OSSL_trace_set_channel, OSSL_trace_set_prefix, OSSL_trace_set_suffix, OSSL_trace_set_callback, OSSL_trace_cb - Enabling trace output
#include <openssl/trace.h>
typedef size_t (*OSSL_trace_cb)(const char *buf, size_t cnt,
int category, int cmd, void *data);
void OSSL_trace_set_channel(int category, BIO *bio);
void OSSL_trace_set_prefix(int category, const char *prefix);
void OSSL_trace_set_suffix(int category, const char *suffix);
void OSSL_trace_set_callback(int category, OSSL_trace_cb cb, void *data);
If available (see "NOTES" below), the application can request internal trace output. This output comes in form of free text for humans to read.
The trace output is divided into categories which can be enabled individually. Every category can be enabled individually by attaching a so called trace channel to it, which in the simplest case is just a BIO object to which the application can write the tracing output for this category. Alternatively, the application can provide a tracer callback in order to get more finegrained trace information. This callback will be wrapped internally by a dedicated BIO object.
For the tracing code, both trace channel types are indistinguishable. These are called a simple trace channel and a callback trace channel, respectively.
OSSL_trace_set_channel() is used to enable the given trace category
by attaching the BIO bio
object as (simple) trace channel.
OSSL_trace_set_prefix() and OSSL_trace_set_suffix() can be used to add an extra line for each channel, to be output before and after group of tracing output. What constitues an output group is decided by the code that produces the output. The lines given here are considered immutable; for more dynamic tracing prefixes, consider setting a callback with OSSL_trace_set_callback() instead.
OSSL_trace_set_callback() is used to enable the given trace category
by giving it the tracer callback cb
with the associated data data
, which will simply be passed through to cb
whenever it's called. The callback function is internally wrapped by a dedicated BIO object, the so called callback trace channel. This should be used when it's desirable to do form the trace output to something suitable for application needs where a prefix and suffix line aren't enough.
OSSL_trace_set_channel() and OSSL_trace_set_callback() are mutually exclusive, calling one of them will clear whatever was set by the previous call.
Calling OSSL_trace_set_channel() with NULL
for channel
or OSSL_trace_set_callback() with NULL
for cb
disables tracing for the given category
The tracer callback must return a size_t
, which must be zero on error and otherwise return the number of bytes that were output. It receives a text buffer buf
with cnt
bytes of text, as well as the category
, a control number cmd
, and the data
that was passed to OSSL_trace_set_callback().
The possible control numbers are:
OSSL_TRACE_CTRL_BEGIN
The callback is called from OSSL_trace_begin(), which gives the callback the possibility to output a dynamic starting line, or set a prefix that should be output at the beginning of each line, or something other.
OSSL_TRACE_CTRL_WRITE
This callback is called whenever data is written to the BIO by some regular BIO output routine. An arbitrary number of OSSL_TRACE_CTRL_WRITE
callbacks can occur inside a group marked by a pair of OSSL_TRACE_CTRL_BEGIN
and OSSL_TRACE_CTRL_END
calls, but never outside such a group.
OSSL_TRACE_CTRL_END
The callback is called from OSSL_trace_end(), which gives the callback the possibility to output a dynamic ending line, or reset the line prefix that was set with OSSL_TRACE_CTRL_BEGIN, or something other.
The trace categories are simple numbers available through macros.
OSSL_TRACE_CATEGORY_TRACE
Traces the OpenSSL trace API itself.
More precisely, this will generate trace output any time a new trace hook is set.
OSSL_TRACE_CATEGORY_INIT
Traces OpenSSL library initialization and cleanup.
