1 /* Copyright (C) 1995-1997 Eric Young (eay@cryptsoft.com)
2 * All rights reserved.
3 *
4 * This package is an SSL implementation written
5 * by Eric Young (eay@cryptsoft.com).
6 * The implementation was written so as to conform with Netscapes SSL.
7 *
8 * This library is free for commercial and non-commercial use as long as
9 * the following conditions are aheared to. The following conditions
10 * apply to all code found in this distribution, be it the RC4, RSA,
11 * lhash, DES, etc., code; not just the SSL code. The SSL documentation
12 * included with this distribution is covered by the same copyright terms
13 * except that the holder is Tim Hudson (tjh@cryptsoft.com).
14 *
15 * Copyright remains Eric Young's, and as such any Copyright notices in
16 * the code are not to be removed.
17 * If this package is used in a product, Eric Young should be given attribution
18 * as the author of the parts of the library used.
19 * This can be in the form of a textual message at program startup or
20 * in documentation (online or textual) provided with the package.
21 *
22 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
23 * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
24 * are met:
25 * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the copyright
26 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
27 * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
28 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
29 * documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
30 * 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software
31 * must display the following acknowledgement:
32 * "This product includes cryptographic software written by
33 * Eric Young (eay@cryptsoft.com)"
34 * The word 'cryptographic' can be left out if the rouines from the library
35 * being used are not cryptographic related :-).
36 * 4. If you include any Windows specific code (or a derivative thereof) from
37 * the apps directory (application code) you must include an acknowledgement:
38 * "This product includes software written by Tim Hudson (tjh@cryptsoft.com)"
39 *
40 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY ERIC YOUNG ``AS IS'' AND
41 * ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
42 * IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
43 * ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
44 * FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
45 * DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
46 * OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
47 * HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
48 * LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
49 * OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
50 * SUCH DAMAGE.
51 *
52 * The licence and distribution terms for any publically available version or
53 * derivative of this code cannot be changed. i.e. this code cannot simply be
54 * copied and put under another distribution licence
55 * [including the GNU Public Licence.]
56 */
57 /* ====================================================================
58 * Copyright (c) 1998-2006 The OpenSSL Project. All rights reserved.
59 *
60 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
61 * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
62 * are met:
63 *
64 * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
65 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
66 *
67 * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
68 * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in
69 * the documentation and/or other materials provided with the
70 * distribution.
71 *
72 * 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this
73 * software must display the following acknowledgment:
74 * "This product includes software developed by the OpenSSL Project
75 * for use in the OpenSSL Toolkit. (http://www.openssl.org/)"
76 *
77 * 4. The names "OpenSSL Toolkit" and "OpenSSL Project" must not be used to
78 * endorse or promote products derived from this software without
79 * prior written permission. For written permission, please contact
80 * openssl-core@openssl.org.
81 *
82 * 5. Products derived from this software may not be called "OpenSSL"
83 * nor may "OpenSSL" appear in their names without prior written
84 * permission of the OpenSSL Project.
85 *
86 * 6. Redistributions of any form whatsoever must retain the following
87 * acknowledgment:
88 * "This product includes software developed by the OpenSSL Project
89 * for use in the OpenSSL Toolkit (http://www.openssl.org/)"
90 *
91 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE OpenSSL PROJECT ``AS IS'' AND ANY
92 * EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
93 * IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
94 * PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE OpenSSL PROJECT OR
95 * ITS CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
96 * SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT
97 * NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES;
98 * LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
99 * HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT,
100 * STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE)
101 * ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED
102 * OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
103 * ====================================================================
104 *
105 * This product includes cryptographic software written by Eric Young
106 * (eay@cryptsoft.com). This product includes software written by Tim
107 * Hudson (tjh@cryptsoft.com).
108 *
109 */
110 /* ====================================================================
111 * Copyright 2002 Sun Microsystems, Inc. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
112 *
113 * Portions of the attached software ("Contribution") are developed by
114 * SUN MICROSYSTEMS, INC., and are contributed to the OpenSSL project.
115 *
116 * The Contribution is licensed pursuant to the Eric Young open source
117 * license provided above.
118 *
119 * The binary polynomial arithmetic software is originally written by
120 * Sheueling Chang Shantz and Douglas Stebila of Sun Microsystems
121 * Laboratories. */
122
123 #ifndef OPENSSL_HEADER_BN_H
124 #define OPENSSL_HEADER_BN_H
125
126 #include <openssl/base.h>
127 #include <openssl/thread.h>
128
129 #include <inttypes.h> // for PRIu64 and friends
130 #include <stdio.h> // for FILE*
131
132 #if defined(__cplusplus)
133 extern "C" {
134 #endif
135
136
137 // BN provides support for working with arbitrary sized integers. For example,
138 // although the largest integer supported by the compiler might be 64 bits, BN
139 // will allow you to work with much larger numbers.
140 //
141 // This library is developed for use inside BoringSSL, and uses implementation
142 // strategies that may not be ideal for other applications. Non-cryptographic
143 // uses should use a more general-purpose integer library, especially if
144 // performance-sensitive.
145 //
146 // Many functions in BN scale quadratically or higher in the bit length of their
147 // input. Callers at this layer are assumed to have capped input sizes within
148 // their performance tolerances.
149
150
151 // BN_ULONG is the native word size when working with big integers.
152 //
153 // Note: on some platforms, inttypes.h does not define print format macros in
154 // C++ unless |__STDC_FORMAT_MACROS| defined. This is due to text in C99 which
155 // was never adopted in any C++ standard and explicitly overruled in C++11. As
156 // this is a public header, bn.h does not define |__STDC_FORMAT_MACROS| itself.
157 // Projects which use |BN_*_FMT*| with outdated C headers may need to define it
158 // externally.
159 #if defined(OPENSSL_64_BIT)
160 typedef uint64_t BN_ULONG;
161 #define BN_BITS2 64
162 #define BN_DEC_FMT1 "%" PRIu64
163 #define BN_DEC_FMT2 "%019" PRIu64
164 #define BN_HEX_FMT1 "%" PRIx64
165 #define BN_HEX_FMT2 "%016" PRIx64
166 #elif defined(OPENSSL_32_BIT)
167 typedef uint32_t BN_ULONG;
168 #define BN_BITS2 32
169 #define BN_DEC_FMT1 "%" PRIu32
170 #define BN_DEC_FMT2 "%09" PRIu32
171 #define BN_HEX_FMT1 "%" PRIx32
172 #define BN_HEX_FMT2 "%08" PRIx32
173 #else
174 #error "Must define either OPENSSL_32_BIT or OPENSSL_64_BIT"
175 #endif
176
177
178 // Allocation and freeing.
179
180 // BN_new creates a new, allocated BIGNUM and initialises it.
181 OPENSSL_EXPORT BIGNUM *BN_new(void);
182
183 // BN_init initialises a stack allocated |BIGNUM|.
