Commit graph

31 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alan Somers
2a7a4b196d tests/sys/opencrypto: use python3
python2 will be EOL soon

Reviewed by:	lwhsu, jmg
MFC after:	2 weeks
Sponsored by:	Axcient
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D25682
2020-07-20 12:47:15 +00:00
Mark Johnston
9a1184de2a Add safexcel(4) to cryptotest.
MFC after:	1 week
Sponsored by:	Rubicon Communications, LLC (Netgate)
2020-07-14 14:11:54 +00:00
John Baldwin
6c80c319ef Remove support for the algorithms deprecated in r348876.
This removes support for the following algorithms:
- ARC4
- Blowfish
- CAST128
- DES
- 3DES
- MD5-HMAC
- Skipjack

Since /dev/crypto no longer supports 3DES, stop testing the 3DES KAT
vectors in cryptotest.py.

Reviewed by:	cem (previous version)
Relnotes:	yes
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D24346
2020-05-02 14:20:32 +00:00
John Baldwin
c034143269 Refactor driver and consumer interfaces for OCF (in-kernel crypto).
- The linked list of cryptoini structures used in session
  initialization is replaced with a new flat structure: struct
  crypto_session_params.  This session includes a new mode to define
  how the other fields should be interpreted.  Available modes
  include:

  - COMPRESS (for compression/decompression)
  - CIPHER (for simply encryption/decryption)
  - DIGEST (computing and verifying digests)
  - AEAD (combined auth and encryption such as AES-GCM and AES-CCM)
  - ETA (combined auth and encryption using encrypt-then-authenticate)

  Additional modes could be added in the future (e.g. if we wanted to
  support TLS MtE for AES-CBC in the kernel we could add a new mode
  for that.  TLS modes might also affect how AAD is interpreted, etc.)

  The flat structure also includes the key lengths and algorithms as
  before.  However, code doesn't have to walk the linked list and
  switch on the algorithm to determine which key is the auth key vs
  encryption key.  The 'csp_auth_*' fields are always used for auth
  keys and settings and 'csp_cipher_*' for cipher.  (Compression
  algorithms are stored in csp_cipher_alg.)

- Drivers no longer register a list of supported algorithms.  This
  doesn't quite work when you factor in modes (e.g. a driver might
  support both AES-CBC and SHA2-256-HMAC separately but not combined
  for ETA).  Instead, a new 'crypto_probesession' method has been
  added to the kobj interface for symmteric crypto drivers.  This
  method returns a negative value on success (similar to how
  device_probe works) and the crypto framework uses this value to pick
  the "best" driver.  There are three constants for hardware
  (e.g. ccr), accelerated software (e.g. aesni), and plain software
  (cryptosoft) that give preference in that order.  One effect of this
  is that if you request only hardware when creating a new session,
  you will no longer get a session using accelerated software.
  Another effect is that the default setting to disallow software
  crypto via /dev/crypto now disables accelerated software.

  Once a driver is chosen, 'crypto_newsession' is invoked as before.

- Crypto operations are now solely described by the flat 'cryptop'
  structure.  The linked list of descriptors has been removed.

  A separate enum has been added to describe the type of data buffer
  in use instead of using CRYPTO_F_* flags to make it easier to add
  more types in the future if needed (e.g. wired userspace buffers for
  zero-copy).  It will also make it easier to re-introduce separate
  input and output buffers (in-kernel TLS would benefit from this).

  Try to make the flags related to IV handling less insane:

  - CRYPTO_F_IV_SEPARATE means that the IV is stored in the 'crp_iv'
    member of the operation structure.  If this flag is not set, the
    IV is stored in the data buffer at the 'crp_iv_start' offset.

  - CRYPTO_F_IV_GENERATE means that a random IV should be generated
    and stored into the data buffer.  This cannot be used with
    CRYPTO_F_IV_SEPARATE.

