taisei/src/util/sha256.c
Andrei Alexeyev b6978178b1
memory: use custom memory allocation wrappers
Introduces wrappers around memory allocation functions in `memory.h`
that should be used instead of the standard C ones.

These never return NULL and, with the exception of `mem_realloc()`,
zero-initialize the allocated memory like `calloc()` does.

All allocations made with the memory.h API must be deallocated with
`mem_free()`. Although standard `free()` will work on some platforms,
it's not portable (currently it won't work on Windows). Likewise,
`mem_free()` must not be used to free foreign allocations.

The standard C allocation functions are now diagnosed as deprecated.
They are, however, available with the `libc_` prefix in case interfacing
with foreign APIs is required. So far they are only used to implement
`memory.h`.

Perhaps the most important change is the introduction of the `ALLOC()`,
`ALLOC_ARRAY()`, and `ALLOC_FLEX()` macros. They take a type as a
parameter, and allocate enough memory with the correct alignment for
that type. That includes overaligned types as well. In most
circumstances you should prefer to use these macros. See the `memory.h`
header for some usage examples.
2023-01-18 13:23:22 +01:00

208 lines
6.5 KiB
C

/*
* This software is licensed under the terms of the MIT License.
* See COPYING for further information.
* ---
* Copyright (c) 2011-2019, Lukas Weber <laochailan@web.de>.
* Copyright (c) 2012-2019, Andrei Alexeyev <akari@taisei-project.org>.
*/
#include "taisei.h"
#include "sha256.h"
#include "util/stringops.h"
typedef uint32_t sha256_word_t;
typedef uint8_t sha256_byte_t;
struct SHA256State {
sha256_byte_t data[64];
sha256_word_t datalen;
uint64_t bitlen;
sha256_word_t state[8];
};
/*
* The following code was taken from https://github.com/B-Con/crypto-algorithms/blob/master/sha256.c
* with minimal modifications for Taisei.
*/
/*********************************************************************
* Filename: sha256.c
* Author: Brad Conte (brad AT bradconte.com)
* Copyright:
* Disclaimer: This code is presented "as is" without any guarantees.
* Details: Implementation of the SHA-256 hashing algorithm.
SHA-256 is one of the three algorithms in the SHA2
specification. The others, SHA-384 and SHA-512, are not
offered in this implementation.
Algorithm specification can be found here:
* http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/fips/fips180-2/fips180-2withchangenotice.pdf
This implementation uses little endian byte order.
*********************************************************************/
/****************************** MACROS ******************************/
#define ROTLEFT(a,b) (((a) << (b)) | ((a) >> (32-(b))))
#define ROTRIGHT(a,b) (((a) >> (b)) | ((a) << (32-(b))))
#define CH(x,y,z) (((x) & (y)) ^ (~(x) & (z)))
#define MAJ(x,y,z) (((x) & (y)) ^ ((x) & (z)) ^ ((y) & (z)))
#define EP0(x) (ROTRIGHT(x,2) ^ ROTRIGHT(x,13) ^ ROTRIGHT(x,22))
#define EP1(x) (ROTRIGHT(x,6) ^ ROTRIGHT(x,11) ^ ROTRIGHT(x,25))
#define SIG0(x) (ROTRIGHT(x,7) ^ ROTRIGHT(x,18) ^ ((x) >> 3))
#define SIG1(x) (ROTRIGHT(x,17) ^ ROTRIGHT(x,19) ^ ((x) >> 10))
/**************************** VARIABLES *****************************/
static const sha256_word_t k[64] = {
0x428a2f98,0x71374491,0xb5c0fbcf,0xe9b5dba5,0x3956c25b,0x59f111f1,0x923f82a4,0xab1c5ed5,
0xd807aa98,0x12835b01,0x243185be,0x550c7dc3,0x72be5d74,0x80deb1fe,0x9bdc06a7,0xc19bf174,
0xe49b69c1,0xefbe4786,0x0fc19dc6,0x240ca1cc,0x2de92c6f,0x4a7484aa,0x5cb0a9dc,0x76f988da,
0x983e5152,0xa831c66d,0xb00327c8,0xbf597fc7,0xc6e00bf3,0xd5a79147,0x06ca6351,0x14292967,
0x27b70a85,0x2e1b2138,0x4d2c6dfc,0x53380d13,0x650a7354,0x766a0abb,0x81c2c92e,0x92722c85,
0xa2bfe8a1,0xa81a664b,0xc24b8b70,0xc76c51a3,0xd192e819,0xd6990624,0xf40e3585,0x106aa070,
0x19a4c116,0x1e376c08,0x2748774c,0x34b0bcb5,0x391c0cb3,0x4ed8aa4a,0x5b9cca4f,0x682e6ff3,
