Make some functions non-static, to avoid Wunused function warnings. Make
a function scoped variable block scoped instead, to avoid Wunused
variable warnings in some configurations.
Part of the tests are adapted in this commit, another part is already
covered by the derive_input tests and some of them are not applicable to
the new API (the new API does not request capacity at the setup stage).
The test coverage temporarily drops with this commit, the two test cases
conserning capacity will be re-added in a later commit.
Add the compile time option PSA_PRE_1_0_KEY_DERIVATION. If this is not
turned on, then the function `psa_key_derivation()` is removed.
Most of the tests regarding key derivation haven't been adapted to the
new API yet and some of them have only been adapted partially. When this
new option is turned off, the tests using the old API and test cases
using the old API of partially adapted tests are skipped.
The sole purpose of this option is to make the transition to the new API
smoother. Once the transition is complete it can and should be removed
along with the old API and its implementation.
This file isn't like the other .function files: it isn't concatenated
by a separate preprocessing script, but included via C preprocessing.
Rename this file to .h. This isn't a normal C header, because it
defines auxiliary functions. But the functions aren't big and we only
have one compilation unit per executable, so this is good enough for
what we're doing.
Replace all calls to mbedtls_psa_crypto_free in tests by PSA_DONE.
This is correct for most tests, because most tests close open keys. A
few tests now fail; these tests need to be reviewed and switched back
to mbedtls_psa_crypto_free if they genuinely expected to end with some
slots still in use.
Create a specific file for helper functions that are related to the
PSA API. The reason for a separate file is so that it can include
<psa/crypto.h>, without forcing this header inclusion into every test
suite. In this commit, psa_helpers.function doesn't need psa/crypto.h
yet, but this will be the case in a subsequent commit.
Move PSA_ASSERT to psa_helpers.function, since that's the sort of
things it's for.
Include "psa_helpers.function" from the PSA crypto tests.
In the ITS test, don't include "psa_helpers". The ITS tests are
meant to stand alone from the rest of the library.
Add parameters to psa_copy_key tests for the enrollment algorithm (alg2).
This commit only tests with alg2=0, which is equivalent to not setting
an enrollment algorithm.
Manually cherry-picked from ca5bed742f
by taking that patch, replacing KEYPAIR by KEY_PAIR
throughout (renaming applied in this branch), and discarding parts
about import_twice in test_suite_psa_crypto (this test function was
removed from this branch).
Add parameters to psa_copy_key tests for the enrollment algorithm (alg2).
This commit only tests with alg2=0, which is equivalent to not setting
an enrollment algorithm.
generate_key is a more classical name. The longer name was only
introduced to avoid confusion with getting a key from a generator,
which is key derivation, but we no longer use the generator
terminology so this reason no longer applies.
perl -i -pe 's/psa_generate_random_key/psa_generate_key/g' $(git ls-files)
Generators are mostly about key derivation (currently: only about key
derivation). "Generator" is not a commonly used term in cryptography.
So favor "derivation" as terminology. Call a generator a key
derivation operation structure, since it behaves like other multipart
operation structures. Furthermore, the function names are not fully
consistent.
In this commit, I rename the functions to consistently have the prefix
"psa_key_derivation_". I used the following command:
perl -i -pe '%t = (
psa_crypto_generator_t => "psa_key_derivation_operation_t",
psa_crypto_generator_init => "psa_key_derivation_init",
psa_key_derivation_setup => "psa_key_derivation_setup",
psa_key_derivation_input_key => "psa_key_derivation_input_key",
psa_key_derivation_input_bytes => "psa_key_derivation_input_bytes",
psa_key_agreement => "psa_key_derivation_key_agreement",
psa_set_generator_capacity => "psa_key_derivation_set_capacity",
psa_get_generator_capacity => "psa_key_derivation_get_capacity",
psa_generator_read => "psa_key_derivation_output_bytes",
psa_generate_derived_key => "psa_key_derivation_output_key",
psa_generator_abort => "psa_key_derivation_abort",
PSA_CRYPTO_GENERATOR_INIT => "PSA_KEY_DERIVATION_OPERATION_INIT",
PSA_GENERATOR_UNBRIDLED_CAPACITY => "PSA_KEY_DERIVATION_UNLIMITED_CAPACITY",
); s/\b(@{[join("|", keys %t)]})\b/$t{$1}/ge' $(git ls-files)
In psa_import_key, change the order of parameters to pass
the pointer where the newly created handle will be stored last.
