BN_num_bits,
BN_num_bytes
BN_num_bits_word
gets BIGNUM size
libcrypto.lib
#include <openssl/bn.h>
int BN_num_bytes(const BIGNUM *a);
int BN_num_bits(const BIGNUM *a);
int BN_num_bits_word(BN_ULONG w);
BN_num_bytes()
returns the size of a BIGNUM in bytes.
BN_num_bits_word()
returns the number of significant bits in a word.
If we take 0x00000432 as an example, it returns 11, not 16, not 32.
Basically, except for a zero, it returns floor(log2(w))+1.
BN_num_bits()
returns the number of significant bits in a BIGNUM,
following the same principle as BN_num_bits_word().
BN_num_bytes()
is a macro.
The size.
Some have tried using
BN_num_bits()
on individual numbers in RSA keys,
DH keys and DSA keys, and found that they do not always come up with
the number of bits they expected (something like 512, 1024, 2048,
...). This is because generating a number with some specific number
of bits does not always set the highest bits, thereby making the number
of significant bits a little lower.
To know the ``key
size'' of such a key, either use functions like RSA_size(),
DH_size()
and DSA_size(), or use
BN_num_bytes()
and multiply with 8 (although
there's no real guarantee that will match the ``key size'', just a lot
more probability).
bn(), DH_size(), DSA_size(), RSA_size()
BN_num_bytes(), BN_num_bits()
and BN_num_bits_word()
are available in
all versions of SSLeay and OpenSSL.
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