  If a consumer wants to deal with explicit vs implicit IVs, etc. it
  can always generate the IV however it needs and store partial IVs in
  the buffer and the full IV/nonce in crp_iv and set
  CRYPTO_F_IV_SEPARATE.

  The layout of the buffer is now described via fields in cryptop.
  crp_aad_start and crp_aad_length define the boundaries of any AAD.
  Previously with GCM and CCM you defined an auth crd with this range,
  but for ETA your auth crd had to span both the AAD and plaintext
  (and they had to be adjacent).

  crp_payload_start and crp_payload_length define the boundaries of
  the plaintext/ciphertext.  Modes that only do a single operation
  (COMPRESS, CIPHER, DIGEST) should only use this region and leave the
  AAD region empty.

  If a digest is present (or should be generated), it's starting
  location is marked by crp_digest_start.

  Instead of using the CRD_F_ENCRYPT flag to determine the direction
  of the operation, cryptop now includes an 'op' field defining the
  operation to perform.  For digests I've added a new VERIFY digest
  mode which assumes a digest is present in the input and fails the
  request with EBADMSG if it doesn't match the internally-computed
  digest.  GCM and CCM already assumed this, and the new AEAD mode
  requires this for decryption.  The new ETA mode now also requires
  this for decryption, so IPsec and GELI no longer do their own
  authentication verification.  Simple DIGEST operations can also do
  this, though there are no in-tree consumers.

  To eventually support some refcounting to close races, the session
  cookie is now passed to crypto_getop() and clients should no longer
  set crp_sesssion directly.

- Assymteric crypto operation structures should be allocated via
  crypto_getkreq() and freed via crypto_freekreq().  This permits the
  crypto layer to track open asym requests and close races with a
  driver trying to unregister while asym requests are in flight.

- crypto_copyback, crypto_copydata, crypto_apply, and
  crypto_contiguous_subsegment now accept the 'crp' object as the
  first parameter instead of individual members.  This makes it easier
  to deal with different buffer types in the future as well as
  separate input and output buffers.  It's also simpler for driver
  writers to use.

- bus_dmamap_load_crp() loads a DMA mapping for a crypto buffer.
  This understands the various types of buffers so that drivers that
  use DMA do not have to be aware of different buffer types.

- Helper routines now exist to build an auth context for HMAC IPAD
  and OPAD.  This reduces some duplicated work among drivers.

- Key buffers are now treated as const throughout the framework and in
  device drivers.  However, session key buffers provided when a session
  is created are expected to remain alive for the duration of the
  session.

- GCM and CCM sessions now only specify a cipher algorithm and a cipher
  key.  The redundant auth information is not needed or used.

- For cryptosoft, split up the code a bit such that the 'process'
  callback now invokes a function pointer in the session.  This
  function pointer is set based on the mode (in effect) though it
  simplifies a few edge cases that would otherwise be in the switch in
  'process'.

  It does split up GCM vs CCM which I think is more readable even if there
  is some duplication.

- I changed /dev/crypto to support GMAC requests using CRYPTO_AES_NIST_GMAC
  as an auth algorithm and updated cryptocheck to work with it.

- Combined cipher and auth sessions via /dev/crypto now always use ETA
  mode.  The COP_F_CIPHER_FIRST flag is now a no-op that is ignored.
  This was actually documented as being true in crypto(4) before, but
  the code had not implemented this before I added the CIPHER_FIRST
  flag.

- I have not yet updated /dev/crypto to be aware of explicit modes for
  sessions.  I will probably do that at some point in the future as well
  as teach it about IV/nonce and tag lengths for AEAD so we can support
  all of the NIST KAT tests for GCM and CCM.

- I've split up the exising crypto.9 manpage into several pages
  of which many are written from scratch.

