Define constants for ECC curve families and DH group families. These
constants have 0x0000 in the lower 16 bits of the key type.
Support these constants in the implementation and in the PSA metadata
tests.
Switch the slot management and secure element driver HAL tests to the
new curve encodings. This requires SE driver code to become slightly
more clever when figuring out the bit-size of an imported EC key since
it now needs to take the data size into account.
Switch some documentation to the new encodings.
Remove the macro PSA_ECC_CURVE_BITS which can no longer be implemented.
Change the representation of psa_ecc_curve_t and psa_dh_group_t from
the IETF 16-bit encoding to a custom 24-bit encoding where the upper 8
bits represent a curve family and the lower 16 bits are the key size
in bits. Families are based on naming and mathematical similarity,
with sufficiently precise families that no two curves in a family have
the same bit size (for example SECP-R1 and SECP-R2 are two different
families).
As a consequence, the lower 16 bits of a key type value are always
either the key size or 0.
Don't rely on the bit size encoded in the PSA curve identifier, in
preparation for removing that.
For some inputs, the error code on EC key creation changes from
PSA_ERROR_INVALID_ARGUMENT to PSA_ERROR_NOT_SUPPORTED or vice versa.
There will be further such changes in subsequent commits.
Key types are now encoded through a category in the upper 4 bits (bits
28-31) and a type-within-category in the next 11 bits (bits 17-27),
with bit 16 unused and bits 0-15 only used for the EC curve or DH
group.
For symmetric keys, bits 20-22 encode the block size (0x0=stream,
0x3=8B, 0x4=16B).
psa_hash_compare is tested for good cases and invalid-signature cases
in hash_compute_compare. Also test invalid-argument cases. Also run a
few autonomous test cases with valid arguments.
Fix get_len_step when buffer_size==0. The intent of this test is to
ensure (via static or runtime buffer overflow analysis) that
mbedtls_asn1_get_len does not attempt to access beyond the end of the
buffer. When buffer_size is 0 (reached from get_len when parsing a
1-byte buffer), the buffer is buf[1..1] because allocating a 0-byte
buffer might yield a null pointer rather than a valid pointer. In this
case the end of the buffer is p==buf+1, not buf+buffer_size which is
buf+0.
The test passed because calling mbedtls_asn1_get_len(&p,end,...) with
end < p happens to work, but this is not guaranteed.
This is useful to inspect what the script does manually, in particular
to check that expected values do get tested. --keep-c provides the
same information but in a way that's harder to access.
Filter out non-ASCII characters in automatically processed headers.
Do this in a way that minimizes the code change: keep manipulating
strings, but strip off non-ASCII characters when reading lines, which
should only remove characters in comments that we don't parse anyway.
We're going to create some edge cases where the attributes of a key
are not bitwise identical to the attributes passed during creation.
Have a test function ready for that.
When MBEDTLS_TEST_DEPRECATED is defined, run some additional tests to
validate deprecated PSA macros. We don't need to test deprecated
features extensively, but we should at least ensure that they don't
break the build.
Add some code to component_build_deprecated in all.sh to run these
tests with MBEDTLS_DEPRECATED_WARNING enabled. The tests are also
executed when MBEDTLS_DEPRECATED_WARNING and
MBEDTLS_DEPRECATED_REMOVED are both disabled.
Rename some macros and functions related to signature which are
changing as part of the addition of psa_sign_message and
psa_verify_message.
perl -i -pe '%t = (
PSA_KEY_USAGE_SIGN => PSA_KEY_USAGE_SIGN_HASH,
PSA_KEY_USAGE_VERIFY => PSA_KEY_USAGE_VERIFY_HASH,
PSA_ASYMMETRIC_SIGNATURE_MAX_SIZE => PSA_SIGNATURE_MAX_SIZE,
PSA_ASYMMETRIC_SIGN_OUTPUT_SIZE => PSA_SIGN_OUTPUT_SIZE,
psa_asymmetric_sign => psa_sign_hash,
psa_asymmetric_verify => psa_verify_hash,
); s/\b(@{[join("|", keys %t)]})\b/$t{$1}/ge' $(git ls-files . ':!:**/crypto_compat.h')
Move backward compatibility aliases to a separate header. Reserve
crypto_extra.h for implementation-specific extensions that we intend
to keep supporting.
This is better documentation for users. New users should simply ignore
backward compatibility aliases, and old users can look at
crypto_compat.h to see what is deprecated without bothering about new
features appearing in crypto_extra.h.
This facilitates maintenance because scripts such as
generate_psa_constants that want to ignore backward compability
aliases can simply exclude crypto_compat.h from their parsing.