openmedialibrary_platform_w.../Lib/site-packages/Crypto/Protocol/KDF.py

124 lines
5 KiB
Python
Raw Permalink Normal View History

2019-01-20 10:35:31 +00:00
#
# KDF.py : a collection of Key Derivation Functions
#
# Part of the Python Cryptography Toolkit
#
# ===================================================================
# The contents of this file are dedicated to the public domain. To
# the extent that dedication to the public domain is not available,
# everyone is granted a worldwide, perpetual, royalty-free,
# non-exclusive license to exercise all rights associated with the
# contents of this file for any purpose whatsoever.
# No rights are reserved.
#
# THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
# EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
# MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
# NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS
# BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN
# ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN
# CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE
# SOFTWARE.
# ===================================================================
"""This file contains a collection of standard key derivation functions.
A key derivation function derives one or more secondary secret keys from
one primary secret (a master key or a pass phrase).
This is typically done to insulate the secondary keys from each other,
to avoid that leakage of a secondary key compromises the security of the
master key, or to thwart attacks on pass phrases (e.g. via rainbow tables).
:undocumented: __revision__
"""
__revision__ = "$Id$"
import math
import struct
from Crypto.Util.py3compat import *
from Crypto.Hash import SHA as SHA1, HMAC
from Crypto.Util.strxor import strxor
def PBKDF1(password, salt, dkLen, count=1000, hashAlgo=None):
"""Derive one key from a password (or passphrase).
This function performs key derivation according an old version of
the PKCS#5 standard (v1.5).
This algorithm is called ``PBKDF1``. Even though it is still described
in the latest version of the PKCS#5 standard (version 2, or RFC2898),
newer applications should use the more secure and versatile `PBKDF2` instead.
:Parameters:
password : string
The secret password or pass phrase to generate the key from.
salt : byte string
An 8 byte string to use for better protection from dictionary attacks.
This value does not need to be kept secret, but it should be randomly
chosen for each derivation.
dkLen : integer
The length of the desired key. Default is 16 bytes, suitable for instance for `Crypto.Cipher.AES`.
count : integer
The number of iterations to carry out. It's recommended to use at least 1000.
hashAlgo : module
The hash algorithm to use, as a module or an object from the `Crypto.Hash` package.
The digest length must be no shorter than ``dkLen``.
The default algorithm is `SHA1`.
:Return: A byte string of length `dkLen` that can be used as key.
"""
if not hashAlgo:
hashAlgo = SHA1
password = tobytes(password)
pHash = hashAlgo.new(password+salt)
digest = pHash.digest_size
if dkLen>digest:
raise ValueError("Selected hash algorithm has a too short digest (%d bytes)." % digest)
if len(salt)!=8:
raise ValueError("Salt is not 8 bytes long.")
for i in range(count-1):
pHash = pHash.new(pHash.digest())
return pHash.digest()[:dkLen]
def PBKDF2(password, salt, dkLen=16, count=1000, prf=None):
"""Derive one or more keys from a password (or passphrase).
This performs key derivation according to the PKCS#5 standard (v2.0),
by means of the ``PBKDF2`` algorithm.
:Parameters:
password : string
The secret password or pass phrase to generate the key from.
salt : string
A string to use for better protection from dictionary attacks.
This value does not need to be kept secret, but it should be randomly
chosen for each derivation. It is recommended to be at least 8 bytes long.
dkLen : integer
The cumulative length of the desired keys. Default is 16 bytes, suitable for instance for `Crypto.Cipher.AES`.
count : integer
The number of iterations to carry out. It's recommended to use at least 1000.
prf : callable
A pseudorandom function. It must be a function that returns a pseudorandom string
from two parameters: a secret and a salt. If not specified, HMAC-SHA1 is used.
:Return: A byte string of length `dkLen` that can be used as key material.
If you wanted multiple keys, just break up this string into segments of the desired length.
"""
password = tobytes(password)
if prf is None:
prf = lambda p,s: HMAC.new(p,s,SHA1).digest()
key = b('')
i = 1
while len(key)<dkLen:
U = previousU = prf(password,salt+struct.pack(">I", i))
for j in range(count-1):
previousU = t = prf(password,previousU)
U = strxor(U,t)
key += U
i = i + 1
return key[:dkLen]