lepu-test-platform-web/node_modules/node-forge/lib/aes.js

1092 lines
38 KiB
JavaScript

/**
* Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) implementation.
*
* This implementation is based on the public domain library 'jscrypto' which
* was written by:
*
* Emily Stark (estark@stanford.edu)
* Mike Hamburg (mhamburg@stanford.edu)
* Dan Boneh (dabo@cs.stanford.edu)
*
* Parts of this code are based on the OpenSSL implementation of AES:
* http://www.openssl.org
*
* @author Dave Longley
*
* Copyright (c) 2010-2014 Digital Bazaar, Inc.
*/
var forge = require('./forge');
require('./cipher');
require('./cipherModes');
require('./util');
/* AES API */
module.exports = forge.aes = forge.aes || {};
/**
* Deprecated. Instead, use:
*
* var cipher = forge.cipher.createCipher('AES-<mode>', key);
* cipher.start({iv: iv});
*
* Creates an AES cipher object to encrypt data using the given symmetric key.
* The output will be stored in the 'output' member of the returned cipher.
*
* The key and iv may be given as a string of bytes, an array of bytes,
* a byte buffer, or an array of 32-bit words.
*
* @param key the symmetric key to use.
* @param iv the initialization vector to use.
* @param output the buffer to write to, null to create one.
* @param mode the cipher mode to use (default: 'CBC').
*
* @return the cipher.
*/
forge.aes.startEncrypting = function(key, iv, output, mode) {
var cipher = _createCipher({
key: key,
output: output,
decrypt: false,
mode: mode
});
cipher.start(iv);
return cipher;
};
/**
* Deprecated. Instead, use:
*
* var cipher = forge.cipher.createCipher('AES-<mode>', key);
*
* Creates an AES cipher object to encrypt data using the given symmetric key.
*
* The key may be given as a string of bytes, an array of bytes, a
* byte buffer, or an array of 32-bit words.
*
* @param key the symmetric key to use.
* @param mode the cipher mode to use (default: 'CBC').
*
* @return the cipher.
*/
forge.aes.createEncryptionCipher = function(key, mode) {
return _createCipher({
key: key,
output: null,
decrypt: false,
mode: mode
});
};
/**
* Deprecated. Instead, use:
*
* var decipher = forge.cipher.createDecipher('AES-<mode>', key);
* decipher.start({iv: iv});
*
* Creates an AES cipher object to decrypt data using the given symmetric key.
* The output will be stored in the 'output' member of the returned cipher.
*
* The key and iv may be given as a string of bytes, an array of bytes,
* a byte buffer, or an array of 32-bit words.
*
* @param key the symmetric key to use.
* @param iv the initialization vector to use.
* @param output the buffer to write to, null to create one.
* @param mode the cipher mode to use (default: 'CBC').
*
* @return the cipher.
*/
forge.aes.startDecrypting = function(key, iv, output, mode) {
var cipher = _createCipher({
key: key,
output: output,
decrypt: true,
mode: mode
});
cipher.start(iv);
return cipher;
};
/**
* Deprecated. Instead, use:
*
* var decipher = forge.cipher.createDecipher('AES-<mode>', key);
*
* Creates an AES cipher object to decrypt data using the given symmetric key.
*
* The key may be given as a string of bytes, an array of bytes, a
* byte buffer, or an array of 32-bit words.
*
* @param key the symmetric key to use.
* @param mode the cipher mode to use (default: 'CBC').
*
* @return the cipher.
*/
forge.aes.createDecryptionCipher = function(key, mode) {
return _createCipher({
key: key,
output: null,
decrypt: true,
mode: mode
});
};
/**
* Creates a new AES cipher algorithm object.
*
* @param name the name of the algorithm.
* @param mode the mode factory function.
*
* @return the AES algorithm object.
*/
forge.aes.Algorithm = function(name, mode) {
if(!init) {
initialize();
}
var self = this;
self.name = name;
self.mode = new mode({
blockSize: 16,
cipher: {
encrypt: function(inBlock, outBlock) {
return _updateBlock(self._w, inBlock, outBlock, false);
},
decrypt: function(inBlock, outBlock) {
return _updateBlock(self._w, inBlock, outBlock, true);
}
}
});
self._init = false;
};
/**
* Initializes this AES algorithm by expanding its key.
*
* @param options the options to use.
* key the key to use with this algorithm.
* decrypt true if the algorithm should be initialized for decryption,
* false for encryption.
