Compare commits
2 Commits
| Author | SHA1 | Date | |
|---|---|---|---|
| bb7b4c3629 | |||
| 11a9b36681 |
+239
-29
@@ -1,17 +1,43 @@
|
||||
%%% @doc
|
||||
%%% Key functions
|
||||
%%% Hakuzaru Key Functions
|
||||
%%%
|
||||
%%% The main reason this is a module of its own is that in the original architecture
|
||||
%%% it was a process rather than just a library of functions. Now that it exists, though,
|
||||
%%% there is little motivation to cram everything here into the controller process's
|
||||
%%% code.
|
||||
%%% The Gajumaru's default key type is based on Elliptical Curve Cryptography (ECC).
|
||||
%%% The specific curve used is 25519, and the typical key representation is Ed25519.
|
||||
%%%
|
||||
%%% The "Ed" in "Ed25519" stands for Harold Edwards. This form represents
|
||||
%%% a coordinate on a "Twisted Edwards Curve".
|
||||
%%%
|
||||
%%% The "X" in "X25519" stands for the X-coordinate, also known as the
|
||||
%%% "Montgomery u-coordinate" on a "Montgomery Curve".
|
||||
%%%
|
||||
%%% The two are equivalent, but have meaningfully different properties.
|
||||
%%% @end
|
||||
|
||||
-module(hz_key_master).
|
||||
-vsn("0.9.2").
|
||||
|
||||
-export([make_key/1, encode/1, decode/1]).
|
||||
-export([lcg/1]).
|
||||
-export([make_key/0, make_key/1, encode/1, decode/1]).
|
||||
-export([shared_secret_a/6, shared_secret_b/6,
|
||||
ed25519_pk_to_x25519/1, ed25519_sk_to_x25519/1,
|
||||
hkdf/4, hkdf/5]).
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
-spec make_key() -> {ID, KeyPair}
|
||||
when ID :: string(),
|
||||
KeyPair :: #{secret => binary(), public => binary()}.
|
||||
%% @doc
|
||||
%% @equiv make_key(<<>>)
|
||||
|
||||
make_key() ->
|
||||
make_key(<<>>).
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
-spec make_key(Secret) -> {ID, KeyPair}
|
||||
when Secret :: <<>> | <<_:32*8>>,
|
||||
ID :: string(),
|
||||
KeyPair :: #{secret => binary(), public => binary()}.
|
||||
%% @doc
|
||||
%% Generate a Ed25519 keypair tagged with the corresponding Gajumaru ID.
|
||||
|
||||
make_key(<<>>) ->
|
||||
Pair = #{public := Public} = ecu_eddsa:sign_keypair(),
|
||||
@@ -125,28 +151,212 @@ sumcheck(Width, Bits) ->
|
||||
end.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
-spec lcg(integer()) -> integer().
|
||||
%% A simple PRNG that fits into 32 bits and is easy to implement anywhere (Kotlin).
|
||||
%% Specifically, it is a "linear congruential generator" of the Lehmer variety.
|
||||
%% The constants used are based on recommendations from Park, Miller and Stockmeyer:
|
||||
%% https://www.firstpr.com.au/dsp/rand31/p105-crawford.pdf#page=4
|
||||
-spec shared_secret_a(A_E_E_SK, B_P_E_PK, B_E_E_PK, Protocol, Version, Salt) -> SS
|
||||
when A_E_E_SK :: binary(),
|
||||
B_P_E_PK :: <<_:32*8>>,
|
||||
B_E_E_PK :: <<_:32*8>>,
|
||||
Protocol :: binary(),
|
||||
Version :: binary(),
|
||||
Salt :: binary(),
|
||||
SS :: <<_:32*8>>.
|
||||
%% @doc
|
||||
%% Alice's side of a shared key derivation based on ed25519 keys as generated by this module.
|
||||
%%
|
||||
%% The input value should be between 1 and 2^31-1.
|
||||
%%
|
||||
%% The purpose of this PRNG is for password-based dictionary shuffling.
|
||||
%% Typically Alice would be providing an ephemeral key to establish
|
||||
%% a shared secret while remaining (at least initially) anonymous from Bob. Bob,
|
||||
%% on the other hand, is providing a permanent key and also an ephemeral key,
|
||||
%% proving identity without exposing the shared secret in the future were one of
|
||||
%% the secrets to be compromised.
