Provided by: openssl_3.0.2-0ubuntu1.19_amd64 bug

NAME

       migration_guide - OpenSSL migration guide

SYNOPSIS

       See the individual manual pages for details.

DESCRIPTION

       This guide details the changes required to migrate to new versions of OpenSSL.  Currently this covers
       OpenSSL 3.0. For earlier versions refer to <https://github.com/openssl/openssl/blob/master/CHANGES.md>.
       For an overview of some of the key concepts introduced in OpenSSL 3.0 see crypto(7).

OPENSSL 3.0

   Main Changes from OpenSSL 1.1.1
       Major Release

       OpenSSL 3.0 is a major release and consequently any application that currently uses an older version of
       OpenSSL will at the very least need to be recompiled in order to work with the new version. It is the
       intention that the large majority of applications will work unchanged with OpenSSL 3.0 if those
       applications previously worked with OpenSSL 1.1.1. However this is not guaranteed and some changes may be
       required in some cases. Changes may also be required if applications need to take advantage of some of
       the new features available in OpenSSL 3.0 such as the availability of the FIPS module.

       License Change

       In previous versions, OpenSSL was licensed under the dual OpenSSL and SSLeay licenses
       <https://www.openssl.org/source/license-openssl-ssleay.txt> (both licenses apply). From OpenSSL 3.0 this
       is replaced by the Apache License v2 <https://www.openssl.org/source/apache-license-2.0.txt>.

       Providers and FIPS support

       One of the key changes from OpenSSL 1.1.1 is the introduction of the Provider concept. Providers collect
       together and make available algorithm implementations.  With OpenSSL 3.0 it is possible to specify,
       either programmatically or via a config file, which providers you want to use for any given application.
       OpenSSL 3.0 comes with 5 different providers as standard. Over time third parties may distribute
       additional providers that can be plugged into OpenSSL.  All algorithm implementations available via
       providers are accessed through the "high level" APIs (for example those functions prefixed with "EVP").
       They cannot be accessed using the "Low Level APIs".

       One of the standard providers available is the FIPS provider. This makes available FIPS validated
       cryptographic algorithms.  The FIPS provider is disabled by default and needs to be enabled explicitly at
       configuration time using the "enable-fips" option. If it is enabled, the FIPS provider gets built and
       installed in addition to the other standard providers. No separate installation procedure is necessary.
       There is however a dedicated "install_fips" make target, which serves the special purpose of installing
       only the FIPS provider into an existing OpenSSL installation.

       Not all algorithms may be available for the application at a particular moment.  If the application code
       uses any digest or cipher algorithm via the EVP interface, the application should verify the result of
       the EVP_EncryptInit(3), EVP_EncryptInit_ex(3), and EVP_DigestInit(3) functions. In case when the
       requested algorithm is not available, these functions will fail.

       See also "Legacy Algorithms" for information on the legacy provider.

       See also "Completing the installation of the FIPS Module" and "Using the FIPS Module in applications".

       Low Level APIs

       OpenSSL has historically provided two sets of APIs for invoking cryptographic algorithms: the "high
       level" APIs (such as the "EVP" APIs) and the "low level" APIs. The high level APIs are typically designed
       to work across all algorithm types. The "low level" APIs are targeted at a specific algorithm
       implementation.  For example, the EVP APIs provide the functions EVP_EncryptInit_ex(3),
       EVP_EncryptUpdate(3) and EVP_EncryptFinal(3) to perform symmetric encryption. Those functions can be used
       with the algorithms AES, CHACHA, 3DES etc.  On the other hand, to do AES encryption using the low level
       APIs you would have to call AES specific functions such as AES_set_encrypt_key(3), AES_encrypt(3), and so
       on. The functions for 3DES are different.  Use of the low level APIs has been informally discouraged by
       the OpenSSL development team for a long time. However in OpenSSL 3.0 this is made more formal. All such
       low level APIs have been deprecated. You may still use them in your applications, but you may start to
       see deprecation warnings during compilation (dependent on compiler support for this). Deprecated APIs may
       be removed from future versions of OpenSSL so you are strongly encouraged to update your code to use the
       high level APIs instead.

       This is described in more detail in "Deprecation of Low Level Functions"

       Legacy Algorithms

       Some cryptographic algorithms such as MD2 and DES that were available via the EVP APIs are now considered
       legacy and their use is strongly discouraged.  These legacy EVP algorithms are still available in OpenSSL
       3.0 but not by default. If you want to use them then you must load the legacy provider.  This can be as
       simple as a config file change, or can be done programmatically.  See OSSL_PROVIDER-legacy(7) for a
       complete list of algorithms.  Applications using the EVP APIs to access these algorithms should instead
       use more modern algorithms. If that is not possible then these applications should ensure that the legacy
       provider has been loaded. This can be achieved either programmatically or via configuration. See
       crypto(7) man page for more information about providers.

       Engines and "METHOD" APIs

       The refactoring to support Providers conflicts internally with the APIs used to support engines,
       including the ENGINE API and any function that creates or modifies custom "METHODS" (for example
       EVP_MD_meth_new(3), EVP_CIPHER_meth_new(3), EVP_PKEY_meth_new(3), RSA_meth_new(3), EC_KEY_METHOD_new(3),
       etc.). These functions are being deprecated in OpenSSL 3.0, and users of these APIs should know that
       their use can likely bypass provider selection and configuration, with unintended consequences.  This is
       particularly relevant for applications written to use the OpenSSL 3.0 FIPS module, as detailed below.
       Authors and maintainers of external engines are strongly encouraged to refactor their code transforming
       engines into providers using the new Provider API and avoiding deprecated methods.

       Support of legacy engines

       If openssl is not built without engine support or deprecated API support, engines will still work.
       However, their applicability will be limited.

       New algorithms provided via engines will still work.

       Engine-backed keys can be loaded via custom OSSL_STORE implementation.  In this case the EVP_PKEY objects
       created via ENGINE_load_private_key(3) will be concidered legacy and will continue to work.

       To ensure the future compatibility, the engines should be turned to providers.  To prefer the provider-
       based hardware offload, you can specify the default properties to prefer your provider.

       Versioning Scheme

       The OpenSSL versioning scheme has changed with the OpenSSL 3.0 release. The new versioning scheme has
       this format:

       MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH

       For OpenSSL 1.1.1 and below, different patch levels were indicated by a letter at the end of the release
       version number. This will no longer be used and instead the patch level is indicated by the final number
       in the version. A change in the second (MINOR) number indicates that new features may have been added.
       OpenSSL versions with the same major number are API and ABI compatible.  If the major number changes then
       API and ABI compatibility is not guaranteed.

       For more information, see OpenSSL_version(3).

       Other major new features

       Certificate Management Protocol (CMP, RFC 4210)

       This also covers CRMF (RFC 4211) and HTTP transfer (RFC 6712) See openssl-cmp(1) and
       OSSL_CMP_exec_certreq(3) as starting points.

       HTTP(S) client

       A proper HTTP(S) client that supports GET and POST, redirection, plain and ASN.1-encoded contents,
       proxies, and timeouts.

       Key Derivation Function API (EVP_KDF)

       This simplifies the process of adding new KDF and PRF implementations.

       Previously KDF algorithms had been shoe-horned into using the EVP_PKEY object which was not a logical
       mapping.  Existing applications that use KDF algorithms using EVP_PKEY (scrypt, TLS1 PRF and HKDF) may be
       slower as they use an EVP_KDF bridge internally.  All new applications should use the new EVP_KDF(3)
       interface.  See also "Key Derivation Function (KDF)" in OSSL_PROVIDER-default(7) and "Key Derivation
       Function (KDF)" in OSSL_PROVIDER-FIPS(7).

       Message Authentication Code API (EVP_MAC)

       This simplifies the process of adding MAC implementations.

       This includes a generic EVP_PKEY to EVP_MAC bridge, to facilitate the continued use of MACs through raw
       private keys in functionality such as EVP_DigestSign(3) and EVP_DigestVerify(3).

       All new applications should use the new EVP_MAC(3) interface.  See also "Message Authentication Code
       (MAC)" in OSSL_PROVIDER-default(7) and "Message Authentication Code (MAC)" in OSSL_PROVIDER-FIPS(7).

       Support for Linux Kernel TLS

       In order to use KTLS, support for it must be compiled in using the "enable-ktls" configuration option. It
       must also be enabled at run time using the SSL_OP_ENABLE_KTLS option.

       New Algorithms

       •   KDF algorithms "SINGLE STEP" and "SSH"

           See EVP_KDF-SS(7) and EVP_KDF-SSHKDF(7)

       •   MAC Algorithms "GMAC" and "KMAC"

           See EVP_MAC-GMAC(7) and EVP_MAC-KMAC(7).

       •   KEM Algorithm "RSASVE"

           See EVP_KEM-RSA(7).

       •   Cipher Algorithm "AES-SIV"

           See "SIV Mode" in EVP_EncryptInit(3).

       •   AES Key Wrap inverse ciphers supported by EVP layer.

           The  inverse  ciphers  use  AES  decryption  for  wrapping,  and  AES  encryption for unwrapping. The
           algorithms are: "AES-128-WRAP-INV", "AES-192-WRAP-INV",  "AES-256-WRAP-INV",  "AES-128-WRAP-PAD-INV",
           "AES-192-WRAP-PAD-INV" and "AES-256-WRAP-PAD-INV".

       •   CTS ciphers added to EVP layer.

           The  algorithms  are "AES-128-CBC-CTS", "AES-192-CBC-CTS", "AES-256-CBC-CTS", "CAMELLIA-128-CBC-CTS",
           "CAMELLIA-192-CBC-CTS" and "CAMELLIA-256-CBC-CTS".  CS1, CS2 and CS3 variants are supported.

       CMS and PKCS#7 updates

       •   Added CAdES-BES signature verification support.

       •   Added CAdES-BES signature scheme and attributes support (RFC 5126) to CMS API.

       •   Added AuthEnvelopedData content type structure (RFC 5083) using AES_GCM

           This uses the AES-GCM parameter (RFC 5084) for the Cryptographic Message Syntax.  Its purpose  is  to
           support  encryption  and  decryption  of  a digital envelope that is both authenticated and encrypted
           using AES GCM mode.

       •   PKCS7_get_octet_string(3) and PKCS7_type_is_other(3) were made public.

       PKCS#12 API updates

       The default algorithms for pkcs12 creation with the PKCS12_create() function were changed to more  modern
       PBKDF2  and  AES  based algorithms. The default MAC iteration count was changed to PKCS12_DEFAULT_ITER to
       make it equal with the password-based encryption iteration count. The default digest  algorithm  for  the
       MAC  computation was changed to SHA-256. The pkcs12 application now supports -legacy option that restores
       the previous default algorithms to support interoperability with legacy systems.