*/
forge.aes.Algorithm.prototype.initialize = function(options) {
if(this._init) {
return;
}
var key = options.key;
var tmp;
/* Note: The key may be a string of bytes, an array of bytes, a byte
buffer, or an array of 32-bit integers. If the key is in bytes, then
it must be 16, 24, or 32 bytes in length. If it is in 32-bit
integers, it must be 4, 6, or 8 integers long. */
if(typeof key === 'string' &&
(key.length === 16 || key.length === 24 || key.length === 32)) {
// convert key string into byte buffer
key = forge.util.createBuffer(key);
} else if(forge.util.isArray(key) &&
(key.length === 16 || key.length === 24 || key.length === 32)) {
// convert key integer array into byte buffer
tmp = key;
key = forge.util.createBuffer();
for(var i = 0; i < tmp.length; ++i) {
key.putByte(tmp[i]);
}
}
// convert key byte buffer into 32-bit integer array
if(!forge.util.isArray(key)) {
tmp = key;
key = [];
// key lengths of 16, 24, 32 bytes allowed
var len = tmp.length();
if(len === 16 || len === 24 || len === 32) {
len = len >>> 2;
for(var i = 0; i < len; ++i) {
key.push(tmp.getInt32());
}
}
}
// key must be an array of 32-bit integers by now
if(!forge.util.isArray(key) ||
!(key.length === 4 || key.length === 6 || key.length === 8)) {
throw new Error('Invalid key parameter.');
}
// encryption operation is always used for these modes
var mode = this.mode.name;
var encryptOp = (['CFB', 'OFB', 'CTR', 'GCM'].indexOf(mode) !== -1);
// do key expansion
this._w = _expandKey(key, options.decrypt && !encryptOp);
this._init = true;
};
/**
* Expands a key. Typically only used for testing.
*
* @param key the symmetric key to expand, as an array of 32-bit words.
* @param decrypt true to expand for decryption, false for encryption.
*
* @return the expanded key.
*/
forge.aes._expandKey = function(key, decrypt) {
if(!init) {
initialize();
}
return _expandKey(key, decrypt);
};
/**
* Updates a single block. Typically only used for testing.
*
* @param w the expanded key to use.
* @param input an array of block-size 32-bit words.
* @param output an array of block-size 32-bit words.
* @param decrypt true to decrypt, false to encrypt.
*/
forge.aes._updateBlock = _updateBlock;
/** Register AES algorithms **/
registerAlgorithm('AES-ECB', forge.cipher.modes.ecb);
registerAlgorithm('AES-CBC', forge.cipher.modes.cbc);
registerAlgorithm('AES-CFB', forge.cipher.modes.cfb);
registerAlgorithm('AES-OFB', forge.cipher.modes.ofb);
registerAlgorithm('AES-CTR', forge.cipher.modes.ctr);
registerAlgorithm('AES-GCM', forge.cipher.modes.gcm);
function registerAlgorithm(name, mode) {
var factory = function() {
return new forge.aes.Algorithm(name, mode);
};
forge.cipher.registerAlgorithm(name, factory);
}
/** AES implementation **/
var init = false; // not yet initialized
var Nb = 4; // number of words comprising the state (AES = 4)
var sbox; // non-linear substitution table used in key expansion
var isbox; // inversion of sbox
var rcon; // round constant word array
var mix; // mix-columns table
var imix; // inverse mix-columns table
/**
* Performs initialization, ie: precomputes tables to optimize for speed.
*
* One way to understand how AES works is to imagine that 'addition' and
* 'multiplication' are interfaces that require certain mathematical
* properties to hold true (ie: they are associative) but they might have
* different implementations and produce different kinds of results ...
* provided that their mathematical properties remain true. AES defines
* its own methods of addition and multiplication but keeps some important
* properties the same, ie: associativity and distributivity. The
* explanation below tries to shed some light on how AES defines addition
* and multiplication of bytes and 32-bit words in order to perform its
* encryption and decryption algorithms.
*
* The basics:
*
* The AES algorithm views bytes as binary representations of polynomials
* that have either 1 or 0 as the coefficients. It defines the addition
* or subtraction of two bytes as the XOR operation. It also defines the
* multiplication of two bytes as a finite field referred to as GF(2^8)
* (Note: 'GF' means "Galois Field" which is a field that contains a finite
* number of elements so GF(2^8) has 256 elements).
*
* This means that any two bytes can be represented as binary polynomials;
* when they multiplied together and modularly reduced by an irreducible
* polynomial of the 8th degree, the results are the field GF(2^8). The
* specific irreducible polynomial that AES uses in hexadecimal is 0x11b.
* This multiplication is associative with 0x01 as the identity:
*
* (b * 0x01 = GF(b, 0x01) = b).
*
* The operation GF(b, 0x02) can be performed at the byte level by left
* shifting b once and then XOR'ing it (to perform the modular reduction)
* with 0x11b if b is >= 128. Repeated application of the multiplication
* of 0x02 can be used to implement the multiplication of any two bytes.
*
* For instance, multiplying 0x57 and 0x13, denoted as GF(0x57, 0x13), can
* be performed by factoring 0x13 into 0x01, 0x02, and 0x10. Then these
* factors can each be multiplied by 0x57 and then added together. To do
* the multiplication, values for 0x57 multiplied by each of these 3 factors
* can be precomputed and stored in a table. To add them, the values from
* the table are XOR'd together.
*
* AES also defines addition and multiplication of words, that is 4-byte
* numbers represented as polynomials of 3 degrees where the coefficients
* are the values of the bytes.
*
* The word [a0, a1, a2, a3] is a polynomial a3x^3 + a2x^2 + a1x + a0.
*
* Addition is performed by XOR'ing like powers of x. Multiplication
* is performed in two steps, the first is an algebriac expansion as
* you would do normally (where addition is XOR). But the result is
* a polynomial larger than 3 degrees and thus it cannot fit in a word. So
* next the result is modularly reduced by an AES-specific polynomial of
* degree 4 which will always produce a polynomial of less than 4 degrees
* such that it will fit in a word. In AES, this polynomial is x^4 + 1.
