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.
Update some test data from the asymmetric_apis_coverage branch that
wasn't updated to the new format from the
psa-asymmetric-format-raw_private_key branch.
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.
streamline the API for the test test_derive_invalid_generator_state: by removing
the key_data parameter.
This parameter is not important for test flow and can be hard-coded.
Add boundary test cases for private key validity for a short
Weierstrass curve (0 < d < n).
Remove obsolete test cases "valid key but wrong curve". With the new
format, the private key representation does not contain an encoding of
the curve.
In preparation for the import/export format change for private
elliptic curve keys from RFC 5915 to the raw secret value, transform the
test data to the new format.
Tests will not pass until the implementation has been changed to the
new format and some test cases and test functions have been adjusted.
I used the script below to look for lines containing a
PSA_KEY_TYPE_ECC_KEYPAIR and change the first hex string in the
line with an ASN.1 header that looks like the beginning of an RFC 5915
ECPrivateKey. This always happens to be a private key input.
perl -a -F: -i -pe 'sub pad { local ($_) = @_; s/^00// if length == $digits + 2; die if length > $digits; sprintf("\"%0${digits}s\"", $_) } if ($F[0] !~ /\W/ && /:PSA_KEY_TYPE_ECC_KEYPAIR\( *PSA_ECC_CURVE_[A-Z_]+([0-9]+)/) {$digits = int(($1+7)/8)*2; s/"30(?:[0-7].|81..|82....)02010104(..)([0-9a-f]+)"/pad(substr($2, 0, hex($1)*2))/ie}' tests/suites/test_suite_psa_crypto.data
In the test function for export_public_key, don't just check the
length of the result. Compare the actual result to the expected
result.
Take an extra argument that allows using an export buffer that's
larger or smaller than needed. Zero is the size given by
PSA_KEY_EXPORT_MAX_SIZE.
Don't check the output of psa_get_key_information. That's useful in
import_export because it tests both import and export, but not in
import_export_public_key whose goal is only to test public key export.
This commit adjusts the existing test data but does not add new test
cases.
Key derivation test now uses an indirect way to test generator validity
as the direct way previously used isn't compatible with the PSA IPC
implementation. Additional bad path test for the generator added
to check basic bad-path scenarios.
Add comments noting that the maximum length of a MAC must fit in
PSA_ALG_MAC_TRUNCATION_MASK. Add a unit test that verifies that the
maximum MAC size fits.
Pass the nonce first, then the AD, then the input. This is the order
in which the data is processed and it's the order of the parameters to
the API functions.
OFB and CFB are streaming modes. XTS is a not a cipher mode but it
doesn't use a separate padding step. This leaves only CBC as a block
cipher mode that needs a padding step.
Since CBC is the only mode that uses a separate padding step, and is
likely to remain the only mode in the future, encode the padding mode
directly in the algorithm constant, rather than building up an
algorithm value from a chaining mode and a padding mode. This greatly
simplifies the interface as well as some parts of the implementation.
In psa_generator_import_key, if generating a DES or 3DES key, set the
parity bits.
Add tests for deriving a DES key. Also test deriving an AES key while
I'm at it.
In psa_generator_hkdf_read, return BAD_STATE if we're trying to
construct more output than the algorithm allows. This can't happen
through the API due to the capacity limit, but it could potentially
happen in an internal call.
Also add a test case that verifies that we can set up HKDF with its
maximum capacity and read up to the maximum capacity.
New key type PSA_KEY_TYPE_DERIVE. New usage flag PSA_KEY_USAGE_DERIVE.
New function psa_key_derivation.
No key derivation algorithm is implemented yet. The code may not
compile with -Wunused.
Write some unit test code for psa_key_derivation. Most of it cannot be
used yet due to the lack of a key derivation algorithm.
Add a label argument to all asymmetric encryption test functions
(currently empty in all tests, but that will change soon).
In asymmetric_encrypt and asymmetric_decrypt, with an empty label,
test with both a null pointer and a non-null pointer.
Although RSASSA-PSS defines its input as a message to be hashed, we
implement a sign-the-hash function. This function can take an input
which isn't a hash, so don't restrict the size of the input, any more
than Mbed TLS does.
Remove a redundant check that hash_length fits in unsigned int for the
sake of Mbed TLS RSA functions.
Test that PSS accepts inputs of various lengths. For PKCS#1 v1.5
signature in raw mode, test the maximum input length.
