return a "zero" bignum as BN_new() does - so reset 'top'. During
BN_CTX_end(), released bignums should be consistent so enforce this in
debug builds. Also, reduce the number of wasted BN_clear_free() calls from
BN_CTX_end() (typically by 75% or so).
Submitted by: Nils Larsch
Reviewed by: Geoff Thorpe, Ulf Möller
automatically to accomodate the value, some compilers fail to do so. Most
notably 0x0123456789ABCDEF should come out as long long in 32-bit context,
but HP compiler truncates it to 32-bit value. Which in turn breaks GF(2^m)
arithmetics in hpux-parisc2-cc build. Therefore this fix...
Use BUF_strlcat() instead of strcat().
Use BIO_snprintf() instead of sprintf().
In some cases, keep better track of buffer lengths.
This is part of a large change submitted by Markus Friedl <markus@openbsd.org>
- Add missing bn_check_top() calls and relocate some others
- Use BN_is_zero() where appropriate
- Remove assert()s that bn_check_top() is already covering
- Simplify the code in places (esp. bn_expand2())
- Only keep ambiguous zero handling if BN_STRICT isn't defined
- Remove some white-space and make some other aesthetic tweaks
the same thing.
Also, I have some stuff on the back-burner related to some BN_CTX notes
from Peter Gutmann about his cryptlib hacks to the bignum code. The BN_CTX
comments are there to remind me of some relevant points in the code.
once in the source (where it is set for the benefit of no other code
whatsoever). I've deprecated the declaration in the header and likewise
made the use of the flag conditional in bn_lib.c. Note, this change also
NULLs the 'd' pointer in a BIGNUM when it is reset but not deallocated.
which, in turn, are used nowhere at all. This is a good thing because
bn_set_max() would currently generate code that wouldn't compile (BIGNUM
has no 'max' element).
The only apparent use for bn_set_[low|high] would be for implementing
windowing algorithms, and all of openssl's seem to use bn_***_words()
helpers instead (including the BN_div() that Nils fixed recently, which had
been using independently-coded versions of what these unused macros are
intended for). I'm therefore consigning these macros to cvs oblivion in the
name of readability.
bn_correct_top() or bn_check_top() depending on debug settings. For
internal source, all bn_fix_top()s should be converted one way or the other
depending on whether the use of bn_correct_top() is justified.
For BN_div_recp(), these cases should not require correction if the other
bignum functions are doing their jobs properly, so convert to
bn_check_top().
(ie. where top may be zero, or it may be one if the corresponding word is
set to zero). Note, this only affects the macros in bn.h, there are probably
similar corrections required in some c files.
Also, clarify the audit-related macros at the top of the header. Mental
note: I must not forget to clean all this out before 0.9.8 is released ...
against inconsistent BIGNUMs coming out of any of its API functions. So
this change no longer "fixes" the bn_print.c functions, but it makes for
cleaner code. This patch was a part of ticket 697.
PR: 697
Submitted by: Otto Moerbeek
Reviewed by: Geoff Thorpe
ticket 697 (though uses a different solution than the proposed one). This
problem was initially raised by Otto Moerbeek.
PR: 697
Submitted by: Nils Larsch
Reviewed by: Geoff Thorpe
and bn_add_words to avoid using fake bignums to window other bignums that
can lead to corruption. This change allows all bignum tests to pass with
BN_DEBUG and BN_DEBUG_RAND debugging and valgrind. NB: This should be
tested on a few different architectures and configuration targets, as the
bignum code this deals with is quite preprocessor (and assembly) sensitive.
Submitted by: Nils Narsch
Reviewed by: Geoff Thorpe, Ulf Moeller
generally a more efficient comparison than comparing two integers, and the
first of these two loops was off-by-one (copying one too many values). This
change also removes a superfluous assignment that would set an unused word
to zero (and potentially allow an overrun in some cases).
Submitted by: Nils Larsch
Reviewed by: Geoff Thorpe
constant BIGNUMs. It turns out that this trips up different but equally
useful compiler warnings to -Wcast-qual, and so wasn't worth the ugliness
it created. (Thanks to Ulf for the forehead-slap.)
and structures as constant without having to cast away const at any point.
There is still plenty of other code that makes gcc's "-Wcast-qual" unhappy,
but crypto/bn/ is now ok. Purists are welcome to suggest alternatives.
constructing BIGNUM structures with pointers offset into other bignums
(among other things). This corrects some of it that is too plainly insane,
and tries to ensure that bignums are normalised when passed to other
functions.
structures being passed in to or out of API functions, and this corrects a
couple of cases found so far.
Also, lop off a couple of bytes of white-space.
I have tried to convert 'len' type variable declarations to unsigned as a
means to address these warnings when appropriate, but when in doubt I have
used casts in the comparisons instead. The better solution (that would get
us all lynched by API users) would be to go through and convert all the
function prototypes and structure definitions to use unsigned variables
except when signed is necessary. The proliferation of (signed) "int" for
strictly non-negative uses is unfortunate.
except internally to the allocator BN_CTX_new(), as such this deprecates
the use of BN_CTX_init() in the API. Moreover, the structure definition of
BN_CTX is taken out of bn_lcl.h and moved into bn_ctx.c itself.
