code: 9ferno

ref: 6bb619c8db2867ddd9cd19c0aec05065f5ee0cae
dir: /man/2/keyring-certtostr/

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.TH KEYRING-CERTTOSTR 2
.SH NAME
keyring: certtostr, pktostr, sktostr, strtocert, strtopk, strtosk \- encryption key conversion functions
.SH SYNOPSIS
.EX
include "keyring.m"
keyring:= load Keyring Keyring->PATH;

strtocert: fn(s: string)         : ref Certificate;
certtostr: fn(c: ref Certificate): string;
strtopk:   fn(s: string)         : ref PK;
pktostr:   fn(pk: ref PK)        : string;
strtosk:   fn(s: string)         : ref SK;
sktostr:   fn(sk: ref SK)        : string;
.EE
.SH DESCRIPTION
Certificates, public keys, and private keys are passed over networks and between applications using a Unicode representation. This collection of functions provide a means to convert adts supplied by the system to and from their portable textual representation. These routines are typically used as part of an I/O package for implementing security.
.PP
.B Strtocert
takes a string argument containing a user name, a hash algorithm, a certifying authority and an expiration time. Fields are separated by a newline. The return value is a
.BR Certificate .
If the string is of improper format, the result is
.IR nil .
.PP
.B Certtostr
performs the inverse operation: takes the
.B Certificate
.I c
and produces a text string suitable for communication over a network.
.PP
.B Strtopk
and
.B strtosk
take as their arguments a string
.I s
representing the public and private keys respectively.
.I S
must contain an algorithm name, a user name and the key. Fields are separated by a newline.
.B Strtopk
returns a reference to the resulting
.BR PK ;
.B strtosk
returns a reference to the resulting
.BR SK .
If the format of
.I s
is invalid, the result is
.IR nil .
.PP
.B Pktostr
and
.B sktostr
perform the inverse operations:
they take a public key (secret key) and produce a printable representation as a string.
.SH SOURCE
.B /libinterp/keyring.c