       Added enhanced PKCS#12 APIs which accept a library context OSSL_LIB_CTX and (where relevant)  a  property
       query.  Other  APIs  which  handle PKCS#7 and PKCS#8 objects have also been enhanced where required. This
       includes:

       PKCS12_add_key_ex(3),      PKCS12_add_safe_ex(3),      PKCS12_add_safes_ex(3),       PKCS12_create_ex(3),
       PKCS12_decrypt_skey_ex(3),                PKCS12_init_ex(3),               PKCS12_item_decrypt_d2i_ex(3),
       PKCS12_item_i2d_encrypt_ex(3),            PKCS12_key_gen_asc_ex(3),             PKCS12_key_gen_uni_ex(3),
       PKCS12_key_gen_utf8_ex(3),              PKCS12_pack_p7encdata_ex(3),              PKCS12_pbe_crypt_ex(3),
       PKCS12_PBE_keyivgen_ex(3),      PKCS12_SAFEBAG_create_pkcs8_encrypt_ex(3),       PKCS5_pbe2_set_iv_ex(3),
       PKCS5_pbe_set0_algor_ex(3),   PKCS5_pbe_set_ex(3),  PKCS5_pbkdf2_set_ex(3),  PKCS5_v2_PBE_keyivgen_ex(3),
       PKCS5_v2_scrypt_keyivgen_ex(3), PKCS8_decrypt_ex(3), PKCS8_encrypt_ex(3), PKCS8_set0_pbe_ex(3).

       As part of this change the EVP_PBE_xxx APIs can also accept a library context and property query and will
       call an extended version of the key/IV derivation function which supports these parameters. This includes
       EVP_PBE_CipherInit_ex(3), EVP_PBE_find_ex(3) and EVP_PBE_scrypt_ex(3).

       Windows thread synchronization changes

       Windows thread synchronization uses read/write primitives (SRWLock) when supported by the  OS,  otherwise
       CriticalSection continues to be used.

       Trace API

       A  new generic trace API has been added which provides support for enabling instrumentation through trace
       output. This feature is mainly intended as an aid for developers and is disabled by default.  To  utilize
       it, OpenSSL needs to be configured with the "enable-trace" option.

       If  the  tracing  API  is enabled, the application can activate trace output by registering BIOs as trace
       channels for a number of tracing and debugging categories. See OSSL_trace_enabled(3).

       Key validation updates

       EVP_PKEY_public_check(3) and EVP_PKEY_param_check(3) now work for more key types. This includes RSA, DSA,
       ED25519, X25519, ED448 and X448.  Previously (in 1.1.1) they would return -2. For key types that  do  not
       have parameters then EVP_PKEY_param_check(3) will always return 1.

       Other notable deprecations and changes

       The function code part of an OpenSSL error code is no longer relevant

       This code is now always set to zero. Related functions are deprecated.

       STACK and HASH macros have been cleaned up

       The  type-safe  wrappers  are  declared  everywhere  and  implemented  once.   See DEFINE_STACK_OF(3) and
       DECLARE_LHASH_OF(3).

       The RAND_DRBG subsystem has been removed

       The new EVP_RAND(3) is a partial replacement: the DRBG callback framework is absent.  The  RAND_DRBG  API
       did not fit well into the new provider concept as implemented by EVP_RAND and EVP_RAND_CTX.

       Removed FIPS_mode() and FIPS_mode_set()

       These  functions  are  legacy APIs that are not applicable to the new provider model. Applications should
       instead use EVP_default_properties_is_fips_enabled(3) and EVP_default_properties_enable_fips(3).

       Key generation is slower

       The Miller-Rabin test now uses 64 rounds, which is used for  all  prime  generation,  including  RSA  key
       generation. This affects the time for larger keys sizes.

       The  default  key  generation method for the regular 2-prime RSA keys was changed to the FIPS 186-4 B.3.6
       method (Generation of Probable Primes with Conditions Based on Auxiliary Probable Primes). This method is
       slower than the original method.

       Change PBKDF2 to conform to SP800-132 instead of the older PKCS5 RFC2898

       This checks that the salt length is at least 128 bits, the derived key length is at least 112  bits,  and
       that  the  iteration  count  is  at least 1000.  For backwards compatibility these checks are disabled by
       default in the default provider, but are enabled by default in the fips provider.

       To enable or disable the checks see OSSL_KDF_PARAM_PKCS5 in EVP_KDF-PBKDF2(7). The parameter can  be  set
       using EVP_KDF_derive(3).

       Enforce a minimum DH modulus size of 512 bits

       Smaller sizes now result in an error.

       SM2 key changes

       EC  EVP_PKEYs  with  the  SM2  curve  have been reworked to automatically become EVP_PKEY_SM2 rather than
       EVP_PKEY_EC.

       Unlike   in   previous    OpenSSL    versions,    this    means    that    applications    cannot    call
       "EVP_PKEY_set_alias_type(pkey, EVP_PKEY_SM2)" to get SM2 computations.

       Parameter and key generation is also reworked to make it possible to generate EVP_PKEY_SM2 parameters and
       keys.  Applications  must now generate SM2 keys directly and must not create an EVP_PKEY_EC key first. It
       is no longer possible to import an SM2 key with domain parameters other than the SM2 elliptic curve ones.

       Validation of SM2 keys has been separated from the validation of regular EC keys, allowing to improve the
       SM2 validation process to reject loaded private keys that are not conforming to the SM2 ISO standard.  In
       particular, a private scalar k outside the range 1 <= k < n-1 is now correctly rejected.

       EVP_PKEY_set_alias_type() method has been removed

       This function made a EVP_PKEY object mutable after it had been set up. In OpenSSL 3.0 it was decided that
       a provided key should not be able to change its type, so this function has been removed.

       Functions that return an internal key should be treated as read only

       Functions such as EVP_PKEY_get0_RSA(3) behave  slightly  differently  in  OpenSSL  3.0.  Previously  they
       returned  a  pointer to the low-level key used internally by libcrypto. From OpenSSL 3.0 this key may now
       be held in a provider. Calling these functions will only return a handle on the internal  key  where  the
       EVP_PKEY was constructed using this key in the first place, for example using a function or macro such as
       EVP_PKEY_assign_RSA(3), EVP_PKEY_set1_RSA(3), etc.  Where the EVP_PKEY holds a provider managed key, then
       these functions now return a cached copy of the key. Changes to the internal provider key that take place
       after  the first time the cached key is accessed will not be reflected back in the cached copy. Similarly
       any changes made to the cached copy by application code will  not  be  reflected  back  in  the  internal
       provider key.

       For the above reasons the keys returned from these functions should typically be treated as read-only. To
       emphasise     this     the    value    returned    from    EVP_PKEY_get0_RSA(3),    EVP_PKEY_get0_DSA(3),
       EVP_PKEY_get0_EC_KEY(3) and EVP_PKEY_get0_DH(3) have been made const. This may break some existing  code.
       Applications  broken by this change should be modified. The preferred solution is to refactor the code to
       avoid the use of these deprecated functions. Failing this the code should be  modified  to  use  a  const
       pointer   instead.    The   EVP_PKEY_get1_RSA(3),   EVP_PKEY_get1_DSA(3),   EVP_PKEY_get1_EC_KEY(3)   and
       EVP_PKEY_get1_DH(3) functions continue to return a non-const  pointer  to  enable  them  to  be  "freed".
       However they should also be treated as read-only.

       The public key check has moved from EVP_PKEY_derive() to EVP_PKEY_derive_set_peer()

       This  may  mean  result in an error in EVP_PKEY_derive_set_peer(3) rather than during EVP_PKEY_derive(3).
       To disable this check use EVP_PKEY_derive_set_peer_ex(dh, peer, 0).

       The print format has cosmetic changes for some functions

       The  output  from  numerous  "printing"  functions  such  as  X509_signature_print(3),  X509_print_ex(3),
       X509_CRL_print_ex(3),  and  other  similar  functions  has  been  amended such that there may be cosmetic
       differences between the output observed in 1.1.1 and 3.0. This also applies to the -text output from  the
       openssl x509 and openssl crl applications.

       Interactive mode from the openssl program has been removed

       From now on, running it without arguments is equivalent to openssl help.

       The error return values from some control calls (ctrl) have changed

       One  significant  change  is  that  controls  which  used  to return -2 for invalid inputs, now return -1
       indicating a generic error condition instead.

       DH and DHX key types have different settable parameters

       Previously (in 1.1.1) these conflicting parameters were allowed, but  will  now  result  in  errors.  See
       EVP_PKEY-DH(7)  for  further  details.  This affects the behaviour of openssl-genpkey(1) for DH parameter
       generation.

       EVP_CIPHER_CTX_set_flags() ordering change

       If using a cipher from a provider the EVP_CIPH_FLAG_LENGTH_BITS flag can only be set after the cipher has
       been assigned to the cipher context.  See "FLAGS" in EVP_EncryptInit(3) for more information.

       Validation of operation context parameters

       Due to move of the implementation of cryptographic operations to the  providers,  validation  of  various
       operation parameters can be postponed until the actual operation is executed where previously it happened
       immediately when an operation parameter was set.

       For example when setting an unsupported curve with EVP_PKEY_CTX_set_ec_paramgen_curve_nid() this function
       call will not fail but later keygen operations with the EVP_PKEY_CTX will fail.

       Removal of function code from the error codes

       The function code part of the error code is now always set to 0. For that reason the ERR_GET_FUNC() macro
       was removed. Applications must resolve the error codes only using the library number and the reason code.

   Installation and Compilation
       Please  refer  to the INSTALL.md file in the top of the distribution for instructions on how to build and
       install OpenSSL 3.0. Please also refer to the various platform specific NOTES  files  for  your  specific
       platform.

   Upgrading from OpenSSL 1.1.1
       Upgrading to OpenSSL 3.0 from OpenSSL 1.1.1 should be relatively straight forward in most cases. The most
       likely  area  where  you  will  encounter  problems  is  if you have used low level APIs in your code (as
       discussed above). In that case you are likely to start seeing deprecation warnings  when  compiling  your
       application. If this happens you have 3 options:

       1.  Ignore  the  warnings. They are just warnings. The deprecated functions are still present and you may
           still use them. However be aware that they may be removed from a future version of OpenSSL.

       2.  Suppress the warnings. Refer to your compiler documentation on how to do this.

       3.  Remove your usage of the low level APIs. In this case you will need to rewrite your code to  use  the
           high level APIs instead

       Error code changes

       As  OpenSSL 3.0 provides a brand new Encoder/Decoder mechanism for working with widely used file formats,
       application code that checks for particular error reason codes on key  loading  failures  might  need  an
       update.

       Password-protected  keys  may  deserve special attention. If only some errors are treated as an indicator
       that the user should be asked about the password again, it's worth testing these scenarios and processing
       the newly relevant codes.

       There may be more cases to treat specially, depending on the calling application code.

   Upgrading from OpenSSL 1.0.2
       Upgrading to OpenSSL 3.0 from OpenSSL 1.0.2 is likely to be significantly more difficult. In addition  to
       the  issues  discussed  above  in the section about "Upgrading from OpenSSL 1.1.1", the main things to be
       aware of are:

       1.  The build and installation procedure has changed significantly.

           Check the file INSTALL.md in the top of the installation for instructions on how to build and install
           OpenSSL for your platform. Also read the various NOTES files in the same directory, as applicable for
           your platform.

       2.  Many structures have been made opaque in OpenSSL 3.0.

           The structure definitions have been removed from the public header files and moved to internal header
           files. In practice this means that you can no longer stack allocate  some  structures.  Instead  they
           must  be  heap  allocated  through  some  function call (typically those function names have a "_new"
           suffix to them).  Additionally you must use "setter" or  "getter"  functions  to  access  the  fields
           within those structures.

