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README.md

1[![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/cisco/libsrtp.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/cisco/libsrtp)
2[![Coverity Scan Build Status](https://scan.coverity.com/projects/14274/badge.svg)](https://scan.coverity.com/projects/cisco-libsrtp)
3
4<a name="introduction-to-libsrtp"></a>
5# Introduction to libSRTP
6
7This package provides an implementation of the Secure Real-time
8Transport Protocol (SRTP), the Universal Security Transform (UST), and
9a supporting cryptographic kernel. The SRTP API is documented in include/srtp.h,
10and the library is in libsrtp2.a (after compilation).
11
12This document describes libSRTP, the Open Source Secure RTP library
13from Cisco Systems, Inc. RTP is the Real-time Transport Protocol, an
14IETF standard for the transport of real-time data such as telephony,
15audio, and video, defined by [RFC 3550](https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3550.txt).
16Secure RTP (SRTP) is an RTP profile for providing confidentiality to RTP data
17and authentication to the RTP header and payload. SRTP is an IETF Standard,
18defined in [RFC 3711](https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3711.txt), and was developed
19in the IETF Audio/Video Transport (AVT) Working Group. This library supports
20all of the mandatory features of SRTP, but not all of the optional features. See
21the [Supported Features](#supported-features) section for more detailed information.
22
23This document is also used to generate the documentation files in the /doc/
24folder where a more detailed reference to the libSRTP API and related functions
25can be created (requires installing doxygen.). The reference material is created
26automatically from comments embedded in some of the C header files. The
27documentation is organized into modules in order to improve its clarity. These
28modules do not directly correspond to files. An underlying cryptographic kernel
29provides much of the basic functionality of libSRTP but is mostly undocumented
30because it does its work behind the scenes.
31
32--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
33
34<a name="contact-us"></a>
35# Contact Us
36
37- [libsrtp@lists.packetizer.com](mailto:libsrtp@lists.packetizer.com) general mailing list for news / announcements / discussions. This is an open list, see
38[https://lists.packetizer.com/mailman/listinfo/libsrtp](https://lists.packetizer.com/mailman/listinfo/libsrtp) for singing up.
39
40- [libsrtp-security@lists.packetizer.com](mailto:libsrtp-security@lists.packetizer.com) for disclosing security issues to the libsrtp maintenance team. This is a closed list but anyone can send to it.
41
42
43--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
44
45<a name="contents"></a>
46## Contents
47
48- [Introduction to libSRTP](#introduction-to-libsrtp)
49- [Contact Us](#contact-us)
50  - [Contents](#contents)
51- [License and Disclaimer](#license-and-disclaimer)
52- [libSRTP Overview](#libsrtp-overview)
53  - [Secure RTP Background](#secure-rtp-background)
54  - [Supported Features](#supported-features)
55  - [Implementation Notes](#implementation-notes)
56- [Installing and Building libSRTP](#installing-and-building-libsrtp)
57  - [Changing Build Configuration](#changing-build-configuration)
58  - [Using Visual Studio](#using-visual-studio)
59- [Applications](#applications)
60  - [Example Code](#example-code)
61- [Credits](#credits)
62- [References](#references)
63
64--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
65
66<a name="license-and-disclaimer"></a>
67# License and Disclaimer
68
69libSRTP is distributed under the following license, which is included
70in the source code distribution. It is reproduced in the manual in
71case you got the library from another source.
72
73> Copyright (c) 2001-2017 Cisco Systems, Inc.  All rights reserved.
74>
75> Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
76> modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
77> are met:
78>
79> - Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
80>   notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
81> - Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
82>   notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in
83>   the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
84> - Neither the name of the Cisco Systems, Inc. nor the names of its
85>   contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived
86>   from this software without specific prior written permission.
87>
88> THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
89> "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
90> LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS
91> FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
92> COPYRIGHT HOLDERS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT,
93> INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES
94> (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR
95> SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
96> HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT,
97> STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE)
98> ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED
99> OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
100
101--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
102
103<a name="libsrtp-overview"></a>
104# libSRTP Overview
105
106libSRTP provides functions for protecting RTP and RTCP.  RTP packets
107can be encrypted and authenticated (using the `srtp_protect()`
108function), turning them into SRTP packets. Similarly, SRTP packets
109can be decrypted and have their authentication verified (using the
110`srtp_unprotect()` function), turning them into RTP packets. Similar
111functions apply security to RTCP packets.
112
113The typedef `srtp_stream_t` points to a structure holding all of the
114state associated with an SRTP stream, including the keys and
115parameters for cipher and message authentication functions and the
116anti-replay data. A particular `srtp_stream_t` holds the information
117needed to protect a particular RTP and RTCP stream. This datatype
118is intentionally opaque in order to better seperate the libSRTP
119API from its implementation.
