While at it, clarify who's responsible for destroying the underlying key. That
can't be us because some keys cannot be destroyed and we wouldn't know. So
let's leave that up to the caller.
The test suites `test_suite_gcm.aes{128,192,256}_en.data` contains
numerous NIST test vectors for AES-*-GCM against which the GCM
API mbedtls_gcm_xxx() is tested.
However, one level higher at the cipher API, no tests exist which
exercise mbedtls_cipher_auth_{encrypt/decrypt}() for GCM ciphers,
although test_suite_cipher.function contains the test auth_crypt_tv
which does precisely that and is already used e.g. in
test_suite_cipher.ccm.
This commit replicates the test vectors from
test_suite_gcm.aes{128,192,256}_en.data in test_suite_cipher.gcm.data
and adds a run of auth_crypt_tv for each of them.
The conversion was mainly done through the sed command line
```
s/gcm_decrypt_and_verify:\([^:]*\):\([^:]*\):\([^:]*\):\([^:]*\):
\([^:]*\):\([^:]*\):\([^:]*\):\([^:]*\):\([^:]*\):\([^:]*\)/auth_crypt_tv:
\1:\2:\4:\5:\3:\7:\8:\9/
```
Allow mbedtls_psa_crypto_free to be called twice, or without a prior
call to psa_crypto_init. Keep track of the initialization state more
precisely in psa_crypto_init so that mbedtls_psa_crypto_free knows
what to do.
It's better for names in the API to describe the "what" (opaque keys) rather
than the "how" (using PSA), at least since we don't intend to have multiple
function doing the same "what" in different ways in the foreseeable future.
Unfortunately the can_do wrapper does not receive the key context as an
argument, so it cannot check psa_get_key_information(). Later we might want to
change our internal structures to fix this, but for now we'll just restrict
opaque PSA keys to be ECDSA keypairs, as this is the only thing we need for
now. It also simplifies testing a bit (no need to test each key type).
While at it, clarify who's responsible for destroying the underlying key. That
can't be us because some keys cannot be destroyed and we wouldn't know. So
let's leave that up to the caller.
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.
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.
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.
This commit introduces variants test-ca_utf8.crt,
test-ca_printablestring.crt and test-ca_uppercase.crt
of tests/data_files/test-ca.crt which differ from
test-ca.crt in their choice of string encoding and
upper and lower case letters in the DN field. These
changes should be immaterial to the recovation check,
and three tests are added that crl.pem, which applies
to test-ca.crt, is also considered as applying to
test-ca_*.crt.
The test files were generated using PR #1641 which
- adds a build instruction for test-ca.crt to
tests/data_files/Makefile which allows easy
change of the subject DN.
- changes the default string format from `PrintableString`
to `UTF8String`.
Specifically:
- `test-ca_utf8.crt` was generated by running
`rm test-ca.crt && make test-ca.crt`
on PR #1641.
- `test-ca_uppercase.crt`, too, was generated by running
`rm test-ca.crt && make test-ca.crt`
on PR #1641, after modifying the subject DN line in the build
instruction for `test-ca.crt` in `tests/data_files/Makefile`.
- `test-ca_printable.crt` is a copy of `test-ca.crt`
because at the time of this commit, `PrintableString` is
still the default string format.
This commit introduces variants test-ca_utf8.crt,
test-ca_printablestring.crt and test-ca_uppercase.crt
of tests/data_files/test-ca.crt which differ from
test-ca.crt in their choice of string encoding and
upper and lower case letters in the DN field. These
changes should be immaterial to the recovation check,
and three tests are added that crl.pem, which applies
to test-ca.crt, is also considered as applying to
test-ca_*.crt.
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,
remove ASN.1-based sanity checks. For the raw secret value, most byte
strings of the correct length are valid (the details depend on the
curve), so as a sanity check, just check the length.
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.
Extend the mbedtls_mpi_is_prime_det test to check that it reports
the number as prime when testing rounds-1 rounds, then reports the
number as composite when testing the full number of rounds.