- I have converted all drivers and consumers in the tree and verified
  that they compile, but I have not tested all of them.  I have tested
  the following drivers:

  - cryptosoft
  - aesni (AES only)
  - blake2
  - ccr

  and the following consumers:

  - cryptodev
  - IPsec
  - ktls_ocf
  - GELI (lightly)

  I have not tested the following:

  - ccp
  - aesni with sha
  - hifn
  - kgssapi_krb5
  - ubsec
  - padlock
  - safe
  - armv8_crypto (aarch64)
  - glxsb (i386)
  - sec (ppc)
  - cesa (armv7)
  - cryptocteon (mips64)
  - nlmsec (mips64)

Discussed with:	cem
Relnotes:	yes
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D23677
2020-03-27 18:25:23 +00:00
Enji Cooper
84a457c6c0 tests/sys/opencrypto: enable armv8crypto on aarch64
This change makes required modifications in runtests to also only require the
aesni module on Intel (i386/amd64) platforms, as it is an Intel specific
module.

MFC after:	1 month
MFC to:		^/stable/12 (support not present on ^/stable/11)
Submitted by:	Greg V <greg@unrelenting.technology>
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D21018
2019-08-10 15:53:42 +00:00
Enji Cooper
f2a344455f Add my name to the copyright
I have contributed a number of changes to these tests over the past few
hundred revisions, and believe I deserve credit for the changes I have
made (plus, the copyright hadn't been updated since 2014).

MFC after:	1 week
2019-05-21 04:11:16 +00:00
Enji Cooper
a60d9a9892 Fix KAT(CCM)?Parser file descriptor leaks
Make `KAT(CCM)?Parser` into a context suite-capable object by implementing
`__enter__` and `__exit__` methods which manage opening up the file descriptors
and closing them on context exit. This implementation was decided over adding
destructor logic to a `__del__` method, as there are a number of issues around
object lifetimes when dealing with threading cleanup, atexit handlers, and a
number of other less obvious edgecases. Plus, the architected solution is more
pythonic and clean.

Complete the iterator implementation by implementing a `__next__` method for
both classes which handles iterating over the data using a generator pattern,
and by changing `__iter__` to return the object instead of the data which it
would iterate over. Alias the `__next__` method to `next` when working with
python 2.x in order to maintain functional compatibility between the two major
versions.

As part of this work and to ensure readability, push the initialization of the
parser objects up one layer and pass it down to a helper function. This could
have been done via a decorator, but I was trying to keep it simple for other
developers to make it easier to modify in the future.

This fixes ResourceWarnings with python 3.

PR:		237403
MFC after:	1 week
Tested with:	python 2.7.16 (amd64), python 3.6.8 (amd64)
2019-05-21 02:30:43 +00:00
Enji Cooper
e8b4bbdfae Followup to r347996
Replace uses of `foo.encode("hex")` with `binascii.hexlify(foo)` for forwards
compatibility between python 2.x and python 3.

PR:		237403
MFC after:	1 week
2019-05-21 00:30:29 +00:00
Enji Cooper
d99c2cecc8 Replace uses of foo.(de|en)code('hex') with binascii.(un)?hexlify(foo)
Python 3 no longer doesn't support encoding/decoding hexadecimal numbers using
the `str.format` method. The backwards compatible new method (using the
binascii module/methods) is a comparable means of converting to/from
hexadecimal format.

In short, the functional change is the following:
* `foo.decode('hex')` -> `binascii.unhexlify(foo)`
* `foo.encode('hex')` -> `binascii.hexlify(foo)`

While here, move the dpkt import in `cryptodev.py` down per PEP8, so it comes
after the standard library provided imports.

PR:		237403
MFC after:	1 week
2019-05-20 16:38:12 +00:00
Enji Cooper
2a96ae15f0 Fix typo: Plen should be plen
MFC after:	1 month
MFC with:	r346617
Reported by:	pylint -E
2019-04-24 05:49:48 +00:00
Enji Cooper
b106e0fccc Chase PEP-3110
Replace `except Environment, e:` with `except Environment as e` for
compatibility between python 2.x and python 3.x.

While here, fix a bad indentation change from r346620 by reindenting the code
properly.