120
121Within an SRTP session, there can be multiple streams, each
122originating from a particular sender. Each source uses a distinct
123stream context to protect the RTP and RTCP stream that it is
124originating. The typedef `srtp_t` points to a structure holding all of
125the state associated with an SRTP session. There can be multiple
126stream contexts associated with a single `srtp_t`. A stream context
127cannot exist indepent from an `srtp_t`, though of course an `srtp_t` can
128be created that contains only a single stream context. A device
129participating in an SRTP session must have a stream context for each
130source in that session, so that it can process the data that it
131receives from each sender.
132
133In libSRTP, a session is created using the function `srtp_create()`.
134The policy to be implemented in the session is passed into this
135function as an `srtp_policy_t` structure. A single one of these
136structures describes the policy of a single stream. These structures
137can also be linked together to form an entire session policy. A linked
138list of `srtp_policy_t` structures is equivalent to a session policy.
139In such a policy, we refer to a single `srtp_policy_t` as an *element*.
140
141An `srtp_policy_t` structure contains two `srtp_crypto_policy_t` structures
142that describe the cryptograhic policies for RTP and RTCP, as well as
143the SRTP master key and the SSRC value. The SSRC describes what to
144protect (e.g. which stream), and the `srtp_crypto_policy_t` structures
145describe how to protect it. The key is contained in a policy element
146because it simplifies the interface to the library. In many cases, it
147is desirable to use the same cryptographic policies across all of the
148streams in a session, but to use a distinct key for each stream. A
149`srtp_crypto_policy_t` structure can be initialized by using either the
150`srtp_crypto_policy_set_rtp_default()` or `srtp_crypto_policy_set_rtcp_default()`
151functions, which set a crypto policy structure to the default policies
152for RTP and RTCP protection, respectively.
153
154--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
155
156<a name="secure-rtp-background"></a>
157## Secure RTP Background
158
159In this section we review SRTP and introduce some terms that are used
160in libSRTP. An RTP session is defined by a pair of destination
161transport addresses, that is, a network address plus a pair of UDP
162ports for RTP and RTCP. RTCP, the RTP control protocol, is used to
163coordinate between the participants in an RTP session, e.g. to provide
164feedback from receivers to senders. An *SRTP session* is
165similarly defined; it is just an RTP session for which the SRTP
166profile is being used. An SRTP session consists of the traffic sent
167to the SRTP or SRTCP destination transport addresses. Each
168participant in a session is identified by a synchronization source
169(SSRC) identifier. Some participants may not send any SRTP traffic;
170they are called receivers, even though they send out SRTCP traffic,
171such as receiver reports.
172
173RTP allows multiple sources to send RTP and RTCP traffic during the
174same session. The synchronization source identifier (SSRC) is used to
175distinguish these sources. In libSRTP, we call the SRTP and SRTCP
176traffic from a particular source a *stream*. Each stream has its own
177SSRC, sequence number, rollover counter, and other data. A particular
178choice of options, cryptographic mechanisms, and keys is called a
179*policy*. Each stream within a session can have a distinct policy
180applied to it. A session policy is a collection of stream policies.
181
182A single policy can be used for all of the streams in a given session,
183though the case in which a single *key* is shared across multiple
184streams requires care. When key sharing is used, the SSRC values that
185identify the streams **must** be distinct. This requirement can be
186enforced by using the convention that each SRTP and SRTCP key is used
187for encryption by only a single sender. In other words, the key is
188shared only across streams that originate from a particular device (of
189course, other SRTP participants will need to use the key for
190decryption). libSRTP supports this enforcement by detecting the case
191in which a key is used for both inbound and outbound data.
192
193--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
194
195<a name="supported-features"></a>
196## Supported Features
197
198This library supports all of the mandatory-to-implement features of
199SRTP (as defined in [RFC 3711](https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3711.txt)). Some of these
200features can be selected (or de-selected) at run time by setting an
201appropriate policy; this is done using the structure `srtp_policy_t`.
202Some other behaviors of the protocol can be adapted by defining an
203approriate event handler for the exceptional events; see the SRTPevents
204section in the generated documentation.
205
206Some options that are described in the SRTP specification are not
207supported. This includes
208
209- key derivation rates other than zero,
210- the cipher F8,
211- the use of the packet index to select between master keys.
212
213The user should be aware that it is possible to misuse this libary,
214and that the result may be that the security level it provides is
215inadequate. If you are implementing a feature using this library, you
216will want to read the Security Considerations section of [RFC 3711](https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3711.txt).
217In addition, it is important that you read and understand the
218terms outlined in the [License and Disclaimer](#license-and-disclaimer) section.
