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| threads(3SSL) | OpenSSL | threads(3SSL) |
NAME¶
CRYPTO_THREADID_set_callback, CRYPTO_THREADID_get_callback, CRYPTO_THREADID_current, CRYPTO_THREADID_cmp, CRYPTO_THREADID_cpy, CRYPTO_THREADID_hash, CRYPTO_set_locking_callback, CRYPTO_num_locks, CRYPTO_set_dynlock_create_callback, CRYPTO_set_dynlock_lock_callback, CRYPTO_set_dynlock_destroy_callback, CRYPTO_get_new_dynlockid, CRYPTO_destroy_dynlockid, CRYPTO_lock - OpenSSL thread supportSYNOPSIS¶
#include <openssl/crypto.h>
/* Don't use this structure directly. */
typedef struct crypto_threadid_st
{
void *ptr;
unsigned long val;
} CRYPTO_THREADID;
/* Only use CRYPTO_THREADID_set_[numeric|pointer]() within callbacks */
void CRYPTO_THREADID_set_numeric(CRYPTO_THREADID *id, unsigned long val);
void CRYPTO_THREADID_set_pointer(CRYPTO_THREADID *id, void *ptr);
int CRYPTO_THREADID_set_callback(void (*threadid_func)(CRYPTO_THREADID *));
void (*CRYPTO_THREADID_get_callback(void))(CRYPTO_THREADID *);
void CRYPTO_THREADID_current(CRYPTO_THREADID *id);
int CRYPTO_THREADID_cmp(const CRYPTO_THREADID *a,
const CRYPTO_THREADID *b);
void CRYPTO_THREADID_cpy(CRYPTO_THREADID *dest,
const CRYPTO_THREADID *src);
unsigned long CRYPTO_THREADID_hash(const CRYPTO_THREADID *id);
int CRYPTO_num_locks(void);
/* struct CRYPTO_dynlock_value needs to be defined by the user */
struct CRYPTO_dynlock_value;
void CRYPTO_set_dynlock_create_callback(struct CRYPTO_dynlock_value *
(*dyn_create_function)(char *file, int line));
void CRYPTO_set_dynlock_lock_callback(void (*dyn_lock_function)
(int mode, struct CRYPTO_dynlock_value *l,
const char *file, int line));
void CRYPTO_set_dynlock_destroy_callback(void (*dyn_destroy_function)
(struct CRYPTO_dynlock_value *l, const char *file, int line));
int CRYPTO_get_new_dynlockid(void);
void CRYPTO_destroy_dynlockid(int i);
void CRYPTO_lock(int mode, int n, const char *file, int line);
#define CRYPTO_w_lock(type) \
CRYPTO_lock(CRYPTO_LOCK|CRYPTO_WRITE,type,__FILE__,__LINE__)
#define CRYPTO_w_unlock(type) \
CRYPTO_lock(CRYPTO_UNLOCK|CRYPTO_WRITE,type,__FILE__,__LINE__)
#define CRYPTO_r_lock(type) \
CRYPTO_lock(CRYPTO_LOCK|CRYPTO_READ,type,__FILE__,__LINE__)
#define CRYPTO_r_unlock(type) \
CRYPTO_lock(CRYPTO_UNLOCK|CRYPTO_READ,type,__FILE__,__LINE__)
#define CRYPTO_add(addr,amount,type) \
CRYPTO_add_lock(addr,amount,type,__FILE__,__LINE__)
DESCRIPTION¶
OpenSSL can safely be used in multi-threaded applications provided that at least two callback functions are set, locking_function and threadid_func. locking_function(int mode, int n, const char *file, int line) is needed to perform locking on shared data structures. (Note that OpenSSL uses a number of global data structures that will be implicitly shared whenever multiple threads use OpenSSL.) Multi-threaded applications will crash at random if it is not set. locking_function() must be able to handle up to CRYPTO_num_locks() different mutex locks. It sets the n-th lock if mode & CRYPTO_LOCK, and releases it otherwise. file and line are the file number of the function setting the lock. They can be useful for debugging. threadid_func(CRYPTO_THREADID *id) is needed to record the currently-executing thread's identifier into id. The implementation of this callback should not fill in id directly, but should use CRYPTO_THREADID_set_numeric() if thread IDs are numeric, or CRYPTO_THREADID_set_pointer() if they are pointer-based. If the application does not register such a callback using CRYPTO_THREADID_set_callback(), then a default implementation is used - on Windows and BeOS this uses the system's default thread identifying APIs, and on all other platforms it uses the address of errno. The latter is satisfactory for thread-safety if and only if the platform has a thread-local error number facility. Once threadid_func() is registered, or if the built-in default implementation is to be used;- •
- CRYPTO_THREADID_current() records the currently-executing thread ID into the given id object.
- •
- CRYPTO_THREADID_cmp() compares two thread IDs (returning zero for equality, ie. the same semantics as memcmp()).
- •
- CRYPTO_THREADID_cpy() duplicates a thread ID value,
- •
- CRYPTO_THREADID_hash() returns a numeric value usable as a hash-table key. This is usually the exact numeric or pointer-based thread ID used internally, however this also handles the unusual case where pointers are larger than 'long' variables and the platform's thread IDs are pointer-based - in this case, mixing is done to attempt to produce a unique numeric value even though it is not as wide as the platform's true thread IDs.
- •
- Three additional callback function, dyn_create_function, dyn_lock_function and dyn_destroy_function.
- •
- A structure defined with the data that each lock needs to handle.
CRYPTO_LOCK 0x01
CRYPTO_UNLOCK 0x02
CRYPTO_READ 0x04
CRYPTO_WRITE 0x08
RETURN VALUES¶
CRYPTO_num_locks() returns the required number of locks. CRYPTO_get_new_dynlockid() returns the index to the newly created lock. The other functions return no values.NOTES¶
You can find out if OpenSSL was configured with thread support:#define OPENSSL_THREAD_DEFINES #include <openssl/opensslconf.h> #if defined(OPENSSL_THREADS) // thread support enabled #else // no thread support #endifAlso, dynamic locks are currently not used internally by OpenSSL, but may do so in the future.
EXAMPLES¶
crypto/threads/mttest.c shows examples of the callback functions on Solaris, Irix and Win32.HISTORY¶
CRYPTO_set_locking_callback() is available in all versions of SSLeay and OpenSSL. CRYPTO_num_locks() was added in OpenSSL 0.9.4. All functions dealing with dynamic locks were added in OpenSSL 0.9.5b-dev. CRYPTO_THREADID and associated functions were introduced in OpenSSL 1.0.0 to replace (actually, deprecate) the previous CRYPTO_set_id_callback(), CRYPTO_get_id_callback(), and CRYPTO_thread_id() functions which assumed thread IDs to always be represented by 'unsigned long'.SEE ALSO¶
crypto(3)| 2016-05-03 | 1.0.1t |