|
||||
%% <ul>
|
||||
%% <li>`A_E_E_SK' Alice's Ephemeral Ed25519 Secret Key.</li>
|
||||
%% <li>`B_P_E_PK' Bob's Permanent Ed25519 Public Key.</li>
|
||||
%% <li>`B_E_E_PK' Bob's Ephemeral Ed25519 Public Key.</li>
|
||||
%% <li>`Protocol' is an arbitrary binary string, typically a protocol name in UTF-8.</li>
|
||||
%% <li>`Version' is another arbitrary binary string, typically a protocol version in UTF-8.</li>
|
||||
%% <li>`Salt' is a binary salt, which if empty will be replaced by a binary string of zeroes.</li>
|
||||
%% <li>`SS' is the resulting 32-byte shared secret.</li>
|
||||
%% </ul>
|
||||
|
||||
lcg(N) ->
|
||||
M = 16#7FFFFFFF,
|
||||
A = 48271,
|
||||
Q = 44488, % M div A
|
||||
R = 3399, % M rem A
|
||||
Div = N div Q,
|
||||
Rem = N rem Q,
|
||||
S = Rem * A,
|
||||
T = Div * R,
|
||||
Result = S - T,
|
||||
case Result < 0 of
|
||||
false -> Result;
|
||||
true -> Result + M
|
||||
shared_secret_a(A_E_E_SK, B_P_E_PK, B_E_E_PK, Protocol, Version, Salt) ->
|
||||
A_E_X_SK = ed25519_sk_to_x25519(A_E_E_SK),
|
||||
B_P_X_PK = ed25519_pk_to_x25519(B_P_E_PK),
|
||||
B_E_X_PK = ed25519_pk_to_x25519(B_E_E_PK),
|
||||
DH_Permanent = crypto:compute_key(ecdh, B_P_X_PK, A_E_X_SK, x25519),
|
||||
DH_Ephemeral = crypto:compute_key(ecdh, B_E_X_PK, A_E_X_SK, x25519),
|
||||
finalize_hkdf(DH_Permanent, DH_Ephemeral, Protocol, Version, Salt).
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
-spec shared_secret_b(B_P_E_SK, B_E_E_SK, A_E_E_PK, Protocol, Version, Salt) -> SS
|
||||
when B_P_E_SK :: binary(),
|
||||
B_E_E_SK :: binary(),
|
||||
A_E_E_PK :: <<_:32*8>>,
|
||||
Protocol :: binary(),
|
||||
Version :: binary(),
|
||||
Salt :: binary(),
|
||||
SS :: <<_:32*8>>.
|
||||
%% @doc
|
||||
%% Bobs's side of a shared key derivation based on ed25519 keys as generated by this module.
|
||||
%%
|
||||
%% Typically Alice would be providing an ephemeral key to establish
|
||||
%% a shared secret while remaining (at least initially) anonymous from Bob. Bob,
|
||||
%% on the other hand, is providing a permanent key and also an ephemeral key,
|
||||
%% proving identity without exposing the shared secret in the future were one of
|
||||
%% the secrets to be compromised.
|
||||
%% <ul>
|
||||
%% <li>`B_P_E_SK' Bob's Permanent Ed25519 Secret Key.</li>
|
||||
%% <li>`B_E_E_SK' Bob's Ephemeral Ed25519 Secret Key.</li>
|
||||
%% <li>`A_E_E_PK' Alice's Ephemeral Ed25519 Public Key.</li>
|
||||
%% <li>`Protocol' is an arbitrary binary string, typically a protocol name in UTF-8.</li>
|
||||
%% <li>`Version' is another arbitrary binary string, typically a protocol version in UTF-8.</li>
|
||||
%% <li>`Salt' is a binary salt, which if empty will be replaced by a binary string of zeroes.</li>
|
||||
%% <li>`SS' is the resulting 32-byte shared secret.</li>
|
||||
%% </ul>
|
||||
|
||||
shared_secret_b(B_P_E_SK, B_E_E_SK, A_E_E_PK, Protocol, Version, Salt) ->
|
||||
B_P_X_SK = ed25519_sk_to_x25519(B_P_E_SK),
|
||||
B_E_X_SK = ed25519_sk_to_x25519(B_E_E_SK),
|
||||
A_E_X_PK = ed25519_pk_to_x25519(A_E_E_PK),
|
||||
DH_Permanent = crypto:compute_key(ecdh, A_E_X_PK, B_P_X_SK, x25519),
|
||||
DH_Ephemeral = crypto:compute_key(ecdh, A_E_X_PK, B_E_X_SK, x25519),
|
||||
finalize_hkdf(DH_Permanent, DH_Ephemeral, Protocol, Version, Salt).