           For example code that previously looked like this:

            EVP_MD_CTX md_ctx;

            /* This line will now generate compiler errors */
            EVP_MD_CTX_init(&md_ctx);

           The code needs to be amended to look like this:

            EVP_MD_CTX *md_ctx;

            md_ctx = EVP_MD_CTX_new();
            ...
            ...
            EVP_MD_CTX_free(md_ctx);

       3.  Support for TLSv1.3 has been added.

           This   has   a   number   of   implications   for   SSL/TLS   applications.   See   the  TLS1.3  page
           <https://wiki.openssl.org/index.php/TLS1.3> for further details.

       More details about the breaking changes between OpenSSL versions 1.0.2 and 1.1.0  can  be  found  on  the
       OpenSSL 1.1.0 Changes page <https://wiki.openssl.org/index.php/OpenSSL_1.1.0_Changes>.

       Upgrading from the OpenSSL 2.0 FIPS Object Module

       The  OpenSSL  2.0  FIPS  Object  Module  was a separate download that had to be built separately and then
       integrated into your main OpenSSL 1.0.2 build.  In OpenSSL 3.0 the FIPS support is fully integrated  into
       the  mainline  version  of  OpenSSL  and  is  no  longer a separate download. For further information see
       "Completing the installation of the FIPS Module".

       The function calls FIPS_mode() and FIPS_mode_set() have been removed from OpenSSL 3.0. You should rewrite
       your application to not use them.  See fips_module(7) and OSSL_PROVIDER-FIPS(7) for details.

   Completing the installation of the FIPS Module
       The FIPS Module will be built and installed automatically  if  FIPS  support  has  been  configured.  The
       current         documentation         can         be        found        in        the        README-FIPS
       <https://github.com/openssl/openssl/blob/master/README-FIPS.md> file.

   Programming
       Applications written to work with OpenSSL 1.1.1 will mostly just work with OpenSSL 3.0.  However  changes
       will  be  required  if  you  want  to  take  advantage of some of the new features that OpenSSL 3.0 makes
       available. In order to do that you need to understand some new concepts introduced in OpenSSL 3.0.   Read
       "Library contexts" in crypto(7) for further information.

       Library Context

       A  library  context  allows different components of a complex application to each use a different library
       context and have  different  providers  loaded  with  different  configuration  settings.   See  "Library
       contexts" in crypto(7) for further info.

       If the user creates an OSSL_LIB_CTX via OSSL_LIB_CTX_new(3) then many functions may need to be changed to
       pass additional parameters to handle the library context.

       Using a Library Context - Old functions that should be changed

       If  a  library  context  is  needed  then all EVP_* digest functions that return a const EVP_MD * such as
       EVP_sha256() should be replaced with a call to EVP_MD_fetch(3). See "ALGORITHM FETCHING" in crypto(7).

       If a library context is needed then all EVP_* cipher functions that return a const EVP_CIPHER *  such  as
       EVP_aes_128_cbc()  should  be  replaced  vith  a call to EVP_CIPHER_fetch(3). See "ALGORITHM FETCHING" in
       crypto(7).

       Some functions can be passed an object that has already been set  up  with  a  library  context  such  as
       d2i_X509(3),  d2i_X509_CRL(3), d2i_X509_REQ(3) and d2i_X509_PUBKEY(3). If NULL is passed instead then the
       created object will be set up with the default library context. Use  X509_new_ex(3),  X509_CRL_new_ex(3),
       X509_REQ_new_ex(3) and X509_PUBKEY_new_ex(3) if a library context is required.

       All  functions  listed below with a NAME have a replacment function NAME_ex that takes OSSL_LIB_CTX as an
       additional argument. Functions that have other mappings are listed along with the respective name.

       •   ASN1_item_new(3), ASN1_item_d2i(3), ASN1_item_d2i_fp(3), ASN1_item_d2i_bio(3), ASN1_item_sign(3)  and
           ASN1_item_verify(3)

       •   BIO_new(3)

       •   b2i_RSA_PVK_bio() and i2b_PVK_bio()BN_CTX_new(3) and BN_CTX_secure_new(3)

       •   CMS_AuthEnvelopedData_create(3),  CMS_ContentInfo_new(3),  CMS_data_create(3),  CMS_digest_create(3),
           CMS_EncryptedData_encrypt(3),              CMS_encrypt(3),               CMS_EnvelopedData_create(3),
           CMS_ReceiptRequest_create0(3) and CMS_sign(3)

       •   CONF_modules_load_file(3)

       •   CTLOG_new(3), CTLOG_new_from_base64(3) and CTLOG_STORE_new(3)

       •   CT_POLICY_EVAL_CTX_new(3)

       •   d2i_AutoPrivateKey(3), d2i_PrivateKey(3) and d2i_PUBKEY(3)

       •   d2i_PrivateKey_bio(3) and d2i_PrivateKey_fp(3)

           Use d2i_PrivateKey_ex_bio(3) and d2i_PrivateKey_ex_fp(3)

       •   EC_GROUP_new(3)

           Use EC_GROUP_new_by_curve_name_ex(3) or EC_GROUP_new_from_params(3).

       •   EVP_DigestSignInit(3) and EVP_DigestVerifyInit(3)

       •   EVP_PBE_CipherInit(3), EVP_PBE_find(3) and EVP_PBE_scrypt(3)

       •   PKCS5_PBE_keyivgen(3)

       •   EVP_PKCS82PKEY(3)

       •   EVP_PKEY_CTX_new_id(3)

           Use EVP_PKEY_CTX_new_from_name(3)

       •   EVP_PKEY_derive_set_peer(3), EVP_PKEY_new_raw_private_key(3) and EVP_PKEY_new_raw_public_key(3)

       •   EVP_SignFinal(3) and EVP_VerifyFinal(3)

       •   NCONF_new(3)

       •   OCSP_RESPID_match(3) and OCSP_RESPID_set_by_key(3)

       •   OPENSSL_thread_stop(3)

       •   OSSL_STORE_open(3)

       •   PEM_read_bio_Parameters(3),            PEM_read_bio_PrivateKey(3),            PEM_read_bio_PUBKEY(3),
           PEM_read_PrivateKey(3) and PEM_read_PUBKEY(3)

       •   PEM_write_bio_PrivateKey(3), PEM_write_bio_PUBKEY(3), PEM_write_PrivateKey(3) and PEM_write_PUBKEY(3)

       •   PEM_X509_INFO_read_bio(3) and PEM_X509_INFO_read(3)

       •   PKCS12_add_key(3), PKCS12_add_safe(3), PKCS12_add_safes(3), PKCS12_create(3), PKCS12_decrypt_skey(3),
           PKCS12_init(3),   PKCS12_item_decrypt_d2i(3),   PKCS12_item_i2d_encrypt(3),    PKCS12_key_gen_asc(3),
           PKCS12_key_gen_uni(3),    PKCS12_key_gen_utf8(3),    PKCS12_pack_p7encdata(3),   PKCS12_pbe_crypt(3),
           PKCS12_PBE_keyivgen(3), PKCS12_SAFEBAG_create_pkcs8_encrypt(3)

       •   PKCS5_pbe_set0_algor(3),    PKCS5_pbe_set(3),    PKCS5_pbe2_set_iv(3),    PKCS5_pbkdf2_set(3)     and
           PKCS5_v2_scrypt_keyivgen(3)

       •   PKCS7_encrypt(3), PKCS7_new(3) and PKCS7_sign(3)

       •   PKCS8_decrypt(3), PKCS8_encrypt(3) and PKCS8_set0_pbe(3)

       •   RAND_bytes(3) and RAND_priv_bytes(3)

       •   SMIME_write_ASN1(3)

       •   SSL_load_client_CA_file(3)

       •   SSL_CTX_new(3)

       •   TS_RESP_CTX_new(3)

       •   X509_CRL_new(3)

       •   X509_load_cert_crl_file(3) and X509_load_cert_file(3)

       •   X509_LOOKUP_by_subject(3) and X509_LOOKUP_ctrl(3)

       •   X509_NAME_hash(3)

       •   X509_new(3)

       •   X509_REQ_new(3) and X509_REQ_verify(3)

       •   X509_STORE_CTX_new(3),            X509_STORE_set_default_paths(3),           X509_STORE_load_file(3),
           X509_STORE_load_locations(3) and X509_STORE_load_store(3)

       New functions that use a Library context

       The following functions can be passed a library context if required.  Passing NULL will use  the  default
       library context.

       •   BIO_new_from_core_bio(3)

       •   EVP_ASYM_CIPHER_fetch(3) and EVP_ASYM_CIPHER_do_all_provided(3)

       •   EVP_CIPHER_fetch(3) and EVP_CIPHER_do_all_provided(3)

       •   EVP_default_properties_enable_fips(3) and EVP_default_properties_is_fips_enabled(3)

       •   EVP_KDF_fetch(3) and EVP_KDF_do_all_provided(3)

       •   EVP_KEM_fetch(3) and EVP_KEM_do_all_provided(3)

       •   EVP_KEYEXCH_fetch(3) and EVP_KEYEXCH_do_all_provided(3)

       •   EVP_KEYMGMT_fetch(3) and EVP_KEYMGMT_do_all_provided(3)

       •   EVP_MAC_fetch(3) and EVP_MAC_do_all_provided(3)

       •   EVP_MD_fetch(3) and EVP_MD_do_all_provided(3)

       •   EVP_PKEY_CTX_new_from_pkey(3)

       •   EVP_PKEY_Q_keygen(3)

       •   EVP_Q_mac(3) and EVP_Q_digest(3)

       •   EVP_RAND(3) and EVP_RAND_do_all_provided(3)

       •   EVP_set_default_properties(3)

       •   EVP_SIGNATURE_fetch(3) and EVP_SIGNATURE_do_all_provided(3)

       •   OSSL_CMP_CTX_new(3) and OSSL_CMP_SRV_CTX_new(3)

       •   OSSL_CRMF_ENCRYPTEDVALUE_get1_encCert(3)

       •   OSSL_CRMF_MSG_create_popo(3) and OSSL_CRMF_MSGS_verify_popo(3)

       •   OSSL_CRMF_pbm_new(3) and OSSL_CRMF_pbmp_new(3)

       •   OSSL_DECODER_CTX_add_extra(3) and OSSL_DECODER_CTX_new_for_pkey(3)

       •   OSSL_DECODER_fetch(3) and OSSL_DECODER_do_all_provided(3)

       •   OSSL_ENCODER_CTX_add_extra(3)

       •   OSSL_ENCODER_fetch(3) and OSSL_ENCODER_do_all_provided(3)

       •   OSSL_LIB_CTX_free(3), OSSL_LIB_CTX_load_config(3) and OSSL_LIB_CTX_set0_default(3)

       •   OSSL_PROVIDER_add_builtin(3),           OSSL_PROVIDER_available(3),          OSSL_PROVIDER_do_all(3),
           OSSL_PROVIDER_load(3), OSSL_PROVIDER_set_default_search_path(3) and OSSL_PROVIDER_try_load(3)

       •   OSSL_SELF_TEST_get_callback(3) and OSSL_SELF_TEST_set_callback(3)

       •   OSSL_STORE_attach(3)

       •   OSSL_STORE_LOADER_fetch(3) and OSSL_STORE_LOADER_do_all_provided(3)

       •   RAND_get0_primary(3),   RAND_get0_private(3),    RAND_get0_public(3),    RAND_set_DRBG_type(3)    and
           RAND_set_seed_source_type(3)

       Providers

       Providers  are  described  in  detail  here  "Providers"  in  crypto(7).  See also "OPENSSL PROVIDERS" in
       crypto(7).

