tor/src/common/aes.c
2011-11-11 11:47:25 -05:00

278 lines
7.7 KiB
C

/* Copyright (c) 2001, Matej Pfajfar.
* Copyright (c) 2001-2004, Roger Dingledine.
* Copyright (c) 2004-2006, Roger Dingledine, Nick Mathewson.
* Copyright (c) 2007-2011, The Tor Project, Inc. */
/* See LICENSE for licensing information */
/**
* \file aes.c
* \brief Implements a counter-mode stream cipher on top of AES.
**/
#include "orconfig.h"
#include <openssl/opensslv.h>
#include <assert.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include "compat.h"
#include "aes.h"
#include "util.h"
#include "torlog.h"
/* We have 2 strategies for getting AES: Via OpenSSL's AES_encrypt function,
* via OpenSSL's EVP_EncryptUpdate function. */
/** Defined iff we're using OpenSSL's AES functions for AES. */
#undef USE_OPENSSL_AES
/** Defined iff we're using OpenSSL's EVP code for AES. */
#undef USE_OPENSSL_EVP
/* Here we pick which to use, if none is force-defined above */
#if (!defined(USE_OPENSSL_AES) && \
!defined(USE_OPENSSL_EVP))
#define USE_OPENSSL_EVP
#endif
/* Include OpenSSL headers as needed. */
#ifdef USE_OPENSSL_AES
# include <openssl/aes.h>
#endif
#ifdef USE_OPENSSL_EVP
# include <openssl/evp.h>
#endif
/*======================================================================*/
/* Interface to AES code, and counter implementation */
/** Implements an AES counter-mode cipher. */
struct aes_cnt_cipher {
/** This next element (however it's defined) is the AES key. */
#if defined(USE_OPENSSL_EVP)
EVP_CIPHER_CTX key;
#elif defined(USE_OPENSSL_AES)
AES_KEY key;
#endif
#if !defined(WORDS_BIGENDIAN)
#define USING_COUNTER_VARS
/** These four values, together, implement a 128-bit counter, with
* counter0 as the low-order word and counter3 as the high-order word. */
uint32_t counter3;
uint32_t counter2;
uint32_t counter1;
uint32_t counter0;
#endif
union {
/** The counter, in big-endian order, as bytes. */
uint8_t buf[16];
/** The counter, in big-endian order, as big-endian words. Note that
* on big-endian platforms, this is redundant with counter3...0,
* so we just use these values instead. */
uint32_t buf32[4];
} ctr_buf;
/** The encrypted value of ctr_buf. */
uint8_t buf[16];
/** Our current stream position within buf. */
uint8_t pos;
};
#if !defined(USING_COUNTER_VARS)
#define COUNTER(c, n) ((c)->ctr_buf.buf32[3-(n)])
#else
#define COUNTER(c, n) ((c)->counter ## n)
#endif
/**
* Helper function: set <b>cipher</b>'s internal buffer to the encrypted
* value of the current counter.
*/
static INLINE void
_aes_fill_buf(aes_cnt_cipher_t *cipher)
{
/* We don't currently use OpenSSL's counter mode implementation because:
* 1) some versions have known bugs
* 2) its attitude towards IVs is not our own
* 3) changing the counter position was not trivial, last time I looked.
* None of these issues are insurmountable in principle.
*/
#if defined(USE_OPENSSL_EVP)
{
int outl=16, inl=16;
EVP_EncryptUpdate(&cipher->key, cipher->buf, &outl,
cipher->ctr_buf.buf, inl);
}
#elif defined(USE_OPENSSL_AES)
AES_encrypt(cipher->ctr_buf.buf, cipher->buf, &cipher->key);
#endif
}
/**
* Return a newly allocated counter-mode AES128 cipher implementation.
*/
aes_cnt_cipher_t*
aes_new_cipher(void)
{
aes_cnt_cipher_t* result = tor_malloc_zero(sizeof(aes_cnt_cipher_t));
return result;
}
/** Set the key of <b>cipher</b> to <b>key</b>, which is
* <b>key_bits</b> bits long (must be 128, 192, or 256). Also resets
* the counter to 0.