When using a primality testing function the tolerable error rate depends
on the scheme in question, the required security strength and wether it
is used for key generation or parameter validation. To support all use
cases we need more flexibility than what the old API provides.
Primality tests have to deal with different distribution when generating
primes and when validating primes.
These new tests are testing if mbedtls_mpi_is_prime() is working
properly in the latter setting.
The new tests involve pseudoprimes with maximum number of
non-witnesses. The non-witnesses were generated by printing them
from mpi_miller_rabin(). The pseudoprimes were generated by the
following function:
void gen_monier( mbedtls_mpi* res, int nbits )
{
mbedtls_mpi p_2x_plus_1, p_4x_plus_1, x, tmp;
mbedtls_mpi_init( &p_2x_plus_1 );
mbedtls_mpi_init( &p_4x_plus_1 );
mbedtls_mpi_init( &x ); mbedtls_mpi_init( &tmp );
do
{
mbedtls_mpi_gen_prime( &p_2x_plus_1, nbits >> 1, 0,
rnd_std_rand, NULL );
mbedtls_mpi_sub_int( &x, &p_2x_plus_1, 1 );
mbedtls_mpi_div_int( &x, &tmp, &x, 2 );
if( mbedtls_mpi_get_bit( &x, 0 ) == 0 )
continue;
mbedtls_mpi_mul_int( &p_4x_plus_1, &x, 4 );
mbedtls_mpi_add_int( &p_4x_plus_1, &p_4x_plus_1, 1 );
if( mbedtls_mpi_is_prime( &p_4x_plus_1, rnd_std_rand,
NULL ) == 0 )
break;
} while( 1 );
mbedtls_mpi_mul_mpi( res, &p_2x_plus_1, &p_4x_plus_1 );
}
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.
Functional tests for various payload sizes and output buffer sizes.
When the padding is bad or the plaintext is too large for the output
buffer, verify that function writes some outputs. This doesn't
validate that the implementation is time-constant, but it at least
validates that it doesn't just return early without outputting anything.
Add signing tests with 528-bit and 520-bit RSA keys with SHA-512. These
selections of key and hash size should lead to an error returned, as
there is not enough room for our chosen minimum salt size of two bytes
less than the hash size. These test the boundary around an available
salt length of 0 or -1 bytes.
The RSA keys were generated with OpenSSL 1.1.1-pre8.
$ openssl genrsa 520
Generating RSA private key, 520 bit long modulus (2 primes)
.............++++++++++++
.................++++++++++++
e is 65537 (0x010001)
-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
MIIBPwIBAAJCANWgb4bludh0KFQBZcqWb6iJOmLipZ0L/XYXeAuwOfkWWjc6jhGd
B2b43lVnEPM/ZwGRU7rYIjd155fUUdSCBvO/AgMBAAECQgDOMq+zy6XZEjWi8D5q
j05zpRGgRRiKP/qEtB6BWbZ7gUV9DDgZhD4FFsqfanwjWNG52LkM9D1OQmUOtGGq
a9COwQIhD+6l9iIPrCkblQjsK6jtKB6zmu5NXcaTJUEGgW68cA7PAiENaJGHhcOq
/jHqqi2NgVbc5kWUD/dzSkVzN6Ub0AvIiBECIQIeL2Gw1XSFYm1Fal/DbQNQUX/e
/dnhc94X7s118wbScQIhAMPVgbDc//VurZ+155vYc9PjZlYe3QIAwlkLX3HYKkGx
AiEND8ndKyhkc8jLGlh8aRP8r03zpDIiZNKqCKiijMWVRYQ=
-----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
$ openssl genrsa 528
Generating RSA private key, 528 bit long modulus (2 primes)
.........++++++++++++
....++++++++++++
e is 65537 (0x010001)
-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
MIIBQgIBAAJDAKJVTrpxW/ZuXs3z1tcY4+XZB+hmbnv1p2tBUQbgTrgn7EyyGZz/
ZkkdRUGQggWapbVLDPXu9EQ0AvMEfAsObwJQgQIDAQABAkJhHVXvFjglElxnK7Rg
lERq0k73yqfYQts4wCegTHrrkv3HzqWQVVi29mGLSXTqoQ45gzWZ5Ru5NKjkTjko
YtWWIVECIgDScqoo7SCFrG3zwFxnGe7V3rYYr6LkykpvczC0MK1IZy0CIgDFeINr
qycUXbndZvF0cLYtSmEA+MoN7fRX7jY5w7lZYyUCIUxyiOurEDhe5eY5B5gQbJlW
ePHIw7S244lO3+9lC12U1QIhWgzQ8YKFObZcEejl5xGXIiQvBEBv89Y1fPu2YrUs
iuS5AiFE64NJs8iI+zZxp72esKHPXq/chJ1BvhHsXI0y1OBK8m8=
-----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
Since we wish to generate RSASSA-PSS signatures even when hashes are
relatively large for the chosen RSA key size, we need some tests. Our
main focus will be on 1024-bit keys and the couple key sizes larger than
it. For example, we test for a signature generated using a salt length
of 63 when a 1032-bit key is used. Other tests check the boundary
conditions around other key sizes. We want to make sure we don't use a
salt length larger than the hash length (because FIPS 186-4 requires
this). We also want to make sure we don't use a salt that is too small
(no smaller than 2 bytes away from the hash length).