       Fetching algorithms and property queries

       Implicit and Explicit Fetching is described in detail here "ALGORITHM FETCHING" in crypto(7).

       Mapping EVP controls and flags to provider OSSL_PARAM parameters

       The existing functions for controls (such as EVP_CIPHER_CTX_ctrl(3))  and  manipulating  flags  (such  as
       EVP_MD_CTX_set_flags(3))internally  use  OSSL_PARAMS  to  pass information to/from provider objects.  See
       OSSL_PARAM(3) for additional information related to parameters.

       For ciphers see "CONTROLS" in EVP_EncryptInit(3),  "FLAGS"  in  EVP_EncryptInit(3)  and  "PARAMETERS"  in
       EVP_EncryptInit(3).

       For  digests  see  "CONTROLS"  in  EVP_DigestInit(3),  "FLAGS"  in  EVP_DigestInit(3) and "PARAMETERS" in
       EVP_DigestInit(3).

       Deprecation of Low Level Functions

       A significant number of APIs have been deprecated in OpenSSL 3.0.  This  section  describes  some  common
       categories of deprecations.  See "Deprecated function mappings" for the list of deprecated functions that
       refer to these categories.

       Providers are a replacement for engines and low-level method overrides

       Any  accessor  that  uses  an  ENGINE is deprecated (such as EVP_PKEY_set1_engine()).  Applications using
       engines should instead use providers.

       Before providers were added algorithms were overriden by changing the methods  used  by  algorithms.  All
       these methods such as RSA_new_method() and RSA_meth_new() are now deprecated and can be replaced by using
       providers instead.

       Deprecated i2d and d2i functions for low-level key types

       Any  i2d  and  d2i  functions such as d2i_DHparams() that take a low-level key type have been deprecated.
       Applications should instead use the OSSL_DECODER(3) and OSSL_ENCODER(3) APIs to  read  and  write  files.
       See "Migration" in d2i_RSAPrivateKey(3) for further details.

       Deprecated low-level key object getters and setters

       Applications that set or get low-level key objects (such as EVP_PKEY_set1_DH() or EVP_PKEY_get0()) should
       instead  use the OSSL_ENCODER (See OSSL_ENCODER_to_bio(3)) or OSSL_DECODER (See OSSL_DECODER_from_bio(3))
       APIs, or alternatively use EVP_PKEY_fromdata(3) or EVP_PKEY_todata(3).

       Deprecated low-level key parameter getters

       Functions that access low-level objects directly such as RSA_get0_n(3) are now  deprecated.  Applications
       should  use  one of EVP_PKEY_get_bn_param(3), EVP_PKEY_get_int_param(3), l<EVP_PKEY_get_size_t_param(3)>,
       EVP_PKEY_get_utf8_string_param(3), EVP_PKEY_get_octet_string_param(3) or EVP_PKEY_get_params(3) to access
       fields from an EVP_PKEY.  Gettable parameters are listed in "Common RSA parameters"  in  EVP_PKEY-RSA(7),
       "DH   parameters"   in   EVP_PKEY-DH(7),   "DSA  parameters"  in  EVP_PKEY-DSA(7),  "FFC  parameters"  in
       EVP_PKEY-FFC(7), "Common EC parameters" in EVP_PKEY-EC(7) and "Common X25519,  X448,  ED25519  and  ED448
       parameters" in EVP_PKEY-X25519(7).  Applications may also use EVP_PKEY_todata(3) to return all fields.

       Deprecated low-level key parameter setters

       Functions  that  access  low-level  objects  directly  such as RSA_set0_crt_params(3) are now deprecated.
       Applications should use EVP_PKEY_fromdata(3) to create new keys from user provided key data. Keys  should
       be   immutable   once   they   are   created,  so  if  required  the  user  may  use  EVP_PKEY_todata(3),
       OSSL_PARAM_merge(3), and EVP_PKEY_fromdata(3) to create a modified key.  See "Examples" in EVP_PKEY-DH(7)
       for more information.  See "Deprecated low-level key generation functions" for information on  generating
       a key using parameters.

       Deprecated low-level object creation

       Low-level  objects  were  created  using  methods  such  as  RSA_new(3),  RSA_up_ref(3)  and RSA_free(3).
       Applications should instead use the high-level EVP_PKEY APIs,  e.g.  EVP_PKEY_new(3),  EVP_PKEY_up_ref(3)
       and EVP_PKEY_free(3).  See also EVP_PKEY_CTX_new_from_name(3) and EVP_PKEY_CTX_new_from_pkey(3).

       EVP_PKEYs  may be created in a variety of ways: See also "Deprecated low-level key generation functions",
       "Deprecated low-level key  reading  and  writing  functions"  and  "Deprecated  low-level  key  parameter
       setters".

       Deprecated low-level encryption functions

       Low-level encryption functions such as AES_encrypt(3) and AES_decrypt(3) have been informally discouraged
       from  use for a long time. Applications should instead use the high level EVP APIs EVP_EncryptInit_ex(3),
       EVP_EncryptUpdate(3),  and  EVP_EncryptFinal_ex(3)  or  EVP_DecryptInit_ex(3),  EVP_DecryptUpdate(3)  and
       EVP_DecryptFinal_ex(3).

       Deprecated low-level digest functions

       Use  of  low-level  digest functions such as SHA1_Init(3) have been informally discouraged from use for a
       long  time.   Applications  should  instead  use  the  the  high  level  EVP  APIs  EVP_DigestInit_ex(3),
       EVP_DigestUpdate(3) and EVP_DigestFinal_ex(3), or the quick one-shot EVP_Q_digest(3).

       Note  that  the  functions  SHA1(3), SHA224(3), SHA256(3), SHA384(3) and SHA512(3) have changed to macros
       that use EVP_Q_digest(3).

       Deprecated low-level signing functions

       Use of low-level signing functions such as DSA_sign(3) have been informally discouraged for a long  time.
       Instead    applications    should    use    EVP_DigestSign(3)    and   EVP_DigestVerify(3).    See   also
       EVP_SIGNATURE-RSA(7), EVP_SIGNATURE-DSA(7), EVP_SIGNATURE-ECDSA(7) and EVP_SIGNATURE-ED25519(7).

       Deprecated low-level MAC functions

       Low-level mac functions such as CMAC_Init(3) are deprecated.  Applications should  instead  use  the  new
       EVP_MAC(3)  interface,  using EVP_MAC_CTX_new(3), EVP_MAC_CTX_free(3), EVP_MAC_init(3), EVP_MAC_update(3)
       and EVP_MAC_final(3) or the single-shot MAC  function  EVP_Q_mac(3).   See  EVP_MAC(3),  EVP_MAC-HMAC(7),
       EVP_MAC-CMAC(7),    EVP_MAC-GMAC(7),    EVP_MAC-KMAC(7),   EVP_MAC-BLAKE2(7),   EVP_MAC-Poly1305(7)   and
       EVP_MAC-Siphash(7) for additional information.

       Note that the one-shot method HMAC() is still available for compatability purposes.

       Deprecated low-level validation functions

       Low-level validation functions such as DH_check(3) have been informally discouraged from use for  a  long
       time.   Applications  should  instead  use  the  high-level  EVP_PKEY  APIs  such  as  EVP_PKEY_check(3),
       EVP_PKEY_param_check(3),             EVP_PKEY_param_check_quick(3),             EVP_PKEY_public_check(3),
       EVP_PKEY_public_check_quick(3), EVP_PKEY_private_check(3), and EVP_PKEY_pairwise_check(3).

       Deprecated low-level key exchange functions

       Many  low-level  functions have been informally discouraged from use for a long time. Applications should
       instead use EVP_PKEY_derive(3).  See EVP_KEYEXCH-DH(7), EVP_KEYEXCH-ECDH(7) and EVP_KEYEXCH-X25519(7).

       Deprecated low-level key generation functions

       Many low-level functions have been informally discouraged from use for a long time.  Applications  should
       instead   use   EVP_PKEY_keygen_init(3)   and   EVP_PKEY_generate(3)  as  described  in  EVP_PKEY-DSA(7),
       EVP_PKEY-DH(7), EVP_PKEY-RSA(7), EVP_PKEY-EC(7) and EVP_PKEY-X25519(7).  The  'quick'  one-shot  function
       EVP_PKEY_Q_keygen(3) and macros for the most common cases: <EVP_RSA_gen(3)> and EVP_EC_gen(3) may also be
       used.

       Deprecated low-level key reading and writing functions

       Use  of  low-level  objects  (such  as  DSA)  has  been  informally discouraged from use for a long time.
       Functions to read and write these low-level objects (such as PEM_read_DSA_PUBKEY()) should  be  replaced.
       Applications should instead use OSSL_ENCODER_to_bio(3) and OSSL_DECODER_from_bio(3).

       Deprecated low-level key printing functions

       Use  of  low-level  objects  (such  as  DSA)  has  been  informally discouraged from use for a long time.
       Functions to print these low-level objects such as DSA_print() should be  replaced  with  the  equivalent
       EVP_PKEY  functions.   Application should use one of EVP_PKEY_print_public(3), EVP_PKEY_print_private(3),
       EVP_PKEY_print_params(3),       EVP_PKEY_print_public_fp(3),       EVP_PKEY_print_private_fp(3)        or
       EVP_PKEY_print_params_fp(3).    Note    that    internally    these    use   OSSL_ENCODER_to_bio(3)   and
       OSSL_DECODER_from_bio(3).

       Deprecated function mappings

       The following functions have been deprecated in 3.0.

       •   AES_bi_ige_encrypt() and AES_ige_encrypt()

           There is no replacement for  the  IGE  functions.  New  code  should  not  use  these  modes.   These
           undocumented  functions  were never integrated into the EVP layer.  They implemented the AES Infinite
           Garble Extension (IGE) mode and  AES  Bi-directional  IGE  mode.  These  modes  were  never  formally
           standardised   and   usage   of  these  functions  is  believed  to  be  very  small.  In  particular
           AES_bi_ige_encrypt() has a known bug. It accepts 2 AES keys, but only one is ever used. The  security
           implications  are  believed to be minimal, but this issue was never fixed for backwards compatibility
           reasons.

       •   AES_encrypt(),  AES_decrypt(),   AES_set_encrypt_key(),   AES_set_decrypt_key(),   AES_cbc_encrypt(),
           AES_cfb128_encrypt(), AES_cfb1_encrypt(), AES_cfb8_encrypt(), AES_ecb_encrypt(), AES_ofb128_encrypt()AES_unwrap_key(), AES_wrap_key()

           See "Deprecated low-level encryption functions"

       •   AES_options()

           There is no replacement. It returned a string indicating if the AES code was unrolled.

       •   ASN1_digest(), ASN1_sign(), ASN1_verify()

           There  are  no  replacements.  These old functions are not used, and could be disabled with the macro
           NO_ASN1_OLD since OpenSSL 0.9.7.

       •   ASN1_STRING_length_set()

           Use ASN1_STRING_set(3) or ASN1_STRING_set0(3) instead.  This was a potentially unsafe  function  that
           could change the bounds of a previously passed in pointer.