*
* The modular product of two polynomials 'a' and 'b' is thus:
*
* d(x) = d3x^3 + d2x^2 + d1x + d0
* with
* d0 = GF(a0, b0) ^ GF(a3, b1) ^ GF(a2, b2) ^ GF(a1, b3)
* d1 = GF(a1, b0) ^ GF(a0, b1) ^ GF(a3, b2) ^ GF(a2, b3)
* d2 = GF(a2, b0) ^ GF(a1, b1) ^ GF(a0, b2) ^ GF(a3, b3)
* d3 = GF(a3, b0) ^ GF(a2, b1) ^ GF(a1, b2) ^ GF(a0, b3)
*
* As a matrix:
*
* [d0] = [a0 a3 a2 a1][b0]
* [d1] [a1 a0 a3 a2][b1]
* [d2] [a2 a1 a0 a3][b2]
* [d3] [a3 a2 a1 a0][b3]
*
* Special polynomials defined by AES (0x02 == {02}):
* a(x) = {03}x^3 + {01}x^2 + {01}x + {02}
* a^-1(x) = {0b}x^3 + {0d}x^2 + {09}x + {0e}.
*
* These polynomials are used in the MixColumns() and InverseMixColumns()
* operations, respectively, to cause each element in the state to affect
* the output (referred to as diffusing).
*
* RotWord() uses: a0 = a1 = a2 = {00} and a3 = {01}, which is the
* polynomial x3.
*
* The ShiftRows() method modifies the last 3 rows in the state (where
* the state is 4 words with 4 bytes per word) by shifting bytes cyclically.
* The 1st byte in the second row is moved to the end of the row. The 1st
* and 2nd bytes in the third row are moved to the end of the row. The 1st,
* 2nd, and 3rd bytes are moved in the fourth row.
*
* More details on how AES arithmetic works:
*
* In the polynomial representation of binary numbers, XOR performs addition
* and subtraction and multiplication in GF(2^8) denoted as GF(a, b)
* corresponds with the multiplication of polynomials modulo an irreducible
* polynomial of degree 8. In other words, for AES, GF(a, b) will multiply
* polynomial 'a' with polynomial 'b' and then do a modular reduction by
* an AES-specific irreducible polynomial of degree 8.
*
* A polynomial is irreducible if its only divisors are one and itself. For
* the AES algorithm, this irreducible polynomial is:
*
* m(x) = x^8 + x^4 + x^3 + x + 1,
*
* or {01}{1b} in hexadecimal notation, where each coefficient is a bit:
* 100011011 = 283 = 0x11b.
*
* For example, GF(0x57, 0x83) = 0xc1 because
*
* 0x57 = 87 = 01010111 = x^6 + x^4 + x^2 + x + 1
* 0x85 = 131 = 10000101 = x^7 + x + 1
*
* (x^6 + x^4 + x^2 + x + 1) * (x^7 + x + 1)
* = x^13 + x^11 + x^9 + x^8 + x^7 +
* x^7 + x^5 + x^3 + x^2 + x +
* x^6 + x^4 + x^2 + x + 1
* = x^13 + x^11 + x^9 + x^8 + x^6 + x^5 + x^4 + x^3 + 1 = y
* y modulo (x^8 + x^4 + x^3 + x + 1)
* = x^7 + x^6 + 1.
*
* The modular reduction by m(x) guarantees the result will be a binary
* polynomial of less than degree 8, so that it can fit in a byte.
*
* The operation to multiply a binary polynomial b with x (the polynomial
* x in binary representation is 00000010) is:
*
* b_7x^8 + b_6x^7 + b_5x^6 + b_4x^5 + b_3x^4 + b_2x^3 + b_1x^2 + b_0x^1
*
* To get GF(b, x) we must reduce that by m(x). If b_7 is 0 (that is the
* most significant bit is 0 in b) then the result is already reduced. If
* it is 1, then we can reduce it by subtracting m(x) via an XOR.
*
* It follows that multiplication by x (00000010 or 0x02) can be implemented
* by performing a left shift followed by a conditional bitwise XOR with
* 0x1b. This operation on bytes is denoted by xtime(). Multiplication by
* higher powers of x can be implemented by repeated application of xtime().
*
* By adding intermediate results, multiplication by any constant can be
* implemented. For instance:
*
* GF(0x57, 0x13) = 0xfe because:
*
* xtime(b) = (b & 128) ? (b << 1 ^ 0x11b) : (b << 1)
*
* Note: We XOR with 0x11b instead of 0x1b because in javascript our
* datatype for b can be larger than 1 byte, so a left shift will not
* automatically eliminate bits that overflow a byte ... by XOR'ing the
* overflow bit with 1 (the extra one from 0x11b) we zero it out.
*
* GF(0x57, 0x02) = xtime(0x57) = 0xae
* GF(0x57, 0x04) = xtime(0xae) = 0x47
* GF(0x57, 0x08) = xtime(0x47) = 0x8e
* GF(0x57, 0x10) = xtime(0x8e) = 0x07
*
* GF(0x57, 0x13) = GF(0x57, (0x01 ^ 0x02 ^ 0x10))
*
* And by the distributive property (since XOR is addition and GF() is
* multiplication):
*
* = GF(0x57, 0x01) ^ GF(0x57, 0x02) ^ GF(0x57, 0x10)
* = 0x57 ^ 0xae ^ 0x07
* = 0xfe.
