| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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* fixes for deprecated constructions in c++11 and later (explicit rule of 3/5 or implicit rule of 0 and other violations)
* `default` specifier instead of `{}` in some places(probably all)
* removal of unreachable code (for example `return` after `throw`)
* removal of compilation unit only visible, but not used functions
* fix for `throw()` specifier - used instead `BOTAN_NOEXCEPT`
* removed not needed semicolons
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Equivalent to an 8 byte all-zero IV, same handling as Salsa.
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If all (say) stream ciphers are disabled, avoid unused arg warning.
[ci skip]
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Renames a couple of functions for somewhat better name consistency,
eg make_u32bit becomes make_uint32. The old typedefs remain for now
since probably lots of application code uses them.
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Treats it as an all-zero 64-bit IV. GH #697
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This required taking a global lock and doing a map lookup each
time an algorithm was requested (and so many times during a TLS
handshake).
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I repent my use of global constructors.
I repent my use of global locks.
Hopefully I will never touch this code again.
:)
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Nothing exciting.
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Updates NewHope to use that instead of the hard-coded SHAKE-128,
and adds toggle for BoringSSL compat mode using AES-128/CTR + SHA-256.
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Also emit `#pragma GCC target` in the ISA specific amalgamation files.
This allows compiling without any special compiler flags, at least
with GCC 6.2 and Clang 3.8. The ISA annotations are ignored in MSVC,
which just emits whatever instruction the intrinsic requires.
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Mostly unused args and missing override notations.
Fix DH - load_check calls were commented out for debugging.
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For block ciphers, stream ciphers, hashes, MACs, and cipher modes.
Cipher_Mode already had it, with a slightly different usage.
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Provides conjectured 200-bit security against a quantum attacker.
Based on the public domain reference implementation at
https://github.com/tpoeppelmann/newhope and bit-for-bit
compatible with that version.
Test vectors generated by the reference testvector.c
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But not any ChaCha20 tests due to no long test inputs. Add one.
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It provided a default implementation that only checked
that the length was correct, but ignored the actual data
and did not notify the caller, which seemed like a
rather odd behaviour.
The only implementation that used this default implementation,
RC4, now throws an exception.
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adding ChaCha8 support
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GCM is defined as having a 32-bit counter, but CTR_BE incremented the
counter across the entire block. This caused incorrect results if
a very large message (2**39 bits) was processed, or if the GHASH
derived nonce ended up having a counter field near to 2**32
Thanks to Juraj Somorovsky for the bug report and repro.
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warnings.
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With sufficient squinting, Transform provided an abstract base
interface that covered both cipher modes and compression algorithms.
However it mapped on neither of them particularly well. In addition
this API had the same problem that has made me dislike the Pipe/Filter
API: given a Transform&, what does it do when you put bits in? Maybe
it encrypts. Maybe it compresses. It's a floor wax and a dessert topping!
Currently the Cipher_Mode interface is left mostly unchanged, with the
APIs previously on Transform just moved down the type hierarchy. I
think there are some definite improvements possible here, wrt handling
of in-place encryption, but left for a later commit.
The compression API is split into two types, Compression_Algorithm and
Decompression_Algorithm. Compression_Algorithm's start() call takes
the compression level, allowing varying compressions with a single
object. And flushing the compression state is moved to a bool param on
`Compression_Algorithm::update`. All the nonsense WRT compression
algorithms having zero length nonces, input granularity rules, etc
as a result of using the Transform interface goes away.
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explicit.
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In some cases this can offer better optimization, via devirtualization.
And it lets the user know the class is not intended for derivation.
Some discussion in GH #402
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Having the code diffused all over the place was ugly and would
not scale well to multiple alternative providers.
GH #368
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The tests previously had used 4 to 6 different schemes internally (the vec file
reader framework, Catch, the old InSiTo Boost.Test tests, the PK/BigInt tests
which escaped the rewrite in 1.11.7, plus a number of one-offs). Converge on a
design that works everywhere, and update all the things.
Fix also a few bugs found by the test changes: SHA-512-256 name incorrect,
OpenSSL RC4 name incorrect, signature of FFI function botan_pubkey_destroy
was wrong.
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For RSA, RC4, and ECDSA put the openssl versions in the same directory
as the base version. They just rely on a macro check for the openssl
module to test for the desire to use OpenSSL.
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Only user-visible change is the removal of get_byte.h
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Previously we were hanging on the type destructors to pull in
the relevant objects. However that fails in many simple cases
where the object is never deleted.
For every type involved in the algo registry add static create
and providers functions to access the algo registry. Modify
lookup.h to be inline and call those functions, and move
a few to sub-headers (eg, get_pbkdf going to pbkdf.h). So
accessing the registry involves going through the same file
that handles the initialization, so there is no way to end up
with missing objs.
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The support problems from having static libraries not work in the
obvious way will be endless trouble. Instead have each set of
registrations tag along in a source file for the basic type, at the
cost of some extra ifdefs. On shared libs this is harmless -
everything is going into the shared object anyway. With static libs,
this means pulling in a single block cipher pulls in the text of all
the them. But that's still strictly better than the amalgamation
(which is really pulling in everything), and it works (unlike status quo).
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