184 OPENSSL_EXPORT void BN_init(BIGNUM *bn);
185
186 // BN_free frees the data referenced by |bn| and, if |bn| was originally
187 // allocated on the heap, frees |bn| also.
188 OPENSSL_EXPORT void BN_free(BIGNUM *bn);
189
190 // BN_clear_free erases and frees the data referenced by |bn| and, if |bn| was
191 // originally allocated on the heap, frees |bn| also.
192 OPENSSL_EXPORT void BN_clear_free(BIGNUM *bn);
193
194 // BN_dup allocates a new BIGNUM and sets it equal to |src|. It returns the
195 // allocated BIGNUM on success or NULL otherwise.
196 OPENSSL_EXPORT BIGNUM *BN_dup(const BIGNUM *src);
197
198 // BN_copy sets |dest| equal to |src| and returns |dest| or NULL on allocation
199 // failure.
200 OPENSSL_EXPORT BIGNUM *BN_copy(BIGNUM *dest, const BIGNUM *src);
201
202 // BN_clear sets |bn| to zero and erases the old data.
203 OPENSSL_EXPORT void BN_clear(BIGNUM *bn);
204
205 // BN_value_one returns a static BIGNUM with value 1.
206 OPENSSL_EXPORT const BIGNUM *BN_value_one(void);
207
208
209 // Basic functions.
210
211 // BN_num_bits returns the minimum number of bits needed to represent the
212 // absolute value of |bn|.
213 OPENSSL_EXPORT unsigned BN_num_bits(const BIGNUM *bn);
214
215 // BN_num_bytes returns the minimum number of bytes needed to represent the
216 // absolute value of |bn|.
217 //
218 // While |size_t| is the preferred type for byte counts, callers can assume that
219 // |BIGNUM|s are bounded such that this value, and its corresponding bit count,
220 // will always fit in |int|.
221 OPENSSL_EXPORT unsigned BN_num_bytes(const BIGNUM *bn);
222
223 // BN_zero sets |bn| to zero.
224 OPENSSL_EXPORT void BN_zero(BIGNUM *bn);
225
226 // BN_one sets |bn| to one. It returns one on success or zero on allocation
227 // failure.
228 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_one(BIGNUM *bn);
229
230 // BN_set_word sets |bn| to |value|. It returns one on success or zero on
231 // allocation failure.
232 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_set_word(BIGNUM *bn, BN_ULONG value);
233
234 // BN_set_u64 sets |bn| to |value|. It returns one on success or zero on
235 // allocation failure.
236 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_set_u64(BIGNUM *bn, uint64_t value);
237
238 // BN_set_negative sets the sign of |bn|.
239 OPENSSL_EXPORT void BN_set_negative(BIGNUM *bn, int sign);
240
241 // BN_is_negative returns one if |bn| is negative and zero otherwise.
242 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_is_negative(const BIGNUM *bn);
243
244
245 // Conversion functions.
246
247 // BN_bin2bn sets |*ret| to the value of |len| bytes from |in|, interpreted as
248 // a big-endian number, and returns |ret|. If |ret| is NULL then a fresh
249 // |BIGNUM| is allocated and returned. It returns NULL on allocation
250 // failure.
251 OPENSSL_EXPORT BIGNUM *BN_bin2bn(const uint8_t *in, size_t len, BIGNUM *ret);
252
253 // BN_bn2bin serialises the absolute value of |in| to |out| as a big-endian
254 // integer, which must have |BN_num_bytes| of space available. It returns the
255 // number of bytes written. Note this function leaks the magnitude of |in|. If
256 // |in| is secret, use |BN_bn2bin_padded| instead.
257 OPENSSL_EXPORT size_t BN_bn2bin(const BIGNUM *in, uint8_t *out);
258
259 // BN_le2bn sets |*ret| to the value of |len| bytes from |in|, interpreted as
260 // a little-endian number, and returns |ret|. If |ret| is NULL then a fresh
261 // |BIGNUM| is allocated and returned. It returns NULL on allocation
262 // failure.
263 OPENSSL_EXPORT BIGNUM *BN_le2bn(const uint8_t *in, size_t len, BIGNUM *ret);
264
265 // BN_bn2le_padded serialises the absolute value of |in| to |out| as a
266 // little-endian integer, which must have |len| of space available, padding
267 // out the remainder of out with zeros. If |len| is smaller than |BN_num_bytes|,
268 // the function fails and returns 0. Otherwise, it returns 1.
269 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_bn2le_padded(uint8_t *out, size_t len, const BIGNUM *in);
270
271 // BN_bn2bin_padded serialises the absolute value of |in| to |out| as a
272 // big-endian integer. The integer is padded with leading zeros up to size
273 // |len|. If |len| is smaller than |BN_num_bytes|, the function fails and
274 // returns 0. Otherwise, it returns 1.
275 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_bn2bin_padded(uint8_t *out, size_t len, const BIGNUM *in);
276
277 // BN_bn2cbb_padded behaves like |BN_bn2bin_padded| but writes to a |CBB|.
278 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_bn2cbb_padded(CBB *out, size_t len, const BIGNUM *in);
279
280 // BN_bn2hex returns an allocated string that contains a NUL-terminated, hex
281 // representation of |bn|. If |bn| is negative, the first char in the resulting
282 // string will be '-'. Returns NULL on allocation failure.
283 OPENSSL_EXPORT char *BN_bn2hex(const BIGNUM *bn);
284
285 // BN_hex2bn parses the leading hex number from |in|, which may be proceeded by
286 // a '-' to indicate a negative number and may contain trailing, non-hex data.
287 // If |outp| is not NULL, it constructs a BIGNUM equal to the hex number and
288 // stores it in |*outp|. If |*outp| is NULL then it allocates a new BIGNUM and
289 // updates |*outp|. It returns the number of bytes of |in| processed or zero on
290 // error.
291 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_hex2bn(BIGNUM **outp, const char *in);
292
293 // BN_bn2dec returns an allocated string that contains a NUL-terminated,
294 // decimal representation of |bn|. If |bn| is negative, the first char in the
295 // resulting string will be '-'. Returns NULL on allocation failure.
296 //
297 // Converting an arbitrarily large integer to decimal is quadratic in the bit
298 // length of |a|. This function assumes the caller has capped the input within
299 // performance tolerances.
300 OPENSSL_EXPORT char *BN_bn2dec(const BIGNUM *a);
301
302 // BN_dec2bn parses the leading decimal number from |in|, which may be
303 // proceeded by a '-' to indicate a negative number and may contain trailing,
304 // non-decimal data. If |outp| is not NULL, it constructs a BIGNUM equal to the
305 // decimal number and stores it in |*outp|. If |*outp| is NULL then it
306 // allocates a new BIGNUM and updates |*outp|. It returns the number of bytes
307 // of |in| processed or zero on error.
308 //
309 // Converting an arbitrarily large integer to decimal is quadratic in the bit
310 // length of |a|. This function assumes the caller has capped the input within
311 // performance tolerances.
