Loading doc/crypto/OBJ_nid2obj.pod +0 −10 Original line number Diff line number Diff line Loading @@ -33,12 +33,6 @@ functions The ASN1 object utility functions process ASN1_OBJECT structures which are a representation of the ASN1 OBJECT IDENTIFIER (OID) type. For convenience, OID's are usually represented in source code as numeric identifiers, or B<NID>'s. OpenSSL has an internal table of OID's that are generated when the library is built, and their corresponding NID's are available as define'd constants. For the functions below, application code should treat all returned values -- OID's, NID's, or names -- as constants. OBJ_nid2obj(), OBJ_nid2ln() and OBJ_nid2sn() convert the NID B<n> to an ASN1_OBJECT structure, its long name and its short name respectively, Loading Loading @@ -118,7 +112,6 @@ Create a new NID and initialize an object from it: int new_nid; ASN1_OBJECT *obj; new_nid = OBJ_create("1.2.3.4", "NewOID", "New Object Identifier"); obj = OBJ_nid2obj(new_nid); Loading @@ -136,9 +129,6 @@ Instead B<buf> must point to a valid buffer and B<buf_len> should be set to a positive value. A buffer length of 80 should be more than enough to handle any OID encountered in practice. Many of the functions here should probably be changed to return B<const> pointers. But the lack of consistency makes that too awkward to do. =head1 RETURN VALUES OBJ_nid2obj() returns an B<ASN1_OBJECT> structure or B<NULL> is an Loading Loading
doc/crypto/OBJ_nid2obj.pod +0 −10 Original line number Diff line number Diff line Loading @@ -33,12 +33,6 @@ functions The ASN1 object utility functions process ASN1_OBJECT structures which are a representation of the ASN1 OBJECT IDENTIFIER (OID) type. For convenience, OID's are usually represented in source code as numeric identifiers, or B<NID>'s. OpenSSL has an internal table of OID's that are generated when the library is built, and their corresponding NID's are available as define'd constants. For the functions below, application code should treat all returned values -- OID's, NID's, or names -- as constants. OBJ_nid2obj(), OBJ_nid2ln() and OBJ_nid2sn() convert the NID B<n> to an ASN1_OBJECT structure, its long name and its short name respectively, Loading Loading @@ -118,7 +112,6 @@ Create a new NID and initialize an object from it: int new_nid; ASN1_OBJECT *obj; new_nid = OBJ_create("1.2.3.4", "NewOID", "New Object Identifier"); obj = OBJ_nid2obj(new_nid); Loading @@ -136,9 +129,6 @@ Instead B<buf> must point to a valid buffer and B<buf_len> should be set to a positive value. A buffer length of 80 should be more than enough to handle any OID encountered in practice. Many of the functions here should probably be changed to return B<const> pointers. But the lack of consistency makes that too awkward to do. =head1 RETURN VALUES OBJ_nid2obj() returns an B<ASN1_OBJECT> structure or B<NULL> is an Loading