       •   BF_encrypt(),  BF_decrypt(),  BF_set_key(),  BF_cbc_encrypt(),  BF_cfb64_encrypt(), BF_ecb_encrypt(),
           BF_ofb64_encrypt()

           See "Deprecated low-level encryption functions".  The Blowfish algorithm has been moved to the Legacy
           Provider.

       •   BF_options()

           There is no replacement. This option returned a constant string.

       •   BIO_get_callback(), BIO_set_callback(), BIO_debug_callback()

           Use the respective non-deprecated _ex() functions.

       •   BN_is_prime_ex(), BN_is_prime_fasttest_ex()

           Use BN_check_prime(3) which that avoids possible misuse and always uses at least  64  rounds  of  the
           Miller-Rabin primality test.

       •   BN_pseudo_rand(), BN_pseudo_rand_range()

           Use BN_rand(3) and BN_rand_range(3).

       •   BN_X931_derive_prime_ex(), BN_X931_generate_prime_ex(), BN_X931_generate_Xpq()

           There   are   no   replacements   for  these  low-level  functions.  They  were  used  internally  by
           RSA_X931_derive_ex()   and   RSA_X931_generate_key_ex()   which    are    also    deprecated.     Use
           EVP_PKEY_keygen(3) instead.

       •   Camellia_encrypt(),       Camellia_decrypt(),       Camellia_set_key(),       Camellia_cbc_encrypt(),
           Camellia_cfb128_encrypt(),             Camellia_cfb1_encrypt(),              Camellia_cfb8_encrypt(),
           Camellia_ctr128_encrypt(), Camellia_ecb_encrypt(), Camellia_ofb128_encrypt()

           See "Deprecated low-level encryption functions".

       •   CAST_encrypt(),    CAST_decrypt(),    CAST_set_key(),    CAST_cbc_encrypt(),    CAST_cfb64_encrypt(),
           CAST_ecb_encrypt(), CAST_ofb64_encrypt()

           See "Deprecated low-level encryption functions".  The CAST algorithm has been  moved  to  the  Legacy
           Provider.

       •   CMAC_CTX_new(), CMAC_CTX_cleanup(), CMAC_CTX_copy(), CMAC_CTX_free(), CMAC_CTX_get0_cipher_ctx()

           See "Deprecated low-level MAC functions".

       •   CMAC_Init(), CMAC_Update(), CMAC_Final(), CMAC_resume()

           See "Deprecated low-level MAC functions".

       •   CRYPTO_mem_ctrl(),    CRYPTO_mem_debug_free(),   CRYPTO_mem_debug_malloc(),   CRYPTO_mem_debug_pop(),
           CRYPTO_mem_debug_push(),   CRYPTO_mem_debug_realloc(),   CRYPTO_mem_leaks(),   CRYPTO_mem_leaks_cb(),
           CRYPTO_mem_leaks_fp(), CRYPTO_set_mem_debug()

           Memory-leak  checking has been deprecated in favor of more modern development tools, such as compiler
           memory and leak sanitizers or Valgrind.

       •   CRYPTO_cts128_encrypt_block(),        CRYPTO_cts128_encrypt(),         CRYPTO_cts128_decrypt_block(),
           CRYPTO_cts128_decrypt(),        CRYPTO_nistcts128_encrypt_block(),       CRYPTO_nistcts128_encrypt(),
           CRYPTO_nistcts128_decrypt_block(), CRYPTO_nistcts128_decrypt()

           Use the higher level  functions  EVP_CipherInit_ex2(),  EVP_CipherUpdate()  and  EVP_CipherFinal_ex()
           instead.   See  the  "cts_mode"  parameter  in  "Gettable  and Settable EVP_CIPHER_CTX parameters" in
           EVP_EncryptInit(3).  See "EXAMPLES" in EVP_EncryptInit(3) for a AES-256-CBC-CTS example.

       •   d2i_DHparams(),  d2i_DHxparams(),  d2i_DSAparams(),   d2i_DSAPrivateKey(),   d2i_DSAPrivateKey_bio(),
           d2i_DSAPrivateKey_fp(),       d2i_DSA_PUBKEY(),       d2i_DSA_PUBKEY_bio(),      d2i_DSA_PUBKEY_fp(),
           d2i_DSAPublicKey(),       d2i_ECParameters(),       d2i_ECPrivateKey(),       d2i_ECPrivateKey_bio(),
           d2i_ECPrivateKey_fp(),  d2i_EC_PUBKEY(),  d2i_EC_PUBKEY_bio(), d2i_EC_PUBKEY_fp(), o2i_ECPublicKey(),
           d2i_RSAPrivateKey(),     d2i_RSAPrivateKey_bio(),      d2i_RSAPrivateKey_fp(),      d2i_RSA_PUBKEY(),
           d2i_RSA_PUBKEY_bio(),      d2i_RSA_PUBKEY_fp(),      d2i_RSAPublicKey(),      d2i_RSAPublicKey_bio(),
           d2i_RSAPublicKey_fp()

           See "Deprecated i2d and d2i functions for low-level key types"

       •   DES_crypt(),   DES_fcrypt(),   DES_encrypt1(),   DES_encrypt2(),   DES_encrypt3(),    DES_decrypt3(),
           DES_ede3_cbc_encrypt(),   DES_ede3_cfb64_encrypt(),  DES_ede3_cfb_encrypt(),DES_ede3_ofb64_encrypt(),
           DES_ecb_encrypt(),  DES_ecb3_encrypt(),  DES_ofb64_encrypt(),  DES_ofb_encrypt(),   DES_cfb64_encrypt
           DES_cfb_encrypt(),  DES_cbc_encrypt(),  DES_ncbc_encrypt(),  DES_pcbc_encrypt(),  DES_xcbc_encrypt(),
           DES_cbc_cksum(),  DES_quad_cksum(),   DES_check_key_parity(),   DES_is_weak_key(),   DES_key_sched(),
           DES_options(),   DES_random_key(),   DES_set_key(),  DES_set_key_checked(),  DES_set_key_unchecked(),
           DES_set_odd_parity(), DES_string_to_2keys(), DES_string_to_key()

           See "Deprecated low-level encryption functions".  Algorithms for  "DESX-CBC",  "DES-ECB",  "DES-CBC",
           "DES-OFB", "DES-CFB", "DES-CFB1" and "DES-CFB8" have been moved to the Legacy Provider.

       •   DH_bits(), DH_security_bits(), DH_size()

           Use EVP_PKEY_get_bits(3), EVP_PKEY_get_security_bits(3) and EVP_PKEY_get_size(3).

       •   DH_check(),     DH_check_ex(),     DH_check_params(),    DH_check_params_ex(),    DH_check_pub_key(),
           DH_check_pub_key_ex()

           See "Deprecated low-level validation functions"

       •   DH_clear_flags(), DH_test_flags(), DH_set_flags()

           The DH_FLAG_CACHE_MONT_P flag has been  deprecated  without  replacement.   The  DH_FLAG_TYPE_DH  and
           DH_FLAG_TYPE_DHX have been deprecated.  Use EVP_PKEY_is_a() to determine the type of a key.  There is
           no replacement for setting these flags.

       •   DH_compute_key() DH_compute_key_padded()

           See "Deprecated low-level key exchange functions".

       •   DH_new(), DH_new_by_nid(), DH_free(), DH_up_ref()

           See "Deprecated low-level object creation"

       •   DH_generate_key(), DH_generate_parameters_ex()

           See "Deprecated low-level key generation functions".

       •   DH_get0_pqg(),    DH_get0_p(),    DH_get0_q(),    DH_get0_g(),   DH_get0_key(),   DH_get0_priv_key(),
           DH_get0_pub_key(), DH_get_length(), DH_get_nid()

           See "Deprecated low-level key parameter getters"

       •   DH_get_1024_160(), DH_get_2048_224(), DH_get_2048_256()

           Applications should instead set the OSSL_PKEY_PARAM_GROUP_NAME as specified  in  "DH  parameters"  in
           EVP_PKEY-DH(7)) to one of "dh_1024_160", "dh_2048_224" or "dh_2048_256" when generating a DH key.

       •   DH_KDF_X9_42()

           Applications should use EVP_PKEY_CTX_set_dh_kdf_type(3) instead.

       •   DH_get_default_method(),     DH_get0_engine(),     DH_meth_*(),     DH_new_method(),    DH_OpenSSL(),
           DH_get_ex_data(), DH_set_default_method(), DH_set_method(), DH_set_ex_data()

           See "Providers are a replacement for engines and low-level method overrides"

       •   DHparams_print(), DHparams_print_fp()

           See "Deprecated low-level key printing functions"

       •   DH_set0_key(), DH_set0_pqg(), DH_set_length()

           See "Deprecated low-level key parameter setters"

       •   DSA_bits(), DSA_security_bits(), DSA_size()

           Use EVP_PKEY_get_bits(3), EVP_PKEY_get_security_bits(3) and EVP_PKEY_get_size(3).

       •   DHparams_dup(), DSA_dup_DH()

           There is no direct replacement. Applications may use EVP_PKEY_copy_parameters(3) and  EVP_PKEY_dup(3)
           instead.

       •   DSA_generate_key(), DSA_generate_parameters_ex()

           See "Deprecated low-level key generation functions".

       •   DSA_get0_engine(),   DSA_get_default_method(),   DSA_get_ex_data(),  DSA_get_method(),  DSA_meth_*(),
           DSA_new_method(), DSA_OpenSSL(), DSA_set_default_method(), DSA_set_ex_data(), DSA_set_method()

           See "Providers are a replacement for engines and low-level method overrides".

       •   DSA_get0_p(),  DSA_get0_q(),  DSA_get0_g(),  DSA_get0_pqg(),   DSA_get0_key(),   DSA_get0_priv_key(),
           DSA_get0_pub_key()

           See "Deprecated low-level key parameter getters".

       •   DSA_new(), DSA_free(), DSA_up_ref()

           See "Deprecated low-level object creation"

       •   DSAparams_dup()

           There  is no direct replacement. Applications may use EVP_PKEY_copy_parameters(3) and EVP_PKEY_dup(3)
           instead.

       •   DSAparams_print(), DSAparams_print_fp(), DSA_print(), DSA_print_fp()

           See "Deprecated low-level key printing functions"

       •   DSA_set0_key(), DSA_set0_pqg()

           See "Deprecated low-level key parameter setters"

       •   DSA_set_flags(), DSA_clear_flags(), DSA_test_flags()

           The DSA_FLAG_CACHE_MONT_P flag has been deprecated without replacement.

       •   DSA_sign(), DSA_do_sign(), DSA_sign_setup(), DSA_verify(), DSA_do_verify()

           See "Deprecated low-level signing functions".

       •   ECDH_compute_key()

           See "Deprecated low-level key exchange functions".

       •   ECDH_KDF_X9_62()

           Applications may either set this using the helper function  EVP_PKEY_CTX_set_ecdh_kdf_type(3)  or  by
           setting an OSSL_PARAM using the "kdf-type" as shown in "EXAMPLES" in EVP_KEYEXCH-ECDH(7)

       •   ECDSA_sign(),     ECDSA_sign_ex(),     ECDSA_sign_setup(),    ECDSA_do_sign(),    ECDSA_do_sign_ex(),
           ECDSA_verify(), ECDSA_do_verify()

           See "Deprecated low-level signing functions".