Test RSASSA-PSS signatures with:
- 1024-bit key and SHA-512 (slen 62)
- 1032-bit key and SHA-512 (slen 63)
- 1040-bit key and SHA-512 (slen 64)
- 1048-bit key and SHA-512 (slen 64)
The tests also verify that we can properly verify the RSASSA-PSS
signatures we've generated.
We've manually verified that OpenSSL 1.1.1-pre8 can verify the
RSASSA-PSS signatures we've generated.
$ openssl rsa -in rsa1024.pem -pubout -out pub1024.pem
writing RSA key
$ openssl rsa -in rsa1032.pem -pubout -out pub1032.pem
writing RSA key
$ openssl rsa -in rsa1040.pem -pubout -out pub1040.pem
writing RSA key
$ openssl rsa -in rsa1048.pem -pubout -out pub1048.pem
writing RSA key
$ cat message.bin | openssl dgst -sha512 -sigopt rsa_padding_mode:pss -sigopt rsa_pss_saltlen:62 -verify pub1024.pem -signature valid1024.bin
Verified OK
$ cat message.bin | openssl dgst -sha512 -sigopt rsa_padding_mode:pss -sigopt rsa_pss_saltlen:63 -verify pub1032.pem -signature valid1032.bin
Verified OK
$ cat message.bin | openssl dgst -sha512 -sigopt rsa_padding_mode:pss -sigopt rsa_pss_saltlen:64 -verify pub1040.pem -signature valid1040.bin
Verified OK
$ cat message.bin | openssl dgst -sha512 -sigopt rsa_padding_mode:pss -sigopt rsa_pss_saltlen:64 -verify pub1048.pem -signature valid1048.bin
Verified OK
We've also added a new test that ensures we can properly validate a
RSASSA-PSS 1032-bit signature with SHA-512 generated by OpenSSL. This
has been added as the "RSASSA-PSS Verify OpenSSL-generated Signature
1032-bit w/SHA-512" test. The signature to verify was generated with the
following command line.
$ cat message.bin | openssl dgst -sha512 -sigopt rsa_padding_mode:pss -sigopt rsa_pss_saltlen:63 -sign rsa1032.pem > valid.bin
The RSA private keys used by these tests were generated with OpenSSL
1.1.1-pre8.
$ openssl genrsa 1024
Generating RSA private key, 1024 bit long modulus (2 primes)
........................................++++++
......++++++
e is 65537 (0x010001)
-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----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-----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
$ openssl genrsa 1032
Generating RSA private key, 1032 bit long modulus (2 primes)
....................++++++
.................................++++++
e is 65537 (0x010001)
-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----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-----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
$ openssl genkey 1040
Generating RSA private key, 1040 bit long modulus
........++++++
........++++++
e is 65537 (0x10001)
-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----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-----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
$ openssl genrsa 1048
Generating RSA private key, 1048 bit long modulus (2 primes)
...............................++++++
.++++++
e is 65537 (0x010001)
-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----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-----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
It should be valid to RSASSA-PSS sign a SHA-512 hash with a 1024-bit or
1032-bit RSA key, but with the salt size being always equal to the hash
size, this isn't possible: the key is too small.
