* allow multiple values per key in name fields in openssl_certificate
* check correct side of comparison
* trigger only on lists
* add subject parameter to openssl_csr
* fix key: value mapping not skipping None elements
* temporary fix for undefined "subject" field
* fix iteration over subject entries
* fix docs
* quote sample string
* allow csr with only subject defined
* fix integration test
* look up NIDs before comparing, add hidden _strict params
* deal with empty issuer/subject fields
* adapt integration tests
* also normalize output from pyopenssl
* fix issue with _sanitize_inputs
* don't convert empty lists
* workaround for pyopenssl limitations
* properly encode the input to the txt2nid function
* another to_bytes fix
* make subject, commonname and subjecAltName completely optional
* don't compare hashes of keys in openssl_csr integration tests
* add integration test for old API in openssl_csr
* compare keys directly in certificate and publickey integration tests
* fix typo
Current openssl_certificate is mistakenly taking its derivating its
version number from the csr version number.
Thos two fields are completly unrelated and hence the version number of
the certificate should be able to be directly specified (via
selfsigned_version parameter).
* openssl_certificate: Fix parameter assertion in Python3
Parameter assertion in Python3 is broken. pyOpenSSL get_X() functions
returns b'' type string and tries to compare it with '' string, leading
to failure.
The error mentionned above has been fixed by sanitizing the inputs from
a user to the assert only backend.
Also, this error was hidden by the fact that the improper check method
was called in the generate() functions.
* Add simple integration test for openssl_certificate
* remove subject == issuer assertion
* run integration tests only on supported hosts
* change min supported version to 0.15.x
* Add test for more CSR fields
* also convert dict members to bytes
* fix version_compare
* openssl_{csr, certificate}: Fail if pyOpenSSL <= 0.15
Previous 0.13 pyOpenSSL was a C-binding, and required the parameter
passed to add_extention to be in ASN.1. This has changed with the move
to 0.14 and it is now all pythong and string based.
Previous the 0.15 release, the `get_extensions()` method didn't exist,
since the modules rely heavily on it we ensure pyOpenSSL version is at
last 0.15.0.
* check pyopenssl version in openssl_csr integration test