The hash driver entry points (and consequentially the hash driver core)
are now always compiled on when PSA_CRYPTO_DRIVER_TEST is turned on.
Signed-off-by: Steven Cooreman <steven.cooreman@silabs.com>
The PSA Core is already calling psa_hash_abort, so the driver doesn't
have to do that explicitly.
Signed-off-by: Steven Cooreman <steven.cooreman@silabs.com>
Drivers (both built-in and external) need to declare their context
structures in a way such that they are accessible by the
to-be-autogenerated crypto_driver_contexts.h file. That file lives in
include/psa, which means all builtin driver context structure
declarations also need to live in include/psa.
Signed-off-by: Steven Cooreman <steven.cooreman@silabs.com>
MinGW and older windows compilers cannot cope with %zu or %lld (there is
a workaround for MinGW, but it involves linking more code, there is no
workaround for Windows compilers prior to 2013). Attempt to work around
this by defining printf specifiers for size_t per platform for the
compilers that cannot use the C99 specifiers.
Signed-off-by: Paul Elliott <paul.elliott@arm.com>
This was a false positive caused by the compiler seeing the %08lx
specifiers and judging the output on that, rather than the numbers being
fed in. Given these are going to be maximum 32 bit numbers, then better
to use %08x, which keeps -Wformat-truncation=2 happy as well.
Signed-off-by: Paul Elliott <paul.elliott@arm.com>
Fixes for printf format specifiers, where they have been flagged as
invalid sizes by coverity, and new build flags to enable catching these
errors when building using CMake. Note that this patch uses %zu, which
requires C99 or later.
Signed-off-by: Paul Elliott <paul.elliott@arm.com>
Printf could potentially produce 2 64 bit numbers here when there is
only space for one, thus causing a buffer overflow. This was caught by
the new warning flags.
Signed-off-by: Paul Elliott <paul.elliott@arm.com>
We were not getting any warnings on printf format errors, as we do not
explicitly use printf anywhere in the code. Thankfully there is a way
to mark a function as having printf behaviour so that its inputs can be
checked in the same way as printf would be.
Signed-off-by: Paul Elliott <paul.elliott@arm.com>
Apply the right define guards for the right purpose. The 'core' hash
driver is included if any hash algorithm is either to be tested through
the test driver, or if it is requested by a user and not accelerated
(i.e. 'fallback'/'software' driver requested for the algorithm).
Signed-off-by: Steven Cooreman <steven.cooreman@silabs.com>
Apparently there's a goal to make the PSA Crypto core free from
dynamic memory allocations. Therefore, all driver context structures
need to be known at compile time in order for the core to know their
final size.
This change defines & implements for hashing operations how the context
structures get defined.
Signed-off-by: Steven Cooreman <steven.cooreman@silabs.com>
mac size is previously checked to not be less than 4, so it can't be zero
anymore at this point.
Signed-off-by: Steven Cooreman <steven.cooreman@silabs.com>
Memsan build was reporting a false positive use of uninitialised memory
in x509_crt.c on a struct filled by an _stat function call. According to
the man pages, the element reported has to be filled in by the call, so
to be safe, and keep memsan happy, zero the struct first.
Signed-off-by: Paul Elliott <paul.elliott@arm.com>
When ECDSA is not supported by the library, prefer
to return NOT_SUPPORTED than INVALID_ARGUMENT when
asked for an ECDSA signature.
Signed-off-by: Ronald Cron <ronald.cron@arm.com>
Move the check that ECDSA is supported from the
caller of the function responsible for Mbed TLS
ECDSA signatures to this function, namely
mbedtls_psa_ecdsa_sign_hash().
This makes the caller code more readable and is
more aligned with what is expected from a
sign_hash() PSA driver entry point.
Add a negative test case where a deterministic
ECDSA signature is requested while the library
does not support deterministic ECDSA.
Signed-off-by: Ronald Cron <ronald.cron@arm.com>