MFC after:	2 months
2019-04-24 04:50:03 +00:00
Enji Cooper
ac65c82761 Reapply whitespace style changes from r346443 after recent changes to tests/sys/opencrypto
From r346443:
"""
Replace hard tabs with four-character indentations, per PEP8.

This is being done to separate stylistic changes from the tests from functional
ones, as I accidentally introduced a bug to the tests when I used four-space
indentation locally.

No functional change.
"""

MFC after:	2 months
Discussed with:	jhb
2019-04-24 04:40:24 +00:00
John Baldwin
151f0ca897 Test the AES-CCM test vectors from the NIST Known Answer Tests.
The CCM test vectors use a slightly different file format in that
there are global key-value pairs as well as section key-value pairs
that need to be used in each test.  In addition, the sections can set
multiple key-value pairs in the section name.  The CCM KAT parser
class is an iterator that returns a dictionary once per test where the
dictionary contains all of the relevant key-value pairs for a given
test (global, section name, section, test-specific).

Note that all of the CCM decrypt tests use nonce and tag lengths that
are not supported by OCF (OCF only supports a 12 byte nonce and 16
byte tag), so none of the decryption vectors are actually tested.

Reviewed by:	ngie
MFC after:	1 month
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19978
2019-04-24 00:23:06 +00:00
John Baldwin
de0f7dca5e Run the plain SHA digest tests from NIST.
Pass in an explicit digest length to the Crypto constructor since it
was assuming only sessions with a MAC key would have a MAC.  Passing
an explicit size allows us to test the full digest in HMAC tests as
well.

Reviewed by:	cem
MFC after:	1 month
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19884
2019-04-24 00:16:39 +00:00
John Baldwin
c091d0d95d Use more descriptive algorithm names in skip messages.
Reviewed by:	cem, ngie
MFC after:	1 month
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19977
2019-04-24 00:14:37 +00:00
John Baldwin
aeb5c8e609 Skip tests with missing test vectors instead of failing.
This copes more gracefully when older version of the nist-kat package
are intalled that don't have newer test vectors such as CCM or plain
SHA.

If the nist-kat package is not installed at all, this still fails with
an error.

Reviewed by:	cem
MFC after:	1 month
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D20034
2019-04-24 00:10:21 +00:00
Enji Cooper
03accca747 Revert r346443
My wide sweeping stylistic change (while well intended) is impeding others from
working on `tests/sys/opencrypto`.

The plan is to revert the change in ^/head, then reintroduce the changes after
the other changes get merged into ^/head .

Approved by:	emaste (mentor; implicit)
Requested by:	jhb
MFC after:	2 months
2019-04-20 16:37:28 +00:00
Enji Cooper
7bd1cac6c5 tests/sys/opencrypto: fix whitespace per PEP8
Replace hard tabs with four-character indentations, per PEP8.

This is being done to separate stylistic changes from the tests from functional
ones, as I accidentally introduced a bug to the tests when I used four-space
indentation locally.

No functional change.

MFC after:	2 months
Approved by:	emaste (mentor: implicit blanket approval for trivial fixes)
2019-04-20 15:43:28 +00:00
Li-Wen Hsu
369ee0905e Specify using Python2, these .py files have not been converted to use Python3
yet, but the default Python version in ports has been switched to 3.

Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
2019-04-20 07:32:29 +00:00
John Baldwin
c87ada6a00 Test SHA2-224-HMAC now that OCF supports it.
Reviewed by:	cem
MFC after:	2 weeks
Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D19882
2019-04-19 22:20:42 +00:00
Conrad Meyer
844d9543dc Add ccp(4): experimental driver for AMD Crypto Co-Processor
* Registers TRNG source for random(4)
* Finds available queues, LSBs; allocates static objects
* Allocates a shared MSI-X for all queues.  The hardware does not have
  separate interrupts per queue.  Working interrupt mode driver.
* Computes SHA hashes, HMAC.  Passes cryptotest.py, cryptocheck tests.
* Does AES-CBC, CTR mode, and XTS.  cryptotest.py and cryptocheck pass.
* Support for "authenc" (AES + HMAC).  (SHA1 seems to result in
  "unaligned" cleartext inputs from cryptocheck -- which the engine
  cannot handle.  SHA2 seems to work fine.)
* GCM passes for block-multiple AAD, input lengths

Largely based on ccr(4), part of cxgbe(4).