*/
function initialize() {
init = true;
/* Populate the Rcon table. These are the values given by
[x^(i-1),{00},{00},{00}] where x^(i-1) are powers of x (and x = 0x02)
in the field of GF(2^8), where i starts at 1.
rcon[0] = [0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00]
rcon[1] = [0x01, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00] 2^(1-1) = 2^0 = 1
rcon[2] = [0x02, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00] 2^(2-1) = 2^1 = 2
...
rcon[9] = [0x1B, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00] 2^(9-1) = 2^8 = 0x1B
rcon[10] = [0x36, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00] 2^(10-1) = 2^9 = 0x36
We only store the first byte because it is the only one used.
*/
rcon = [0x00, 0x01, 0x02, 0x04, 0x08, 0x10, 0x20, 0x40, 0x80, 0x1B, 0x36];
// compute xtime table which maps i onto GF(i, 0x02)
var xtime = new Array(256);
for(var i = 0; i < 128; ++i) {
xtime[i] = i << 1;
xtime[i + 128] = (i + 128) << 1 ^ 0x11B;
}
// compute all other tables
sbox = new Array(256);
isbox = new Array(256);
mix = new Array(4);
imix = new Array(4);
for(var i = 0; i < 4; ++i) {
mix[i] = new Array(256);
imix[i] = new Array(256);
}
var e = 0, ei = 0, e2, e4, e8, sx, sx2, me, ime;
for(var i = 0; i < 256; ++i) {
/* We need to generate the SubBytes() sbox and isbox tables so that
we can perform byte substitutions. This requires us to traverse
all of the elements in GF, find their multiplicative inverses,
and apply to each the following affine transformation:
bi' = bi ^ b(i + 4) mod 8 ^ b(i + 5) mod 8 ^ b(i + 6) mod 8 ^
b(i + 7) mod 8 ^ ci
for 0 <= i < 8, where bi is the ith bit of the byte, and ci is the
ith bit of a byte c with the value {63} or {01100011}.
It is possible to traverse every possible value in a Galois field
using what is referred to as a 'generator'. There are many
generators (128 out of 256): 3,5,6,9,11,82 to name a few. To fully
traverse GF we iterate 255 times, multiplying by our generator
each time.
On each iteration we can determine the multiplicative inverse for
the current element.
Suppose there is an element in GF 'e'. For a given generator 'g',
e = g^x. The multiplicative inverse of e is g^(255 - x). It turns
out that if use the inverse of a generator as another generator
it will produce all of the corresponding multiplicative inverses
at the same time. For this reason, we choose 5 as our inverse
generator because it only requires 2 multiplies and 1 add and its
inverse, 82, requires relatively few operations as well.
In order to apply the affine transformation, the multiplicative
inverse 'ei' of 'e' can be repeatedly XOR'd (4 times) with a
bit-cycling of 'ei'. To do this 'ei' is first stored in 's' and
'x'. Then 's' is left shifted and the high bit of 's' is made the
low bit. The resulting value is stored in 's'. Then 'x' is XOR'd
with 's' and stored in 'x'. On each subsequent iteration the same
operation is performed. When 4 iterations are complete, 'x' is
XOR'd with 'c' (0x63) and the transformed value is stored in 'x'.
For example:
s = 01000001
x = 01000001
iteration 1: s = 10000010, x ^= s
iteration 2: s = 00000101, x ^= s
iteration 3: s = 00001010, x ^= s
iteration 4: s = 00010100, x ^= s
x ^= 0x63
This can be done with a loop where s = (s << 1) | (s >> 7). However,
it can also be done by using a single 16-bit (in this case 32-bit)
number 'sx'. Since XOR is an associative operation, we can set 'sx'
to 'ei' and then XOR it with 'sx' left-shifted 1,2,3, and 4 times.
The most significant bits will flow into the high 8 bit positions
and be correctly XOR'd with one another. All that remains will be
to cycle the high 8 bits by XOR'ing them all with the lower 8 bits
afterwards.
At the same time we're populating sbox and isbox we can precompute
the multiplication we'll need to do to do MixColumns() later.
*/
// apply affine transformation
sx = ei ^ (ei << 1) ^ (ei << 2) ^ (ei << 3) ^ (ei << 4);
sx = (sx >> 8) ^ (sx & 255) ^ 0x63;
// update tables
sbox[e] = sx;
isbox[sx] = e;
/* Mixing columns is done using matrix multiplication. The columns
that are to be mixed are each a single word in the current state.