This required tweaking exercise_signature_key to use a payload size
for the signature based on the algorithm, since our implementation of
PSS requires that the input size matches the hash size. This would
also be the case for PKCS#1 v1.5 with a specified hash.
* No test depends on MBEDTLS_PK_C except via MBEDTLS_PK_PARSE_C, so
remove MBEDTLS_PK_C and keep only MBEDTLS_PK_PARSE_C.
* Add MBEDTLS_PK_WRITE_C for pk export tests.
* Add MBEDTLS_GENPRIME for RSA key generation tests.
* Add dependencies to AEAD tests.
* Add missing dependencies to many RSA tests.
* Add a test for decryption with invalid padding.
* Add a test for encryption with input too large.
* In negative tests, pass input whose length matches the key length,
unless that's what the test is about.
Change most asymmetric_verify to use public keys (they were all using
key pairs before). Keep one test with an RSA key pair and one with an
EC key pair.
Revise the test function asymmetric_encrypt_fail into
asymmetric_encrypt and use it for positive tests as well. Get the
expected output length from PSA_ASYMMETRIC_ENCRYPT_OUTPUT_SIZE. Check
the actual output length against test data.
Add positive test cases for encryption: one with an RSA public
key (this is the only test for encryption with a public key rather
than a key pair) and one with a key pair.
Add tests of key policy checks for MAC, cipher, AEAD, asymmetric
encryption and asymmetric signature. For each category, test
with/without the requisite usage flag in each direction, and test
algorithm mismatch.
Change the representation of an ECDSA signature from the ASN.1 DER
encoding used in TLS and X.509, to the concatenation of r and s
in big-endian order with a fixed size. A fixed size helps memory and
buffer management and this representation is generally easier to use
for anything that doesn't require the ASN.1 representation. This is
the same representation as PKCS#11 (Cryptoki) except that PKCS#11
allows r and s to be truncated (both to the same length), which
complicates the implementation and negates the advantage of a
fixed-size representation.
* Distinguish randomized ECDSA from deterministic ECDSA.
* Deterministic ECDSA needs to be parametrized by a hash.
* Randomized ECDSA only uses the hash for the initial hash step,
but add ECDSA(hash) algorithms anyway so that all the signature
algorithms encode the initial hashing step.
* Add brief documentation for the ECDSA signature mechanisms.
* Also define DSA signature mechanisms while I'm at it. There were
already key types for DSA.
* PSS needs to be parametrized by a hash.
* Don't use `_MGF1` in the names of macros for OAEP and PSS. No one
ever uses anything else.
* Add brief documentation for the RSA signature mechanisms.
Add a negative test for import where the expected key is an EC key
with the correct key size, but the wrong curve. Change the test that
tries to import an RSA key when an EC key is expected to have the
expected key size.
Because exporting-public a symmetric key fails, we have no reasonable
expectation that the exported key length has any value at all other than
something obviously incorrect or "empty", like a key with a length of 0.
Our current implementation explicitly sets the exported key length to 0
on errors, so test for this. Fix the "PSA import/export-public: cannot
export-public a symmetric key" test to expect a key length of 0 instead
of 162.
In the test generate_random, focus on testing that psa_generate_random
is writing all the bytes of the output buffer and no more. Add a check
that it is writing to each byte of the output buffer. Do not try to
look for repeating output as the structure of a unit test isn't likely
to catch that sort of problem anyway.
Also add what was missing in the test suite to support block ciphers
with a block size that isn't 16.
Fix some buggy test data that passed only due to problems with DES
support in the product.
In psa_hash_start, psa_mac_start and psa_cipher_setup, return
PSA_ERROR_INVALID_ARGUMENT rather than PSA_ERROR_NOT_SUPPORTED when
the algorithm parameter is not the right category.
When psa_mac_start(), psa_encrypt_setup() or psa_cipher_setup()
failed, depending on when the failure happened, it was possible that
psa_mac_abort() or psa_cipher_abort() would crash because it would try
to call a free() function uninitialized data in the operation
structure. Refactor the functions so that they initialize the
operation structure before doing anything else.
Add non-regression tests and a few more positive and negative unit
tests for psa_mac_start() and psa_cipher_setup() (the latter via
psa_encrypt_setip()).
Exporting an asymmetric key only worked if the target buffer had
exactly the right size, because psa_export_key uses
mbedtls_pk_write_key_der or mbedtls_pk_write_pubkey_der and these
functions write to the end of the buffer, which psa_export_key did not
correct for. Fix this by moving the data to the beginning of the
buffer if necessary.
Add non-regression tests.