Rough performance averages on AMD Ryzen 1950X (4kB buffer):
aesni:      SHA1: ~8300 Mb/s    SHA256: ~8000 Mb/s
ccp:               ~630 Mb/s    SHA256:  ~660 Mb/s  SHA512:  ~700 Mb/s
cryptosoft:       ~1800 Mb/s    SHA256: ~1800 Mb/s  SHA512: ~2700 Mb/s

As you can see, performance is poor in comparison to aesni(4) and even
cryptosoft (due to high setup cost).  At a larger buffer size (128kB),
throughput is a little better (but still worse than aesni(4)):

aesni:      SHA1:~10400 Mb/s    SHA256: ~9950 Mb/s
ccp:              ~2200 Mb/s    SHA256: ~2600 Mb/s  SHA512: ~3800 Mb/s
cryptosoft:       ~1750 Mb/s    SHA256: ~1800 Mb/s  SHA512: ~2700 Mb/s

AES performance has a similar story:

aesni:      4kB: ~11250 Mb/s    128kB: ~11250 Mb/s
ccp:               ~350 Mb/s    128kB:  ~4600 Mb/s
cryptosoft:       ~1750 Mb/s    128kB:  ~1700 Mb/s

This driver is EXPERIMENTAL.  You should verify cryptographic results on
typical and corner case inputs from your application against a known- good
implementation.

Sponsored by:	Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12723
2018-01-18 22:01:30 +00:00
Conrad Meyer
fe182ba1d0 aesni(4): Add support for x86 SHA intrinsics
Some x86 class CPUs have accelerated intrinsics for SHA1 and SHA256.
Provide this functionality on CPUs that support it.

This implements CRYPTO_SHA1, CRYPTO_SHA1_HMAC, and CRYPTO_SHA2_256_HMAC.

Correctness: The cryptotest.py suite in tests/sys/opencrypto has been
enhanced to verify SHA1 and SHA256 HMAC using standard NIST test vectors.
The test passes on this driver.  Additionally, jhb's cryptocheck tool has
been used to compare various random inputs against OpenSSL.  This test also
passes.

Rough performance averages on AMD Ryzen 1950X (4kB buffer):
aesni:      SHA1: ~8300 Mb/s    SHA256: ~8000 Mb/s
cryptosoft:       ~1800 Mb/s    SHA256: ~1800 Mb/s

So ~4.4-4.6x speedup depending on algorithm choice.  This is consistent with
the results the Linux folks saw for 4kB buffers.

The driver borrows SHA update code from sys/crypto sha1 and sha256.  The
intrinsic step function comes from Intel under a 3-clause BSDL.[0]  The
intel_sha_extensions_sha<foo>_intrinsic.c files were renamed and lightly
modified (added const, resolved a warning or two; included the sha_sse
header to declare the functions).

[0]: https://software.intel.com/en-us/articles/intel-sha-extensions-implementations

Reviewed by:	jhb
Sponsored by:	Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12452
2017-09-26 23:12:32 +00:00
Conrad Meyer
a317fb03c2 crypto(9): Use a more specific error code when a capable driver is not found
When crypto_newsession() is given a request for an unsupported capability,
raise a more specific error than EINVAL.

This allows cryptotest.py to skip some HMAC tests that a driver does not
support.

Reviewed by:	jhb, rlibby
Sponsored by:	Dell EMC Isilon
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D12451
2017-09-26 01:31:49 +00:00
Enji Cooper
d86680b073 Convert some idioms over to py3k-compatible idioms
- Import print_function from __future__ and use print(..) instead of `print ..`.
- Use repr instead of backticks when the object needs to be dumped, unless
  print(..) can do it lazily. Use str instead of backticks as appropriate
  for simplification reasons.

