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authorTim Hudson <tjh@openssl.org>2014-07-21 20:03:50 +1000
committerTim Hudson <tjh@openssl.org>2014-07-21 20:25:14 +1000
commit2be9425514c25ff6450cf0a13acf99ddc1a2c35a (patch)
treefde6477a9084ff8b7ce64033d4d67026c3ddaaf2 /doc/crypto
parentf284fc7cc39e89928f5d75297eaf21e37914fd97 (diff)
Minor documentation update removing "really" and a
statement of opinion rather than a fact. Reviewed-by: Dr. Stephen Henson <steve@openssl.org> Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org> (cherry picked from commit c8d133e4b6f1ed1b7ad3c1a6d2c62f460e26c050)
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/crypto')
-rw-r--r--doc/crypto/des.pod7
-rw-r--r--doc/crypto/ui.pod2
2 files changed, 4 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/doc/crypto/des.pod b/doc/crypto/des.pod
index 6f0cf1cc5e..e1add56b5e 100644
--- a/doc/crypto/des.pod
+++ b/doc/crypto/des.pod
@@ -135,9 +135,8 @@ depend on a global variable.
DES_set_odd_parity() sets the parity of the passed I<key> to odd.
-DES_is_weak_key() returns 1 is the passed key is a weak key, 0 if it
-is ok. The probability that a randomly generated key is weak is
-1/2^52, so it is not really worth checking for them.
+DES_is_weak_key() returns 1 if the passed key is a weak key, 0 if it
+is ok.
The following routines mostly operate on an input and output stream of
I<DES_cblock>s.
@@ -181,7 +180,7 @@ of 24 bytes. This is much better than CBC DES.
DES_ede3_cbc_encrypt() implements outer triple CBC DES encryption with
three keys. This means that each DES operation inside the CBC mode is
-really an C<C=E(ks3,D(ks2,E(ks1,M)))>. This mode is used by SSL.
+an C<C=E(ks3,D(ks2,E(ks1,M)))>. This mode is used by SSL.
The DES_ede2_cbc_encrypt() macro implements two-key Triple-DES by
reusing I<ks1> for the final encryption. C<C=E(ks1,D(ks2,E(ks1,M)))>.
diff --git a/doc/crypto/ui.pod b/doc/crypto/ui.pod
index 6df68d604a..04f8e9c360 100644
--- a/doc/crypto/ui.pod
+++ b/doc/crypto/ui.pod
@@ -119,7 +119,7 @@ verification will fail.
UI_add_input_boolean() adds a prompt to the UI that's supposed to be answered
in a boolean way, with a single character for yes and a different character
for no. A set of characters that can be used to cancel the prompt is given
-as well. The prompt itself is really divided in two, one part being the
+as well. The prompt itself is divided in two, one part being the
descriptive text (given through the I<prompt> argument) and one describing
the possible answers (given through the I<action_desc> argument).