312 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_dec2bn(BIGNUM **outp, const char *in);
313
314 // BN_asc2bn acts like |BN_dec2bn| or |BN_hex2bn| depending on whether |in|
315 // begins with "0X" or "0x" (indicating hex) or not (indicating decimal). A
316 // leading '-' is still permitted and comes before the optional 0X/0x. It
317 // returns one on success or zero on error.
318 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_asc2bn(BIGNUM **outp, const char *in);
319
320 // BN_print writes a hex encoding of |a| to |bio|. It returns one on success
321 // and zero on error.
322 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_print(BIO *bio, const BIGNUM *a);
323
324 // BN_print_fp acts like |BIO_print|, but wraps |fp| in a |BIO| first.
325 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_print_fp(FILE *fp, const BIGNUM *a);
326
327 // BN_get_word returns the absolute value of |bn| as a single word. If |bn| is
328 // too large to be represented as a single word, the maximum possible value
329 // will be returned.
330 OPENSSL_EXPORT BN_ULONG BN_get_word(const BIGNUM *bn);
331
332 // BN_get_u64 sets |*out| to the absolute value of |bn| as a |uint64_t| and
333 // returns one. If |bn| is too large to be represented as a |uint64_t|, it
334 // returns zero.
335 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_get_u64(const BIGNUM *bn, uint64_t *out);
336
337
338 // ASN.1 functions.
339
340 // BN_parse_asn1_unsigned parses a non-negative DER INTEGER from |cbs| writes
341 // the result to |ret|. It returns one on success and zero on failure.
342 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_parse_asn1_unsigned(CBS *cbs, BIGNUM *ret);
343
344 // BN_marshal_asn1 marshals |bn| as a non-negative DER INTEGER and appends the
345 // result to |cbb|. It returns one on success and zero on failure.
346 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_marshal_asn1(CBB *cbb, const BIGNUM *bn);
347
348
349 // BIGNUM pools.
350 //
351 // Certain BIGNUM operations need to use many temporary variables and
352 // allocating and freeing them can be quite slow. Thus such operations typically
353 // take a |BN_CTX| parameter, which contains a pool of |BIGNUMs|. The |ctx|
354 // argument to a public function may be NULL, in which case a local |BN_CTX|
355 // will be created just for the lifetime of that call.
356 //
357 // A function must call |BN_CTX_start| first. Then, |BN_CTX_get| may be called
358 // repeatedly to obtain temporary |BIGNUM|s. All |BN_CTX_get| calls must be made
359 // before calling any other functions that use the |ctx| as an argument.
360 //
361 // Finally, |BN_CTX_end| must be called before returning from the function.
362 // When |BN_CTX_end| is called, the |BIGNUM| pointers obtained from
363 // |BN_CTX_get| become invalid.
364
365 // BN_CTX_new returns a new, empty BN_CTX or NULL on allocation failure.
366 OPENSSL_EXPORT BN_CTX *BN_CTX_new(void);
367
368 // BN_CTX_free frees all BIGNUMs contained in |ctx| and then frees |ctx|
369 // itself.
370 OPENSSL_EXPORT void BN_CTX_free(BN_CTX *ctx);
371
372 // BN_CTX_start "pushes" a new entry onto the |ctx| stack and allows future
373 // calls to |BN_CTX_get|.
374 OPENSSL_EXPORT void BN_CTX_start(BN_CTX *ctx);
375
376 // BN_CTX_get returns a new |BIGNUM|, or NULL on allocation failure. Once
377 // |BN_CTX_get| has returned NULL, all future calls will also return NULL until
378 // |BN_CTX_end| is called.
379 OPENSSL_EXPORT BIGNUM *BN_CTX_get(BN_CTX *ctx);
380
381 // BN_CTX_end invalidates all |BIGNUM|s returned from |BN_CTX_get| since the
382 // matching |BN_CTX_start| call.
383 OPENSSL_EXPORT void BN_CTX_end(BN_CTX *ctx);
384
385
386 // Simple arithmetic
387
388 // BN_add sets |r| = |a| + |b|, where |r| may be the same pointer as either |a|
389 // or |b|. It returns one on success and zero on allocation failure.
390 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_add(BIGNUM *r, const BIGNUM *a, const BIGNUM *b);
391
392 // BN_uadd sets |r| = |a| + |b|, where |a| and |b| are non-negative and |r| may
393 // be the same pointer as either |a| or |b|. It returns one on success and zero
394 // on allocation failure.
395 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_uadd(BIGNUM *r, const BIGNUM *a, const BIGNUM *b);
396
397 // BN_add_word adds |w| to |a|. It returns one on success and zero otherwise.
398 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_add_word(BIGNUM *a, BN_ULONG w);
399
400 // BN_sub sets |r| = |a| - |b|, where |r| may be the same pointer as either |a|
401 // or |b|. It returns one on success and zero on allocation failure.
402 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_sub(BIGNUM *r, const BIGNUM *a, const BIGNUM *b);
403
404 // BN_usub sets |r| = |a| - |b|, where |a| and |b| are non-negative integers,
405 // |b| < |a| and |r| may be the same pointer as either |a| or |b|. It returns
406 // one on success and zero on allocation failure.
407 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_usub(BIGNUM *r, const BIGNUM *a, const BIGNUM *b);
408
409 // BN_sub_word subtracts |w| from |a|. It returns one on success and zero on
410 // allocation failure.
411 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_sub_word(BIGNUM *a, BN_ULONG w);
412
413 // BN_mul sets |r| = |a| * |b|, where |r| may be the same pointer as |a| or
414 // |b|. Returns one on success and zero otherwise.
415 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_mul(BIGNUM *r, const BIGNUM *a, const BIGNUM *b,
416 BN_CTX *ctx);
417
418 // BN_mul_word sets |bn| = |bn| * |w|. It returns one on success or zero on
419 // allocation failure.
420 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_mul_word(BIGNUM *bn, BN_ULONG w);
421
422 // BN_sqr sets |r| = |a|^2 (i.e. squares), where |r| may be the same pointer as
423 // |a|. Returns one on success and zero otherwise. This is more efficient than
424 // BN_mul(r, a, a, ctx).
425 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_sqr(BIGNUM *r, const BIGNUM *a, BN_CTX *ctx);
426
427 // BN_div divides |numerator| by |divisor| and places the result in |quotient|
428 // and the remainder in |rem|. Either of |quotient| or |rem| may be NULL, in
429 // which case the respective value is not returned. The result is rounded
430 // towards zero; thus if |numerator| is negative, the remainder will be zero or
431 // negative. It returns one on success or zero on error.
432 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_div(BIGNUM *quotient, BIGNUM *rem,
433 const BIGNUM *numerator, const BIGNUM *divisor,
434 BN_CTX *ctx);
435
436 // BN_div_word sets |numerator| = |numerator|/|divisor| and returns the
437 // remainder or (BN_ULONG)-1 on error.
