Previously, command line arguments `psk_slot` and `psk_list_slot`
could be used to indicate the PSA key slots that the example
applications should use to store the PSK(s) provided.
This commit changes this approach to use the utility function
`mbedtls_psa_get_free_key_slot()` to obtain free key slots from
the PSA Crypto implementation automatically, so that users only
need to pass boolean flags `psk_opaque` and `psk_list_opaque`
on the command line to enable / disable PSA-based opaque PSKs.
Allow use of persistent keys, including configuring them, importing and
exporting them, and destroying them.
When getting a slot using psa_get_key_slot, there are 3 scenarios that
can occur if the keys lifetime is persistent:
1. Key type is PSA_KEY_TYPE_NONE, no persistent storage entry:
- The key slot is treated as a standard empty key slot
2. Key type is PSA_KEY_TYPE_NONE, persistent storage entry exists:
- Attempt to load the key from persistent storage
3. Key type is not PSA_KEY_TYPE_NONE:
- As checking persistent storage on every use of the key could
be expensive, the persistent key is assumed to be saved in
persistent storage, the in-memory key is continued to be used.
Add new functions, psa_load_persistent_key(),
psa_free_persistent_key_data(), and psa_save_persistent_key(), for
managing persistent keys. These functions load to or save from our
internal representation of key slots. Serialization is a concern of the
storage backend implementation and doesn't abstraction-leak into the
lifetime management code.
An initial implementation for files is provided. Additional storage
backends can implement this interface for other storage types.
The persistent key implementation will be split across multiple
files as it will eventually be implementing multiple storage
backends. As these internal functions will need to be callable by
other files, we will add the headers in the library folder. This
commit adds this include location to the necessary scripts.
For tests, the library is added as an include location as testing
on-target with Mbed OS is not possible with paths including ".."
This commit adds the default upstream configuration to the set of
tests we run on CI, which was long overdue.
config-default is a copy of the Mbed TLS upstream config.h. It's
useful for two things: to compare our local changes to
include/mbedtls/config.h, and to test that we aren't breaking the
default upstream configuration.
Run a subset of the TLS tests that focus on exercising cryptographic
algorithms as used from TLS. Don't run the full set of TLS tests
because they're unlikely to be affected by changes in the PSA branch.
Mbed TLS version 2.14.0
Resolved conflicts in include/mbedtls/config.h,
tests/scripts/check-files.py, and yotta/create-module.sh by removing yotta.
Resolved conflicts in tests/.jenkins/Jenkinsfile by continuing to run
mbedtls-psa job.
There was no test case of ECDH with anything other than
PSA_ALG_SELECT_RAW. Exercise the code path from ECDH through a
"proper" KDF.
ECDH shared secret copied from an existing test, HKDF output
calculated with Cryptodome.
In ECDH key agreement, allow a public key with the OID id-ECDH, not
just a public key with the OID id-ecPublicKey.
Public keys with the OID id-ECDH are not permitted by psa_import_key,
at least for now. There would be no way to use the key for a key
agreement operation anyway in the current API.
Add test cases that do key agreement with raw selection in pieces, to
validate that selection works even when the application doesn't read
everything in one chunk.
A key selection algorithm is similar to a key derivation algorithm in
that it takes a secret input and produces a secret output stream.
However, unlike key derivation algorithms, there is no expectation
that the input cannot be reconstructed from the output. Key selection
algorithms are exclusively meant to be used on the output of a key
agreement algorithm to select chunks of the shared secret.
On key import and key generation, for RSA, reject key sizes that are
not a multiple of 8. Such keys are not well-supported in Mbed TLS and
are hardly ever used in practice.
The previous commit removed support for non-byte-aligned keys at the
PSA level. This commit actively rejects such keys and adds
corresponding tests (test keys generated with "openssl genrsa").
We had only allocated 40 bytes for printing into, but we wanted to print 46
bytes. Update the buffer to be 47 bytes, which is large enough to hold what
we want to print plus a terminating null byte.
Simplify the test case "PSA export a slot after a failed import of an
EC keypair": use an invalid private value for the specified curve. Now
the dependencies match the test data, so this fixes curves.pl.