To enable use of hashes that are relatively large compared to the key
size, allow reducing the salt size to no less than the hash size minus 2
bytes. We don't allow salt sizes smaller than the hash size minus 2
bytes because that too significantly changes the security guarantees the
library provides compared to the previous implementation which always
used a salt size equal to the hash size. The new calculated salt size
remains compliant with FIPS 186-4.
We also need to update the "hash too large" test, since we now reduce
the salt size when certain key sizes are used. We used to not support
1024-bit keys with SHA-512, but now we support this by reducing the salt
size to 62. Update the "hash too large" test to use a 1016-bit RSA key
with SHA-512, which still has too large of a hash because we will not
reduce the salt size further than 2 bytes shorter than the hash size.
The RSA private key used for the test was generated using "openssl
genrsa 1016" using OpenSSL 1.1.1-pre8.
$ openssl genrsa 1016
Generating RSA private key, 1016 bit long modulus (2 primes)
..............++++++
....++++++
e is 65537 (0x010001)
-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----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-----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
This commit fixes some missing size comparison. In
aead_encrypt_decrypt, aead_encrypt and aead_decrypt, the test code
would not have noticed if the library function had reported an output
length that was not the expected length.
ASSERT_COMPARE tests that the two buffers have the same size and
content. The intended use is to replace TEST_ASSERT( size1 == size2 )
followed by memcmp on the content. Keep using memcmp when comparing
two buffers that have the same size by construction.
This commit resolves a bug whereby some test cases failed on systems
where mbedtls_calloc returns NULL when the size of 0, because the test
case asserted `pointer != NULL` regardless of the size.
The new macro ASSERT_ALLOC allocates memory with mbedtls_calloc and
fails the test if the allocation fails. It outputs a null pointer if
the requested size is 0. It is meant to replace existing calls to
mbedtls_calloc.
Setting the dh_flag to 1 used to indicate that the caller requests safe
primes from mbedtls_mpi_gen_prime. We generalize the functionality to
make room for more flags in that parameter.
If some algorithms are excluded in the build, it's ok for the corresponding
macros not to give the correct results. Therefore the corresponding test cases
should depend on the implementation of the algorithm. For example, it's ok for
PSA_HASH_MAX_SIZE to be less than PSA_HASH_SIZE(PSA_ALG_SHA_512) if we build
without SHA-512 support, and we indeed do this. It's even ok for an
implementation to return 0 for PSA_ALG_IS_HASH(PSA_ALG_SHA_512) if it doesn't
support SHA-512; we return 1 anyway but the tests are less
implementation-specific if we don't enforce it.
This commit adds dependencies on symbols that don't exist in Mbed TLS,
for algorithms that Mbed TLS doesn't implement. These are:
MBEDTLS_SHA512_256 for SHA-512/256, MBEDTLS_SHA3_C for SHA-3,
MBEDTLS_DSA_C and MBEDTLS_DSA_DETERMINISTIC for DSA, and
MBEDTLS_ECP_DP_xxx_ENABLED for elliptic curves that have a PSA
encoding but are not supported in Mbed TLS.
For all key types, validate feature test macros (PSA_KEY_TYPE_IS_xxx).
For asymmetric keys (public key or key pair), validate the
corresponding public/pair type.
For ECC keys, validate GET_CURVE.
For all algorithms, validate feature test macros (PSA_ALG_IS_xxx).
For hash algorithms, validate the exact hash size, and validate
xxx_GET_HASH macros on dependent algorithms.
For MAC algorithms, validate the MAC size. For AEAD algorithms,
validate the tag size.
There is a separate test case for each HMAC algorithm, which is
necessary because each has its own MAC size. For other hash-dependent
algorithms, there is no interesting variation to test here, so only
one hash gets tested.
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.
