/usr/include/nss/secmime.h is in libnss3-dev 2:3.28.4-0ubuntu0.14.04.5.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 | /* This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public
* License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this
* file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/. */
/*
* Header file for routines specific to S/MIME. Keep things that are pure
* pkcs7 out of here; this is for S/MIME policy, S/MIME interoperability, etc.
*/
#ifndef _SECMIME_H_
#define _SECMIME_H_ 1
#include "secpkcs7.h"
/************************************************************************/
SEC_BEGIN_PROTOS
/*
* Initialize the local recording of the user S/MIME cipher preferences.
* This function is called once for each cipher, the order being
* important (first call records greatest preference, and so on).
* When finished, it is called with a "which" of CIPHER_FAMILID_MASK.
* If the function is called again after that, it is assumed that
* the preferences are being reset, and the old preferences are
* discarded.
*
* XXX This is for a particular user, and right now the storage is
* XXX local, static. The preference should be stored elsewhere to allow
* XXX for multiple uses of one library? How does SSL handle this;
* XXX it has something similar?
*
* - The "which" values are defined in ciferfam.h (the SMIME_* values,
* for example SMIME_DES_CBC_56).
* - If "on" is non-zero then the named cipher is enabled, otherwise
* it is disabled. (It is not necessary to call the function for
* ciphers that are disabled, however, as that is the default.)
*
* If the cipher preference is successfully recorded, SECSuccess
* is returned. Otherwise SECFailure is returned. The only errors
* are due to failure allocating memory or bad parameters/calls:
* SEC_ERROR_XXX ("which" is not in the S/MIME cipher family)
* SEC_ERROR_XXX (function is being called more times than there
* are known/expected ciphers)
*/
extern SECStatus SECMIME_EnableCipher(long which, int on);
/*
* Initialize the local recording of the S/MIME policy.
* This function is called to enable/disable a particular cipher.
* (S/MIME encryption or decryption using a particular cipher is only
* allowed if that cipher is currently enabled.) At startup, all S/MIME
* ciphers are disabled. From that point, this function can be called
* to enable a cipher -- it is not necessary to call this to disable
* a cipher unless that cipher was previously, explicitly enabled via
* this function.
*
* XXX This is for a the current module, I think, so local, static storage
* XXX is okay. Is that correct, or could multiple uses of the same
* XXX library expect to operate under different policies?
*
* - The "which" values are defined in ciferfam.h (the SMIME_* values,
* for example SMIME_DES_CBC_56).
* - If "on" is non-zero then the named cipher is enabled, otherwise
* it is disabled.
*
* If the cipher is successfully enabled/disabled, SECSuccess is
* returned. Otherwise SECFailure is returned. The only errors
* are due to bad parameters:
* SEC_ERROR_XXX ("which" is not in the S/MIME cipher family)
* SEC_ERROR_XXX ("which" exceeds expected maximum cipher; this is
* really an internal error)
*/
extern SECStatus SECMIME_SetPolicy(long which, int on);
/*
* Does the current policy allow S/MIME decryption of this particular
* algorithm and keysize?
*/
extern PRBool SECMIME_DecryptionAllowed(SECAlgorithmID *algid, PK11SymKey *key);
/*
* Does the current policy allow *any* S/MIME encryption (or decryption)?
*
* This tells whether or not *any* S/MIME encryption can be done,
* according to policy. Callers may use this to do nicer user interface
* (say, greying out a checkbox so a user does not even try to encrypt
* a message when they are not allowed to) or for any reason they want
* to check whether S/MIME encryption (or decryption, for that matter)
* may be done.
*
* It takes no arguments. The return value is a simple boolean:
* PR_TRUE means encryption (or decryption) is *possible*
* (but may still fail due to other reasons, like because we cannot
* find all the necessary certs, etc.; PR_TRUE is *not* a guarantee)
* PR_FALSE means encryption (or decryption) is not permitted
*
* There are no errors from this routine.
*/
extern PRBool SECMIME_EncryptionPossible(void);
/*
* Start an S/MIME encrypting context.
*
* "scert" is the cert for the sender. It will be checked for validity.
* "rcerts" are the certs for the recipients. They will also be checked.
*
* "certdb" is the cert database to use for verifying the certs.
* It can be NULL if a default database is available (like in the client).
*
* This function already does all of the stuff specific to S/MIME protocol
* and local policy; the return value just needs to be passed to
* SEC_PKCS7Encode() or to SEC_PKCS7EncoderStart() to create the encoded data,
* and finally to SEC_PKCS7DestroyContentInfo().
*
* An error results in a return value of NULL and an error set.
* (Retrieve specific errors via PORT_GetError()/XP_GetError().)
*/
extern SEC_PKCS7ContentInfo *SECMIME_CreateEncrypted(CERTCertificate *scert,
CERTCertificate **rcerts,
CERTCertDBHandle *certdb,
SECKEYGetPasswordKey pwfn,
void *pwfn_arg);
/*
* Start an S/MIME signing context.
*
* "scert" is the cert that will be used to sign the data. It will be
* checked for validity.
*
* "certdb" is the cert database to use for verifying the cert.
* It can be NULL if a default database is available (like in the client).
*
* "digestalg" names the digest algorithm. (It should be SEC_OID_SHA1;
* XXX There should be SECMIME functions for hashing, or the hashing should
* be built into this interface, which we would like because we would
* support more smartcards that way, and then this argument should go away.)
*
* "digest" is the actual digest of the data. It must be provided in
* the case of detached data or NULL if the content will be included.
*
* This function already does all of the stuff specific to S/MIME protocol
* and local policy; the return value just needs to be passed to
* SEC_PKCS7Encode() or to SEC_PKCS7EncoderStart() to create the encoded data,
* and finally to SEC_PKCS7DestroyContentInfo().
*
* An error results in a return value of NULL and an error set.
* (Retrieve specific errors via PORT_GetError()/XP_GetError().)
*/
extern SEC_PKCS7ContentInfo *SECMIME_CreateSigned(CERTCertificate *scert,
CERTCertificate *ecert,
CERTCertDBHandle *certdb,
SECOidTag digestalg,
SECItem *digest,
SECKEYGetPasswordKey pwfn,
void *pwfn_arg);
/************************************************************************/
SEC_END_PROTOS
#endif /* _SECMIME_H_ */
|