219
220--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
221
222<a name="implementation-notes"></a>
223## Implementation Notes
224
225  * The `srtp_protect()` function assumes that the buffer holding the
226    rtp packet has enough storage allocated that the authentication
227    tag can be written to the end of that packet. If this assumption
228    is not valid, memory corruption will ensue.
229
230  * Automated tests for the crypto functions are provided through
231    the `cipher_type_self_test()` and `auth_type_self_test()` functions.
232    These functions should be used to test each port of this code
233    to a new platform.
234
235  * Replay protection is contained in the crypto engine, and
236    tests for it are provided.
237
238  * This implementation provides calls to initialize, protect, and
239    unprotect RTP packets, and makes as few as possible assumptions
240    about how these functions will be called. For example, the
241    caller is not expected to provide packets in order (though if
242    they're called more than 65k out of sequence, synchronization
243    will be lost).
244
245  * The sequence number in the rtp packet is used as the low 16 bits
246    of the sender's local packet index. Note that RTP will start its
247    sequence number in a random place, and the SRTP layer just jumps
248    forward to that number at its first invocation. An earlier
249    version of this library used initial sequence numbers that are
250    less than 32,768; this trick is no longer required as the
251    `rdbx_estimate_index(...)` function has been made smarter.
252
253  * The replay window for (S)RTCP is hardcoded to 128 bits in length.
254
255--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
256
257<a name="installing-and-building-libsrtp"></a>
258# Installing and Building libSRTP
259
260To install libSRTP, download the latest release of the distribution
261from [https://github.com/cisco/libsrtp/releases](https://github.com/cisco/libsrtp/releases).
262You probably want to get the most recent release. Unpack the distribution and
263extract the source files; the directory into which the source files
264will go is named `libsrtp-A-B-C` where `A` is the version number, `B` is the
265major release number and `C` is the minor release number.
266
267libSRTP uses the GNU `autoconf` and `make` utilities (BSD make will not work; if
268both versions of make are on your platform, you can invoke GNU make as
269`gmake`.). In the `libsrtp` directory, run the configure script and then
270make:
271
272~~~.txt
273./configure [ options ]
274make
275~~~
276
277The configure script accepts the following options:
278
279Option                         | Description
280-------------------------------|--------------------
281\-\-help                   \-h | Display help
282\-\-enable-debug-logging       | Enable debug logging in all modules
283\-\-enable-log-stdout          | Enable logging to stdout
284\-\-enable-openssl             | Enable OpenSSL crypto engine
285\-\-enable-openssl-kdf         | Enable OpenSSL KDF algorithm
286\-\-with-log-file              | Use file for logging
287\-\-with-openssl-dir           | Location of OpenSSL installation
288
289By default there is no log output, logging can be enabled to be output to stdout
290or a given file using the configure options.
291
292This package has been tested on the following platforms: Mac OS X
293(powerpc-apple-darwin1.4), Cygwin (i686-pc-cygwin), Solaris
294(sparc-sun-solaris2.6), RedHat Linux 7.1 and 9 (i686-pc-linux), and
295OpenBSD (sparc-unknown-openbsd2.7).
296
297--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
298
299<a name="changing-build-configuration"></a>
300## Changing Build Configuration
301
302To build the `./configure` script mentioned above, libSRTP relies on the
303[automake](https://www.gnu.org/software/automake/) toolchain.  Since
304`./configure` is built from `configure.in` by automake, if you make changes in
305how `./configure` works (e.g., to add a new library dependency), you will need
306to rebuild `./configure` and commit the updated version.  In addition to
307automake itself, you will need to have the `pkgconfig` tools installed as well.
308
309For example, on macOS:
310
311```
312brew install automake pkgconfig
313# Edit configure.in
314autoremake -ivf
315```
316
317--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
318<a name="using-visual-studio"></a>
319## Using Visual Studio
320
321On Windows one can use Visual Studio via CMake. CMake can be downloaded here:
322https://cmake.org/ . To create Visual Studio build files, for example run the
323following commands:
324
325```
326# Create build subdirectory
327mkdir build
328cd build
329
330# Make project files
331cmake .. -G "Visual Studio 15 2017"
332
333# Or for 64 bit project files
334cmake .. -G "Visual Studio 15 2017 Win64"
335```
336
337--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
338
339<a name="applications"></a>
340# Applications
341
342Several test drivers and a simple and portable srtp application are
343included in the `test/` subdirectory.
344
345Test driver     | Function tested
346---------       | -------
347kernel_driver   | crypto kernel (ciphers, auth funcs, rng)
348srtp_driver	    | srtp in-memory tests (does not use the network)
349rdbx_driver	    | rdbx (extended replay database)
350roc_driver	    | extended sequence number functions
351replay_driver	  | replay database
352cipher_driver	  | ciphers
353auth_driver	    | hash functions
354
355The app `rtpw` is a simple rtp application which reads words from
356`/usr/dict/words` and then sends them out one at a time using [s]rtp.