|
||||
|
||||
finalize_hkdf(DH_Permanent, DH_Ephemeral, Protocol, Version, Salt) ->
|
||||
MixedInput = <<DH_Permanent/binary, DH_Ephemeral/binary>>,
|
||||
Info = <<Protocol/binary, ":", Version/binary, ":">>,
|
||||
hkdf(sha256, MixedInput, Salt, Info).
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
%% Curve25519 Prime Field Constant: 2^255 - 19
|
||||
%% Yes, in hex it reads kind of like "lucky fed"
|
||||
p() -> 16#7FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFED.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
-spec ed25519_pk_to_x25519(ED25519_PubKey) -> X25519_PubKey
|
||||
when ED25519_PubKey :: <<_:32*8>>,
|
||||
X25519_PubKey :: <<_:32*8>>.
|
||||
%% @doc
|
||||
%% Convert a curve 25519 public key from Edwards representation to X-coordinate
|
||||
%% representation.
|
||||
|
||||
ed25519_pk_to_x25519(<<ED25519_PK:32/binary>>) ->
|
||||
<<CompressedInt:256/little-integer>> = ED25519_PK,
|
||||
% Clear the sign bit (MSB) to get the raw y-coordinate
|
||||
Y = CompressedInt band ((1 bsl 255) - 1),
|
||||
|
||||
% Compute u = (1 + y) / (1 - y) mod P
|
||||
Num = (1 + Y) rem p(),
|
||||
Den = (1 - Y + p()) rem p(),
|
||||
case Den =:= 0 of
|
||||
true ->
|
||||
% If y == 1, the point maps to the point at infinity.
|
||||
% On X25519, this translates to u = 0.
|
||||
<<0:256/little-integer>>;
|
||||
false ->
|
||||
U = (Num * mod_inv(Den, p())) rem p(),
|
||||
<<U:256/little-integer>>
|
||||
end.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
-spec ed25519_sk_to_x25519(ED25519_SecKey) -> X25519_SecKey
|
||||
when ED25519_SecKey :: binary(),
|
||||
X25519_SecKey :: <<_:32*8>>.
|
||||
%% @doc
|
||||
%% Convert a curve 25519 secret key from Edwards representation to X-coordinate
|
||||
%% representation.
|
||||
|
||||
ed25519_sk_to_x25519(<<ED25519_SK_Secret:32/binary, _/binary>>) ->
|
||||
<<X25519_SK:32/binary, _/binary>> = crypto:hash(sha512, ED25519_SK_Secret),
|
||||
X25519_SK.
|
||||
|
||||
mod_inv(A, M) ->
|
||||
{1, X, _} = ext_gcd(A, M),
|
||||
(X + M) rem M.
|
||||
|
||||
ext_gcd(A, 0) ->
|
||||
{A, 1, 0};
|
||||
ext_gcd(A, B) ->
|
||||
{G, X1, Y1} = ext_gcd(B, A rem B),
|
||||
{G, Y1, X1 - (A div B) * Y1}.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
-spec hkdf(Hash, IKM, Salt, Info) -> DerivedKey
|
||||
when Hash :: md5 | sha | sha224 | sha256 | sha384 | sha512,
|
||||
IKM :: binary(),
|
||||
Salt :: binary(),
|
||||
Info :: binary(),
|
||||
DerivedKey :: <<_:32*8>>.
|
||||
%% @doc
|
||||
%% 32-byte HMAC-Based Extract-and-Expand Key Derivation
|
||||
%% @equiv hkdf(Hash, IKM, Salt, Info, 32)
|
||||
|
||||
hkdf(Hash, IKM, Salt, Info) ->
|
||||
hkdf(Hash, IKM, Salt, Info, 32).
