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cloudkeys-go/vendor/golang.org/x/crypto/pbkdf2/pbkdf2.go
Knut Ahlers a1df72edc5
Squashed commit of the following:
commit f0db1ff1f8
Author: Knut Ahlers <knut@ahlers.me>
Date:   Sun Dec 24 12:19:56 2017 +0100

    Mark option as deprecated

    Signed-off-by: Knut Ahlers <knut@ahlers.me>

commit 9891df2a16
Author: Knut Ahlers <knut@ahlers.me>
Date:   Sun Dec 24 12:11:56 2017 +0100

    Fix: Typo

    Signed-off-by: Knut Ahlers <knut@ahlers.me>

commit 836006de64
Author: Knut Ahlers <knut@ahlers.me>
Date:   Sun Dec 24 12:04:20 2017 +0100

    Add new dependencies

    Signed-off-by: Knut Ahlers <knut@ahlers.me>

commit d64fee60c8
Author: Knut Ahlers <knut@ahlers.me>
Date:   Sun Dec 24 11:55:52 2017 +0100

    Replace insecure password hashing

    Prior this commit passwords were hashed with a static salt and using the
    SHA1 hashing function. This could lead to passwords being attackable in
    case someone gets access to the raw data stored inside the database.
    This commit introduces password hashing using bcrypt hashing function
    which addresses this issue.

    Old passwords are not automatically re-hashed as they are unknown.
    Replacing the old password scheme is not that easy and needs #10 to be
    solved. Therefore the old hashing scheme is kept for compatibility
    reason.

    Signed-off-by: Knut Ahlers <knut@ahlers.me>

Signed-off-by: Knut Ahlers <knut@ahlers.me>

closes #14
closes #15
2017-12-24 19:44:24 +01:00

77 lines
2.4 KiB
Go

// Copyright 2012 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
/*
Package pbkdf2 implements the key derivation function PBKDF2 as defined in RFC
2898 / PKCS #5 v2.0.
A key derivation function is useful when encrypting data based on a password
or any other not-fully-random data. It uses a pseudorandom function to derive
a secure encryption key based on the password.
While v2.0 of the standard defines only one pseudorandom function to use,
HMAC-SHA1, the drafted v2.1 specification allows use of all five FIPS Approved
Hash Functions SHA-1, SHA-224, SHA-256, SHA-384 and SHA-512 for HMAC. To
choose, you can pass the `New` functions from the different SHA packages to
pbkdf2.Key.
*/
package pbkdf2 // import "golang.org/x/crypto/pbkdf2"
import (
"crypto/hmac"
"hash"
)
// Key derives a key from the password, salt and iteration count, returning a
// []byte of length keylen that can be used as cryptographic key. The key is
// derived based on the method described as PBKDF2 with the HMAC variant using
// the supplied hash function.
//
// For example, to use a HMAC-SHA-1 based PBKDF2 key derivation function, you
// can get a derived key for e.g. AES-256 (which needs a 32-byte key) by
// doing:
//
// dk := pbkdf2.Key([]byte("some password"), salt, 4096, 32, sha1.New)
//
// Remember to get a good random salt. At least 8 bytes is recommended by the
// RFC.
//
// Using a higher iteration count will increase the cost of an exhaustive
// search but will also make derivation proportionally slower.
func Key(password, salt []byte, iter, keyLen int, h func() hash.Hash) []byte {
prf := hmac.New(h, password)
hashLen := prf.Size()
numBlocks := (keyLen + hashLen - 1) / hashLen
var buf [4]byte
dk := make([]byte, 0, numBlocks*hashLen)
U := make([]byte, hashLen)
for block := 1; block <= numBlocks; block++ {
// N.B.: || means concatenation, ^ means XOR
// for each block T_i = U_1 ^ U_2 ^ ... ^ U_iter
// U_1 = PRF(password, salt || uint(i))
prf.Reset()
prf.Write(salt)
buf[0] = byte(block >> 24)
buf[1] = byte(block >> 16)
buf[2] = byte(block >> 8)
buf[3] = byte(block)
prf.Write(buf[:4])
dk = prf.Sum(dk)
T := dk[len(dk)-hashLen:]
copy(U, T)
// U_n = PRF(password, U_(n-1))
for n := 2; n <= iter; n++ {
prf.Reset()
prf.Write(U)
U = U[:0]
U = prf.Sum(U)
for x := range U {
T[x] ^= U[x]
}
}
}
return dk[:keyLen]
}