Add news and a description of the ENGINE part and how it's currently

distributed.
This commit is contained in:
Richard Levitte 2000-09-20 15:52:26 +00:00
parent b38d84d867
commit b22bda21a1
2 changed files with 58 additions and 0 deletions

4
NEWS
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o New 'rsautl' application, low level RSA utility.
o MD4 now included.
o Bugfix for SSL rollback padding check.
o Support for external crypto device[1].
[1] The support for external crypto devices is currently a separate
distribution. See the file README.ENGINE.
Major changes between OpenSSL 0.9.5 and OpenSSL 0.9.5a:

54
README.ENGINE Normal file
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ENGINE
======
With OpenSSL 0.9.6, a new component has been added to support external
crypto devices, for example accelerator cards. The component is called
ENGINE, and has still a pretty experimental status and almost no
documentation. It's designed to be faily easily extensible by the
calling programs.
There's currently built-in support for the following crypto devices:
o CryptoSwift
o Compaq Atalla
o nCipher CHIL
A number of things are still needed and are being worked on:
o An openssl utility command to handle or at least check available
engines.
o A better way of handling the methods that are handled by the
engines.
o Documentation!
What already exists is fairly stable as far as it has been tested, but
the test base has been a bit small most of the time.
Because of this experimental status and what's lacking, the ENGINE
component is not yet part of the default OpenSSL distribution. However,
we have made a separate kit for those who want to try this out, to be
found in the same places as the default OpenSSL distribution, but with
"-engine-" being part of the kit file name. For example, version 0.9.6
is distributed in the following two files:
openssl-0.9.6.tar.gz
openssl-engine-0.9.6.tar.gz
NOTES
=====
openssl-engine-0.9.6.tar.gz does not depend on openssl-0.9.6.tar, you do
not need to download both.
openssl-engine-0.9.6.tar.gz is usable even if you don't have an external
crypto device. The internal OpenSSL functions are contained in the
engine "openssl", and will be used by default.
No external crypto device is chosen unless you say so. You have actively
tell the openssl utility commands to use it through a new command line
switch called "-engine". And if you want to use the ENGINE library to
do something similar, you must also explicitely choose an external crypto
device, or the built-in crypto routines will be used, just as in the
default OpenSSL distribution.