NDEBUG should probably only be "forced" in the top-level configuration, but
until it is I will avoid removing it from bn_ctx.c which might surprise
people with massive slow-downs in their keygens. So I've left it in
bn_ctx.c but tidied up the preprocessor logic a touch and made it more
tolerant of debugging efforts.
be) precompiled out in the API headers. This change is to ensure that if
it is defined when compiling openssl, the deprecated functions aren't
implemented either.
sure the loop does correctly stop and breaking ("division by zero")
modulus operations are not performed. The (pre-generated) prime
table crypto/bn/bn_prime.h was already correct, but it could not be
re-generated on some platforms because of the "division by zero"
situation in the script.
replaced #if logic around bn_sub_part_words in bn_mul.c. I rely upon
OPENSSL_BN_ASM_PART_WORDS being added by ./Configure script. Would it
still work on non-Unix platforms?
- a patch to fix a memory leak in rsa_gen.c
- a note about compiler warnings with unions
- a note about improving structure element names
This applies his patch and implements a solution to the notes.
key-generation and prime-checking functions. Rather than explicitly passing
callback functions and caller-defined context data for the callbacks, a new
structure BN_GENCB is defined that encapsulates this; a pointer to the
structure is passed to all such functions instead.
This wrapper structure allows the encapsulation of "old" and "new" style
callbacks - "new" callbacks return a boolean result on the understanding
that returning FALSE should terminate keygen/primality processing. The
BN_GENCB abstraction will allow future callback modifications without
needing to break binary compatibility nor change the API function
prototypes. The new API functions have been given names ending in "_ex" and
the old functions are implemented as wrappers to the new ones. The
OPENSSL_NO_DEPRECATED symbol has been introduced so that, if defined,
declaration of the older functions will be skipped. NB: Some
openssl-internal code will stick with the older callbacks for now, so
appropriate "#undef" logic will be put in place - this is in case the user
is *building* openssl (rather than *including* its headers) with this
symbol defined.
There is another change in the new _ex functions; the key-generation
functions do not return key structures but operate on structures passed by
the caller, the return value is a boolean. This will allow for a smoother
transition to having key-generation as "virtual function" in the various
***_METHOD tables.
the divisor was a bit more complex than I first saw. The lost bit
can't just be discarded, as there are cases where it is important.
For example, look at dividing 320000 with 80000 vs. 80001 (all
decimals), the difference is crucial. The trick here is to check if
that lost bit was 1, and in that case, do the following:
1. subtract the quotient from the remainder
2. as long as the remainder is negative, add the divisor (the whole
divisor, not the shofted down copy) to it, and decrease the
quotient by one.
There's probably a nice mathematical proof for this already, but I
won't bother with that, unless someone requests it from me.
PR: 338
Here's the description, submitted by Gisle Vanem <giva@bgnett.no>:
1. sock_init() renamed to ssl_sock_init() in ./apps/s_socket.c due
to name-clash with Watt-32.
2. rand() renamed to Rand() in ./crypto/bn/divtest.c due to name-clash
with <stdlib.h>
3. Added calls to dbug_init()/sock_init() in some demo programs.
4. Changed cflags/lflags in configure. Watt-32 install root now taken
from $WATT_ROOT.
the new method names where _GF... suffixes have been removed.
Revert changes to ..._{get/set}_Jprojective_coordinates_...:
The current implementation for ECC over binary fields does not use
projective coordinates, and if it did, it would not use Jacobian
projective coordinates; so it's OK to use the ..._GFp prefix for all
this.
Add author attributions to some files so that it doesn't look
as if Sun wrote all of this :-)
The 'OPENSSL_NO_SUN_DIV' default is still subject to change,
so I didn't bother to finish the CHANGES entry yet.
Submitted by: Douglas Stebila <douglas.stebila@sun.com>, Sheueling Chang <sheueling.chang@sun.com>
(CHANGES entry by Bodo Moeller)
happens reliably, even if the BIGNUM is already sufficiently large.
[Note that the bn_expand()/bn_wexpand() macros call bn_expand2() only
if the BIGNUM actually has to grow, so this change does not add any
new overhead as currently bn_expand2() is never called directly.]
HP-UX in common in ./config). Note that for the moment of this writing
none of 64-bit platforms pass bntest. I'm committing this anyway as it's
too frustrating to patch snapshots over and over while 0.9.6 is known to
work.
details (performance numbers and accompanying discussions:-). Note that
the code is not engaged in ./Configure yet. I'll add it later this week
along with updates for .spec file.
Submitted by:
Reviewed by:
PR:
It does not appear to be faster than the current Montgomery code
except for very small moduli (somewhere between 192 and 224 bits
in a 64-bit Sun environment, and even less than 192 bits
on 32 bit systems).