The pk layer can infer the hash length from the hash type. Calculate
it explicitly here anyway because it's needed for debugging purposes,
and it's needed for the upcoming feature allowing the signature
operation to be offloaded to an external cryptographic processor, as
the offloading code will need to know what length hash to copy.
New compile-time option MBEDTLS_SSL_ASYNC_PRIVATE_C, enabling
callbacks to replace private key operations. These callbacks allow the
SSL stack to make an asynchronous call to an external cryptographic
module instead of calling the cryptography layer inside the library.
The call is asynchronous in that it may return the new status code
MBEDTLS_ERR_SSL_ASYNC_IN_PROGRESS, in which case the SSL stack returns
and can be later called where it left off.
This commit introduces the configuration option. Later commits will
implement the feature proper.
This function is declared in ssl_internal.h, so this is not a public
API change.
This is in preparation for mbedtls_ssl_handshake_free needing to call
methods from the config structure.
In SSL, don't use mbedtls_pk_ec or mbedtls_pk_rsa on a private
signature or decryption key (as opposed to a public key or a key used
for DH/ECDH). Extract the data (it's the same data) from the public
key object instead. This way the code works even if the private key is
opaque or if there is no private key object at all.
Specifically, with an EC key, when checking whether the curve in a
server key matches the handshake parameters, rely only on the offered
certificate and not on the metadata of the private key.
* public/pr/1380:
Update ChangeLog for #1380
Generate RSA keys according to FIPS 186-4
Generate primes according to FIPS 186-4
Avoid small private exponents during RSA key generation
Change mbedtls_zeroize() implementation to use memset() instead of a
custom implementation for performance reasons. Furthermore, we would
also like to prevent as much as we can compiler optimisations that
remove zeroization code.
The implementation of mbedtls_zeroize() now uses a volatile function
pointer to memset() as suggested by Colin Percival at:
http://www.daemonology.net/blog/2014-09-04-how-to-zero-a-buffer.html
Add a new macro MBEDTLS_UTILS_ZEROIZE that allows users to configure
mbedtls_zeroize() to an alternative definition when defined. If the
macro is not defined, then mbed TLS will use the default definition of
the function.
This commit removes all the static occurrencies of the function
mbedtls_zeroize() in each of the individual .c modules. Instead the
function has been moved to utils.h that is included in each of the
modules.
The new header contains common information across various mbed TLS
modules and avoids code duplication. To start, utils.h currently only
contains the mbedtls_zeroize() function.
The specification requires that P and Q are not too close. The specification
also requires that you generate a P and stick with it, generating new Qs until
you have found a pair that works. In practice, it turns out that sometimes a
particular P results in it being very unlikely a Q can be found matching all
the constraints. So we keep the original behavior where a new P and Q are
generated every round.
The specification requires that numbers are the raw entropy (except for odd/
even) and at least 2^(nbits-0.5). If not, new random bits need to be used for
the next number. Similarly, if the number is not prime new random bits need to
be used.
Attacks against RSA exist for small D. [Wiener] established this for
D < N^0.25. [Boneh] suggests the bound should be N^0.5.
Multiple possible values of D might exist for the same set of E, P, Q. The
attack works when there exists any possible D that is small. To make sure that
the generated key is not susceptible to attack, we need to make sure we have
found the smallest possible D, and then check that D is big enough. The
Carmichael function λ of p*q is lcm(p-1, q-1), so we can apply Carmichael's
theorem to show that D = d mod λ(n) is the smallest.
[Wiener] Michael J. Wiener, "Cryptanalysis of Short RSA Secret Exponents"
[Boneh] Dan Boneh and Glenn Durfee, "Cryptanalysis of RSA with Private Key d Less than N^0.292"
Clang-Msan is known to report spurious errors when MBEDTLS_AESNI_C is
enabled, due to the use of assembly code. The error reports don't
mention AES, so they can be difficult to trace back to the use of
AES-NI. Warn about this potential problem at compile time.
Zeroing out an fd_set before calling FD_ZERO on it is in principle
useless, but without it some memory sanitizers think the fd_set is
still uninitialized after FD_ZERO (e.g. clang-msan/Glibc/x86_64 where
FD_ZERO is implemented in assembly). Make the zeroing conditional on
using a memory sanitizer.
The initialization via FD_SET is not seen by memory sanitizers if
FD_SET is implemented through assembly. Additionally zeroizing the
respective fd_set's before calling FD_SET contents the sanitizers
and comes at a negligible computational overhead.
In mbedtls_ssl_derive_keys, don't call mbedtls_md_hmac_starts in
ciphersuites that don't use HMAC. This doesn't change the behavior of
the code, but avoids relying on an uncaught error when attempting to
start an HMAC operation that hadn't been initialized.
