structure in PKCS#8 EncryptedPrivateKeyInfo
format using PKCS#5 v2.0 password based encryption algorithms. The
cipher argument specifies the encryption algorithm to use: unlike some
other PEM routines the encryption is applied at the PKCS#8 level and
not in the PEM headers. If cipher is NULL then no encryption is used
and a PKCS#8 PrivateKeyInfo structure is used instead.
PEM_write_bio_PKCS8PrivateKey_nid() and PEM_write_PKCS8PrivateKey_nid()
also write out a private key as a PKCS#8 EncryptedPrivateKeyInfo
however it uses PKCS#5 v1.5 or PKCS#12 encryption algorithms instead.
The algorithm to use is specified in the nid parameter and should be
the NID of the corresponding OBJECT IDENTIFIER (see NOTES section).
The PUBKEY functions process a public key using an EVP_PKEY structure.
The public key is encoded as a SubjectPublicKeyInfo structure.
The RSAPrivateKey functions process an RSA private key using an RSA
structure. The write routines uses traditional format. The read
routines handles the same formats as the PrivateKey functions but an
error occurs if the private key is not RSA.
The RSAPublicKey functions process an RSA public key using an RSA
structure. The public key is encoded using a PKCS#1 RSAPublicKey
structure.
The RSA_PUBKEY functions also process an RSA public key using an RSA
structure. However, the public key is encoded using a
SubjectPublicKeyInfo structure and an error occurs if the public key is
not RSA.
structure. The public key is encoded using a SubjectPublicKeyInfo
structure and an error occurs if the public key is not DSA.
The Parameters functions read or write key parameters in PEM format
using an EVP_PKEY structure. The encoding depends on the type of key;
for DSA key parameters, it will be a Dss-Parms structure as defined in
RFC2459, and for DH key parameters, it will be a PKCS#3 DHparameter
structure. These functions only exist for the BBIIOO type.
The DSAparams functions process DSA parameters using a DSA structure.
The parameters are encoded using a Dss-Parms structure as defined in
RFC2459.
The DHparams functions process DH parameters using a DH structure. The
parameters are encoded using a PKCS#3 DHparameter structure.
The X509 functions process an X509 certificate using an X509 structure.
They will also process a trusted X509 certificate but any trust
settings are discarded.
The X509_AUX functions process a trusted X509 certificate using an X509
structure.
The X509_REQ and X509_REQ_NEW functions process a PKCS#10 certificate
request using an X509_REQ structure. The X509_REQ write functions use
CERTIFICATE REQUEST in the header whereas the X509_REQ_NEW functions
use NEW CERTIFICATE REQUEST (as required by some CAs). The X509_REQ
read functions will handle either form so there are no X509_REQ_NEW
read functions.
The X509_CRL functions process an X509 CRL using an X509_CRL structure.
The PKCS7 functions process a PKCS#7 ContentInfo using a PKCS7
structure.
PEM FUNCTION ARGUMENTS
The PEM functions have many common arguments.
The bp BIO parameter (if present) specifies the BIO to read from or
write to.
The fp FILE parameter (if present) specifies the FILE pointer to read
from or write to.
The PEM read functions all take an argument TTYYPPEE **x and return a TTYYPPEE
* pointer. Where TTYYPPEE is whatever structure the function uses. If x is
NULL then the parameter is ignored. If x is not NULL but *x is NULL
then the structure returned will be written to *x. If neither x nor *x
is NULL then an attempt is made to reuse the structure at *x (but see
BUGS and EXAMPLES sections). Irrespective of the value of x a pointer
to the structure is always returned (or NULL if an error occurred).
The PEM functions which write private keys take an enc parameter which
specifies the encryption algorithm to use, encryption is done at the
PEM level. If this parameter is set to NULL then the private key is
written in unencrypted form.
The cb argument is the callback to use when querying for the pass
phrase used for encrypted PEM structures (normally only private keys).
routine is used which will typically prompt for the passphrase on the
current terminal with echoing turned off.
