Fix a test that depends on a relative path am: 148b146a68 am: 04fba693c9 am: 44d33d5368 am: ce93b80a78

Original change: https://android-review.googlesource.com/c/platform/external/rust/crates/x509-parser/+/1780752

Change-Id: Iaaec7cb7770f60c86c749b0bcb78d3abbea2923b
tree: 81ab7d86c6f58cc7c9faa2cbc6b9d188d91a71a7
  1. assets/
  2. examples/
  3. patches/
  4. src/
  5. tests/
  6. .cargo_vcs_info.json
  7. .gitignore
  8. Android.bp
  9. Cargo.toml
  10. Cargo.toml.orig
  11. cargo2android.json
  12. CHANGELOG.md
  13. LICENSE-APACHE
  14. LICENSE-MIT
  15. METADATA
  16. MODULE_LICENSE_APACHE2
  17. OWNERS
  18. README.md
README.md

License: MIT Apache License 2.0 docs.rs crates.io Download numbers Github CI Minimum rustc version

X.509 Parser

A X.509 v3 (RFC5280) parser, implemented with the nom parser combinator framework.

It is written in pure Rust, fast, and makes extensive use of zero-copy. A lot of care is taken to ensure security and safety of this crate, including design (recursion limit, defensive programming), tests, and fuzzing. It also aims to be panic-free.

The code is available on Github and is part of the Rusticata project.

Certificates are usually encoded in two main formats: PEM (usually the most common format) or DER. A PEM-encoded certificate is a container, storing a DER object. See the pem module for more documentation.

To decode a DER-encoded certificate, the main parsing method is parse_x509_certificate, which builds a X509Certificate object.

The returned objects for parsers follow the definitions of the RFC. This means that accessing fields is done by accessing struct members recursively. Some helper functions are provided, for example X509Certificate::issuer() returns the same as accessing <object>.tbs_certificate.issuer.

For PEM-encoded certificates, use the pem module.

Examples

Parsing a certificate in DER format:

use x509_parser::prelude::*;

static IGCA_DER: &[u8] = include_bytes!("../assets/IGC_A.der");

let res = parse_x509_certificate(IGCA_DER);
match res {
    Ok((rem, cert)) => {
        assert!(rem.is_empty());
        //
        assert_eq!(cert.tbs_certificate.version, X509Version::V3);
    },
    _ => panic!("x509 parsing failed: {:?}", res),
}

To parse a CRL and print information about revoked certificates:

#
#
let res = parse_x509_crl(DER);
match res {
    Ok((_rem, crl)) => {
        for revoked in crl.iter_revoked_certificates() {
            println!("Revoked certificate serial: {}", revoked.raw_serial_as_string());
            println!("  Reason: {}", revoked.reason_code().unwrap_or_default().1);
        }
    },
    _ => panic!("CRL parsing failed: {:?}", res),
}

See also examples/print-cert.rs.

Features

/// Cryptographic signature verification: returns true if certificate was signed by issuer
#[cfg(feature = "verify")]
pub fn check_signature(cert: &X509Certificate<'_>, issuer: &X509Certificate<'_>) -> bool {
    let issuer_public_key = &issuer.tbs_certificate.subject_pki;
    cert
        .verify_signature(Some(issuer_public_key))
        .is_ok()
}

Rust version requirements

x509-parser requires Rustc version 1.45 or greater, based on nom 6 dependencies and for proc-macro attributes support.

Changes

See CHANGELOG.md

License

Licensed under either of

at your option.

Contribution

Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.