Never output -0; make "negative zero" an impossibility.
Do better checking on BN_rand top/bottom requirements and #bits.
Update doc.
Ignoring trailing garbage in BN_asc2bn.
Port this commit from boringSSL: https://boringssl.googlesource.com/boringssl/+/
899b9b19a4cd3fe526aaf5047ab9234cdca19f7d%5E!/
Ensure |BN_div| never gives negative zero in the no_branch code.
Have |bn_correct_top| fix |bn->neg| if the input is zero so that we
don't have negative zeros lying around.
Thanks to Brian Smith for noticing.
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
(cherry picked from commit
01c09f9fde5793e0b3712d602b02e2aed4908e8d)
}
a->top = tmp_top;
}
+ if (a->top == 0)
+ a->neg = 0;
bn_pollute(a);
}
char *buf;
char *p;
- if (a->neg && BN_is_zero(a)) {
- /* "-0" == 3 bytes including NULL terminator */
- buf = OPENSSL_malloc(3);
- } else {
- buf = OPENSSL_malloc(a->top * BN_BYTES * 2 + 2);
- }
+ if (BN_is_zero(a))
+ return OPENSSL_strdup("0");
+ buf = OPENSSL_malloc(a->top * BN_BYTES * 2 + 2);
if (buf == NULL) {
BNerr(BN_F_BN_BN2HEX, ERR_R_MALLOC_FAILURE);
goto err;
}
ret->top = h;
bn_correct_top(ret);
- ret->neg = neg;
*bn = ret;
bn_check_top(ret);
+ /* Don't set the negative flag if it's zero. */
+ if (ret->top != 0)
+ ret->neg = neg;
return (num);
err:
if (*bn == NULL)
if (j == BN_DEC_NUM)
j = 0;
l = 0;
- while (*a) {
+ while (--i >= 0) {
l *= 10;
l += *a - '0';
a++;
j = 0;
}
}
- ret->neg = neg;
bn_correct_top(ret);
*bn = ret;
bn_check_top(ret);
+ /* Don't set the negative flag if it's zero. */
+ if (ret->top != 0)
+ ret->neg = neg;
return (num);
err:
if (*bn == NULL)
int BN_asc2bn(BIGNUM **bn, const char *a)
{
const char *p = a;
+
if (*p == '-')
p++;
if (!BN_dec2bn(bn, p))
return 0;
}
- if (*a == '-')
+ /* Don't set the negative flag if it's zero. */
+ if (*a == '-' && (*bn)->top != 0)
(*bn)->neg = 1;
return 1;
}
int ret = 0, bit, bytes, mask;
time_t tim;
- if (bits < 0 || (bits == 1 && top > 0)) {
- BNerr(BN_F_BNRAND, BN_R_BITS_TOO_SMALL);
- return 0;
- }
-
if (bits == 0) {
+ if (top != BN_RAND_TOP_ANY || bottom != BN_RAND_BOTTOM_ANY)
+ goto toosmall;
BN_zero(rnd);
return 1;
}
+ if (bits < 0 || (bits == 1 && top > 0))
+ goto toosmall;
bytes = (bits + 7) / 8;
bit = (bits - 1) % 8;
OPENSSL_clear_free(buf, bytes);
bn_check_top(rnd);
return (ret);
+
+toosmall:
+ BNerr(BN_F_BNRAND, BN_R_BITS_TOO_SMALL);
+ return 0;
}
int BN_rand(BIGNUM *rnd, int bits, int top, int bottom)
hexadecimal number representation and converts them to a B<BIGNUM> and
stores it in **B<bn>. If *B<bn> is NULL, a new B<BIGNUM> is created. If
B<bn> is NULL, it only computes the length of valid representation.
+A "negative zero" is converted to zero.
BN_dec2bn() is the same using the decimal system.
BN_print() and BN_print_fp() write the hexadecimal encoding of B<a>,
BN_rand() generates a cryptographically strong pseudo-random number of
B<bits> in length and stores it in B<rnd>.
-The value of B<bits> must be zero or greater.
+If B<bits> is less than zero, or too small to
+accomodate the requirements specified by the B<top> and B<bottom>
+parameters, an error is returned.
The B<top> parameters specifies
requirements on the most significant bit of the generated number.
If it is B<BN_RAND_TOP_ANY>, there is no constraint.