438 OPENSSL_EXPORT BN_ULONG BN_div_word(BIGNUM *numerator, BN_ULONG divisor);
439
440 // BN_sqrt sets |*out_sqrt| (which may be the same |BIGNUM| as |in|) to the
441 // square root of |in|, using |ctx|. It returns one on success or zero on
442 // error. Negative numbers and non-square numbers will result in an error with
443 // appropriate errors on the error queue.
444 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_sqrt(BIGNUM *out_sqrt, const BIGNUM *in, BN_CTX *ctx);
445
446
447 // Comparison functions
448
449 // BN_cmp returns a value less than, equal to or greater than zero if |a| is
450 // less than, equal to or greater than |b|, respectively.
451 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_cmp(const BIGNUM *a, const BIGNUM *b);
452
453 // BN_cmp_word is like |BN_cmp| except it takes its second argument as a
454 // |BN_ULONG| instead of a |BIGNUM|.
455 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_cmp_word(const BIGNUM *a, BN_ULONG b);
456
457 // BN_ucmp returns a value less than, equal to or greater than zero if the
458 // absolute value of |a| is less than, equal to or greater than the absolute
459 // value of |b|, respectively.
460 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_ucmp(const BIGNUM *a, const BIGNUM *b);
461
462 // BN_equal_consttime returns one if |a| is equal to |b|, and zero otherwise.
463 // It takes an amount of time dependent on the sizes of |a| and |b|, but
464 // independent of the contents (including the signs) of |a| and |b|.
465 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_equal_consttime(const BIGNUM *a, const BIGNUM *b);
466
467 // BN_abs_is_word returns one if the absolute value of |bn| equals |w| and zero
468 // otherwise.
469 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_abs_is_word(const BIGNUM *bn, BN_ULONG w);
470
471 // BN_is_zero returns one if |bn| is zero and zero otherwise.
472 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_is_zero(const BIGNUM *bn);
473
474 // BN_is_one returns one if |bn| equals one and zero otherwise.
475 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_is_one(const BIGNUM *bn);
476
477 // BN_is_word returns one if |bn| is exactly |w| and zero otherwise.
478 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_is_word(const BIGNUM *bn, BN_ULONG w);
479
480 // BN_is_odd returns one if |bn| is odd and zero otherwise.
481 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_is_odd(const BIGNUM *bn);
482
483 // BN_is_pow2 returns 1 if |a| is a power of two, and 0 otherwise.
484 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_is_pow2(const BIGNUM *a);
485
486
487 // Bitwise operations.
488
489 // BN_lshift sets |r| equal to |a| << n. The |a| and |r| arguments may be the
490 // same |BIGNUM|. It returns one on success and zero on allocation failure.
491 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_lshift(BIGNUM *r, const BIGNUM *a, int n);
492
493 // BN_lshift1 sets |r| equal to |a| << 1, where |r| and |a| may be the same
494 // pointer. It returns one on success and zero on allocation failure.
495 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_lshift1(BIGNUM *r, const BIGNUM *a);
496
497 // BN_rshift sets |r| equal to |a| >> n, where |r| and |a| may be the same
498 // pointer. It returns one on success and zero on allocation failure.
499 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_rshift(BIGNUM *r, const BIGNUM *a, int n);
500
501 // BN_rshift1 sets |r| equal to |a| >> 1, where |r| and |a| may be the same
502 // pointer. It returns one on success and zero on allocation failure.
503 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_rshift1(BIGNUM *r, const BIGNUM *a);
504
505 // BN_set_bit sets the |n|th, least-significant bit in |a|. For example, if |a|
506 // is 2 then setting bit zero will make it 3. It returns one on success or zero
507 // on allocation failure.
508 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_set_bit(BIGNUM *a, int n);
509
510 // BN_clear_bit clears the |n|th, least-significant bit in |a|. For example, if
511 // |a| is 3, clearing bit zero will make it two. It returns one on success or
512 // zero on allocation failure.
513 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_clear_bit(BIGNUM *a, int n);
514
515 // BN_is_bit_set returns one if the |n|th least-significant bit in |a| exists
516 // and is set. Otherwise, it returns zero.
517 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_is_bit_set(const BIGNUM *a, int n);
518
519 // BN_mask_bits truncates |a| so that it is only |n| bits long. It returns one
520 // on success or zero if |n| is negative.
521 //
522 // This differs from OpenSSL which additionally returns zero if |a|'s word
523 // length is less than or equal to |n|, rounded down to a number of words. Note
524 // word size is platform-dependent, so this behavior is also difficult to rely
525 // on in OpenSSL and not very useful.
526 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_mask_bits(BIGNUM *a, int n);
527
528 // BN_count_low_zero_bits returns the number of low-order zero bits in |bn|, or
529 // the number of factors of two which divide it. It returns zero if |bn| is
530 // zero.
531 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_count_low_zero_bits(const BIGNUM *bn);
532
533
534 // Modulo arithmetic.
535
536 // BN_mod_word returns |a| mod |w| or (BN_ULONG)-1 on error.
537 OPENSSL_EXPORT BN_ULONG BN_mod_word(const BIGNUM *a, BN_ULONG w);
538
539 // BN_mod_pow2 sets |r| = |a| mod 2^|e|. It returns 1 on success and
540 // 0 on error.
541 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_mod_pow2(BIGNUM *r, const BIGNUM *a, size_t e);
542
543 // BN_nnmod_pow2 sets |r| = |a| mod 2^|e| where |r| is always positive.
544 // It returns 1 on success and 0 on error.
545 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_nnmod_pow2(BIGNUM *r, const BIGNUM *a, size_t e);
546
547 // BN_mod is a helper macro that calls |BN_div| and discards the quotient.
548 #define BN_mod(rem, numerator, divisor, ctx) \
549 BN_div(NULL, (rem), (numerator), (divisor), (ctx))
550
551 // BN_nnmod is a non-negative modulo function. It acts like |BN_mod|, but 0 <=
552 // |rem| < |divisor| is always true. It returns one on success and zero on
553 // error.
554 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_nnmod(BIGNUM *rem, const BIGNUM *numerator,
555 const BIGNUM *divisor, BN_CTX *ctx);
556
557 // BN_mod_add sets |r| = |a| + |b| mod |m|. It returns one on success and zero
558 // on error.
559 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_mod_add(BIGNUM *r, const BIGNUM *a, const BIGNUM *b,
560 const BIGNUM *m, BN_CTX *ctx);
561
562 // BN_mod_add_quick acts like |BN_mod_add| but requires that |a| and |b| be
563 // non-negative and less than |m|.
564 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_mod_add_quick(BIGNUM *r, const BIGNUM *a, const BIGNUM *b,
565 const BIGNUM *m);
566
567 // BN_mod_sub sets |r| = |a| - |b| mod |m|. It returns one on success and zero
568 // on error.
569 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_mod_sub(BIGNUM *r, const BIGNUM *a, const BIGNUM *b,
570 const BIGNUM *m, BN_CTX *ctx);
571
572 // BN_mod_sub_quick acts like |BN_mod_sub| but requires that |a| and |b| be
573 // non-negative and less than |m|.