This is consistent with most other library functions that put inputs
before outputs.
In psa_generate_derived_key, change the order of parameters to pass
the pointer where the newly created handle will be stored last.
This is consistent with most other library functions that put inputs
before outputs.
psa_set_key_lifetime and psa_set_key_id aren't pure setters: they also
set the other attribute in some conditions. Add dedicated tests for
this behavior.
Change the scope of key identifiers to be global, rather than
per lifetime. As a result, you now need to specify the lifetime of a
key only when creating it.
Split the test function copy_key into two: one for success and one for
failure.
Add failure tests where the attributes specify an incorrect type or size.
Read extra data from the domain parameters in the attribute structure
instead of taking an argument on the function call.
Implement this for RSA key generation, where the public exponent can
be set as a domain parameter.
Add tests that generate RSA keys with various public exponents.
After calling psa_get_key_attributes(), call
psa_reset_key_attributes() if the key may have domain parameters,
because that's the way to free the domain parameter substructure in
the attribute structure. Keep not calling reset() in some places where
the key can only be a symmetric key which doesn't have domain
parameters.
Instead of passing a separate parameter for the key size to
psa_generate_key and psa_generator_import_key, set it through the
attributes, like the key type and other metadata.
Update persistent_key_load_key_from_storage to the new attribute-based
key creation interface. I tweaked the code a little to make it simpler
and more robust without changing the core logic.
With the attribute-based key creation API, it is no longer possible to
have a handle to a slot that does not hold key material. Remove all
corresponding tests.
Implement attribute querying.
Test attribute getters and setters. Use psa_get_key_attributes instead
of the deprecated functions psa_get_key_policy or
psa_get_key_information in most tests.
Implement the new, attribute-based psa_import_key and some basic
functions to access psa_key_attributes_t. Replace
psa_import_key_to_handle by psa_import_key in a few test functions.
This commit does not handle persistence attributes yet.
This commit starts a migration to a new interface for key creation.
Today, the application allocates a handle, then fills its metadata,
and finally injects key material. The new interface fills metadata
into a temporary structure, and a handle is allocated at the same time
it gets filled with both metadata and key material.
This commit was obtained by moving the declaration of the old-style
functions to crypto_extra.h and renaming them with the to_handle
suffix, adding declarations for the new-style functions in crypto.h
under their new name, and running
perl -i -pe 's/\bpsa_(import|copy|generator_import|generate)_key\b/$&_to_handle/g' library/*.c tests/suites/*.function programs/psa/*.c
perl -i -pe 's/\bpsa_get_key_lifetime\b/$&_from_handle/g' library/*.c tests/suites/*.function programs/psa/*.c
Many functions that are specific to the old interface, and which will
not remain under the same name with the new interface, are still in
crypto.h for now.
All functional tests should still pass. The documentation may have
some broken links.
Allow either the key derivation step or the key agreement step to
fail.
These tests should be split into three groups: key derivation setup
tests with an algorithm that includes a key agreement step, and
multipart key agreement failure tests, and raw key agreement failure
tests.
Merge the Mbed Crypto development branch a little after
mbedcrypto-1.0.0 into the PSA Crypto API 1.0 beta branch a little
after beta 2.
Summary of merge conflicts:
* Some features (psa_copy_key, public key format without
SubjectPublicKeyInfo wrapping) went into both sides, but with a few
improvements on the implementation side. For those, take the
implementation side.
* The key derivation API changed considerably on the API side. This
merge commit generally goes with the updated API except in the tests
where it keeps some aspects of the implementation.
Due to the divergence between the two branches on key derivation and
key agreement, test_suite_psa_crypto does not compile. This will be
resolved in subsequent commits.
Commit "Smoke-test operation contexts after setup+abort" replaced
{failed-setup; abort} sequences by {failed-setup; successful-setup}.