The state has Nb columns (4 columns). Therefore each column is a
4 byte word. So to mix the columns in a single column 'c' where
its rows are r0, r1, r2, and r3, we use the following matrix
multiplication:
[2 3 1 1]*[r0,c]=[r'0,c]
[1 2 3 1] [r1,c] [r'1,c]
[1 1 2 3] [r2,c] [r'2,c]
[3 1 1 2] [r3,c] [r'3,c]
r0, r1, r2, and r3 are each 1 byte of one of the words in the
state (a column). To do matrix multiplication for each mixed
column c' we multiply the corresponding row from the left matrix
with the corresponding column from the right matrix. In total, we
get 4 equations:
r0,c' = 2*r0,c + 3*r1,c + 1*r2,c + 1*r3,c
r1,c' = 1*r0,c + 2*r1,c + 3*r2,c + 1*r3,c
r2,c' = 1*r0,c + 1*r1,c + 2*r2,c + 3*r3,c
r3,c' = 3*r0,c + 1*r1,c + 1*r2,c + 2*r3,c
As usual, the multiplication is as previously defined and the
addition is XOR. In order to optimize mixing columns we can store
the multiplication results in tables. If you think of the whole
column as a word (it might help to visualize by mentally rotating
the equations above by counterclockwise 90 degrees) then you can
see that it would be useful to map the multiplications performed on
each byte (r0, r1, r2, r3) onto a word as well. For instance, we
could map 2*r0,1*r0,1*r0,3*r0 onto a word by storing 2*r0 in the
highest 8 bits and 3*r0 in the lowest 8 bits (with the other two
respectively in the middle). This means that a table can be
constructed that uses r0 as an index to the word. We can do the
same with r1, r2, and r3, creating a total of 4 tables.
To construct a full c', we can just look up each byte of c in
their respective tables and XOR the results together.
Also, to build each table we only have to calculate the word
for 2,1,1,3 for every byte ... which we can do on each iteration
of this loop since we will iterate over every byte. After we have
calculated 2,1,1,3 we can get the results for the other tables
by cycling the byte at the end to the beginning. For instance
we can take the result of table 2,1,1,3 and produce table 3,2,1,1
by moving the right most byte to the left most position just like
how you can imagine the 3 moved out of 2,1,1,3 and to the front
to produce 3,2,1,1.
There is another optimization in that the same multiples of
the current element we need in order to advance our generator
to the next iteration can be reused in performing the 2,1,1,3
calculation. We also calculate the inverse mix column tables,
with e,9,d,b being the inverse of 2,1,1,3.
When we're done, and we need to actually mix columns, the first
byte of each state word should be put through mix[0] (2,1,1,3),
the second through mix[1] (3,2,1,1) and so forth. Then they should
be XOR'd together to produce the fully mixed column.
*/
// calculate mix and imix table values
sx2 = xtime[sx];
e2 = xtime[e];
e4 = xtime[e2];
e8 = xtime[e4];
me =
(sx2 << 24) ^ // 2
(sx << 16) ^ // 1
(sx << 8) ^ // 1
(sx ^ sx2); // 3
ime =
(e2 ^ e4 ^ e8) << 24 ^ // E (14)
(e ^ e8) << 16 ^ // 9
(e ^ e4 ^ e8) << 8 ^ // D (13)
(e ^ e2 ^ e8); // B (11)
// produce each of the mix tables by rotating the 2,1,1,3 value
for(var n = 0; n < 4; ++n) {
mix[n][e] = me;
imix[n][sx] = ime;
// cycle the right most byte to the left most position
// ie: 2,1,1,3 becomes 3,2,1,1
me = me << 24 | me >>> 8;
ime = ime << 24 | ime >>> 8;
}
// get next element and inverse
if(e === 0) {
// 1 is the inverse of 1
e = ei = 1;
} else {
// e = 2e + 2*2*2*(10e)) = multiply e by 82 (chosen generator)
// ei = ei + 2*2*ei = multiply ei by 5 (inverse generator)
e = e2 ^ xtime[xtime[xtime[e2 ^ e8]]];
ei ^= xtime[xtime[ei]];
}
}
}
/**
* Generates a key schedule using the AES key expansion algorithm.
*
* The AES algorithm takes the Cipher Key, K, and performs a Key Expansion
* routine to generate a key schedule. The Key Expansion generates a total
* of Nb*(Nr + 1) words: the algorithm requires an initial set of Nb words,
* and each of the Nr rounds requires Nb words of key data. The resulting
* key schedule consists of a linear array of 4-byte words, denoted [wi ],
* with i in the range 0 <= i < Nb(Nr + 1).
*
* KeyExpansion(byte key[4*Nk], word w[Nb*(Nr+1)], Nk)
* AES-128 (Nb=4, Nk=4, Nr=10)
* AES-192 (Nb=4, Nk=6, Nr=12)
* AES-256 (Nb=4, Nk=8, Nr=14)
* Note: Nr=Nk+6.
*
* Nb is the number of columns (32-bit words) comprising the State (or
* number of bytes in a block). For AES, Nb=4.
*
* @param key the key to schedule (as an array of 32-bit words).
* @param decrypt true to modify the key schedule to decrypt, false not to.
*
* @return the generated key schedule.
*/
function _expandKey(key, decrypt) {
// copy the key's words to initialize the key schedule
var w = key.slice(0);
/* RotWord() will rotate a word, moving the first byte to the last
byte's position (shifting the other bytes left).
We will be getting the value of Rcon at i / Nk. 'i' will iterate
from Nk to (Nb * Nr+1). Nk = 4 (4 byte key), Nb = 4 (4 words in
a block), Nr = Nk + 6 (10). Therefore 'i' will iterate from
4 to 44 (exclusive). Each time we iterate 4 times, i / Nk will
increase by 1. We use a counter iNk to keep track of this.