The default passphrase callback is sometimes inappropriate (for example
in a GUI application) so an alternative can be supplied. The callback
routine has the following form:
int cb(char *buf, int size, int rwflag, void *u);
buf is the buffer to write the passphrase to. size is the maximum
length of the passphrase (i.e. the size of buf). rwflag is a flag which
is set to 0 when reading and 1 when writing. A typical routine will ask
the user to verify the passphrase (for example by prompting for it
twice) if rwflag is 1. The u parameter has the same value as the u
parameter passed to the PEM routine. It allows arbitrary data to be
passed to the callback by the application (for example a window handle
in a GUI application). The callback must return the number of
characters in the passphrase or -1 if an error occurred. The passphrase
can be arbitrary data; in the case where it is a string, it is not NUL
terminated. See the "EXAMPLES" section below.
Some implementations may need to use cryptographic algorithms during
their operation. If this is the case and libctx and propq parameters
have been passed then any algorithm fetches will use that library
context and property query string. Otherwise the default library
context and property query string will be used.
NOTES
The PEM reading functions will skip any extraneous content or PEM data
of a different type than they expect. This allows for example having a
certificate (or multiple certificates) and a key in the PEM format in a
single file.
The old PrivateKey write routines are retained for compatibility. New
applications should write private keys using the
PEM_write_bio_PKCS8PrivateKey() or PEM_write_PKCS8PrivateKey() routines
because they are more secure (they use an iteration count of 2048
whereas the traditional routines use a count of 1) unless compatibility
with older versions of OpenSSL is important.
The PrivateKey read routines can be used in all applications because
they handle all formats transparently.
A frequent cause of problems is attempting to use the PEM routines like
this:
X509 *x;
PEM_read_bio_X509(bp, &x, 0, NULL);
this is a bug because an attempt will be made to reuse the data at x
which is an uninitialised pointer.
These functions make no assumption regarding the pass phrase received
from the password callback. It will simply be treated as a byte
sequence.
PEM ENCRYPTION FORMAT
These old PrivateKey routines use a non standard technique for
...base64 encoded data...
-----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
The line beginning with Proc-Type contains the version and the
protection on the encapsulated data. The line beginning DEK-Info
contains two comma separated values: the encryption algorithm name as
used by EVP_get_cipherbyname() and an initialization vector used by the
cipher encoded as a set of hexadecimal digits. After those two lines is
the base64-encoded encrypted data.
The encryption key is derived using EVP_BytesToKey(). The cipher's
initialization vector is passed to EVP_BytesToKey() as the salt
parameter. Internally, PKCS5_SALT_LEN bytes of the salt are used
(regardless of the size of the initialization vector). The user's
password is passed to EVP_BytesToKey() using the data and datal
parameters. Finally, the library uses an iteration count of 1 for
EVP_BytesToKey().
The key derived by EVP_BytesToKey() along with the original
initialization vector is then used to decrypt the encrypted data. The
iv produced by EVP_BytesToKey() is not utilized or needed, and NULL
should be passed to the function.
The pseudo code to derive the key would look similar to:
EVP_CIPHER* cipher = EVP_des_ede3_cbc();
EVP_MD* md = EVP_md5();
unsigned int nkey = EVP_CIPHER_get_key_length(cipher);
unsigned int niv = EVP_CIPHER_get_iv_length(cipher);
unsigned char key[nkey];
unsigned char iv[niv];
memcpy(iv, HexToBin("3F17F5316E2BAC89"), niv);
rc = EVP_BytesToKey(cipher, md, iv /*salt*/, pword, plen, 1, key, NULL /*iv*/);
if (rc != nkey)
/* Error */
/* On success, use key and iv to initialize the cipher */
BUGS
The PEM read routines in some versions of OpenSSL will not correctly
reuse an existing structure. Therefore, the following:
PEM_read_bio_X509(bp, &x, 0, NULL);
where x already contains a valid certificate, may not work, whereas:
X509_free(x);
x = PEM_read_bio_X509(bp, NULL, 0, NULL);
is guaranteed to work. It is always acceptable for x to contain a newly
allocated, empty X509 object (for example allocated via
X509_new_ex(3)).
