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RAND_egd(3)                                        OpenSSL                                       RAND_egd(3)



NAME
       RAND_egd - query entropy gathering daemon

SYNOPSIS
        #include <openssl/rand.h>

        int RAND_egd(const char *path);
        int RAND_egd_bytes(const char *path, int bytes);

        int RAND_query_egd_bytes(const char *path, unsigned char *buf, int bytes);

DESCRIPTION
       RAND_egd() queries the entropy gathering daemon EGD on socket path.  It queries 255 bytes and uses
       RAND_add(3) to seed the OpenSSL built-in PRNG. RAND_egd(path) is a wrapper for RAND_egd_bytes(path,
       255);

       RAND_egd_bytes() queries the entropy gathering daemon EGD on socket path.  It queries bytes bytes and
       uses RAND_add(3) to seed the OpenSSL built-in PRNG.  This function is more flexible than RAND_egd().
       When only one secret key must be generated, it is not necessary to request the full amount 255 bytes
       from the EGD socket. This can be advantageous, since the amount of entropy that can be retrieved from
       EGD over time is limited.

       RAND_query_egd_bytes() performs the actual query of the EGD daemon on socket path. If buf is given,
       bytes bytes are queried and written into buf. If buf is NULL, bytes bytes are queried and used to
       seed the OpenSSL built-in PRNG using RAND_add(3).

NOTES
       On systems without /dev/*random devices providing entropy from the kernel, the EGD entropy gathering
       daemon can be used to collect entropy. It provides a socket interface through which entropy can be
       gathered in chunks up to 255 bytes. Several chunks can be queried during one connection.

       EGD is available from http://www.lothar.com/tech/crypto/ ("perl Makefile.PL; make; make install" to
       install). It is run as egd path, where path is an absolute path designating a socket. When RAND_egd()
       is called with that path as an argument, it tries to read random bytes that EGD has collected. The
       read is performed in non-blocking mode.

       Alternatively, the EGD-interface compatible daemon PRNGD can be used. It is available from
       http://www.aet.tu-cottbus.de/personen/jaenicke/postfix_tls/prngd.html .  PRNGD does employ an
       internal PRNG itself and can therefore never run out of entropy.

       OpenSSL automatically queries EGD when entropy is requested via RAND_bytes() or the status is checked
       via RAND_status() for the first time, if the socket is located at /var/run/egd-pool, /dev/egd-pool or
       /etc/egd-pool.

RETURN VALUE
       RAND_egd() and RAND_egd_bytes() return the number of bytes read from the daemon on success, and -1 if
       the connection failed or the daemon did not return enough data to fully seed the PRNG.

       RAND_query_egd_bytes() returns the number of bytes read from the daemon on success, and -1 if the
       connection failed. The PRNG state is not considered.

SEE ALSO
       rand(3), RAND_add(3), RAND_cleanup(3)

HISTORY
       RAND_egd() is available since OpenSSL 0.9.5.

       RAND_egd_bytes() is available since OpenSSL 0.9.6.

       RAND_query_egd_bytes() is available since OpenSSL 0.9.7.

       The automatic query of /var/run/egd-pool et al was added in OpenSSL 0.9.7.



0.9.7l                                           2001-02-10                                      RAND_egd(3)

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