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/*
Generate a 1024 bit DSA key and put it into a file. The public key format is
that specified by X.509, while the private key format is PKCS #8.
The domain parameters are the ones specified as the Java default DSA
parameters. There is nothing special about these, it's just the only 1024-bit
DSA parameter set that's included in Botan at the time of this writing. The
application always reads/writes all of the domain parameters to/from the file,
so a new set could be used without any problems. We could generate a new set
for each key, or read a set of DSA params from a file and use those, but they
mostly seem like needless complications.
Written by Jack Lloyd (lloyd@randombit.net), August 5, 2002
Updated to use X.509 and PKCS #8 formats, October 21, 2002
This file is in the public domain
*/
#include <iostream>
#include <fstream>
#include <string>
#include <botan/botan.h>
#include <botan/dsa.h>
#include <botan/libstate.h>
using namespace Botan;
int main(int argc, char* argv[])
{
if(argc != 1 && argc != 2)
{
std::cout << "Usage: " << argv[0] << " [passphrase]" << std::endl;
return 1;
}
std::ofstream priv("dsapriv.pem");
std::ofstream pub("dsapub.pem");
if(!priv || !pub)
{
std::cout << "Couldn't write output files" << std::endl;
return 1;
}
try
{
DSA_PrivateKey key(DL_Group("dsa/jce/1024"),
global_state().prng_reference());
pub << X509::PEM_encode(key);
if(argc == 1)
priv << PKCS8::PEM_encode(key);
else
priv << PKCS8::PEM_encode(key, argv[1]);
}
catch(std::exception& e)
{
std::cout << "Exception caught: " << e.what() << std::endl;
}
return 0;
}
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