*/
// go through the rounds expanding the key
var temp, iNk = 1;
var Nk = w.length;
var Nr1 = Nk + 6 + 1;
var end = Nb * Nr1;
for(var i = Nk; i < end; ++i) {
temp = w[i - 1];
if(i % Nk === 0) {
// temp = SubWord(RotWord(temp)) ^ Rcon[i / Nk]
temp =
sbox[temp >>> 16 & 255] << 24 ^
sbox[temp >>> 8 & 255] << 16 ^
sbox[temp & 255] << 8 ^
sbox[temp >>> 24] ^ (rcon[iNk] << 24);
iNk++;
} else if(Nk > 6 && (i % Nk === 4)) {
// temp = SubWord(temp)
temp =
sbox[temp >>> 24] << 24 ^
sbox[temp >>> 16 & 255] << 16 ^
sbox[temp >>> 8 & 255] << 8 ^
sbox[temp & 255];
}
w[i] = w[i - Nk] ^ temp;
}
/* When we are updating a cipher block we always use the code path for
encryption whether we are decrypting or not (to shorten code and
simplify the generation of look up tables). However, because there
are differences in the decryption algorithm, other than just swapping
in different look up tables, we must transform our key schedule to
account for these changes:
1. The decryption algorithm gets its key rounds in reverse order.
2. The decryption algorithm adds the round key before mixing columns
instead of afterwards.
We don't need to modify our key schedule to handle the first case,
we can just traverse the key schedule in reverse order when decrypting.
The second case requires a little work.
The tables we built for performing rounds will take an input and then
perform SubBytes() and MixColumns() or, for the decrypt version,
InvSubBytes() and InvMixColumns(). But the decrypt algorithm requires
us to AddRoundKey() before InvMixColumns(). This means we'll need to
apply some transformations to the round key to inverse-mix its columns
so they'll be correct for moving AddRoundKey() to after the state has
had its columns inverse-mixed.
To inverse-mix the columns of the state when we're decrypting we use a
lookup table that will apply InvSubBytes() and InvMixColumns() at the
same time. However, the round key's bytes are not inverse-substituted
in the decryption algorithm. To get around this problem, we can first
substitute the bytes in the round key so that when we apply the
transformation via the InvSubBytes()+InvMixColumns() table, it will
undo our substitution leaving us with the original value that we
want -- and then inverse-mix that value.
This change will correctly alter our key schedule so that we can XOR
each round key with our already transformed decryption state. This
allows us to use the same code path as the encryption algorithm.
We make one more change to the decryption key. Since the decryption
algorithm runs in reverse from the encryption algorithm, we reverse
the order of the round keys to avoid having to iterate over the key
schedule backwards when running the encryption algorithm later in
decryption mode. In addition to reversing the order of the round keys,
we also swap each round key's 2nd and 4th rows. See the comments
section where rounds are performed for more details about why this is
done. These changes are done inline with the other substitution
described above.
*/
if(decrypt) {
var tmp;
var m0 = imix[0];
var m1 = imix[1];
var m2 = imix[2];
var m3 = imix[3];
var wnew = w.slice(0);
end = w.length;
for(var i = 0, wi = end - Nb; i < end; i += Nb, wi -= Nb) {
// do not sub the first or last round key (round keys are Nb
// words) as no column mixing is performed before they are added,
// but do change the key order
if(i === 0 || i === (end - Nb)) {
wnew[i] = w[wi];
wnew[i + 1] = w[wi + 3];
wnew[i + 2] = w[wi + 2];
wnew[i + 3] = w[wi + 1];
} else {
// substitute each round key byte because the inverse-mix
// table will inverse-substitute it (effectively cancel the
// substitution because round key bytes aren't sub'd in
// decryption mode) and swap indexes 3 and 1
for(var n = 0; n < Nb; ++n) {
tmp = w[wi + n];
wnew[i + (3&-n)] =
m0[sbox[tmp >>> 24]] ^
m1[sbox[tmp >>> 16 & 255]] ^
m2[sbox[tmp >>> 8 & 255]] ^
m3[sbox[tmp & 255]];
}
}
}
w = wnew;
}
return w;
}
/**
* Updates a single block (16 bytes) using AES. The update will either
* encrypt or decrypt the block.
*
* @param w the key schedule.
* @param input the input block (an array of 32-bit words).
* @param output the updated output block.
* @param decrypt true to decrypt the block, false to encrypt it.