Clarify what MBEDTLS_ERR_ECP_SIG_LEN_MISMATCH and
MBEDTLS_ERR_PK_SIG_LEN_MISMATCH mean. Add comments to highlight that
this indicates that a valid signature is present, unlike other error
codes. See
https://github.com/ARMmbed/mbedtls/pull/1149#discussion_r178130705
Conflict resolution:
* ChangeLog
* tests/data_files/Makefile: concurrent additions, order irrelevant
* tests/data_files/test-ca.opensslconf: concurrent additions, order irrelevant
* tests/scripts/all.sh: one comment change conflicted with a code
addition. In addition some of the additions in the
iotssl-1381-x509-verify-refactor-restricted branch need support for
keep-going mode, this will be added in a subsequent commit.
The relevant ASN.1 definitions for a PKCS#8 encoded Elliptic Curve key are:
PrivateKeyInfo ::= SEQUENCE {
version Version,
privateKeyAlgorithm PrivateKeyAlgorithmIdentifier,
privateKey PrivateKey,
attributes [0] IMPLICIT Attributes OPTIONAL
}
AlgorithmIdentifier ::= SEQUENCE {
algorithm OBJECT IDENTIFIER,
parameters ANY DEFINED BY algorithm OPTIONAL
}
ECParameters ::= CHOICE {
namedCurve OBJECT IDENTIFIER
-- implicitCurve NULL
-- specifiedCurve SpecifiedECDomain
}
ECPrivateKey ::= SEQUENCE {
version INTEGER { ecPrivkeyVer1(1) } (ecPrivkeyVer1),
privateKey OCTET STRING,
parameters [0] ECParameters {{ NamedCurve }} OPTIONAL,
publicKey [1] BIT STRING OPTIONAL
}
Because of the two optional fields, there are 4 possible variants that need to
be parsed: no optional fields, only parameters, only public key, and both
optional fields. Previously mbedTLS was unable to parse keys with "only
parameters". Also, only "only public key" was tested. There was a test for "no
optional fields", but it was labelled incorrectly as SEC.1 and not run because
of a great renaming mixup.
check-names.sh reserves the prefix MBEDTLS_ for macros defined in
config.h so this name (or check-names.sh) had to change.
This is also more flexible because it allows for platforms that don't have
an EINTR equivalent or have multiple such values.
Also, introduce MBEDTLS_EINTR locally in net_sockets.c
for the platform-dependent return code macro used by
the `select` call to indicate that the poll was interrupted
by a signal handler: On Unix, the corresponding macro is EINTR,
while on Windows, it's WSAEINTR.
If the select UNIX system call is interrupted by a signal handler,
it is not automatically restarted but returns EINTR. This commit
modifies the use of select in mbedtls_net_poll from net_sockets.c
to retry the select call in this case.
Found by running:
CC=clang cmake -D CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE="Check"
tests/scripts/depend-pkalgs.pl
(Also tested with same command but CC=gcc)
Another PR will address improving all.sh and/or the depend-xxx.pl scripts
themselves to catch this kind of thing.
library\x509_crt.c(2137): warning C4267: 'function' : conversion from 'size_t' to 'int', possible loss of data
library\x509_crt.c(2265): warning C4267: 'function' : conversion from 'size_t' to 'int', possible loss of data
* development: (557 commits)
Add attribution for #1351 report
Adapt version_features.c
Note incompatibility of truncated HMAC extension in ChangeLog
Add LinkLibraryDependencies to VS2010 app template
Add ChangeLog entry for PR #1382
MD: Make deprecated functions not inline
Add ChangeLog entry for PR #1384
Have Visual Studio handle linking to mbedTLS.lib internally
Mention in ChangeLog that this fixes#1351
Add issue number to ChangeLog
Note in the changelog that this fixes an interoperability issue.
Style fix in ChangeLog
Add ChangeLog entries for PR #1168 and #1362
Add ChangeLog entry for PR #1165
ctr_drbg: Typo fix in the file description comment.
dhm: Fix typo in RFC 5114 constants
tests_suite_pkparse: new PKCS8-v2 keys with PRF != SHA1
data_files/pkcs8-v2: add keys generated with PRF != SHA1
tests/pkcs5/pbkdf2_hmac: extend array to accommodate longer results
tests/pkcs5/pbkdf2_hmac: add unit tests for additional SHA algorithms
...
Use specific instructions for moving bytes around in a word. This speeds
things up, and as a side-effect, slightly lowers code size.
ARIA_P3 and ARIA_P1 are now 1 single-cycle instruction each (those
instructions are available in all architecture versions starting from v6-M).
Note: ARIA_P3 was already translated to a single instruction by Clang 3.8 and
armclang 6.5, but not arm-gcc 5.4 nor armcc 5.06.