Don't rely on static initialization of a flexible array member, that's
a GNU extension. The previous code also triggered a Clang warning
"suggest braces around initialization of subobject" (-Wmissing-braces)
for `struct {char a[]} = {"foo"}`.
This is not useful to validate the implementation when importing
canonical input, which is the case for most import/export test cases,
but it helps validate the sanity checks themselves.
Implement sanity checks of exported public keys, using ASN.1 parsing.
Rewrite the sanity checks of key pairs using ASN.1 parsing, so as to
check more things with simpler code.
Move the code to perform sanity checks on the exported key from
generate_key to exercise_key. This way the sanity checks can be
performed after importing or deriving a key as well.
In addition to checking the exported key if its usage allows it, check
the exported public key if the key is asymmetric.
The last slot in the array was not freed due to an off-by-one error.
Amend the fill_slots test to serve as a non-regression test for this
issue: without this bug fix, it would cause a memory leak.
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.
In asymmetric_encrypt_decrypt, use the buffer size advertized by the
library for the ciphertext, and the length of the plaintext for the
re-decrypted output.
Test the output length if known. Require it to be 0 on error for
encrypt/decrypt functions. If the output length is unknown, test at
least that it's within the buffer limits.
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.
Make function names for multipart operations more consistent (cipher
edition).
Rename symmetric cipher multipart operation functions so that they all
start with psa_cipher_:
* psa_encrypt_setup -> psa_cipher_encrypt_setup
* psa_decrypt_setup -> psa_cipher_decrypt_setup
* psa_encrypt_set_iv -> psa_cipher_set_iv
* psa_encrypt_generate_iv -> psa_cipher_generate_iv
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.
Make function names for multipart operations more consistent (MAC
setup edition).
Split psa_mac_setup into two functions psa_mac_sign_setup and
psa_mac_verify_setup. These functions behave identically except that
they require different usage flags on the key. The goal of the split
is to enforce the key policy during setup rather than at the end of
the operation (which was a bit of a hack).
In psa_mac_sign_finish and psa_mac_verify_finish, if the operation is
of the wrong type, abort the operation before returning BAD_STATE.
No common signature algorithm uses a salt (RSA-PKCS#1v1.5, RSA-PSS,
DSA, ECDSA, EdDSA). We don't even take an IV for MAC whereas MAC
algorithms with IV are uncommon but heard of. So remove the salt
parameter from psa_asymmetric_sign and psa_asymmetric_verify.
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.
At this point it fixes memory leaks as well. These memory leaks are the
fault of the 'psa_cipher_finish()' function and the calls fixed in this
commit (among with many others in the test suite) will become obsolete
after fixing 'psa_cipher_finish()'.
Add required includes in tests and psa_crypto.c file in order to be able to compilef for the SPM solution.
Some functions needed to be deprecated from psa_crypto.c since they already implemented in the SPM.
Use PSA_BLOCK_CIPHER_BLOCK_SIZE() macro to get the cipher block size instead of accessing the operation struct
additionally, for SPM case, the 'block_size' member is not a member in the operation struct
In tests that had a hard-coded buffer size, use PSA_MAC_MAX_SIZE or
PSA_ASYMMETRIC_SIGNATURE_MAX_SIZE as appropriate.
Test that PSA_xxx_MAX_SIZE is larger than the size used in tests that
expect a specific output.
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.
Make psa_export_key() always set a valid data_length when exporting,
even when there are errors. This makes the API easier to use for buggy
programs (like our test code).
Our test code previously used exported_length uninitialized when
checking to see that the buffer returned was all zero in import_export()
in the case where an error was returned from psa_export_key().
Initialize exported_length to an invalid length, and check that it gets
set properly by psa_export_key(), to avoid this using export_length
uninitialized. Note that the mem_is_zero() check is still valid when
psa_export_key() returns an error, e.g. where exported_length is 0, as
we want to check that nothing was written to the buffer on error.
Out test code also previous passed NULL for the data_length parameter of
psa_export_key() when it expected a failure (in key_policy_fail()).