We want to test that, but we also want to test {failed-setup; abort}.
So test {failed-setup; abort; failed-setup; successful-setup}.
After a successful setup followed by abort, or after a failed setup
from an inactive state, a context must be usable. Test this for
hash, MAC and cipher contexts.
Calling psa_*_setup() twice on a MAC, cipher, or hash context should
result in a PSA_ERROR_BAD_STATE error because the operation has already
been set up.
Fixes#10
Extend hash bad order test in line with the new bad order tests for MAC
and cipher, covering more cases and making comments and test layout
consistent.
Ensure that when doing hash operations out of order, PSA_ERROR_BAD_STATE
is returned as documented in crypto.h and the PSA Crypto specification.
In multipart cipher tests, test that each step of psa_cipher_update
produces output of the expected length. The length is hard-coded in
the test data since it depends on the mode.
The length of the output of psa_cipher_finish is effectively tested
because it's the total output length minus the length produced by the
update steps.
The output length can be equal to the input length.
This wasn't noticed at runtime because we happened to only test with
CBC with the first chunk being a partial block.
Some calls to psa_cipher_finish or psa_cipher_update append to a
buffer. Several of these calls were not calculating the offset into
the buffer or the remaining buffer size correctly.
This did not lead to buffer overflows before because the buffer sizes
were sufficiently large for our test inputs. This did not lead to
incorrect output when the test was designed to append but actually
wrote too early because all the existing test cases either have no
output from finish (stream cipher) or have no output from update (CBC,
with less than one block of input).
Check generator validity (i.e. that alg has been initialized) before
allowing reads from the generator or allowing reads of the generator's
capacity.
This aligns our implementation with the documented error code behavior
in our crypto.h and the PSA Crypto API.
Test that freshly-initialized contexts exhibit default behavior through
the API. Do this without depending on the internal representation of the
contexts. This provides better portability of our tests on compilers
like MSVC.
For must-fail asymmetric decryption tests, add an output size parameter
so that tests can directly control what output buffer size they allocate
and use independently from the key size used. This enables better
testing of behavior with various output buffer sizes.
When RSA decrypting, unlike with RSA encrypting, we sometimes expect the
output length will be less than the key size. For instance, in the case
where the plaintext is zero-length we expect the output length of the
decryption to be zero-length as well, not key size in length.
For must-fail tests, we don't expect output-buffer-sized RSA-decryption,
only that the output length is less than or equal to the output size, so
these tests remain unchanged.
Change the must-pass tests to expect that the actual output size is
equal to the expected length of the output buffer instead of always
being the key size.
In one place, exercise_key was used in a such a way that if the test
failed inside exercise_key, the test suite would correctly report the
test as failed but would not report the exact location of the failure.
Fix this.
Add documentation for exercise_key that explains how to use it.
Split the testing into tests that exercise policies in
test_suite_psa_crypto and tests that exercise slot content (slot
states, key material) in test_suite_psa_crypto_slot_management.
Test various cases of source and target policies with and without
wildcards. Missing: testing of the policy constraint on psa_copy_key
itself.
Test several key types (raw data, AES, RSA). Test with the
source or target being persistent.
Add failure tests (incompatible policies, source slot empty, target
slot occupied).
Remove front matter from our EC key format, to make it just the contents
of an ECPoint as defined by SEC1 section 2.3.3.
As a consequence of the simplification, remove the restriction on not
being able to use an ECDH key with ECDSA. There is no longer any OID
specified when importing a key, so we can't reject importing of an ECDH
key for the purpose of ECDSA based on the OID.
Remove pkcs-1 and rsaEncryption front matter from RSA public keys. Move
code that was shared between RSA and other key types (like EC keys) to
be used only with non-RSA keys.
Remove the type and bits arguments to psa_allocate_key() and
psa_create_key(). They can be useful if the implementation wants to
know exactly how much space to allocate for the slot, but many
implementations (including ours) don't care, and it's possible to work
around their lack by deferring size-dependent actions to the time when
the key material is created. They are a burden to applications and
make the API more complex, and the benefits aren't worth it.
Change the API and adapt the implementation, the units test and the
sample code accordingly.