574 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_mod_sub_quick(BIGNUM *r, const BIGNUM *a, const BIGNUM *b,
575 const BIGNUM *m);
576
577 // BN_mod_mul sets |r| = |a|*|b| mod |m|. It returns one on success and zero
578 // on error.
579 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_mod_mul(BIGNUM *r, const BIGNUM *a, const BIGNUM *b,
580 const BIGNUM *m, BN_CTX *ctx);
581
582 // BN_mod_sqr sets |r| = |a|^2 mod |m|. It returns one on success and zero
583 // on error.
584 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_mod_sqr(BIGNUM *r, const BIGNUM *a, const BIGNUM *m,
585 BN_CTX *ctx);
586
587 // BN_mod_lshift sets |r| = (|a| << n) mod |m|, where |r| and |a| may be the
588 // same pointer. It returns one on success and zero on error.
589 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_mod_lshift(BIGNUM *r, const BIGNUM *a, int n,
590 const BIGNUM *m, BN_CTX *ctx);
591
592 // BN_mod_lshift_quick acts like |BN_mod_lshift| but requires that |a| be
593 // non-negative and less than |m|.
594 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_mod_lshift_quick(BIGNUM *r, const BIGNUM *a, int n,
595 const BIGNUM *m);
596
597 // BN_mod_lshift1 sets |r| = (|a| << 1) mod |m|, where |r| and |a| may be the
598 // same pointer. It returns one on success and zero on error.
599 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_mod_lshift1(BIGNUM *r, const BIGNUM *a, const BIGNUM *m,
600 BN_CTX *ctx);
601
602 // BN_mod_lshift1_quick acts like |BN_mod_lshift1| but requires that |a| be
603 // non-negative and less than |m|.
604 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_mod_lshift1_quick(BIGNUM *r, const BIGNUM *a,
605 const BIGNUM *m);
606
607 // BN_mod_sqrt returns a newly-allocated |BIGNUM|, r, such that
608 // r^2 == a (mod p). It returns NULL on error or if |a| is not a square mod |p|.
609 // In the latter case, it will add |BN_R_NOT_A_SQUARE| to the error queue.
610 // If |a| is a square and |p| > 2, there are two possible square roots. This
611 // function may return either and may even select one non-deterministically.
612 //
613 // This function only works if |p| is a prime. If |p| is composite, it may fail
614 // or return an arbitrary value. Callers should not pass attacker-controlled
615 // values of |p|.
616 OPENSSL_EXPORT BIGNUM *BN_mod_sqrt(BIGNUM *in, const BIGNUM *a, const BIGNUM *p,
617 BN_CTX *ctx);
618
619
620 // Random and prime number generation.
621
622 // The following are values for the |top| parameter of |BN_rand|.
623 #define BN_RAND_TOP_ANY (-1)
624 #define BN_RAND_TOP_ONE 0
625 #define BN_RAND_TOP_TWO 1
626
627 // The following are values for the |bottom| parameter of |BN_rand|.
628 #define BN_RAND_BOTTOM_ANY 0
629 #define BN_RAND_BOTTOM_ODD 1
630
631 // BN_rand sets |rnd| to a random number of length |bits|. It returns one on
632 // success and zero otherwise.
633 //
634 // |top| must be one of the |BN_RAND_TOP_*| values. If |BN_RAND_TOP_ONE|, the
635 // most-significant bit, if any, will be set. If |BN_RAND_TOP_TWO|, the two
636 // most significant bits, if any, will be set. If |BN_RAND_TOP_ANY|, no extra
637 // action will be taken and |BN_num_bits(rnd)| may not equal |bits| if the most
638 // significant bits randomly ended up as zeros.
639 //
640 // |bottom| must be one of the |BN_RAND_BOTTOM_*| values. If
641 // |BN_RAND_BOTTOM_ODD|, the least-significant bit, if any, will be set. If
642 // |BN_RAND_BOTTOM_ANY|, no extra action will be taken.
643 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_rand(BIGNUM *rnd, int bits, int top, int bottom);
644
645 // BN_pseudo_rand is an alias for |BN_rand|.
646 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_pseudo_rand(BIGNUM *rnd, int bits, int top, int bottom);
647
648 // BN_rand_range is equivalent to |BN_rand_range_ex| with |min_inclusive| set
649 // to zero and |max_exclusive| set to |range|.
650 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_rand_range(BIGNUM *rnd, const BIGNUM *range);
651
652 // BN_rand_range_ex sets |rnd| to a random value in
653 // [min_inclusive..max_exclusive). It returns one on success and zero
654 // otherwise.
655 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_rand_range_ex(BIGNUM *r, BN_ULONG min_inclusive,
656 const BIGNUM *max_exclusive);
657
658 // BN_pseudo_rand_range is an alias for BN_rand_range.
659 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_pseudo_rand_range(BIGNUM *rnd, const BIGNUM *range);
660
661 #define BN_GENCB_GENERATED 0
662 #define BN_GENCB_PRIME_TEST 1
663
664 // bn_gencb_st, or |BN_GENCB|, holds a callback function that is used by
665 // generation functions that can take a very long time to complete. Use
666 // |BN_GENCB_set| to initialise a |BN_GENCB| structure.
667 //
668 // The callback receives the address of that |BN_GENCB| structure as its last
669 // argument and the user is free to put an arbitrary pointer in |arg|. The other
670 // arguments are set as follows:
671 // event=BN_GENCB_GENERATED, n=i: after generating the i'th possible prime
672 // number.
673 // event=BN_GENCB_PRIME_TEST, n=-1: when finished trial division primality
674 // checks.
675 // event=BN_GENCB_PRIME_TEST, n=i: when the i'th primality test has finished.
676 //
677 // The callback can return zero to abort the generation progress or one to
678 // allow it to continue.
679 //
680 // When other code needs to call a BN generation function it will often take a
681 // BN_GENCB argument and may call the function with other argument values.
682 struct bn_gencb_st {
683 void *arg; // callback-specific data
684 int (*callback)(int event, int n, struct bn_gencb_st *);
685 };
686
687 // BN_GENCB_new returns a newly-allocated |BN_GENCB| object, or NULL on
688 // allocation failure. The result must be released with |BN_GENCB_free| when
689 // done.
690 OPENSSL_EXPORT BN_GENCB *BN_GENCB_new(void);
691
692 // BN_GENCB_free releases memory associated with |callback|.
693 OPENSSL_EXPORT void BN_GENCB_free(BN_GENCB *callback);
694
695 // BN_GENCB_set configures |callback| to call |f| and sets |callout->arg| to
696 // |arg|.
697 OPENSSL_EXPORT void BN_GENCB_set(BN_GENCB *callback,
698 int (*f)(int event, int n, BN_GENCB *),
699 void *arg);
700
701 // BN_GENCB_call calls |callback|, if not NULL, and returns the return value of
702 // the callback, or 1 if |callback| is NULL.
