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462ddce5b2
This removes a bunch of weird code around the counter overflow check in concatKDF and makes it actually work for different hash output sizes. The overflow check worked as follows: concatKDF applies the hash function N times, where N is roundup(kdLen, hashsize) / hashsize. N should not overflow 32 bits because that would lead to a repetition in the KDF output. A couple issues with the overflow check: - It used the hash.BlockSize, which is wrong because the block size is about the input of the hash function. Luckily, all standard hash functions have a block size that's greater than the output size, so concatKDF didn't crash, it just generated too much key material. - The check used big.Int to compare against 2^32-1. - The calculation could still overflow before reaching the check. The new code in concatKDF doesn't check for overflow. Instead, there is a new check on ECIESParams which ensures that params.KeyLen is < 512. This removes any possibility of overflow. There are a couple of miscellaneous improvements bundled in with this change: - The key buffer is pre-allocated instead of appending the hash output to an initially empty slice. - The code that uses concatKDF to derive keys is now shared between Encrypt and Decrypt. - There was a redundant invocation of IsOnCurve in Decrypt. This is now removed because elliptic.Unmarshal already checks whether the input is a valid curve point since Go 1.5. Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com> |
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README |
# NOTE This implementation is direct fork of Kylom's implementation. I claim no authorship over this code apart from some minor modifications. Please be aware this code **has not yet been reviewed**. ecies implements the Elliptic Curve Integrated Encryption Scheme. The package is designed to be compliant with the appropriate NIST standards, and therefore doesn't support the full SEC 1 algorithm set. STATUS: ecies should be ready for use. The ASN.1 support is only complete so far as to supported the listed algorithms before. CAVEATS 1. CMAC support is currently not present. SUPPORTED ALGORITHMS SYMMETRIC CIPHERS HASH FUNCTIONS AES128 SHA-1 AES192 SHA-224 AES256 SHA-256 SHA-384 ELLIPTIC CURVE SHA-512 P256 P384 KEY DERIVATION FUNCTION P521 NIST SP 800-65a Concatenation KDF Curve P224 isn't supported because it does not provide a minimum security level of AES128 with HMAC-SHA1. According to NIST SP 800-57, the security level of P224 is 112 bits of security. Symmetric ciphers use CTR-mode; message tags are computed using HMAC-<HASH> function. CURVE SELECTION According to NIST SP 800-57, the following curves should be selected: +----------------+-------+ | SYMMETRIC SIZE | CURVE | +----------------+-------+ | 128-bit | P256 | +----------------+-------+ | 192-bit | P384 | +----------------+-------+ | 256-bit | P521 | +----------------+-------+ TODO 1. Look at serialising the parameters with the SEC 1 ASN.1 module. 2. Validate ASN.1 formats with SEC 1. TEST VECTORS The only test vectors I've found so far date from 1993, predating AES and including only 163-bit curves. Therefore, there are no published test vectors to compare to. LICENSE ecies is released under the same license as the Go source code. See the LICENSE file for details. REFERENCES * SEC (Standard for Efficient Cryptography) 1, version 2.0: Elliptic Curve Cryptography; Certicom, May 2009. http://www.secg.org/sec1-v2.pdf * GEC (Guidelines for Efficient Cryptography) 2, version 0.3: Test Vectors for SEC 1; Certicom, September 1999. http://read.pudn.com/downloads168/doc/772358/TestVectorsforSEC%201-gec2.pdf * NIST SP 800-56a: Recommendation for Pair-Wise Key Establishment Schemes Using Discrete Logarithm Cryptography. National Institute of Standards and Technology, May 2007. http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/nistpubs/800-56A/SP800-56A_Revision1_Mar08-2007.pdf * Suite B Implementer’s Guide to NIST SP 800-56A. National Security Agency, July 28, 2009. http://www.nsa.gov/ia/_files/SuiteB_Implementer_G-113808.pdf * NIST SP 800-57: Recommendation for Key Management – Part 1: General (Revision 3). National Institute of Standards and Technology, July 2012. http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/nistpubs/800-57/sp800-57_part1_rev3_general.pdf