This doesn't fully convert these modules over py3k. It just gets over some of
the trivial compatibility hurdles.
2017-09-24 00:14:48 +00:00
Conrad Meyer
67e4d800ec cryptotest.py: Like r323869, skip SHA HMAC tests on non-SHA drivers
Sponsored by:	Dell EMC Isilon
2017-09-22 04:41:48 +00:00
Conrad Meyer
e720124622 cryptotest.py: Fix whitespace style errors
I accidentally introduced different whitespace style in r323878.  I'm not
used to using tabs for indentation in Python scripts.

Whitespace only; no functional change.

Sponsored by:	Dell EMC Isilon
2017-09-22 04:25:44 +00:00
Conrad Meyer
005fdbbc69 cryptotest.py: Actually use NIST-KAT HMAC test vectors and test the right hashes
Previously, this test was entirely a no-op as no vector in the NIST-KAT file
has a precisely 20-byte key.

Additionally, not every vector in the file is SHA1.  The length field
determines the hash under test, and is now decoded correctly.

Finally, due to a limitation I didn't feel like fixing in cryptodev.py, MACs
are truncated to 16 bytes in this test.

With this change and the uncommitted D12437 (to allow key sizes other than
those used in IPSec), the SHA tests in cryptotest.py actually test something
and e.g. at least cryptosoft passes the test.

Sponsored by:	Dell EMC Isilon
2017-09-21 21:07:21 +00:00
Conrad Meyer
b3eaa68045 cryptotest.py: Do not run AES-CBC or AES-GCM tests on non-AES crypto(4) drivers
For some reason, we only skipped AES-XTS tests if a driver was not in the
aesmodules list.  Skip other AES modes as well to prevent spurious failures
in non-AES drivers.

Sponsored by:	Dell EMC Isilon
2017-09-21 18:06:21 +00:00
Conrad Meyer
7abea82d17 cryptotest.py: Add a seatbelt that we're actually testing anything
Without nist-kat installed, cryptotest.py is a no-op.  Showing 'success' in
that case is unhelpful.

Sponsored by:	Dell EMC Isilon
2017-09-21 05:46:28 +00:00
John Baldwin
6720b89045 Add the ccr0 device to the opencrypto tests against the NIST KAT tests.
The ccr0 device supports both AES and SHA tests.

Sponsored by:	Chelsio Communications
2017-06-08 21:34:54 +00:00
John-Mark Gurney
08fca7a56b Add some new modes to OpenCrypto. These modes are AES-ICM (can be used
for counter mode), and AES-GCM.  Both of these modes have been added to
the aesni module.

Included is a set of tests to validate that the software and aesni
module calculate the correct values.  These use the NIST KAT test
vectors.  To run the test, you will need to install a soon to be
committed port, nist-kat that will install the vectors.  Using a port
is necessary as the test vectors are around 25MB.

All the man pages were updated.  I have added a new man page, crypto.7,
which includes a description of how to use each mode.  All the new modes
and some other AES modes are present.  It would be good for someone
else to go through and document the other modes.

A new ioctl was added to support AEAD modes which AES-GCM is one of them.
Without this ioctl, it is not possible to test AEAD modes from userland.

Add a timing safe bcmp for use to compare MACs.  Previously we were using
bcmp which could leak timing info and result in the ability to forge
messages.

Add a minor optimization to the aesni module so that single segment
mbufs don't get copied and instead are updated in place.  The aesni
module needs to be updated to support blocked IO so segmented mbufs
don't have to be copied.

We require that the IV be specified for all calls for both GCM and ICM.
This is to ensure proper use of these functions.

Obtained from:	p4: //depot/projects/opencrypto
Relnotes:	yes
Sponsored by:	FreeBSD Foundation
Sponsored by:	NetGate
2014-12-12 19:56:36 +00:00