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EVP_ENCODEINIT(3)		    OpenSSL		     EVP_ENCODEINIT(3)

NAME
       EVP_ENCODE_CTX_new, EVP_ENCODE_CTX_free,	EVP_ENCODE_CTX_copy,
       EVP_ENCODE_CTX_num, EVP_EncodeInit, EVP_EncodeUpdate, EVP_EncodeFinal,
       EVP_EncodeBlock,	EVP_DecodeInit,	EVP_DecodeUpdate, EVP_DecodeFinal,
       EVP_DecodeBlock - EVP base 64 encode/decode routines

SYNOPSIS
	#include <openssl/evp.h>

	EVP_ENCODE_CTX *EVP_ENCODE_CTX_new(void);
	void EVP_ENCODE_CTX_free(EVP_ENCODE_CTX	*ctx);
	int EVP_ENCODE_CTX_copy(EVP_ENCODE_CTX *dctx, EVP_ENCODE_CTX *sctx);
	int EVP_ENCODE_CTX_num(EVP_ENCODE_CTX *ctx);
	void EVP_EncodeInit(EVP_ENCODE_CTX *ctx);
	int EVP_EncodeUpdate(EVP_ENCODE_CTX *ctx, unsigned char	*out, int *outl,
			     const unsigned char *in, int inl);
	void EVP_EncodeFinal(EVP_ENCODE_CTX *ctx, unsigned char	*out, int *outl);
	int EVP_EncodeBlock(unsigned char *t, const unsigned char *f, int n);

	void EVP_DecodeInit(EVP_ENCODE_CTX *ctx);
	int EVP_DecodeUpdate(EVP_ENCODE_CTX *ctx, unsigned char	*out, int *outl,
			     const unsigned char *in, int inl);
	int EVP_DecodeFinal(EVP_ENCODE_CTX *ctx, unsigned char *out, int *outl);
	int EVP_DecodeBlock(unsigned char *t, const unsigned char *f, int n);

DESCRIPTION
       The EVP encode routines provide a high-level interface to base 64
       encoding	and decoding. Base 64 encoding converts	binary data into a
       printable form that uses	the characters A-Z, a-z, 0-9, "+" and "/" to
       represent the data. For every 3 bytes of	binary data provided 4 bytes
       of base 64 encoded data will be produced	plus some occasional newlines
       (see below). If the input data length is	not a multiple of 3 then the
       output data will	be padded at the end using the "=" character.

       EVP_ENCODE_CTX_new() allocates, initializes and returns a context to be
       used for	the encode/decode functions.

       EVP_ENCODE_CTX_free() cleans up an encode/decode	context	ctx and	frees
       up the space allocated to it.

       Encoding	of binary data is performed in blocks of 48 input bytes	(or
       less for	the final block). For each 48 byte input block encoded 64
       bytes of	base 64	data is	output plus an additional newline character
       (i.e. 65	bytes in total). The final block (which	may be less than 48
       bytes) will output 4 bytes for every 3 bytes of input. If the data
       length is not divisible by 3 then a full	4 bytes	is still output	for
       the final 1 or 2	bytes of input.	Similarly a newline character will
       also be output.

       EVP_EncodeInit()	initialises ctx	for the	start of a new encoding
       operation.

       EVP_EncodeUpdate() encode inl bytes of data found in the	buffer pointed
       to by in. The output is stored in the buffer out	and the	number of
       bytes output is stored in *outl.	It is the caller's responsibility to
       ensure that the buffer at out is	sufficiently large to accommodate the
       output data. Only full blocks of	data (48 bytes)	will be	immediately
       processed and output by this function. Any remainder is held in the ctx
       object and will be processed by a subsequent call to EVP_EncodeUpdate()
       or EVP_EncodeFinal(). To	calculate the required size of the output
       buffer add together the value of	inl with the amount of unprocessed
       data held in ctx	and divide the result by 48 (ignore any	remainder).
       This gives the number of	blocks of data that will be processed.	Ensure
       the output buffer contains 65 bytes of storage for each block, plus an
       additional byte for a NUL terminator. EVP_EncodeUpdate()	may be called
       repeatedly to process large amounts of input data. In the event of an
       error EVP_EncodeUpdate()	will set *outl to 0 and	return 0. On success 1
       will be returned.