However, data_length is not allowed to be NULL, especially now that we
write to data_length from psa_export_key() even when there are errors.
Update the test code to not pass in a NULL data_length.
It isn't used to define other macros and it doesn't seem that useful
for users. Remove it, we can reintroduce it if needed.
Define a similar function key_type_is_raw_bytes in the implementation
with a clear semantics: it's a key that's represented as a struct
raw_data.
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()).
In some configurations (like config-mini-tls1_1.h), size is unused. This
leads to failures when building with CMake Asan, because that build
doesn't use "-Wno-unused-value".
Fixes: e01822299624 ("New function mbedtls_rsa_get_bitlen")
In psa_export_key, ensure that each byte of the output buffer either
contains its original value, is zero, or is part of the actual output.
Specifically, don't risk having partial output on error, and don't
leave extra data at the end of the buffer when exporting an asymmetric
key.
Test that exporting to a previously zeroed buffer leaves the buffer
zeroed outside the actual output if any.
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.
* init-deinit
* import-export
* policies
* lifetime
* hash
* MAC
* cipher
* AEAD
* asymmetric sign
* asymmetric verify
* asymmetric encrypt-decrypt
This commit only moves test functions and test cases around. It does
not modify, add or remove tests.
psa_import_key must check that the imported key data matches the
expected key type. Implement the missing check for EC keys that the
curve is the expected one.
Instead of rolling our own list of elliptic curve identifiers, use one
from somewhere. Pick TLS because it's the right size (16 bits) and
it's as good as any.
Get rid of many redundant casts. In particular, it is not useful to
cast uint32_t values to size_t before performing arithmetic or
comparisons on them.
Rewrap a number of function calls, many of which now have narrower
arguments thanks to the removed casts. When a function call doesn't
fit on a single line, avoid grouping unrelated parameters together,
but do try to group a buffer pointer and the associated size.
Define more auxiliary variables xxx of a particular integer
type (psa_algorithm_t, psa_key_usage_t, etc.) corresponding to a test
function xxx_arg which has the type int. This avoids the need to cast
xxx_arg to an unsigned type sometimes in the code.
Avoid lines longer than 80 columns.
Remove some redundant parentheses, e.g. change
if( ( a == b ) && ( c == d ) )
to
if( a == b && c == d )
which makes lines less long and makes the remaining parentheses more
relevant.
Add missing parentheses around return statements.
There should be no semantic change in this commit.
* development-restricted: (578 commits)
Update library version number to 2.13.1
Don't define _POSIX_C_SOURCE in header file
Don't declare and define gmtime()-mutex on Windows platforms
Correct preprocessor guards determining use of gmtime()
Correct documentation of mbedtls_platform_gmtime_r()
Correct typo in documentation of mbedtls_platform_gmtime_r()
Correct POSIX version check to determine presence of gmtime_r()
Improve documentation of mbedtls_platform_gmtime_r()
platform_utils.{c/h} -> platform_util.{c/h}
Don't include platform_time.h if !MBEDTLS_HAVE_TIME
Improve wording of documentation of MBEDTLS_PLATFORM_GMTIME_R_ALT
Fix typo in documentation of MBEDTLS_PLATFORM_GMTIME_R_ALT
Replace 'thread safe' by 'thread-safe' in the documentation
Improve documentation of MBEDTLS_HAVE_TIME_DATE
ChangeLog: Add missing renamings gmtime -> gmtime_r
Improve documentation of MBEDTLS_HAVE_TIME_DATE
Minor documentation improvements
Style: Add missing period in documentation in threading.h
Rename mbedtls_platform_gmtime() to mbedtls_platform_gmtime_r()
Guard decl and use of gmtime mutex by HAVE_TIME_DATE and !GMTIME_ALT
...
Always adding things at the end tends to create merge conflicts.
Adding in the middle in this way makes the order more logical in
addition to avoiding conflicts.
* PKCS#7 padding always adds at least one byte of padding, so test
data with plaintext length = ciphertext length could not have been
correct.
* CTR has plaintext length = ciphertext length, so test data with
differing lengths could not have been correct.