*/
function _updateBlock(w, input, output, decrypt) {
/*
Cipher(byte in[4*Nb], byte out[4*Nb], word w[Nb*(Nr+1)])
begin
byte state[4,Nb]
state = in
AddRoundKey(state, w[0, Nb-1])
for round = 1 step 1 to Nr-1
SubBytes(state)
ShiftRows(state)
MixColumns(state)
AddRoundKey(state, w[round*Nb, (round+1)*Nb-1])
end for
SubBytes(state)
ShiftRows(state)
AddRoundKey(state, w[Nr*Nb, (Nr+1)*Nb-1])
out = state
end
InvCipher(byte in[4*Nb], byte out[4*Nb], word w[Nb*(Nr+1)])
begin
byte state[4,Nb]
state = in
AddRoundKey(state, w[Nr*Nb, (Nr+1)*Nb-1])
for round = Nr-1 step -1 downto 1
InvShiftRows(state)
InvSubBytes(state)
AddRoundKey(state, w[round*Nb, (round+1)*Nb-1])
InvMixColumns(state)
end for
InvShiftRows(state)
InvSubBytes(state)
AddRoundKey(state, w[0, Nb-1])
out = state
end
*/
// Encrypt: AddRoundKey(state, w[0, Nb-1])
// Decrypt: AddRoundKey(state, w[Nr*Nb, (Nr+1)*Nb-1])
var Nr = w.length / 4 - 1;
var m0, m1, m2, m3, sub;
if(decrypt) {
m0 = imix[0];
m1 = imix[1];
m2 = imix[2];
m3 = imix[3];
sub = isbox;
} else {
m0 = mix[0];
m1 = mix[1];
m2 = mix[2];
m3 = mix[3];
sub = sbox;
}
var a, b, c, d, a2, b2, c2;
a = input[0] ^ w[0];
b = input[decrypt ? 3 : 1] ^ w[1];
c = input[2] ^ w[2];
d = input[decrypt ? 1 : 3] ^ w[3];
var i = 3;
/* In order to share code we follow the encryption algorithm when both
encrypting and decrypting. To account for the changes required in the
decryption algorithm, we use different lookup tables when decrypting
and use a modified key schedule to account for the difference in the
order of transformations applied when performing rounds. We also get
key rounds in reverse order (relative to encryption). */
for(var round = 1; round < Nr; ++round) {
/* As described above, we'll be using table lookups to perform the
column mixing. Each column is stored as a word in the state (the
array 'input' has one column as a word at each index). In order to
mix a column, we perform these transformations on each row in c,
which is 1 byte in each word. The new column for c0 is c'0:
m0 m1 m2 m3
r0,c'0 = 2*r0,c0 + 3*r1,c0 + 1*r2,c0 + 1*r3,c0
r1,c'0 = 1*r0,c0 + 2*r1,c0 + 3*r2,c0 + 1*r3,c0
r2,c'0 = 1*r0,c0 + 1*r1,c0 + 2*r2,c0 + 3*r3,c0
r3,c'0 = 3*r0,c0 + 1*r1,c0 + 1*r2,c0 + 2*r3,c0
So using mix tables where c0 is a word with r0 being its upper
8 bits and r3 being its lower 8 bits:
m0[c0 >> 24] will yield this word: [2*r0,1*r0,1*r0,3*r0]
...
m3[c0 & 255] will yield this word: [1*r3,1*r3,3*r3,2*r3]
Therefore to mix the columns in each word in the state we
do the following (& 255 omitted for brevity):
c'0,r0 = m0[c0 >> 24] ^ m1[c1 >> 16] ^ m2[c2 >> 8] ^ m3[c3]
c'0,r1 = m0[c0 >> 24] ^ m1[c1 >> 16] ^ m2[c2 >> 8] ^ m3[c3]
c'0,r2 = m0[c0 >> 24] ^ m1[c1 >> 16] ^ m2[c2 >> 8] ^ m3[c3]
c'0,r3 = m0[c0 >> 24] ^ m1[c1 >> 16] ^ m2[c2 >> 8] ^ m3[c3]
However, before mixing, the algorithm requires us to perform
ShiftRows(). The ShiftRows() transformation cyclically shifts the
last 3 rows of the state over different offsets. The first row
(r = 0) is not shifted.
s'_r,c = s_r,(c + shift(r, Nb) mod Nb
for 0 < r < 4 and 0 <= c < Nb and
shift(1, 4) = 1
shift(2, 4) = 2
shift(3, 4) = 3.
This causes the first byte in r = 1 to be moved to the end of
the row, the first 2 bytes in r = 2 to be moved to the end of
the row, the first 3 bytes in r = 3 to be moved to the end of
the row:
r1: [c0 c1 c2 c3] => [c1 c2 c3 c0]
r2: [c0 c1 c2 c3] [c2 c3 c0 c1]
r3: [c0 c1 c2 c3] [c3 c0 c1 c2]
We can make these substitutions inline with our column mixing to
generate an updated set of equations to produce each word in the
state (note the columns have changed positions):
c0 c1 c2 c3 => c0 c1 c2 c3
c0 c1 c2 c3 c1 c2 c3 c0 (cycled 1 byte)
c0 c1 c2 c3 c2 c3 c0 c1 (cycled 2 bytes)
c0 c1 c2 c3 c3 c0 c1 c2 (cycled 3 bytes)
Therefore:
c'0 = 2*r0,c0 + 3*r1,c1 + 1*r2,c2 + 1*r3,c3
c'0 = 1*r0,c0 + 2*r1,c1 + 3*r2,c2 + 1*r3,c3
c'0 = 1*r0,c0 + 1*r1,c1 + 2*r2,c2 + 3*r3,c3
c'0 = 3*r0,c0 + 1*r1,c1 + 1*r2,c2 + 2*r3,c3
c'1 = 2*r0,c1 + 3*r1,c2 + 1*r2,c3 + 1*r3,c0
c'1 = 1*r0,c1 + 2*r1,c2 + 3*r2,c3 + 1*r3,c0
c'1 = 1*r0,c1 + 1*r1,c2 + 2*r2,c3 + 3*r3,c0
c'1 = 3*r0,c1 + 1*r1,c2 + 1*r2,c3 + 2*r3,c0
... and so forth for c'2 and c'3. The important distinction is
that the columns are cycling, with c0 being used with the m0
map when calculating c0, but c1 being used with the m0 map when
calculating c1 ... and so forth.