       •   ECDSA_size()

           Applications should use EVP_PKEY_get_size(3).

       •   EC_GF2m_simple_method(),   EC_GFp_mont_method(),   EC_GFp_nist_method(),    EC_GFp_nistp224_method(),
           EC_GFp_nistp256_method(), EC_GFp_nistp521_method(), EC_GFp_simple_method()

           There  are no replacements for these functions. Applications should rely on the library automatically
           assigning a suitable method internally when an EC_GROUP is constructed.

       •   EC_GROUP_clear_free()

           Use EC_GROUP_free(3) instead.

       •   EC_GROUP_get_curve_GF2m(),            EC_GROUP_get_curve_GFp(),            EC_GROUP_set_curve_GF2m(),
           EC_GROUP_set_curve_GFp()

           Applications should use EC_GROUP_get_curve(3) and EC_GROUP_set_curve(3).

       •   EC_GROUP_have_precompute_mult(), EC_GROUP_precompute_mult(), EC_KEY_precompute_mult()

           These functions are not widely used. Applications should instead switch to named curves which OpenSSL
           has hardcoded lookup tables for.

       •   EC_GROUP_new(), EC_GROUP_method_of(), EC_POINT_method_of()

           EC_METHOD  is  now  an  internal-only concept and a suitable EC_METHOD is assigned internally without
           application intervention.  Users of EC_GROUP_new() should switch to a different suitable constructor.

       •   EC_KEY_can_sign()

           Applications should use EVP_PKEY_can_sign(3) instead.

       •   EC_KEY_check_key()

           See "Deprecated low-level validation functions"

       •   EC_KEY_set_flags(), EC_KEY_get_flags(), EC_KEY_clear_flags()

           See "Common EC  parameters"  in  EVP_PKEY-EC(7)  which  handles  flags  as  seperate  parameters  for
           OSSL_PKEY_PARAM_EC_POINT_CONVERSION_FORMAT,                      OSSL_PKEY_PARAM_EC_GROUP_CHECK_TYPE,
           OSSL_PKEY_PARAM_EC_ENCODING, OSSL_PKEY_PARAM_USE_COFACTOR_ECDH and OSSL_PKEY_PARAM_EC_INCLUDE_PUBLIC.
           See also "EXAMPLES" in EVP_PKEY-EC(7)

       •   EC_KEY_dup(), EC_KEY_copy()

           There is no direct replacement. Applications may use EVP_PKEY_copy_parameters(3) and  EVP_PKEY_dup(3)
           instead.

       •   EC_KEY_decoded_from_explicit_params()

           There is no replacement.

       •   EC_KEY_generate_key()

           See "Deprecated low-level key generation functions".

       •   EC_KEY_get0_group(),   EC_KEY_get0_private_key(),  EC_KEY_get0_public_key(),  EC_KEY_get_conv_form(),
           EC_KEY_get_enc_flags()

           See "Deprecated low-level key parameter getters".

       •   EC_KEY_get0_engine(),    EC_KEY_get_default_method(),    EC_KEY_get_method(),    EC_KEY_new_method(),
           EC_KEY_get_ex_data(),     EC_KEY_OpenSSL(),     EC_KEY_set_ex_data(),    EC_KEY_set_default_method(),
           EC_KEY_METHOD_*(), EC_KEY_set_method()

           See "Providers are a replacement for engines and low-level method overrides"

       •   EC_METHOD_get_field_type()

           Use EC_GROUP_get_field_type(3) instead.  See "Providers are a replacement for engines  and  low-level
           method overrides"

       •   EC_KEY_key2buf(), EC_KEY_oct2key(), EC_KEY_oct2priv(), EC_KEY_priv2buf(), EC_KEY_priv2oct()

           There are no replacements for these.

       •   EC_KEY_new(), EC_KEY_new_by_curve_name(), EC_KEY_free(), EC_KEY_up_ref()

           See "Deprecated low-level object creation"

       •   EC_KEY_print(), EC_KEY_print_fp()

           See "Deprecated low-level key printing functions"

       •   EC_KEY_set_asn1_flag(), EC_KEY_set_conv_form(), EC_KEY_set_enc_flags()

           See "Deprecated low-level key parameter setters".

       •   EC_KEY_set_group(),                 EC_KEY_set_private_key(),                EC_KEY_set_public_key(),
           EC_KEY_set_public_key_affine_coordinates()

           See "Deprecated low-level key parameter setters".

       •   ECParameters_print(), ECParameters_print_fp(), ECPKParameters_print(), ECPKParameters_print_fp()

           See "Deprecated low-level key printing functions"

       •   EC_POINT_bn2point(), EC_POINT_point2bn()

           These functions were not particularly useful, since EC point serialization formats are not individual
           big-endian integers.

       •   EC_POINT_get_affine_coordinates_GF2m(),                        EC_POINT_get_affine_coordinates_GFp(),
           EC_POINT_set_affine_coordinates_GF2m(), EC_POINT_set_affine_coordinates_GFp()

           Applications  should  use  EC_POINT_get_affine_coordinates(3)  and EC_POINT_set_affine_coordinates(3)
           instead.

       •   EC_POINT_get_Jprojective_coordinates_GFp(), EC_POINT_set_Jprojective_coordinates_GFp()

           These   functions    are    not    widely    used.    Applications    should    instead    use    the
           EC_POINT_set_affine_coordinates(3) and EC_POINT_get_affine_coordinates(3) functions.

       •   EC_POINT_make_affine(), EC_POINTs_make_affine()

           There  is  no  replacement.  These functions were not widely used, and OpenSSL automatically performs
           this conversion when needed.

       •   EC_POINT_set_compressed_coordinates_GF2m(), EC_POINT_set_compressed_coordinates_GFp()

           Applications should use EC_POINT_set_compressed_coordinates(3) instead.

       •   EC_POINTs_mul()

           This function is not widely used. Applications should instead use the EC_POINT_mul(3) function.

       •   ENGINE_*()

           All engine functions are deprecated. An engine should be rewritten as a provider.  See "Providers are
           a replacement for engines and low-level method overrides".

       •   ERR_load_*(),     ERR_func_error_string(),      ERR_get_error_line(),      ERR_get_error_line_data(),
           ERR_get_state()

           OpenSSL now loads error strings automatically so these functions are not needed.

       •   ERR_peek_error_line_data(), ERR_peek_last_error_line_data()

           The  new  functions  are ERR_peek_error_func(3), ERR_peek_last_error_func(3), ERR_peek_error_data(3),
           ERR_peek_last_error_data(3),         ERR_get_error_all(3),         ERR_peek_error_all(3)          and
           ERR_peek_last_error_all(3).   Applications  should use ERR_get_error_all(3), or pick information with
           ERR_peek functions and finish off with getting the error code by using ERR_get_error(3).

       •   EVP_CIPHER_CTX_iv(), EVP_CIPHER_CTX_iv_noconst(), EVP_CIPHER_CTX_original_iv()

           Applications should instead  use  EVP_CIPHER_CTX_get_updated_iv(3),  EVP_CIPHER_CTX_get_updated_iv(3)
           and   EVP_CIPHER_CTX_get_original_iv(3)   respectively.   See  EVP_CIPHER_CTX_get_original_iv(3)  for
           further information.

       •   EVP_CIPHER_meth_*(), EVP_MD_CTX_set_update_fn(), EVP_MD_CTX_update_fn(), EVP_MD_meth_*()

           See "Providers are a replacement for engines and low-level method overrides".

       •   EVP_PKEY_CTRL_PKCS7_ENCRYPT(),       EVP_PKEY_CTRL_PKCS7_DECRYPT(),       EVP_PKEY_CTRL_PKCS7_SIGN(),
           EVP_PKEY_CTRL_CMS_ENCRYPT(), EVP_PKEY_CTRL_CMS_DECRYPT(), and EVP_PKEY_CTRL_CMS_SIGN()

           These  control  operations  are not invoked by the OpenSSL library anymore and are replaced by direct
           checks of the key operation against the key type when the operation is initialized.

       •   EVP_PKEY_CTX_get0_dh_kdf_ukm(), EVP_PKEY_CTX_get0_ecdh_kdf_ukm()

           See the "kdf-ukm" item in "DH key exchange parameters" in EVP_KEYEXCH-DH(7) and  "ECDH  Key  Exchange
           parameters" in EVP_KEYEXCH-ECDH(7).  These functions are obsolete and should not be required.

       •   EVP_PKEY_CTX_set_rsa_keygen_pubexp()

           Applications should use EVP_PKEY_CTX_set1_rsa_keygen_pubexp(3) instead.

       •   EVP_PKEY_cmp(), EVP_PKEY_cmp_parameters()

           Applications    should    use    EVP_PKEY_eq(3)    and    EVP_PKEY_parameters_eq(3)   instead.    See
           EVP_PKEY_copy_parameters(3) for further details.

       •   EVP_PKEY_encrypt_old(), EVP_PKEY_decrypt_old(),

           Applications should use EVP_PKEY_encrypt_init(3) and EVP_PKEY_encrypt(3) or  EVP_PKEY_decrypt_init(3)
           and EVP_PKEY_decrypt(3) instead.

       •   EVP_PKEY_get0()

           This function returns NULL if the key comes from a provider.

       •   EVP_PKEY_get0_DH(),       EVP_PKEY_get0_DSA(),      EVP_PKEY_get0_EC_KEY(),      EVP_PKEY_get0_RSA(),
           EVP_PKEY_get1_DH(),    EVP_PKEY_get1_DSA(),     EVP_PKEY_get1_EC_KEY     and     EVP_PKEY_get1_RSA(),
           EVP_PKEY_get0_hmac(), EVP_PKEY_get0_poly1305(), EVP_PKEY_get0_siphash()

           See "Functions that return an internal key should be treated as read only".

       •   EVP_PKEY_meth_*()

           See "Providers are a replacement for engines and low-level method overrides".

       •   EVP_PKEY_new_CMAC_key()

           See "Deprecated low-level MAC functions".

       •   EVP_PKEY_assign(),       EVP_PKEY_set1_DH(),       EVP_PKEY_set1_DSA(),       EVP_PKEY_set1_EC_KEY(),
           EVP_PKEY_set1_RSA()

           See "Deprecated low-level key object getters and setters"

       •   EVP_PKEY_set1_tls_encodedpoint() EVP_PKEY_get1_tls_encodedpoint()

           These functions were previously used by libssl to set or get  an  encoded  public  key  into/from  an
           EVP_PKEY   object.   With   OpenSSL   3.0   these   are   replaced  by  the  more  generic  functions
           EVP_PKEY_set1_encoded_public_key(3) and EVP_PKEY_get1_encoded_public_key(3).  The old  versions  have
           been converted to deprecated macros that just call the new functions.

       •   EVP_PKEY_set1_engine(), EVP_PKEY_get0_engine()

           See "Providers are a replacement for engines and low-level method overrides".

       •   EVP_PKEY_set_alias_type()

           This  function  has been removed. There is no replacement.  See "EVP_PKEY_set_alias_type() method has
           been removed"

       •   HMAC_Init_ex(), HMAC_Update(), HMAC_Final(), HMAC_size()

           See "Deprecated low-level MAC functions".

       •   HMAC_CTX_new(),    HMAC_CTX_free(),    HMAC_CTX_copy(),    HMAC_CTX_reset(),    HMAC_CTX_set_flags(),
           HMAC_CTX_get_md()

           See "Deprecated low-level MAC functions".