       EVP_EncodeFinal() must be called	at the end of an encoding operation.
       It will process any partial block of data remaining in the ctx object.
       The output data will be stored in out and the length of the data
       written will be stored in *outl.	It is the caller's responsibility to
       ensure that out is sufficiently large to	accommodate the	output data
       which will never	be more	than 65	bytes plus an additional NUL
       terminator (i.e.	66 bytes in total).

       EVP_ENCODE_CTX_copy() can be used to copy a context sctx	to a context
       dctx. dctx must be initialized before calling this function.

       EVP_ENCODE_CTX_num() will return	the number of as yet unprocessed bytes
       still to	be encoded or decoded that are pending in the ctx object.

       EVP_EncodeBlock() encodes a full	block of input data in f and of	length
       n and stores it in t. For every 3 bytes of input	provided 4 bytes of
       output data will	be produced. If	n is not divisible by 3	then the block
       is encoded as a final block of data and the output is padded such that
       it is always divisible by 4. Additionally a NUL terminator character
       will be added. For example if 16	bytes of input data is provided	then
       24 bytes	of encoded data	is created plus	1 byte for a NUL terminator
       (i.e. 25	bytes in total). The length of the data	generated without the
       NUL terminator is returned from the function.

       EVP_DecodeInit()	initialises ctx	for the	start of a new decoding
       operation.

       EVP_DecodeUpdate() decodes inl characters of data found in the buffer
       pointed to by in. The output is stored in the buffer out	and the	number
       of bytes	output is stored in *outl. It is the caller's responsibility
       to ensure that the buffer at out	is sufficiently	large to accommodate
       the output data.	This function will attempt to decode as	much data as
       possible	in 4 byte chunks. Any whitespace, newline or carriage return
       characters are ignored. Any partial chunk of unprocessed	data (1, 2 or
       3 bytes)	that remains at	the end	will be	held in	the ctx	object and
       processed by a subsequent call to EVP_DecodeUpdate(). If	any illegal
       base 64 characters are encountered or if	the base 64 padding character
       "=" is encountered in the middle	of the data then the function returns
       -1 to indicate an error.	A return value of 0 or 1 indicates successful
       processing of the data. A return	value of 0 additionally	indicates that
       the last	input data characters processed	included the base 64 padding
       character "=" and therefore no more non-padding character data is
       expected	to be processed. For every 4 valid base	64 bytes processed
       (ignoring whitespace, carriage returns and line feeds), 3 bytes of
       binary output data will be produced (or less at the end of the data
       where the padding character "=" has been	used).

       EVP_DecodeFinal() must be called	at the end of a	decoding operation. If
       there is	any unprocessed	data still in ctx then the input data must not
       have been a multiple of 4 and therefore an error	has occurred. The
       function	will return -1 in this case. Otherwise the function returns 1
       on success.

       EVP_DecodeBlock() will decode the block of n characters of base 64 data
       contained in f and store	the result in t. Any leading whitespace	will
       be trimmed as will any trailing whitespace, newlines, carriage returns
       or EOF characters. After	such trimming the length of the	data in	f must
       be divisible by 4. For every 4 input bytes exactly 3 output bytes will
       be produced. The	output will be padded with 0 bits if necessary to
       ensure that the output is always	3 bytes	for every 4 input bytes. This
       function	will return the	length of the data decoded or -1 on error.

RETURN VALUES
       EVP_ENCODE_CTX_new() returns a pointer to the newly allocated
       EVP_ENCODE_CTX object or	NULL on	error.

       EVP_ENCODE_CTX_num() returns the	number of bytes	pending	encoding or
       decoding	in ctx.

       EVP_EncodeUpdate() returns 0 on error or	1 on success.

       EVP_EncodeBlock() returns the number of bytes encoded excluding the NUL
       terminator.

       EVP_DecodeUpdate() returns -1 on	error and 0 or 1 on success. If	0 is
       returned	then no	more non-padding base 64 characters are	expected.

       EVP_DecodeFinal() returns -1 on error or	1 on success.

       EVP_DecodeBlock() returns the length of the data	decoded	or -1 on
       error.

SEE ALSO
       evp(7)

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright 2016-2020 The OpenSSL Project Authors.	All Rights Reserved.

       Licensed	under the OpenSSL license (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>.

1.1.1k				  2021-03-25		     EVP_ENCODEINIT(3)

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | RETURN VALUES | SEE ALSO | COPYRIGHT

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