In cipher_test_verify_output_multpart, tweak the ways chunk sizes are
added in order to get rid of the variable temp. In other functions,
this commit does not change the logic at all.
Only whitespace changes.
* Remove tabs.
* Remove trailing whitespace.
* Correct some misindented lines.
* Normalize whitespace around some punctuation.
* Split some lines to avoid going over 80 columns.
cipher_test_positive was never compiled due to a syntax error in the
BEGIN_CASE magic comment. It has now been duplicated as
cipher_test_encrypt. Remove the copy that was never compiled.
Conflicts:
library/psa_crypto.c
tests/suites/test_suite_psa_crypto.data
tests/suites/test_suite_psa_crypto.function
All the conflicts are concurrent additions where the order doesn't
matter. I put the code from feature-psa (key policy) before the code
from PR #13 (key lifetime).
Conflict resolution:
* `tests/suites/test_suite_psa_crypto.data`: in the new tests from PR #14,
rename `PSA_ALG_RSA_PKCS1V15_RAW` to `PSA_ALG_RSA_PKCS1V15_SIGN_RAW` as
was done in PR #15 in the other branch.
New header file crypto_struct.h. The main file crypto.sh declares
structures which are implementation-defined. These structures must be
defined in crypto_struct.h, which is included at the end so that the
structures can use types defined in crypto.h.
Implement psa_hash_start, psa_hash_update and psa_hash_final. This
should work for all hash algorithms supported by Mbed TLS, but has
only been smoke-tested for SHA-256, and only in the nominal case.
Don't use the pk module except as required for pkparse/pkwrite. The
PSA crypto layer is meant to work alongside pk, not on top of it.
Fix the compile-time dependencies on RSA/ECP handling in
psa_export_key, psa_destroy_key and psa_get_key_information.
Define psa_key_type_t and a first stab at a few values.
New functions psa_import_key, psa_export_key, psa_destroy_key,
psa_get_key_information. Implement them for raw data and RSA.
Under the hood, create an in-memory, fixed-size keystore with room
for MBEDTLS_PSA_KEY_SLOT_COUNT - 1 keys.
Add a new function mbedtls_rsa_get_bitlen which returns the RSA key
size, i.e. the bit size of the modulus. In the pk module, call
mbedtls_rsa_get_bitlen instead of mbedtls_rsa_get_len, which gave the
wrong result for key sizes that are not a multiple of 8.
This commit adds one non-regression test in the pk suite. More tests
are needed for RSA key sizes that are a multiple of 8.
This commit does not address RSA alternative implementations, which
only provide an interface that return the modulus size in bytes.
New module psa_crypto.c (MBEDTLS_PSA_CRYPTO_C):
Platform Security Architecture compatibility layer on top of
libmedcrypto.
Implement psa_crypto_init function which sets up a RNG.
Add a mbedtls_psa_crypto_free function which deinitializes the
library.
Define a first batch of error codes.
previously a single function was used for most test cases (ctr_drbg_validate) making it harder to understand what the exact scenario is as a result it was split into easier to understand functions.
the testing functions were re-factored so that the common code was extracted to a single static function (removing the need for unclear goto statements).
As part of the re-factor the test functions now use data_t for parameters (support for this was introduced in previous rebase),
the change is designed to make configuring 128bit keys for ctr_drbg more similar to other configuration options. Tests have been updated accordingly.
also clarified test naming.
Unify the three existing validation functions (with prediction
resistance, with manual reseeding between generations, and with no
reseeding) into a single function that supports these three scenarios
plus a fourth one (reseed before the first generation).
The four supported scenarios cover the three scenarios from the
current CAVP test vectors (no reseed, reseed before generating,
prediction resistance) plus a fourth scenario used by the existing
test vectors (reseed after generating).
(cherry picked from commit cee9bedee6bc1a8e2b22fa8a31647b62ebb8a0a4)
The ctr_drbg_validate_xxx test functions had hard-coded sizes for the
entropy and the output size. Generalize the sizes.
Keep track of the current entropy size.
Unhexify the expected output and compare with the actual output,
rather than hexifying the actual output and comparing the hex.