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
-spec hkdf(Hash, IKM, Salt, Info, Length) -> DerivedKey
|
||||
when Hash :: md5 | sha | sha224 | sha256 | sha384 | sha512,
|
||||
IKM :: binary(),
|
||||
Salt :: binary(),
|
||||
Info :: binary(),
|
||||
Length :: 16 | 20 | 28 | 32 | 48 | 64,
|
||||
DerivedKey :: binary().
|
||||
%% @doc
|
||||
%% RFC-5869 compliant HMAC-Based Extract-and-Expand Key Derivation
|
||||
%%
|
||||
%% RFC-5869:
|
||||
%% <a href="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc5869">https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc5869</a>
|
||||
%%
|
||||
%% The purpose of HKDF is to take an initial, raw secret input that might
|
||||
%% be mathematically strong but structurally "clumpy" and transform it into one
|
||||
%% or more uniform, high-entropy keys suitable for use in cryptography.
|
||||
%%
|
||||
%% The problem is that when Alice and Bob compute a Diffie-Hellman shared secret
|
||||
%% over X25519, the resulting bytes are mathematically secure, but they are not
|
||||
%% evenly distributed as random noise. Cryptographic ciphers expect keys where
|
||||
%% every single bit has an exactly 50% chance of being a 0 or a 1. Passing raw
|
||||
%% DH outputs straight into a cipher can introduce subtle, exploitable patterns.
|
||||
%%
|
||||
%% HKDF "smooths out" the entropy.
|
||||
%%
|
||||
%% HMAC stands for "Keyed-Hash Message Authentication Code", but without the
|
||||
%% leading "K" just to keep us on our toes. The problem it solves is that simply
|
||||
%% concatenating a secret and some target data and hashing them together to produce
|
||||
%% a message authentication hash leaves the resulting hash vulnerable to a "length
|
||||
%% extension attack". An attacker can append additional data to the end of the
|
||||
%% message and arrive at a valid new hash without ever knowing the secret.
|
||||
%%
|
||||
%% RFC-2104 provides good background information on the technique:
|
||||
%% <a href="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc2104">https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc2104</a>
|
||||
|
||||
hkdf(Hash, IKM, Salt, Info, Length) ->
|
||||
PRK = extract(Hash, Salt, IKM),
|
||||
expand(Hash, PRK, Info, Length).
|
||||
|
||||
extract(Hash, <<>>, IKM) ->
|
||||
%% If salt is empty RFC 5869 requires a string of zeros equal to hash size
|
||||
Salt = binary:copy(<<0>>, hash_size(Hash)),
|
||||
extract(Hash, Salt, IKM);
|
||||
extract(Hash, Salt, IKM) ->
|
||||
crypto:mac(hmac, Hash, Salt, IKM).
|
||||
|
||||
expand(Hash, PRK, Info, OutLen) ->
|
||||
HashLen = hash_size(Hash),
|
||||
BlockCount = (OutLen + HashLen - 1) div HashLen,
|
||||
true = BlockCount =< 255,
|
||||
FullBlocks = expand_loop(Hash, PRK, Info, BlockCount, 1, <<>>, <<>>),
|
||||
<<Output:OutLen/binary, _/binary>> = FullBlocks,
|
||||
Output.
|
||||
|
||||
expand_loop(Hash, PRK, Info, N, Counter, PrevT, Acc) when Counter =< N ->
|
||||
Payload = <<PrevT/binary, Info/binary, Counter:8>>,
|
||||
T = crypto:mac(hmac, Hash, PRK, Payload),
|
||||
expand_loop(Hash, PRK, Info, N, Counter + 1, T, <<Acc/binary, T/binary>>);
|
||||
expand_loop(_, _, _, _, _, _, Acc) ->
|
||||
Acc.
|
||||
|
||||
hash_size(md5) -> 16;
|
||||
hash_size(sha) -> 20;
|
||||
hash_size(sha224) -> 28;
|
||||
hash_size(sha256) -> 32;
|
||||
hash_size(sha384) -> 48;
|
||||
hash_size(sha512) -> 64.
|
||||
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user