0x748f82ee,0x78a5636f,0x84c87814,0x8cc70208,0x90befffa,0xa4506ceb,0xbef9a3f7,0xc67178f2
};
/*********************** FUNCTION DEFINITIONS ***********************/
static void sha256_transform(SHA256State *ctx, const sha256_byte_t data[])
{
sha256_word_t a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h, i, j, t1, t2, m[64];
for (i = 0, j = 0; i < 16; ++i, j += 4)
m[i] = ((sha256_word_t)data[j] << 24) | ((sha256_word_t)data[j + 1] << 16) | ((sha256_word_t)data[j + 2] << 8) | ((sha256_word_t)data[j + 3]);
for ( ; i < 64; ++i)
m[i] = SIG1(m[i - 2]) + m[i - 7] + SIG0(m[i - 15]) + m[i - 16];
a = ctx->state[0];
b = ctx->state[1];
c = ctx->state[2];
d = ctx->state[3];
e = ctx->state[4];
f = ctx->state[5];
g = ctx->state[6];
h = ctx->state[7];
for (i = 0; i < 64; ++i) {
t1 = h + EP1(e) + CH(e,f,g) + k[i] + m[i];
t2 = EP0(a) + MAJ(a,b,c);
h = g;
g = f;
f = e;
e = d + t1;
d = c;
c = b;
b = a;
a = t1 + t2;
}
ctx->state[0] += a;
ctx->state[1] += b;
ctx->state[2] += c;
ctx->state[3] += d;
ctx->state[4] += e;
ctx->state[5] += f;
ctx->state[6] += g;
ctx->state[7] += h;
}
static void sha256_init(SHA256State *ctx)
{
ctx->datalen = 0;
ctx->bitlen = 0;
ctx->state[0] = 0x6a09e667;
ctx->state[1] = 0xbb67ae85;
ctx->state[2] = 0x3c6ef372;
ctx->state[3] = 0xa54ff53a;
ctx->state[4] = 0x510e527f;
ctx->state[5] = 0x9b05688c;
ctx->state[6] = 0x1f83d9ab;
ctx->state[7] = 0x5be0cd19;
}
SHA256State *sha256_new(void) {
auto ctx = ALLOC(SHA256State);
sha256_init(ctx);
return ctx;
}
void sha256_free(SHA256State *ctx) {
mem_free(ctx);
}
void sha256_update(SHA256State *ctx, const sha256_byte_t data[], size_t len) {
sha256_word_t i;
for (i = 0; i < len; ++i) {
ctx->data[ctx->datalen] = data[i];
ctx->datalen++;
if (ctx->datalen == 64) {
sha256_transform(ctx, ctx->data);
ctx->bitlen += 512;
ctx->datalen = 0;
}
}
}
void sha256_final(SHA256State *ctx, sha256_byte_t hash[], size_t hashlen) {
assert(hashlen >= SHA256_BLOCK_SIZE);
sha256_word_t i;
i = ctx->datalen;
// Pad whatever data is left in the buffer.
if (ctx->datalen < 56) {
ctx->data[i++] = 0x80;
while (i < 56)
ctx->data[i++] = 0x00;
}
else {
ctx->data[i++] = 0x80;
while (i < 64)
ctx->data[i++] = 0x00;
sha256_transform(ctx, ctx->data);
memset(ctx->data, 0, 56);
}
// Append to the padding the total message's length in bits and transform.
ctx->bitlen += ctx->datalen * 8;
ctx->data[63] = ctx->bitlen;
ctx->data[62] = ctx->bitlen >> 8;
ctx->data[61] = ctx->bitlen >> 16;
ctx->data[60] = ctx->bitlen >> 24;
ctx->data[59] = ctx->bitlen >> 32;
ctx->data[58] = ctx->bitlen >> 40;
ctx->data[57] = ctx->bitlen >> 48;
ctx->data[56] = ctx->bitlen >> 56;
sha256_transform(ctx, ctx->data);
// Since this implementation uses little endian byte ordering and SHA uses big endian,
// reverse all the bytes when copying the final state to the output hash.
for (i = 0; i < 4; ++i) {
hash[i] = (ctx->state[0] >> (24 - i * 8)) & 0x000000ff;
hash[i + 4] = (ctx->state[1] >> (24 - i * 8)) & 0x000000ff;
hash[i + 8] = (ctx->state[2] >> (24 - i * 8)) & 0x000000ff;
hash[i + 12] = (ctx->state[3] >> (24 - i * 8)) & 0x000000ff;
hash[i + 16] = (ctx->state[4] >> (24 - i * 8)) & 0x000000ff;
hash[i + 20] = (ctx->state[5] >> (24 - i * 8)) & 0x000000ff;
hash[i + 24] = (ctx->state[6] >> (24 - i * 8)) & 0x000000ff;
hash[i + 28] = (ctx->state[7] >> (24 - i * 8)) & 0x000000ff;
}
}
void sha256_digest(const uint8_t *data, size_t len, uint8_t hash[SHA256_BLOCK_SIZE], size_t hashlen) {
assert(hashlen >= SHA256_BLOCK_SIZE);
SHA256State ctx;
sha256_init(&ctx);
sha256_update(&ctx, data, len);
sha256_final(&ctx, hash, hashlen);
}
void sha256_hexdigest(const uint8_t *data, size_t len, char hash[SHA256_HEXDIGEST_SIZE], size_t hashlen) {
assert(hashlen >= SHA256_HEXDIGEST_SIZE);
uint8_t digest[SHA256_BLOCK_SIZE];
sha256_digest(data, len, digest, sizeof(digest));
hexdigest(digest, sizeof(digest), hash, hashlen);
}