       •   i2d_DHparams(), i2d_DHxparams()

           See "Deprecated low-level key reading and writing functions" and "Migration" in d2i_RSAPrivateKey(3)

       •   i2d_DSAparams(),      i2d_DSAPrivateKey(),      i2d_DSAPrivateKey_bio(),      i2d_DSAPrivateKey_fp(),
           i2d_DSA_PUBKEY(), i2d_DSA_PUBKEY_bio(), i2d_DSA_PUBKEY_fp(), i2d_DSAPublicKey()

           See "Deprecated low-level key reading and writing functions" and "Migration" in d2i_RSAPrivateKey(3)

       •   i2d_ECParameters(),      i2d_ECPrivateKey(),      i2d_ECPrivateKey_bio(),      i2d_ECPrivateKey_fp(),
           i2d_EC_PUBKEY(), i2d_EC_PUBKEY_bio(), i2d_EC_PUBKEY_fp(), i2o_ECPublicKey()

           See "Deprecated low-level key reading and writing functions" and "Migration" in d2i_RSAPrivateKey(3)

       •   i2d_RSAPrivateKey(),      i2d_RSAPrivateKey_bio(),      i2d_RSAPrivateKey_fp(),     i2d_RSA_PUBKEY(),
           i2d_RSA_PUBKEY_bio(),      i2d_RSA_PUBKEY_fp(),      i2d_RSAPublicKey(),      i2d_RSAPublicKey_bio(),
           i2d_RSAPublicKey_fp()

           See "Deprecated low-level key reading and writing functions" and "Migration" in d2i_RSAPrivateKey(3)

       •   IDEA_encrypt(),       IDEA_set_decrypt_key(),       IDEA_set_encrypt_key(),       IDEA_cbc_encrypt(),
           IDEA_cfb64_encrypt(), IDEA_ecb_encrypt(), IDEA_ofb64_encrypt()

           See "Deprecated low-level encryption functions".  IDEA has been moved to the Legacy Provider.

       •   IDEA_options()

           There is no replacement. This function returned a constant string.

       •   MD2(), MD2_Init(), MD2_Update(), MD2_Final()

           See "Deprecated low-level encryption functions".  MD2 has been moved to the Legacy Provider.

       •   MD2_options()

           There is no replacement. This function returned a constant string.

       •   MD4(), MD4_Init(), MD4_Update(), MD4_Final(), MD4_Transform()

           See "Deprecated low-level encryption functions".  MD4 has been moved to the Legacy Provider.

       •   MDC2(), MDC2_Init(), MDC2_Update(), MDC2_Final()

           See "Deprecated low-level encryption functions".  MDC2 has been moved to the Legacy Provider.

       •   MD5(), MD5_Init(), MD5_Update(), MD5_Final(), MD5_Transform()

           See "Deprecated low-level encryption functions".

       •   NCONF_WIN32()

           This undocumented function has no replacement.  See "HISTORY" in config(5) for more details.

       •   OCSP_parse_url()

           Use OSSL_HTTP_parse_url(3) instead.

       •   OCSP_REQ_CTX type and OCSP_REQ_CTX_*() functions

           These methods were used to collect all necessary data to form a HTTP request, and to perform the HTTP
           transfer with that request.  With OpenSSL 3.0, the type  is  OSSL_HTTP_REQ_CTX,  and  the  deprecated
           functions are replaced with OSSL_HTTP_REQ_CTX_*(). See OSSL_HTTP_REQ_CTX(3) for additional details.

       •   OPENSSL_fork_child(), OPENSSL_fork_parent(), OPENSSL_fork_prepare()

           There  is  no  replacement  for  these  functions.  These pthread fork support methods were unused by
           OpenSSL.

       •   OSSL_STORE_ctrl(),           OSSL_STORE_do_all_loaders(),            OSSL_STORE_LOADER_get0_engine(),
           OSSL_STORE_LOADER_get0_scheme(),       OSSL_STORE_LOADER_new(),       OSSL_STORE_LOADER_set_attach(),
           OSSL_STORE_LOADER_set_close(),       OSSL_STORE_LOADER_set_ctrl(),       OSSL_STORE_LOADER_set_eof(),
           OSSL_STORE_LOADER_set_error(),      OSSL_STORE_LOADER_set_expect(),     OSSL_STORE_LOADER_set_find(),
           OSSL_STORE_LOADER_set_load(),     OSSL_STORE_LOADER_set_open(),      OSSL_STORE_LOADER_set_open_ex(),
           OSSL_STORE_register_loader(), OSSL_STORE_unregister_loader(), OSSL_STORE_vctrl()

           These functions helped applications and engines create loaders for schemes they supported.  These are
           all deprecated and discouraged in favour of provider implementations, see provider-storemgmt(7).

       •   PEM_read_DHparams(),    PEM_read_bio_DHparams(),    PEM_read_DSAparams(),   PEM_read_bio_DSAparams(),
           PEM_read_DSAPrivateKey(),        PEM_read_DSA_PUBKEY(),        PEM_read_bio_DSAPrivateKey         and
           PEM_read_bio_DSA_PUBKEY(),  PEM_read_ECPKParameters(), PEM_read_ECPrivateKey(), PEM_read_EC_PUBKEY(),
           PEM_read_bio_ECPKParameters(),         PEM_read_bio_ECPrivateKey(),         PEM_read_bio_EC_PUBKEY(),
           PEM_read_RSAPrivateKey(),               PEM_read_RSA_PUBKEY(),               PEM_read_RSAPublicKey(),
           PEM_read_bio_RSAPrivateKey(),         PEM_read_bio_RSA_PUBKEY(),         PEM_read_bio_RSAPublicKey(),
           PEM_write_bio_DHparams(),   PEM_write_bio_DHxparams(),  PEM_write_DHparams(),  PEM_write_DHxparams(),
           PEM_write_DSAparams(), PEM_write_DSAPrivateKey(), PEM_write_DSA_PUBKEY(),  PEM_write_bio_DSAparams(),
           PEM_write_bio_DSAPrivateKey(),         PEM_write_bio_DSA_PUBKEY(),        PEM_write_ECPKParameters(),
           PEM_write_ECPrivateKey(),           PEM_write_EC_PUBKEY(),            PEM_write_bio_ECPKParameters(),
           PEM_write_bio_ECPrivateKey(),          PEM_write_bio_EC_PUBKEY(),          PEM_write_RSAPrivateKey(),
           PEM_write_RSA_PUBKEY(),           PEM_write_RSAPublicKey(),            PEM_write_bio_RSAPrivateKey(),
           PEM_write_bio_RSA_PUBKEY(), PEM_write_bio_RSAPublicKey(),

           See "Deprecated low-level key reading and writing functions"

       •   PKCS1_MGF1()

           See "Deprecated low-level encryption functions".

       •   RAND_get_rand_method(), RAND_set_rand_method(), RAND_OpenSSL(), RAND_set_rand_engine()

           Applications   should   instead   use   RAND_set_DRBG_type(3),   EVP_RAND(3)  and  EVP_RAND(7).   See
           RAND_set_rand_method(3) for more details.

       •   RC2_encrypt(),     RC2_decrypt(),     RC2_set_key(),     RC2_cbc_encrypt(),      RC2_cfb64_encrypt(),
           RC2_ecb_encrypt(),   RC2_ofb64_encrypt(),   RC4(),  RC4_set_key(),  RC4_options(),  RC5_32_encrypt(),
           RC5_32_set_key(),       RC5_32_decrypt(),        RC5_32_cbc_encrypt(),        RC5_32_cfb64_encrypt(),
           RC5_32_ecb_encrypt(), RC5_32_ofb64_encrypt()

           See  "Deprecated  low-level  encryption  functions".  The Algorithms "RC2", "RC4" and "RC5" have been
           moved to the Legacy Provider.

       •   RIPEMD160(), RIPEMD160_Init(), RIPEMD160_Update(), RIPEMD160_Final(), RIPEMD160_Transform()

           See "Deprecated low-level digest functions".  The  RIPE  algorithm  has  been  moved  to  the  Legacy
           Provider.

       •   RSA_bits(), RSA_security_bits(), RSA_size()

           Use EVP_PKEY_get_bits(3), EVP_PKEY_get_security_bits(3) and EVP_PKEY_get_size(3).

       •   RSA_check_key(), RSA_check_key_ex()

           See "Deprecated low-level validation functions"

       •   RSA_clear_flags(),     RSA_flags(),    RSA_set_flags(),    RSA_test_flags(),    RSA_setup_blinding(),
           RSA_blinding_off(), RSA_blinding_on()

           All of these RSA flags have been deprecated without replacement:

           RSA_FLAG_BLINDING,      RSA_FLAG_CACHE_PRIVATE,       RSA_FLAG_CACHE_PUBLIC,       RSA_FLAG_EXT_PKEY,
           RSA_FLAG_NO_BLINDING, RSA_FLAG_THREAD_SAFE RSA_METHOD_FLAG_NO_CHECKRSA_generate_key_ex(), RSA_generate_multi_prime_key()

           See "Deprecated low-level key generation functions".

       •   RSA_get0_engine()

           See "Providers are a replacement for engines and low-level method overrides"

       •   RSA_get0_crt_params(),      RSA_get0_d(),     RSA_get0_dmp1(),     RSA_get0_dmq1(),     RSA_get0_e(),
           RSA_get0_factors(),     RSA_get0_iqmp(),      RSA_get0_key(),      RSA_get0_multi_prime_crt_params(),
           RSA_get0_multi_prime_factors(),   RSA_get0_n(),  RSA_get0_p(),  RSA_get0_pss_params(),  RSA_get0_q(),
           RSA_get_multi_prime_extra_count()

           See "Deprecated low-level key parameter getters"

       •   RSA_new(), RSA_free(), RSA_up_ref()

           See "Deprecated low-level object creation".

       •   RSA_get_default_method(), RSA_get_ex_data and RSA_get_method()

           See "Providers are a replacement for engines and low-level method overrides".

       •   RSA_get_version()

           There is no replacement.

       •   RSA_meth_*(), RSA_new_method(), RSA_null_method and RSA_PKCS1_OpenSSL()

           See "Providers are a replacement for engines and low-level method overrides".

       •   RSA_padding_add_*(), RSA_padding_check_*()

           See "Deprecated low-level signing functions" and "Deprecated low-level encryption functions".

       •   RSA_print(), RSA_print_fp()

           See "Deprecated low-level key printing functions"

       •   RSA_public_encrypt(), RSA_private_decrypt()

           See "Deprecated low-level encryption functions"

       •   RSA_private_encrypt(), RSA_public_decrypt()

           This is equivalent to doing sign and verify recover operations (with a padding  mode  of  none).  See
           "Deprecated low-level signing functions".

       •   RSAPrivateKey_dup(), RSAPublicKey_dup()

           There is no direct replacement. Applications may use EVP_PKEY_dup(3).

       •   RSAPublicKey_it(), RSAPrivateKey_it()

           See "Deprecated low-level key reading and writing functions"

       •   RSA_set0_crt_params(), RSA_set0_factors(), RSA_set0_key(), RSA_set0_multi_prime_params()

           See "Deprecated low-level key parameter setters".