ARIA_P2 is already efficiently translated to the minimal number of
instruction (1 in ARM mode, 2 in thumb mode) by all tested compilers
Manually compiled and inspected generated code with the following compilers:
arm-gcc 5.4, clang 3.8, armcc 5.06 (with and without --gnu), armclang 6.5.
Size reduction (arm-none-eabi-gcc -march=armv6-m -mthumb -Os): 5288 -> 5044 B
Effect on executing time of self-tests on a few boards:
FRDM-K64F (Cortex-M4): 444 -> 385 us (-13%)
LPC1768 (Cortex-M3): 488 -> 432 us (-11%)
FRDM-KL64Z (Cortex-M0): 1429 -> 1134 us (-20%)
Measured using a config.h with no cipher mode and the following program with
aria.c and aria.h copy-pasted to the online compiler:
#include "mbed.h"
#include "aria.h"
int main() {
Timer t;
t.start();
int ret = mbedtls_aria_self_test(0);
t.stop();
printf("ret = %d; time = %d us\n", ret, t.read_us());
}
(A similar commit for Arm follows.)
Use specific instructions for moving bytes around in a word. This speeds
things up, and as a side-effect, slightly lowers code size.
ARIA_P3 (aka reverse byte order) is now 1 instruction on x86, which speeds up
key schedule. (Clang 3.8 finds this but GCC 5.4 doesn't.)
I couldn't find an Intel equivalent of ARM's ret16 (aka ARIA_P1), so I made it
two instructions, which is still much better than the code generated with
the previous mask-shift-or definition, and speeds up en/decryption. (Neither
Clang 3.8 nor GCC 5.4 find this.)
Before:
O aria.o ins
s 7976 43,865
2 10520 37,631
3 13040 28,146
After:
O aria.o ins
s 7768 33,497
2 9816 28,268
3 11432 20,829
For measurement method, see previous commit:
"aria: turn macro into static inline function"
This decreases the size with -Os by nearly 1k while
not hurting performance too much with -O2 and -O3
Before:
O aria.o ins
s 8784 41,408
2 11112 37,001
3 13096 27,438
After:
O aria.o ins
s 7976 43,865
2 10520 37,631
3 13040 28,146
(See previous commit for measurement details.)
Besides documenting types better and so on, this give the compiler more room
to optimise either for size or performance.
Here are some before/after measurements of:
- size of aria.o in bytes (less is better)
- instruction count for the selftest function (less is better)
with various -O flags.
Before:
O aria.o ins
s 10896 37,256
2 11176 37,199
3 12248 27,752
After:
O aria.o ins
s 8784 41,408
2 11112 37,001
3 13096 27,438
The new version allows the compiler to reach smaller size with -Os while
maintaining (actually slightly improving) performance with -O2 and -O3.
Measurements were done on x86_64 (but since this is mainly about inlining
code, this should transpose well to other platforms) using the following
helper program and script, after disabling CBC, CFB and CTR in config.h, in
order to focus on the core functions.
==> st.c <==
#include "mbedtls/aria.h"
int main( void ) {
return mbedtls_aria_self_test( 0 );
}
==> p.sh <==
#!/bin/sh
set -eu
ccount () {
(
valgrind --tool=callgrind --dump-line=no --callgrind-out-file=/dev/null --collect-atstart=no --toggle-collect=main $1
) 2>&1 | sed -n -e 's/.*refs: *\([0-9,]*\)/\1/p'
}
printf "O\taria.o\tins\n"
for O in s 2 3; do
GCC="gcc -Wall -Wextra -Werror -Iinclude"
$GCC -O$O -c library/aria.c
$GCC -O1 st.c aria.o -o st
./st
SIZE=$( du -b aria.o | cut -f1 )
INS=$( ccount ./st )
printf "$O\t$SIZE\t$INS\n"
done
We're not absolutely consistent in the rest of the library, but we tend to use
C99-style comments less often.
Change to use C89-style comments everywhere except for end-of-line comments
Those suites were defined in ciphersuite_definitions[] but not included in
ciphersuite_preference[] which meant they couldn't be negotiated unless
explicitly added by the user. Add them so that they're usable by default like
any other suite.
In 2.7.0, we replaced a number of MD functions with deprecated inline
versions. This causes ABI compatibility issues, as the functions are no
longer guaranteed to be callable when built into a shared library.
Instead, deprecate the functions without also inlining them, to help
maintain ABI backwards compatibility.
Add missing MBEDTLS_DEPRECATED_REMOVED guards around the definitions
of mbedtls_aes_decrypt and mbedtls_aes_encrypt.
This fixes the build under -Wmissing-prototypes -Werror.
Fixes#1388