RETURN VALUES
The read routines return either a pointer to the structure read or NULL
if an error occurred.
To read a certificate with a library context in PEM format from a BIO:
X509 *x = X509_new_ex(libctx, NULL);
if (x == NULL)
/* Error */
if (PEM_read_bio_X509(bp, &x, 0, NULL) == NULL)
/* Error */
Read a certificate in PEM format from a BIO:
X509 *x;
x = PEM_read_bio_X509(bp, NULL, 0, NULL);
if (x == NULL)
/* Error */
Alternative method:
X509 *x = NULL;
if (!PEM_read_bio_X509(bp, &x, 0, NULL))
/* Error */
Write a certificate to a BIO:
if (!PEM_write_bio_X509(bp, x))
/* Error */
Write a private key (using traditional format) to a BIO using triple
DES encryption, the pass phrase is prompted for:
if (!PEM_write_bio_PrivateKey(bp, key, EVP_des_ede3_cbc(), NULL, 0, 0, NULL))
/* Error */
Write a private key (using PKCS#8 format) to a BIO using triple DES
encryption, using the pass phrase "hello":
if (!PEM_write_bio_PKCS8PrivateKey(bp, key, EVP_des_ede3_cbc(),
NULL, 0, 0, "hello"))
/* Error */
Read a private key from a BIO using a pass phrase callback:
key = PEM_read_bio_PrivateKey(bp, NULL, pass_cb, "My Private Key");
if (key == NULL)
/* Error */
Skeleton pass phrase callback:
int pass_cb(char *buf, int size, int rwflag, void *u)
{
/* We'd probably do something else if 'rwflag' is 1 */
printf("Enter pass phrase for \"%s\"\n", (char *)u);
/* get pass phrase, length 'len' into 'tmp' */
char *tmp = "hello";
memcpy(buf, tmp, len);
return len;
}
SEE ALSO
EVP_EncryptInit(3), EVP_BytesToKey(3), passphrase-encoding(7)
HISTORY
The old Netscape certificate sequences were no longer documented in
OpenSSL 1.1.0; applications should use the PKCS7 standard instead as
they will be formally deprecated in a future releases.
PEM_read_bio_PrivateKey_ex(), PEM_read_PrivateKey_ex(),
PEM_read_bio_PUBKEY_ex(), PEM_read_PUBKEY_ex() and
PEM_read_bio_Parameters_ex() were introduced in OpenSSL 3.0.
The functions PEM_read_bio_RSAPrivateKey(), PEM_read_RSAPrivateKey(),
PEM_write_bio_RSAPrivateKey(), PEM_write_RSAPrivateKey(),
PEM_read_bio_RSAPublicKey(), PEM_read_RSAPublicKey(),
PEM_write_bio_RSAPublicKey(), PEM_write_RSAPublicKey(),
PEM_read_bio_RSA_PUBKEY(), PEM_read_RSA_PUBKEY(),
PEM_write_bio_RSA_PUBKEY(), PEM_write_RSA_PUBKEY(),
PEM_read_bio_DSAPrivateKey(), PEM_read_DSAPrivateKey(),
PEM_write_bio_DSAPrivateKey(), PEM_write_DSAPrivateKey(),
PEM_read_bio_DSA_PUBKEY(), PEM_read_DSA_PUBKEY(),
PEM_write_bio_DSA_PUBKEY(), PEM_write_DSA_PUBKEY();
PEM_read_bio_DSAparams(), PEM_read_DSAparams(),
PEM_write_bio_DSAparams(), PEM_write_DSAparams(),
PEM_read_bio_DHparams(), PEM_read_DHparams(), PEM_write_bio_DHparams()
and PEM_write_DHparams() were deprecated in 3.0.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2001-2022 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
<https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>.
3.0.11 2023-09-19 PEM_READ_BIO_PRIVATEKEY(3ossl)