This needs special care, as OpenSSL will do automatic cleanup after exit from Traces the TLS/SSL protocol. Traces the ciphers used by the TLS/SSL protocol. Traces the ENGINE configuration. Traces the ENGINE algorithm table selection. More precisely, engine_table_select(), the function that is used by RSA, DSA (etc) code to select registered ENGINEs, cache defaults and functional references (etc), will generate trace summaries. Tracds the ENGINE reference counting. More precisely, both reference counts in the ENGINE structure will be monitored with a line of trace output generated for each change. Traces PKCS#5 v2 key generation. Traces PKCS#12 key generation. Traces PKCS#12 decryption. Traces X509v3 policy processing. More precisely, this generates the complete policy tree at various point during evaluation. Traces BIGNUM context operations. Traces the OSSL_PROVIDER configuration.main()
, and any tracing output done during this cleanup will be lost if the tracing channel or callback were cleaned away prematurely. A suggestion is to make such cleanup part of a function that's registered very early with OSSL_TRACE_CATEGORY_TLS
OSSL_TRACE_CATEGORY_TLS_CIPHER
OSSL_TRACE_CATEGORY_ENGINE_CONF
OSSL_TRACE_CATEGORY_ENGINE_TABLE
OSSL_TRACE_CATEGORY_ENGINE_REF_COUNT
OSSL_TRACE_CATEGORY_PKCS5V2
OSSL_TRACE_CATEGORY_PKCS12_KEYGEN
OSSL_TRACE_CATEGORY_PKCS12_DECRYPT
OSSL_TRACE_CATEGORY_X509V3_POLICY
OSSL_TRACE_CATEGORY_BN_CTX
OSSL_TRACE_CATEGORY_PROVIDER_CONF
There is also OSSL_TRACE_CATEGORY_ALL
, which works as a fallback and can be used to get all trace output.
Note, however, that in this case all trace output will effectively be associated with the 'ALL' category, which is undesirable if the application intends to include the category name in the trace output. In this case it is better to register separate channels for each trace category instead.
OSSL_trace_set_channel(), OSSL_trace_set_prefix(), OSSL_trace_set_suffix(), and OSSL_trace_set_callback() return 1 on success, or 0 on failure.
In all examples below, the trace producing code is assumed to be the following:
int foo = 42;
const char bar[] = { 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7,
8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15 };
OSSL_TRACE_BEGIN(TLS) {
BIO_puts(trc_out, "foo: ");
BIO_printf(trc_out, "%d\n", foo);
BIO_dump(trc_out, bar, sizeof(bar));
} OSSL_TRACE_END(TLS);
An example with just a channel and constant prefix / suffix.
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
BIO *err = BIO_new_fp(stderr, BIO_NOCLOSE | BIO_FP_TEXT);
OSSL_trace_set_channel(OSSL_TRACE_CATEGORY_SSL, err);
OSSL_trace_set_prefix(OSSL_TRACE_CATEGORY_SSL, "BEGIN TRACE[TLS]");
OSSL_trace_set_suffix(OSSL_TRACE_CATEGORY_SSL, "END TRACE[TLS]");
/* ... work ... */
}
When the trace producing code above is performed, this will be output on standard error:
BEGIN TRACE[TLS]
foo: 42
0000 - 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07-08 09 0a 0b 0c 0d 0e 0f ................
END TRACE[TLS]
This example uses the callback, and depends on pthreads functionality.
static size_t cb(const char *buf, size_t cnt,
int category, int cmd, void *vdata)
{
BIO *bio = vdata;
const char *label = NULL;
switch (cmd) {
case OSSL_TRACE_CTRL_BEGIN:
label = "BEGIN";
break;
case OSSL_TRACE_CTRL_END:
label = "END";
break;
}
if (label != NULL) {
union {
pthread_t tid;
unsigned long ltid;
} tid;
tid.tid = pthread_self();
BIO_printf(bio, "%s TRACE[%s]:%lx\n",
label, OSSL_trace_get_category_name(category), tid.ltid);
}
return (size_t)BIO_puts(bio, buf);
}
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
BIO *err = BIO_new_fp(stderr, BIO_NOCLOSE | BIO_FP_TEXT);
OSSL_trace_set_callback(OSSL_TRACE_CATEGORY_SSL, cb, err);
/* ... work ... */
}
The output is almost the same as for the simple example above.
BEGIN TRACE[TLS]:7f9eb0193b80
foo: 42
0000 - 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07-08 09 0a 0b 0c 0d 0e 0f ................
END TRACE[TLS]:7f9eb0193b80
By default, the OpenSSL library is built with tracing disabled. To use the tracing functionality documented here, it is therefore necessary to configure and build OpenSSL with the 'enable-trace' option.
When the library is built with tracing disabled, the macro OPENSSL_NO_TRACE
is defined in openssl/opensslconf.h
and all functions described here are inoperational, i.e. will do nothing.
OSSL_trace_set_channel(), OSSL_trace_set_prefix(), OSSL_trace_set_suffix(), and OSSL_trace_set_callback() were all added in OpenSSL 3.0.
Copyright 2019 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.