       •   RSA_set_default_method(), RSA_set_method(), RSA_set_ex_data()

           See "Providers are a replacement for engines and low-level method overrides"

       •   RSA_sign(),      RSA_sign_ASN1_OCTET_STRING(),      RSA_verify(),     RSA_verify_ASN1_OCTET_STRING(),
           RSA_verify_PKCS1_PSS(), RSA_verify_PKCS1_PSS_mgf1()

           See "Deprecated low-level signing functions".

       •   RSA_X931_derive_ex(), RSA_X931_generate_key_ex(), RSA_X931_hash_id()

           There are no replacements for these functions.  X931 padding can be set using "Signature  Parameters"
           in EVP_SIGNATURE-RSA(7).  See OSSL_SIGNATURE_PARAM_PAD_MODE.

       •   SEED_encrypt(),    SEED_decrypt(),    SEED_set_key(),    SEED_cbc_encrypt(),   SEED_cfb128_encrypt(),
           SEED_ecb_encrypt(), SEED_ofb128_encrypt()

           See "Deprecated low-level encryption functions".  The SEED algorithm has been  moved  to  the  Legacy
           Provider.

       •   SHA1_Init(),   SHA1_Update(),   SHA1_Final(),   SHA1_Transform(),   SHA224_Init(),   SHA224_Update(),
           SHA224_Final(), SHA256_Init(), SHA256_Update(),  SHA256_Final(),  SHA256_Transform(),  SHA384_Init(),
           SHA384_Update(), SHA384_Final(), SHA512_Init(), SHA512_Update(), SHA512_Final(), SHA512_Transform()

           See "Deprecated low-level digest functions".

       •   SRP_Calc_A(), SRP_Calc_B(), SRP_Calc_client_key(), SRP_Calc_server_key(), SRP_Calc_u(), SRP_Calc_x(),
           SRP_check_known_gN_param(),  SRP_create_verifier(),  SRP_create_verifier_BN(),  SRP_get_default_gN(),
           SRP_user_pwd_free(),     SRP_user_pwd_new(),     SRP_user_pwd_set0_sv(),     SRP_user_pwd_set1_ids(),
           SRP_user_pwd_set_gN(),     SRP_VBASE_add0_user(),     SRP_VBASE_free(),     SRP_VBASE_get1_by_user(),
           SRP_VBASE_init(), SRP_VBASE_new(), SRP_Verify_A_mod_N(), SRP_Verify_B_mod_N()

           There are no replacements for the SRP functions.

       •   SSL_CTX_set_tmp_dh_callback(), SSL_set_tmp_dh_callback(), SSL_CTX_set_tmp_dh(), SSL_set_tmp_dh()

           These are used to set the Diffie-Hellman (DH) parameters that are to be  used  by  servers  requiring
           ephemeral  DH  keys.  Instead  applications should consider using the built-in DH parameters that are
           available by calling SSL_CTX_set_dh_auto(3) or SSL_set_dh_auto(3). If custom parameters are necessary
           then   applications   can   use   the   alternative   functions    SSL_CTX_set0_tmp_dh_pkey(3)    and
           SSL_set0_tmp_dh_pkey(3).  There  is  no direct replacement for the "callback" functions. The callback
           was originally useful in order to have different parameters for export and  non-export  ciphersuites.
           Export  ciphersuites  are  no  longer  supported  by OpenSSL. Use of the callback functions should be
           replaced by one of the other methods described above.

       •   SSL_CTX_set_tlsext_ticket_key_cb()

           Use the new SSL_CTX_set_tlsext_ticket_key_evp_cb(3) function instead.

       •   WHIRLPOOL(), WHIRLPOOL_Init(), WHIRLPOOL_Update(), WHIRLPOOL_Final(), WHIRLPOOL_BitUpdate()

           See "Deprecated low-level digest functions".  The Whirlpool algorithm has been moved  to  the  Legacy
           Provider.

       •   X509_certificate_type()

           This    was    an    undocumented    function.   Applications   can   use   X509_get0_pubkey(3)   and
           X509_get0_signature(3) instead.

       •   X509_http_nbio(), X509_CRL_http_nbio()

           Use X509_load_http(3) and X509_CRL_load_http(3) instead.

   Using the FIPS Module in applications
       See fips_module(7) and OSSL_PROVIDER-FIPS(7) for details.

   OpenSSL command line application changes
       New applications

       openssl kdf uses the new EVP_KDF(3) API.  openssl kdf uses the new EVP_MAC(3) API.

       Added options

       -provider_path and -provider are available to all apps and  can  be  used  multiple  times  to  load  any
       providers,  such  as  the 'legacy' provider or third party providers. If used then the 'default' provider
       would also need to be specified if required. The -provider_path must be specified  before  the  -provider
       option.

       The list app has many new options. See openssl-list(1) for more information.

       -crl_lastupdate and -crl_nextupdate used by openssl ca allows explicit setting of fields in the generated
       CRL.

       Removed options

       Interactive mode is not longer available.

       The  -crypt  option used by openssl passwd.  The -c option used by openssl x509, openssl dhparam, openssl
       dsaparam, and openssl ecparam.

       Other Changes

       The output of Command line  applications  may  have  minor  changes.   These  are  primarily  changes  in
       capitalisation  and white space.  However, in some cases, there are additional differences.  For example,
       the DH parameters output from openssl dhparam now lists 'P', 'Q', 'G' and 'pcounter' instead of  'prime',
       'generator', 'subgroup order' and 'counter' respectively.

       The  openssl  commands  that  read  keys,  certificates, and CRLs now automatically detect the PEM or DER
       format of the input files so it is not necessary to explicitly specify the input format anymore.  However
       if the input format option is used the specified format will be required.

       openssl speed no longer uses low-level API calls.  This implies some of the performance numbers might not
       be  comparable  with the previous releases due to higher overhead. This applies particularly to measuring
       performance on smaller data chunks.

       b<openssl dhparam>, openssl dsa, openssl gendsa, openssl dsaparam, openssl genrsa and  openssl  rsa  have
       been modified to use PKEY APIs.  openssl genrsa and openssl rsa now write PKCS #8 keys by default.

       Default settings

       "SHA256" is now the default digest for TS query used by openssl ts.

       Deprecated apps

       openssl rsautl is deprecated, use openssl pkeyutl instead.  openssl dhparam, openssl dsa, openssl gendsa,
       openssl dsaparam, openssl genrsa, openssl rsa, openssl genrsa and openssl rsa are now in maintenance mode
       and no new features will be added to them.

   TLS Changes
       •   TLS 1.3 FFDHE key exchange support added

           This uses DH safe prime named groups.

       •   Support for fully "pluggable" TLSv1.3 groups.

           This means that providers may supply their own group implementations (using either the "key exchange"
           or the "key encapsulation" methods) which will automatically be detected and used by libssl.

       •   SSL and SSL_CTX options are now 64 bit instead of 32 bit.

           The  signatures  of  the  functions  to  get  and set options on SSL and SSL_CTX objects changed from
           "unsigned long" to "uint64_t" type.

           This may require source code changes. For example it is no longer possible to use the  SSL_OP_  macro
           values  in  preprocessor "#if" conditions.  However it is still possible to test whether these macros
           are defined or not.

           See SSL_CTX_get_options(3), SSL_CTX_set_options(3), SSL_get_options(3) and SSL_set_options(3).

       •   SSL_set1_host() and SSL_add1_host() Changes

           These functions now take IP literal addresses as well as actual hostnames.

       •   Added SSL option SSL_OP_CLEANSE_PLAINTEXT

           If the option is set, openssl  cleanses  (zeroizes)  plaintext  bytes  from  internal  buffers  after
           delivering  them  to  the application. Note, the application is still responsible for cleansing other
           copies (e.g.: data received by SSL_read(3)).

       •   Client-initiated renegotiation is disabled by default.

           To allow it, use the -client_renegotiation option, the SSL_OP_ALLOW_CLIENT_RENEGOTIATION flag, or the
           "ClientRenegotiation" config parameter as appropriate.

       •   Secure renegotiation is now required by default for TLS connections

           Support for RFC 5746 secure renegotiation is now required by default for SSL or  TLS  connections  to
           succeed.   Applications  that  require the ability to connect to legacy peers will need to explicitly
           set SSL_OP_LEGACY_SERVER_CONNECT.  Accordingly, SSL_OP_LEGACY_SERVER_CONNECT is no longer set as part
           of SSL_OP_ALL.

       •   Combining the Configure options no-ec and no-dh no longer disables TLSv1.3

           Typically if OpenSSL has no EC or DH algorithms then it  cannot  support  connections  with  TLSv1.3.
           However  OpenSSL  now  supports "pluggable" groups through providers. Therefore third party providers
           may supply group implementations even where there are no built-in  ones.  Attempting  to  create  TLS
           connections  in such a build without also disabling TLSv1.3 at run time or using third party provider
           groups may result in  handshake  failures.  TLSv1.3  can  be  disabled  at  compile  time  using  the
           "no-tls1_3" Configure option.

       •   SSL_CTX_set_ciphersuites() and SSL_set_ciphersuites() changes.

           The methods now ignore unknown ciphers.

       •   Security callback change.

           The  security  callback, which can be customised by application code, supports the security operation
           SSL_SECOP_TMP_DH. This is defined to take an EVP_PKEY in the "other" parameter. In most  places  this
           is what is passed. All these places occur server side. However there was one client side call of this
           security  operation  and it passed a DH object instead. This is incorrect according to the definition
           of SSL_SECOP_TMP_DH, and is inconsistent with all of the other locations. Therefore this client  side
           call has been changed to pass an EVP_PKEY instead.

       •   New SSL option SSL_OP_IGNORE_UNEXPECTED_EOF

           The  SSL  option SSL_OP_IGNORE_UNEXPECTED_EOF is introduced. If that option is set, an unexpected EOF
           is ignored, it pretends a close notify was  received  instead  and  so  the  returned  error  becomes
           SSL_ERROR_ZERO_RETURN.

       •   The security strength of SHA1 and MD5 based signatures in TLS has been reduced.

           This  results in SSL 3, TLS 1.0, TLS 1.1 and DTLS 1.0 no longer working at the default security level
           of 1 and instead requires security level 0. The security level can be changed either using the cipher
           string with @SECLEVEL, or calling SSL_CTX_set_security_level(3).  This  also  means  that  where  the
           signature  algorithms extension is missing from a ClientHello then the handshake will fail in TLS 1.2
           at security level 1. This is because, although this extension is optional,  failing  to  provide  one
           means  that OpenSSL will fallback to a default set of signature algorithms. This default set requires
           the availability of SHA1.

       •   X509 certificates signed using SHA1 are no longer allowed at security level 1 and above.

           In TLS/SSL the default security level is 1. It can  be  set  either  using  the  cipher  string  with
           @SECLEVEL,  or calling SSL_CTX_set_security_level(3). If the leaf certificate is signed with SHA-1, a
           call to SSL_CTX_use_certificate(3) will fail if the security level is  not  lowered  first.   Outside
           TLS/SSL,   the   default   security   level   is   -1   (effectively   0).   It   can  be  set  using
           X509_VERIFY_PARAM_set_auth_level(3) or using the -auth_level options of the commands.

SEE ALSO

       fips_module(7)

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright 2021 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>.

3.0.2                                              2025-02-05                              MIGRATION_GUIDE(7SSL)