*/
void
aes_set_key(aes_cnt_cipher_t *cipher, const char *key, int key_bits)
{
#if defined(USE_OPENSSL_EVP)
const EVP_CIPHER *c;
switch (key_bits) {
case 128: c = EVP_aes_128_ecb(); break;
case 192: c = EVP_aes_192_ecb(); break;
case 256: c = EVP_aes_256_ecb(); break;
default: tor_assert(0);
}
EVP_EncryptInit(&cipher->key, c, (const unsigned char*)key, NULL);
#elif defined(USE_OPENSSL_AES)
AES_set_encrypt_key((const unsigned char *)key, key_bits, &(cipher->key));
#endif
#ifdef USING_COUNTER_VARS
cipher->counter0 = 0;
cipher->counter1 = 0;
cipher->counter2 = 0;
cipher->counter3 = 0;
#endif
memset(cipher->ctr_buf.buf, 0, sizeof(cipher->ctr_buf.buf));
cipher->pos = 0;
_aes_fill_buf(cipher);
}
/** Release storage held by <b>cipher</b>
*/
void
aes_free_cipher(aes_cnt_cipher_t *cipher)
{
if (!cipher)
return;
#ifdef USE_OPENSSL_EVP
EVP_CIPHER_CTX_cleanup(&cipher->key);
#endif
memset(cipher, 0, sizeof(aes_cnt_cipher_t));
tor_free(cipher);
}
#if defined(USING_COUNTER_VARS)
#define UPDATE_CTR_BUF(c, n) STMT_BEGIN \
(c)->ctr_buf.buf32[3-(n)] = htonl((c)->counter ## n); \
STMT_END
#else
#define UPDATE_CTR_BUF(c, n)
#endif
/** Encrypt <b>len</b> bytes from <b>input</b>, storing the result in
* <b>output</b>. Uses the key in <b>cipher</b>, and advances the counter
* by <b>len</b> bytes as it encrypts.
*/
void
aes_crypt(aes_cnt_cipher_t *cipher, const char *input, size_t len,
char *output)
{
/* This function alone is up to 5% of our runtime in some profiles; anything
* we could do to make it faster would be great.
*
* Experimenting suggests that unrolling the inner loop into a switch
* statement doesn't help. What does seem to help is making the input and
* output buffers word aligned, and never crypting anything besides an
* integer number of words at a time -- it shaves maybe 4-5% of the per-byte
* encryption time measured by bench_aes. We can't do that with the current
* Tor protocol, though: Tor really likes to crypt things in 509-byte
* chunks.
*
* If we were really ambitous, we'd force len to be a multiple of the block
* size, and shave maybe another 4-5% off.
*/
int c = cipher->pos;
if (PREDICT_UNLIKELY(!len)) return;
while (1) {
do {
if (len-- == 0) { cipher->pos = c; return; }
*(output++) = *(input++) ^ cipher->buf[c];
} while (++c != 16);
cipher->pos = c = 0;
if (PREDICT_UNLIKELY(! ++COUNTER(cipher, 0))) {
if (PREDICT_UNLIKELY(! ++COUNTER(cipher, 1))) {
if (PREDICT_UNLIKELY(! ++COUNTER(cipher, 2))) {
++COUNTER(cipher, 3);
UPDATE_CTR_BUF(cipher, 3);
}
UPDATE_CTR_BUF(cipher, 2);
}
UPDATE_CTR_BUF(cipher, 1);
}
UPDATE_CTR_BUF(cipher, 0);
_aes_fill_buf(cipher);
}
}
/** Encrypt <b>len</b> bytes from <b>input</b>, storing the results in place.
* Uses the key in <b>cipher</b>, and advances the counter by <b>len</b> bytes
* as it encrypts.
*/
void
aes_crypt_inplace(aes_cnt_cipher_t *cipher, char *data, size_t len)
{
/* XXXX This function is up to 5% of our runtime in some profiles;
* we should look into unrolling some of the loops; taking advantage
* of alignment, using a bigger buffer, and so on. Not till after 0.1.2.x,
* though. */
int c = cipher->pos;
if (PREDICT_UNLIKELY(!len)) return;
while (1) {
do {
if (len-- == 0) { cipher->pos = c; return; }
*(data++) ^= cipher->buf[c];
} while (++c != 16);
cipher->pos = c = 0;
if (PREDICT_UNLIKELY(! ++COUNTER(cipher, 0))) {
if (PREDICT_UNLIKELY(! ++COUNTER(cipher, 1))) {
if (PREDICT_UNLIKELY(! ++COUNTER(cipher, 2))) {
++COUNTER(cipher, 3);
UPDATE_CTR_BUF(cipher, 3);
}
UPDATE_CTR_BUF(cipher, 2);
}
UPDATE_CTR_BUF(cipher, 1);
}
UPDATE_CTR_BUF(cipher, 0);
_aes_fill_buf(cipher);
}
}
/** Reset the 128-bit counter of <b>cipher</b> to the 16-bit big-endian value
* in <b>iv</b>. */
void
aes_set_iv(aes_cnt_cipher_t *cipher, const char *iv)
{
#ifdef USING_COUNTER_VARS
cipher->counter3 = ntohl(get_uint32(iv));
cipher->counter2 = ntohl(get_uint32(iv+4));
cipher->counter1 = ntohl(get_uint32(iv+8));
cipher->counter0 = ntohl(get_uint32(iv+12));
#endif
cipher->pos = 0;
memcpy(cipher->ctr_buf.buf, iv, 16);
_aes_fill_buf(cipher);
}