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PROVIDER-OBJECT(7SSL)               OpenSSL              PROVIDER-OBJECT(7SSL)

NAME
       provider-object - A specification for a provider-native object
       abstraction

SYNOPSIS
        #include <openssl/core_object.h>
        #include <openssl/core_names.h>

DESCRIPTION
       The provider-native object abstraction is a set of OSSL_PARAM(3) keys
       and values that can be used to pass provider-native objects to OpenSSL
       library code or between different provider operation implementations
       with the help of OpenSSL library code.

       The intention is that certain provider-native operations can pass any
       sort of object that belong with other operations, or with OpenSSL
       library code.

       An object may be passed in the following manners:

       1.  By value

           This  means that the object data is passed as an octet string or an
           UTF8 string, which can be handled in diverse ways by other provided
           implementations.  The encoding of the object depends on the context
           it's  used  in;  for  example,  OSSL_DECODER(3)   allows   multiple
           encodings,  depending  on  existing  decoders.   If central OpenSSL
           library functionality is to handle the data directly,  it  must  be
           encoded  in  DER  for  all object types except for OSSL_OBJECT_NAME
           (see "Parameter reference" below), where it's assumed  to  a  plain
           UTF8 string.

       2.  By reference

           This  means  that  the object data isn't passed directly, an object
           reference is passed instead.  It's an octet string  that  only  the
           correct provider understands correctly.

       Objects  by  value  can  be  used  by anything that handles DER encoded
       objects.

       Objects by reference need  a  higher  level  of  cooperation  from  the
       implementation  where  the  object originated (let's call it X) and its
       target implementation (let's call it Y):

       1.  An object loading function in the target implementation

           The target implementation (Y) may have a function that can take  an
           object   reference.    This   can   only  be  used  if  the  target
           implementation is from the same provider as the one originating the
           object abstraction in question (X).

           The exact target implementation  to  use  is  determined  from  the
           object  type  and possibly the object data type.  For example, when
           the OpenSSL library receives an object abstraction with the  object
           type  OSSL_OBJECT_PKEY,  it  will fetch a provider-keymgmt(7) using
           the object data type as  its  key  type  (the  second  argument  in
           EVP_KEYMGMT_fetch(3)).

       2.  An object exporter in the originating implementation

           The  originating  implementation (X) may have an exporter function.
           This exporter  function  can  be  used  to  export  the  object  in
           OSSL_PARAM(3)  form,  that  can  then  be  imported  by  the target
           implementation's imported function.

           This can be used  when  it's  not  possible  to  fetch  the  target
           implementation (Y) from the same provider.

   Parameter reference
       A  provider-native  object  abstraction  is  an  OSSL_PARAM(3)  with  a
       selection of the following parameters:

       "data" (OSSL_OBJECT_PARAM_DATA) <octet string> or <UTF8 string>
           The object data passed by value.

       "reference" (OSSL_OBJECT_PARAM_REFERENCE) <octet string>
           The object data passed by reference.

       "type" (OSSL_OBJECT_PARAM_TYPE) <integer>
           The object type, a number that may have any of the following values
           (all defined in <openssl/core_object.h>):

           OSSL_OBJECT_NAME
               The object data may only be passed by value, and  should  be  a
               UTF8 string.

               This  is  useful  for  provider-storemgmt(7)  when  a  URI load
               results in new URIs.

           OSSL_OBJECT_PKEY
               The object data is suitable  as  provider-native  EVP_PKEY  key
               data.   The  object  data  may  be passed by value or passed by
               reference.

           OSSL_OBJECT_CERT
               The object data is suitable as X509 data.  The object data  for
               this  object type can only be passed by value, and should be an
               octet string.

               Since  there's  no  provider-native   X.509   object,   OpenSSL
               libraries  that receive this object abstraction are expected to
               convert the data to a X509 object with d2i_X509().

           OSSL_OBJECT_CRL
               The object data is suitable as X509_CRL data.  The object  data
               can only be passed by value, and should be an octet string.

               Since  there's  no  provider-native  X.509  CRL object, OpenSSL
               libraries that receive this object abstraction are expected  to
               convert the data to a X509_CRL object with d2i_X509_CRL().

       "data-type" (OSSL_OBJECT_PARAM_DATA_TYPE) <UTF8 string>
           The  specific type of the object content.  Legitimate values depend
           on the object type; if it is OSSL_OBJECT_PKEY,  the  data  type  is
           expected   to   be   a   key   type   suitable   for   fetching   a
           provider-keymgmt(7) that can handle the data.

       "data-structure" (OSSL_OBJECT_PARAM_DATA_STRUCTURE) <UTF8 string>
           The outermost structure of the object content.   Legitimate  values
           depend on the object type.

       "desc" (OSSL_OBJECT_PARAM_DESC) <UTF8 string>
           A human readable text that describes extra details on the object.

       When  a  provider-native  object  abstraction  is used, it must contain
       object data in at least one form (object data passed by value, i.e. the
       "data" item, or object data passed by reference, i.e.  the  "reference"
       item).   Both may be present at once, in which case the OpenSSL library
       code that receives this will use the most optimal variant.

       For objects with the object type  OSSL_OBJECT_NAME,  that  object  type
       must be given.

SEE ALSO
       provider(7), OSSL_DECODER(3)

HISTORY
       The concept of providers and everything surrounding them was introduced
       in OpenSSL 3.0.

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright 2020-2023 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>.

3.0.13                            2025-09-18             PROVIDER-OBJECT(7SSL)

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