gnutls_priority_init — Sets priorities for the cipher suites supported by gnutls.
#include <gnutls/gnutls.h>
int gnutls_priority_init( |
gnutls_priority_t * priority_cache, |
const char * priorities, | |
const char ** err_pos) ; |
is a gnutls_prioritity_t structure.
is a string describing priorities
In case of an error this will have the position in the string the error occured
Sets priorities for the ciphers, key exchange methods,
macs and compression methods. This is to avoid using the
gnutls_*_priority
()
functions.
The priorities
option allows you to specify a semi−colon separated
list of the cipher priorities to enable.
Unless the first keyword is "NONE" the defaults (in preference order) are for TLS protocols TLS1.1, TLS1.0, SSL3.0; for compression NULL; for certificate types X.509, OpenPGP.
For key exchange algorithms when in NORMAL or SECURE levels the perfect forward secrecy algorithms take precendence of the other protocols. In all cases all the supported key exchange algorithms are enabled (except for the RSA−EXPORT which is only enabled in EXPORT level).
Note that although one can select very long key sizes (such as 256 bits) for symmetric algorithms, to actually increase security the public key algorithms have to use longer key sizes as well.
For all the current available algorithms and protocols use "gnutls−cli −l" to get a listing.
Some keywords are defined to provide quick access to common preferences.
"PERFORMANCE" means all the "secure" ciphersuites are enabled, limited to 128 bit ciphers and sorted by terms of speed performance.
"NORMAL" means all "secure" ciphersuites. The 256−bit ciphers are included as a fallback only. The ciphers are sorted by security margin.
"SECURE128" means all "secure" ciphersuites with ciphers up to 128 bits, sorted by security margin.
"SECURE256" means all "secure" ciphersuites including the 256 bit ciphers, sorted by security margin.
"EXPORT" means all ciphersuites are enabled, including the low−security 40 bit ciphers.
"NONE" means nothing is enabled. This disables even protocols and compression methods.
"!" or "−" appended with an algorithm will remove this algorithm.
"+" appended with an algorithm will add this algorithm.
"%COMPAT" will enable compatibility features for a server.
"%SSL3_RECORD_VERSION" will use SSL3.0 record version in client hello.
"%VERIFY_ALLOW_SIGN_RSA_MD5" will allow RSA−MD5 signatures in certificate chains.
"%VERIFY_ALLOW_X509_V1_CA_CRT" will allow V1 CAs in chains.
To avoid collisions in order to specify a compression algorithm in this string you have to prefix it with "COMP−", protocol versions with "VERS−", signature algorithms with "SIGN−" and certificate types with "CTYPE−". All other algorithms don't need a prefix.
"NORMAL:!AES−128−CBC" means normal ciphers except for AES−128.
"EXPORT:!VERS−TLS1.0:+COMP−DEFLATE" means that export ciphers are enabled, TLS 1.0 is disabled, and libz compression enabled.
"NONE:+VERS−TLS1.0:+AES−128−CBC:+RSA:+SHA1:+COMP−NULL", "NORMAL", "%COMPAT".
On syntax error GNUTLS_E_INVALID_REQUEST is returned, GNUTLS_E_SUCCESS on success, or an error code.
Report bugs to <[email protected]>. GnuTLS home page: http://www.gnu.org/software/gnutls/ General help using GNU software: http://www.gnu.org/gethelp/
The full documentation for gnutls is maintained as a Texinfo manual. If the info and gnutls programs are properly installed at your site, the command
info gnutls
should give you access to the complete manual.
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Copyright © 2008 Free Software Foundation. Copying and distribution of this file, with or without modification, are permitted in any medium without royalty provided the copyright notice and this notice are preserved. |