When performing the inverse we transform the mirror image and
skip the bottom row, instead of the top one, and move upwards:
c3 c2 c1 c0 => c0 c3 c2 c1 (cycled 3 bytes) *same as encryption
c3 c2 c1 c0 c1 c0 c3 c2 (cycled 2 bytes)
c3 c2 c1 c0 c2 c1 c0 c3 (cycled 1 byte) *same as encryption
c3 c2 c1 c0 c3 c2 c1 c0
If you compare the resulting matrices for ShiftRows()+MixColumns()
and for InvShiftRows()+InvMixColumns() the 2nd and 4th columns are
different (in encrypt mode vs. decrypt mode). So in order to use
the same code to handle both encryption and decryption, we will
need to do some mapping.
If in encryption mode we let a=c0, b=c1, c=c2, d=c3, and r<N> be
a row number in the state, then the resulting matrix in encryption
mode for applying the above transformations would be:
r1: a b c d
r2: b c d a
r3: c d a b
r4: d a b c
If we did the same in decryption mode we would get:
r1: a d c b
r2: b a d c
r3: c b a d
r4: d c b a
If instead we swap d and b (set b=c3 and d=c1), then we get:
r1: a b c d
r2: d a b c
r3: c d a b
r4: b c d a
Now the 1st and 3rd rows are the same as the encryption matrix. All
we need to do then to make the mapping exactly the same is to swap
the 2nd and 4th rows when in decryption mode. To do this without
having to do it on each iteration, we swapped the 2nd and 4th rows
in the decryption key schedule. We also have to do the swap above
when we first pull in the input and when we set the final output. */
a2 =
m0[a >>> 24] ^
m1[b >>> 16 & 255] ^
m2[c >>> 8 & 255] ^
m3[d & 255] ^ w[++i];
b2 =
m0[b >>> 24] ^
m1[c >>> 16 & 255] ^
m2[d >>> 8 & 255] ^
m3[a & 255] ^ w[++i];
c2 =
m0[c >>> 24] ^
m1[d >>> 16 & 255] ^
m2[a >>> 8 & 255] ^
m3[b & 255] ^ w[++i];
d =
m0[d >>> 24] ^
m1[a >>> 16 & 255] ^
m2[b >>> 8 & 255] ^
m3[c & 255] ^ w[++i];
a = a2;
b = b2;
c = c2;
}
/*
Encrypt:
SubBytes(state)
ShiftRows(state)
AddRoundKey(state, w[Nr*Nb, (Nr+1)*Nb-1])
Decrypt:
InvShiftRows(state)
InvSubBytes(state)
AddRoundKey(state, w[0, Nb-1])
*/
// Note: rows are shifted inline
output[0] =
(sub[a >>> 24] << 24) ^
(sub[b >>> 16 & 255] << 16) ^
(sub[c >>> 8 & 255] << 8) ^
(sub[d & 255]) ^ w[++i];
output[decrypt ? 3 : 1] =
(sub[b >>> 24] << 24) ^
(sub[c >>> 16 & 255] << 16) ^
(sub[d >>> 8 & 255] << 8) ^
(sub[a & 255]) ^ w[++i];
output[2] =
(sub[c >>> 24] << 24) ^
(sub[d >>> 16 & 255] << 16) ^
(sub[a >>> 8 & 255] << 8) ^
(sub[b & 255]) ^ w[++i];
output[decrypt ? 1 : 3] =
(sub[d >>> 24] << 24) ^
(sub[a >>> 16 & 255] << 16) ^
(sub[b >>> 8 & 255] << 8) ^
(sub[c & 255]) ^ w[++i];
}
/**
* Deprecated. Instead, use:
*
* forge.cipher.createCipher('AES-<mode>', key);
* forge.cipher.createDecipher('AES-<mode>', key);
*
* Creates a deprecated AES cipher object. This object's mode will default to
* CBC (cipher-block-chaining).
*
* The key and iv may be given as a string of bytes, an array of bytes, a
* byte buffer, or an array of 32-bit words.
*
* @param options the options to use.
* key the symmetric key to use.
* output the buffer to write to.
* decrypt true for decryption, false for encryption.
* mode the cipher mode to use (default: 'CBC').
*
* @return the cipher.
*/
function _createCipher(options) {
options = options || {};
var mode = (options.mode || 'CBC').toUpperCase();
var algorithm = 'AES-' + mode;
var cipher;
if(options.decrypt) {
cipher = forge.cipher.createDecipher(algorithm, options.key);
} else {
cipher = forge.cipher.createCipher(algorithm, options.key);
}
// backwards compatible start API
var start = cipher.start;
cipher.start = function(iv, options) {
// backwards compatibility: support second arg as output buffer
var output = null;
if(options instanceof forge.util.ByteBuffer) {
output = options;
options = {};
}
options = options || {};
options.output = output;
options.iv = iv;
start.call(cipher, options);
};
return cipher;
}