703 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_GENCB_call(BN_GENCB *callback, int event, int n);
704
705 // BN_GENCB_get_arg returns |callback->arg|.
706 OPENSSL_EXPORT void *BN_GENCB_get_arg(const BN_GENCB *callback);
707
708 // BN_generate_prime_ex sets |ret| to a prime number of |bits| length. If safe
709 // is non-zero then the prime will be such that (ret-1)/2 is also a prime.
710 // (This is needed for Diffie-Hellman groups to ensure that the only subgroups
711 // are of size 2 and (p-1)/2.).
712 //
713 // If |add| is not NULL, the prime will fulfill the condition |ret| % |add| ==
714 // |rem| in order to suit a given generator. (If |rem| is NULL then |ret| %
715 // |add| == 1.)
716 //
717 // If |cb| is not NULL, it will be called during processing to give an
718 // indication of progress. See the comments for |BN_GENCB|. It returns one on
719 // success and zero otherwise.
720 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_generate_prime_ex(BIGNUM *ret, int bits, int safe,
721 const BIGNUM *add, const BIGNUM *rem,
722 BN_GENCB *cb);
723
724 // BN_prime_checks_for_validation can be used as the |checks| argument to the
725 // primarily testing functions when validating an externally-supplied candidate
726 // prime. It gives a false positive rate of at most 2^{-128}. (The worst case
727 // false positive rate for a single iteration is 1/4 per
728 // https://eprint.iacr.org/2018/749. (1/4)^64 = 2^{-128}.)
729 #define BN_prime_checks_for_validation 64
730
731 // BN_prime_checks_for_generation can be used as the |checks| argument to the
732 // primality testing functions when generating random primes. It gives a false
733 // positive rate at most the security level of the corresponding RSA key size.
734 //
735 // Note this value only performs enough checks if the candidate prime was
736 // selected randomly. If validating an externally-supplied candidate, especially
737 // one that may be selected adversarially, use |BN_prime_checks_for_validation|
738 // instead.
739 #define BN_prime_checks_for_generation 0
740
741 // bn_primality_result_t enumerates the outcomes of primality-testing.
742 enum bn_primality_result_t {
743 bn_probably_prime,
744 bn_composite,
745 bn_non_prime_power_composite,
746 };
747
748 // BN_enhanced_miller_rabin_primality_test tests whether |w| is probably a prime
749 // number using the Enhanced Miller-Rabin Test (FIPS 186-4 C.3.2) with
750 // |checks| iterations and returns the result in |out_result|. Enhanced
751 // Miller-Rabin tests primality for odd integers greater than 3, returning
752 // |bn_probably_prime| if the number is probably prime,
753 // |bn_non_prime_power_composite| if the number is a composite that is not the
754 // power of a single prime, and |bn_composite| otherwise. It returns one on
755 // success and zero on failure. If |cb| is not NULL, then it is called during
756 // each iteration of the primality test.
757 //
758 // See |BN_prime_checks_for_validation| and |BN_prime_checks_for_generation| for
759 // recommended values of |checks|.
760 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_enhanced_miller_rabin_primality_test(
761 enum bn_primality_result_t *out_result, const BIGNUM *w, int checks,
762 BN_CTX *ctx, BN_GENCB *cb);
763
764 // BN_primality_test sets |*is_probably_prime| to one if |candidate| is
765 // probably a prime number by the Miller-Rabin test or zero if it's certainly
766 // not.
767 //
768 // If |do_trial_division| is non-zero then |candidate| will be tested against a
769 // list of small primes before Miller-Rabin tests. The probability of this
770 // function returning a false positive is at most 2^{2*checks}. See
771 // |BN_prime_checks_for_validation| and |BN_prime_checks_for_generation| for
772 // recommended values of |checks|.
773 //
774 // If |cb| is not NULL then it is called during the checking process. See the
775 // comment above |BN_GENCB|.
776 //
777 // The function returns one on success and zero on error.
778 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_primality_test(int *is_probably_prime,
779 const BIGNUM *candidate, int checks,
780 BN_CTX *ctx, int do_trial_division,
781 BN_GENCB *cb);
782
783 // BN_is_prime_fasttest_ex returns one if |candidate| is probably a prime
784 // number by the Miller-Rabin test, zero if it's certainly not and -1 on error.
785 //
786 // If |do_trial_division| is non-zero then |candidate| will be tested against a
787 // list of small primes before Miller-Rabin tests. The probability of this
788 // function returning one when |candidate| is composite is at most 2^{2*checks}.
789 // See |BN_prime_checks_for_validation| and |BN_prime_checks_for_generation| for
790 // recommended values of |checks|.
791 //
792 // If |cb| is not NULL then it is called during the checking process. See the
793 // comment above |BN_GENCB|.
794 //
795 // WARNING: deprecated. Use |BN_primality_test|.
796 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_is_prime_fasttest_ex(const BIGNUM *candidate, int checks,
797 BN_CTX *ctx, int do_trial_division,
798 BN_GENCB *cb);
799
800 // BN_is_prime_ex acts the same as |BN_is_prime_fasttest_ex| with
801 // |do_trial_division| set to zero.
802 //
803 // WARNING: deprecated: Use |BN_primality_test|.
804 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_is_prime_ex(const BIGNUM *candidate, int checks,
805 BN_CTX *ctx, BN_GENCB *cb);
806
807
808 // Number theory functions
809
810 // BN_gcd sets |r| = gcd(|a|, |b|). It returns one on success and zero
811 // otherwise.
812 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_gcd(BIGNUM *r, const BIGNUM *a, const BIGNUM *b,
813 BN_CTX *ctx);
814
815 // BN_mod_inverse sets |out| equal to |a|^-1, mod |n|. If |out| is NULL, a
816 // fresh BIGNUM is allocated. It returns the result or NULL on error.
817 //
818 // If |n| is even then the operation is performed using an algorithm that avoids
819 // some branches but which isn't constant-time. This function shouldn't be used
820 // for secret values; use |BN_mod_inverse_blinded| instead. Or, if |n| is
821 // guaranteed to be prime, use
822 // |BN_mod_exp_mont_consttime(out, a, m_minus_2, m, ctx, m_mont)|, taking
823 // advantage of Fermat's Little Theorem.
824 OPENSSL_EXPORT BIGNUM *BN_mod_inverse(BIGNUM *out, const BIGNUM *a,
825 const BIGNUM *n, BN_CTX *ctx);
826
827 // BN_mod_inverse_blinded sets |out| equal to |a|^-1, mod |n|, where |n| is the
828 // Montgomery modulus for |mont|. |a| must be non-negative and must be less
829 // than |n|. |n| must be greater than 1. |a| is blinded (masked by a random
830 // value) to protect it against side-channel attacks. On failure, if the failure
831 // was caused by |a| having no inverse mod |n| then |*out_no_inverse| will be
832 // set to one; otherwise it will be set to zero.