Change the key derivation API to take inputs in multiple steps,
instead of a single one-site-fits-poorly function.
Conflicts:
* include/psa/crypto.h: merge independent changes in the documentation
of psa_key_agreement (public_key from the work on public key formats
vs general description and other parameters in the work on key derivation).
* tests/suites/test_suite_psa_crypto.data: update the key agreement
tests from the work on key derivation to the format from the work on
public key formats.
* tests/suites/test_suite_psa_crypto_metadata.function: reconcile the
addition of unrelated ALG_IS_xxx macros
Remove front matter from our EC key format, to make it just the contents
of an ECPoint as defined by SEC1 section 2.3.3.
As a consequence of the simplification, remove the restriction on not
being able to use an ECDH key with ECDSA. There is no longer any OID
specified when importing a key, so we can't reject importing of an ECDH
key for the purpose of ECDSA based on the OID.
You can use PSA_ALG_ANY_HASH to build the algorithm value for a
hash-and-sign algorithm in a policy. Then the policy allows usage with
this hash-and-sign family with any hash.
Test that PSA_ALG_ANY_HASH-based policies allow a specific hash, but
not a different hash-and-sign family. Test that PSA_ALG_ANY_HASH is
not valid for operations, only in policies.
Remove pkcs-1 and rsaEncryption front matter from RSA public keys. Move
code that was shared between RSA and other key types (like EC keys) to
be used only with non-RSA keys.
Add new initializers for cipher operation objects and use them in our
tests and library code. Prefer using the macro initializers due to their
straightforwardness.
Add new initializers for MAC operation objects and use them in our tests
and library code. Prefer using the macro initializers due to their
straightforwardness.
Add new initializers for hash operation objects and use them in our
tests and library code. Prefer using the macro initializers due to their
straightforwardness.
Add new initializers for key policies and use them in our docs, example
programs, tests, and library code. Prefer using the macro initializers
due to their straightforwardness.
Change the way some lines are wrapped to cut at a more logical place.
This commit mainly rewrites multi-line calls to TEST_EQUAL, and also a
few calls to PSA_ASSERT.
This commit is the result of the following command, followed by
reindenting (but not wrapping lines):
perl -00 -i -pe 's/^( *)TEST_ASSERT\(([^;=]*)(?: |\n *)==([^;=]*)\);$/${1}TEST_EQUAL($2,$3);/gm' tests/suites/test_suite_psa_*.function
This commit is the result of the following command, followed by
reindenting (but not wrapping lines):
perl -00 -i -pe 's/^( *)TEST_ASSERT\(([^;=]*)(?: |\n *)==\s*PSA_SUCCESS\s*\);$/${1}PSA_ASSERT($2 );/gm' tests/suites/test_suite_psa_*.function
Switch from the direct use of slot numbers to handles allocated by
psa_allocate_key.
This commit does not affect persistent key tests except for the one
test function in test_suite_psa_crypto that uses persistent keys
(persistent_key_load_key_from_storage).
The general principle for each function is:
* Change `psa_key_slot_t slot` to `psa_key_handle_t handle`.
* Call psa_allocate_key() before setting the policy of the slot,
or before creating key material in functions that don't set a policy.
* Some PSA_ERROR_EMPTY_SLOT errors become PSA_ERROR_INVALID_HANDLE
because there is now a distinction between not having a valid
handle, and having a valid handle to a slot that doesn't contain key
material.
* In tests that use symmetric keys, calculate the max_bits parameters
of psa_allocate_key() from the key data size. In tests where the key
may be asymmetric, call an auxiliary macro KEY_BITS_FROM_DATA which
returns an overapproximation. There's no good way to find a good
value for max_bits with the API, I think the API should be tweaked.
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 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.
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.
1. New test for testing bad order of hash function calls.
2. Removed test hash_update_bad_paths since it's test scenario
was moved to the new test.
3. Moved some scenarios from test hash_verify_bad_paths to
the new test.
1. Rename hash_bad_paths to hash_verify_bad_paths
2. Add test hash_update_bad_paths
3. Add test hash_finish_bad_paths
The different scenarios tested as part of hash_bad_paths are
moved to the relevant test.