Commit Graph

4 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Conrad Meyer
590adc1bc2 Remove "HMAC" from <HASH>_HMAC_BLOCK_LEN macro names
The block size is a property of the underlying hash algorithm, and has
nothing to do with the HMAC construction.

No functional change.
2018-07-09 07:21:37 +00:00
Conrad Meyer
255811d758 opencrypto: Use C99 initializers for auth_hash instances
A misordering in the Via padlock driver really strongly suggested that these
should use C99 named initializers.

No functional change.

Sponsored by:	Dell EMC Isilon
2017-09-26 17:52:52 +00:00
Conrad Meyer
3693b18840 opencrypto: Loosen restriction on HMAC key sizes
Theoretically, HMACs do not actually have any limit on key sizes.
Transforms should compact input keys larger than the HMAC block size by
using the transform (hash) on the input key.

(Short input keys are padded out with zeros to the HMAC block size.)

Still, not all FreeBSD crypto drivers that provide HMAC functionality
handle longer-than-blocksize keys appropriately, so enforce a "maximum" key
length in the crypto API for auth_hashes that previously expressed a
requirement.  (The "maximum" is the size of a single HMAC block for the
given transform.)  Unconstrained auth_hashes are left as-is.

I believe the previous hardcoded sizes were committed in the original
import of opencrypto from OpenBSD and are due to specific protocol
details of IPSec.  Note that none of the previous sizes actually matched
the appropriate HMAC block size.

The previous hardcoded sizes made the SHA tests in cryptotest.py
useless for testing FreeBSD crypto drivers; none of the NIST-KAT example
inputs had keys sized to the previous expectations.

The following drivers were audited to check that they handled keys up to
the block size of the HMAC safely:

  Software HMAC:
    * padlock(4)
    * cesa
    * glxsb
    * safe(4)
    * ubsec(4)

  Hardware accelerated HMAC:
    * ccr(4)
    * hifn(4)
    * sec(4) (Only supports up to 64 byte keys despite claiming to
      support SHA2 HMACs, but validates input key sizes)
    * cryptocteon (MIPS)
    * nlmsec (MIPS)
    * rmisec (MIPS) (Amusingly, does not appear to use key material at
      all -- presumed broken)

Reviewed by:	jhb (previous version), rlibby (previous version)
Sponsored by:	Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12437
2017-09-26 16:18:10 +00:00
Allan Jude
2155bb238f Break up opencrypto/xform.c so it can be reused piecemeal
Keep xform.c as a meta-file including the broken out bits
existing code that includes xform.c continues to work as normal

Individual algorithms can now be reused elsewhere, including outside
of the kernel

Reviewed by:	bapt (previous version), gnn, delphij
Approved by:	secteam
MFC after:	1 week
Sponsored by:	ScaleEngine Inc.
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D4674
2015-12-30 22:43:07 +00:00