833 //
834 // Note this function may incorrectly report |a| has no inverse if the random
835 // blinding value has no inverse. It should only be used when |n| has few
836 // non-invertible elements, such as an RSA modulus.
837 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_mod_inverse_blinded(BIGNUM *out, int *out_no_inverse,
838 const BIGNUM *a,
839 const BN_MONT_CTX *mont, BN_CTX *ctx);
840
841 // BN_mod_inverse_odd sets |out| equal to |a|^-1, mod |n|. |a| must be
842 // non-negative and must be less than |n|. |n| must be odd. This function
843 // shouldn't be used for secret values; use |BN_mod_inverse_blinded| instead.
844 // Or, if |n| is guaranteed to be prime, use
845 // |BN_mod_exp_mont_consttime(out, a, m_minus_2, m, ctx, m_mont)|, taking
846 // advantage of Fermat's Little Theorem. It returns one on success or zero on
847 // failure. On failure, if the failure was caused by |a| having no inverse mod
848 // |n| then |*out_no_inverse| will be set to one; otherwise it will be set to
849 // zero.
850 int BN_mod_inverse_odd(BIGNUM *out, int *out_no_inverse, const BIGNUM *a,
851 const BIGNUM *n, BN_CTX *ctx);
852
853
854 // Montgomery arithmetic.
855
856 // BN_MONT_CTX contains the precomputed values needed to work in a specific
857 // Montgomery domain.
858
859 // BN_MONT_CTX_new_for_modulus returns a fresh |BN_MONT_CTX| given the modulus,
860 // |mod| or NULL on error. Note this function assumes |mod| is public.
861 OPENSSL_EXPORT BN_MONT_CTX *BN_MONT_CTX_new_for_modulus(const BIGNUM *mod,
862 BN_CTX *ctx);
863
864 // BN_MONT_CTX_new_consttime behaves like |BN_MONT_CTX_new_for_modulus| but
865 // treats |mod| as secret.
866 OPENSSL_EXPORT BN_MONT_CTX *BN_MONT_CTX_new_consttime(const BIGNUM *mod,
867 BN_CTX *ctx);
868
869 // BN_MONT_CTX_free frees memory associated with |mont|.
870 OPENSSL_EXPORT void BN_MONT_CTX_free(BN_MONT_CTX *mont);
871
872 // BN_MONT_CTX_copy sets |to| equal to |from|. It returns |to| on success or
873 // NULL on error.
874 OPENSSL_EXPORT BN_MONT_CTX *BN_MONT_CTX_copy(BN_MONT_CTX *to,
875 const BN_MONT_CTX *from);
876
877 // BN_to_montgomery sets |ret| equal to |a| in the Montgomery domain. |a| is
878 // assumed to be in the range [0, n), where |n| is the Montgomery modulus. It
879 // returns one on success or zero on error.
880 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_to_montgomery(BIGNUM *ret, const BIGNUM *a,
881 const BN_MONT_CTX *mont, BN_CTX *ctx);
882
883 // BN_from_montgomery sets |ret| equal to |a| * R^-1, i.e. translates values out
884 // of the Montgomery domain. |a| is assumed to be in the range [0, n*R), where
885 // |n| is the Montgomery modulus. Note n < R, so inputs in the range [0, n*n)
886 // are valid. This function returns one on success or zero on error.
887 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_from_montgomery(BIGNUM *ret, const BIGNUM *a,
888 const BN_MONT_CTX *mont, BN_CTX *ctx);
889
890 // BN_mod_mul_montgomery set |r| equal to |a| * |b|, in the Montgomery domain.
891 // Both |a| and |b| must already be in the Montgomery domain (by
892 // |BN_to_montgomery|). In particular, |a| and |b| are assumed to be in the
893 // range [0, n), where |n| is the Montgomery modulus. It returns one on success
894 // or zero on error.
895 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_mod_mul_montgomery(BIGNUM *r, const BIGNUM *a,
896 const BIGNUM *b,
897 const BN_MONT_CTX *mont, BN_CTX *ctx);
898
899
900 // Exponentiation.
901
902 // BN_exp sets |r| equal to |a|^{|p|}. It does so with a square-and-multiply
903 // algorithm that leaks side-channel information. It returns one on success or
904 // zero otherwise.
905 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_exp(BIGNUM *r, const BIGNUM *a, const BIGNUM *p,
906 BN_CTX *ctx);
907
908 // BN_mod_exp sets |r| equal to |a|^{|p|} mod |m|. It does so with the best
909 // algorithm for the values provided. It returns one on success or zero
910 // otherwise. The |BN_mod_exp_mont_consttime| variant must be used if the
911 // exponent is secret.
912 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_mod_exp(BIGNUM *r, const BIGNUM *a, const BIGNUM *p,
913 const BIGNUM *m, BN_CTX *ctx);
914
915 // BN_mod_exp_mont behaves like |BN_mod_exp| but treats |a| as secret and
916 // requires 0 <= |a| < |m|.
917 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_mod_exp_mont(BIGNUM *r, const BIGNUM *a, const BIGNUM *p,
918 const BIGNUM *m, BN_CTX *ctx,
919 const BN_MONT_CTX *mont);
920
921 // BN_mod_exp_mont_consttime behaves like |BN_mod_exp| but treats |a|, |p|, and
922 // |m| as secret and requires 0 <= |a| < |m|.
923 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_mod_exp_mont_consttime(BIGNUM *rr, const BIGNUM *a,
924 const BIGNUM *p, const BIGNUM *m,
925 BN_CTX *ctx,
926 const BN_MONT_CTX *mont);
927
928
929 // Deprecated functions
930
931 // BN_bn2mpi serialises the value of |in| to |out|, using a format that consists
932 // of the number's length in bytes represented as a 4-byte big-endian number,
933 // and the number itself in big-endian format, where the most significant bit
934 // signals a negative number. (The representation of numbers with the MSB set is
935 // prefixed with null byte). |out| must have sufficient space available; to
936 // find the needed amount of space, call the function with |out| set to NULL.
937 OPENSSL_EXPORT size_t BN_bn2mpi(const BIGNUM *in, uint8_t *out);
938
939 // BN_mpi2bn parses |len| bytes from |in| and returns the resulting value. The
940 // bytes at |in| are expected to be in the format emitted by |BN_bn2mpi|.
941 //
942 // If |out| is NULL then a fresh |BIGNUM| is allocated and returned, otherwise
943 // |out| is reused and returned. On error, NULL is returned and the error queue
944 // is updated.
945 OPENSSL_EXPORT BIGNUM *BN_mpi2bn(const uint8_t *in, size_t len, BIGNUM *out);
946
947 // BN_mod_exp_mont_word is like |BN_mod_exp_mont| except that the base |a| is
948 // given as a |BN_ULONG| instead of a |BIGNUM *|. It returns one on success
949 // or zero otherwise.
950 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_mod_exp_mont_word(BIGNUM *r, BN_ULONG a, const BIGNUM *p,
951 const BIGNUM *m, BN_CTX *ctx,
952 const BN_MONT_CTX *mont);
953
954 // BN_mod_exp2_mont calculates (a1^p1) * (a2^p2) mod m. It returns 1 on success
955 // or zero otherwise.
956 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_mod_exp2_mont(BIGNUM *r, const BIGNUM *a1,
957 const BIGNUM *p1, const BIGNUM *a2,
958 const BIGNUM *p2, const BIGNUM *m,
959 BN_CTX *ctx, const BN_MONT_CTX *mont);
960
961 // BN_MONT_CTX_new returns a fresh |BN_MONT_CTX| or NULL on allocation failure.
962 // Use |BN_MONT_CTX_new_for_modulus| instead.
963 OPENSSL_EXPORT BN_MONT_CTX *BN_MONT_CTX_new(void);
964
965 // BN_MONT_CTX_set sets up a Montgomery context given the modulus, |mod|. It
966 // returns one on success and zero on error. Use |BN_MONT_CTX_new_for_modulus|
967 // instead.
968 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_MONT_CTX_set(BN_MONT_CTX *mont, const BIGNUM *mod,
969 BN_CTX *ctx);
970
971 // BN_bn2binpad behaves like |BN_bn2bin_padded|, but it returns |len| on success
972 // and -1 on error.
973 //
974 // Use |BN_bn2bin_padded| instead. It is |size_t|-clean.
975 OPENSSL_EXPORT int BN_bn2binpad(const BIGNUM *in, uint8_t *out, int len);
976
977 // BN_prime_checks is a deprecated alias for |BN_prime_checks_for_validation|.
978 // Use |BN_prime_checks_for_generation| or |BN_prime_checks_for_validation|
979 // instead. (This defaults to the |_for_validation| value in order to be
980 // conservative.)
981 #define BN_prime_checks BN_prime_checks_for_validation
982
983 // BN_secure_new calls |BN_new|.
984 OPENSSL_EXPORT BIGNUM *BN_secure_new(void);
985
986
987 // Private functions
988
989 struct bignum_st {
990 // d is a pointer to an array of |width| |BN_BITS2|-bit chunks in
991 // little-endian order. This stores the absolute value of the number.
992 BN_ULONG *d;
993 // width is the number of elements of |d| which are valid. This value is not
994 // necessarily minimal; the most-significant words of |d| may be zero.
995 // |width| determines a potentially loose upper-bound on the absolute value
996 // of the |BIGNUM|.
997 //
998 // Functions taking |BIGNUM| inputs must compute the same answer for all
999 // possible widths. |bn_minimal_width|, |bn_set_minimal_width|, and other
1000 // helpers may be used to recover the minimal width, provided it is not
1001 // secret. If it is secret, use a different algorithm. Functions may output
1002 // minimal or non-minimal |BIGNUM|s depending on secrecy requirements, but
1003 // those which cause widths to unboundedly grow beyond the minimal value
1004 // should be documented such.
1005 //
1006 // Note this is different from historical |BIGNUM| semantics.
1007 int width;
1008 // dmax is number of elements of |d| which are allocated.
1009 int dmax;
1010 // neg is one if the number if negative and zero otherwise.
1011 int neg;
1012 // flags is a bitmask of |BN_FLG_*| values
1013 int flags;
1014 };
1015
1016 struct bn_mont_ctx_st {
1017 // RR is R^2, reduced modulo |N|. It is used to convert to Montgomery form. It
1018 // is guaranteed to have the same width as |N|.
1019 BIGNUM RR;
1020 // N is the modulus. It is always stored in minimal form, so |N.width|
1021 // determines R.
1022 BIGNUM N;
1023 BN_ULONG n0[2]; // least significant words of (R*Ri-1)/N
1024 };
1025
1026 OPENSSL_EXPORT unsigned BN_num_bits_word(BN_ULONG l);
1027
1028 #define BN_FLG_MALLOCED 0x01
1029 #define BN_FLG_STATIC_DATA 0x02
1030 // |BN_FLG_CONSTTIME| has been removed and intentionally omitted so code relying
1031 // on it will not compile. Consumers outside BoringSSL should use the
1032 // higher-level cryptographic algorithms exposed by other modules. Consumers
1033 // within the library should call the appropriate timing-sensitive algorithm
1034 // directly.
1035
1036
1037 #if defined(__cplusplus)
1038 } // extern C
1039
1040 #if !defined(BORINGSSL_NO_CXX)
1041 extern "C++" {
1042
1043 BSSL_NAMESPACE_BEGIN
1044
BORINGSSL_MAKE_DELETER(BIGNUM,BN_free)1045 BORINGSSL_MAKE_DELETER(BIGNUM, BN_free)
1046 BORINGSSL_MAKE_DELETER(BN_CTX, BN_CTX_free)
1047 BORINGSSL_MAKE_DELETER(BN_MONT_CTX, BN_MONT_CTX_free)
1048
1049 class BN_CTXScope {
1050 public:
1051 BN_CTXScope(BN_CTX *ctx) : ctx_(ctx) { BN_CTX_start(ctx_); }
1052 ~BN_CTXScope() { BN_CTX_end(ctx_); }
1053
1054 private:
1055 BN_CTX *ctx_;
1056
1057 BN_CTXScope(BN_CTXScope &) = delete;
1058 BN_CTXScope &operator=(BN_CTXScope &) = delete;
1059 };
1060
1061 BSSL_NAMESPACE_END
1062
1063 } // extern C++
1064 #endif
1065
1066 #endif
1067
1068 #define BN_R_ARG2_LT_ARG3 100
1069 #define BN_R_BAD_RECIPROCAL 101
1070 #define BN_R_BIGNUM_TOO_LONG 102
1071 #define BN_R_BITS_TOO_SMALL 103
1072 #define BN_R_CALLED_WITH_EVEN_MODULUS 104
1073 #define BN_R_DIV_BY_ZERO 105
1074 #define BN_R_EXPAND_ON_STATIC_BIGNUM_DATA 106
1075 #define BN_R_INPUT_NOT_REDUCED 107
1076 #define BN_R_INVALID_RANGE 108
1077 #define BN_R_NEGATIVE_NUMBER 109
1078 #define BN_R_NOT_A_SQUARE 110
1079 #define BN_R_NOT_INITIALIZED 111
1080 #define BN_R_NO_INVERSE 112
1081 #define BN_R_PRIVATE_KEY_TOO_LARGE 113
1082 #define BN_R_P_IS_NOT_PRIME 114
1083 #define BN_R_TOO_MANY_ITERATIONS 115
1084 #define BN_R_TOO_MANY_TEMPORARY_VARIABLES 116
1085 #define BN_R_BAD_ENCODING 117
1086 #define BN_R_ENCODE_ERROR 118
1087 #define BN_R_INVALID_INPUT 119
1088
1089 #endif // OPENSSL_HEADER_BN_H
1090