357Manual srtp keying uses the -k option; automated key management
358using gdoi will be added later.
359
360usage:
361~~~.txt
362rtpw [[-d <debug>]* [-k|b <key> [-a][-e <key size>][-g]] [-s | -r] dest_ip dest_port] | [-l]
363~~~
364
365Either the -s (sender) or -r (receiver) option must be chosen.  The
366values `dest_ip`, `dest_port` are the IP address and UDP port to which
367the dictionary will be sent, respectively.
368
369The options are:
370
371Option         | Description
372---------      | -------
373  -s           | (S)RTP sender - causes app to send words
374  -r           | (S)RTP receive - causes app to receive words
375  -k <key>     | use SRTP master key <key>, where the key is a hexadecimal (without the leading "0x")
376  -b <key>     | same as -k but with base64 encoded key
377  -e <keysize> | encrypt/decrypt (for data confidentiality) (requires use of -k option as well) (use 128, 192, or 256 for keysize)
378  -g           | use AES-GCM mode (must be used with -e)
379  -a           | message authentication (requires use of -k option as well)
380  -l           | list the available debug modules
381  -d <debug>   | turn on debugging for module <debug>
382
383In order to get random 30-byte values for use as key/salt pairs , you
384can use the following bash function to format the output of
385`/dev/random` (where that device is available).
386
387~~~.txt
388function randhex() {
389   cat /dev/random | od --read-bytes=32 --width=32 -x | awk '{ print $2 $3 $4 $5 $6 $7 $8 $9 $10 $11 $12 $13 $14 $15 $16 }'
390}
391~~~
392
393An example of an SRTP session using two rtpw programs follows:
394
395~~~.txt
396set k=c1eec3717da76195bb878578790af71c4ee9f859e197a414a78d5abc7451
397
398[sh1]$ test/rtpw -s -k $k -e 128 -a 0.0.0.0 9999
399Security services: confidentiality message authentication
400set master key/salt to C1EEC3717DA76195BB878578790AF71C/4EE9F859E197A414A78D5ABC7451
401setting SSRC to 2078917053
402sending word: A
403sending word: a
404sending word: aa
405sending word: aal
406...
407
408[sh2]$ test/rtpw -r -k $k -e 128 -a 0.0.0.0 9999
409security services: confidentiality message authentication
410set master key/salt to C1EEC3717DA76195BB878578790AF71C/4EE9F859E197A414A78D5ABC7451
41119 octets received from SSRC 2078917053 word: A
41219 octets received from SSRC 2078917053 word: a
41320 octets received from SSRC 2078917053 word: aa
41421 octets received from SSRC 2078917053 word: aal
415...
416~~~
417
418--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
419
420<a name="example-code"></a>
421## Example Code
422
423This section provides a simple example of how to use libSRTP. The
424example code lacks error checking, but is functional. Here we assume
425that the value ssrc is already set to describe the SSRC of the stream
426that we are sending, and that the functions `get_rtp_packet()` and
427`send_srtp_packet()` are available to us. The former puts an RTP packet
428into the buffer and returns the number of octets written to that
429buffer. The latter sends the RTP packet in the buffer, given the
430length as its second argument.
431
432~~~.c
433srtp_t session;
434srtp_policy_t policy;
435
436// Set key to predetermined value
437uint8_t key[30] = {0x00, 0x01, 0x02, 0x03, 0x04, 0x05, 0x06, 0x07,
438                   0x08, 0x09, 0x0A, 0x0B, 0x0C, 0x0D, 0x0E, 0x0F,
439                   0x10, 0x11, 0x12, 0x13, 0x14, 0x15, 0x16, 0x17,
440                   0x18, 0x19, 0x1A, 0x1B, 0x1C, 0x1D};
441
442// initialize libSRTP
443srtp_init();
444
445// default policy values
446memset(&policy, 0x0, sizeof(srtp_policy_t));
447
448// set policy to describe a policy for an SRTP stream
449srtp_crypto_policy_set_rtp_default(&policy.rtp);
450srtp_crypto_policy_set_rtcp_default(&policy.rtcp);
451policy.ssrc = ssrc;
452policy.key  = key;
453policy.next = NULL;
454
455// allocate and initialize the SRTP session
456srtp_create(&session, &policy);
457
458// main loop: get rtp packets, send srtp packets
459while (1) {
460  char rtp_buffer[2048];
461  unsigned len;
462
463  len = get_rtp_packet(rtp_buffer);
464  srtp_protect(session, rtp_buffer, &len);
465  send_srtp_packet(rtp_buffer, len);
466}
467~~~
468
469--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
470
471<a name="credits"></a>
472# Credits
473
474The original implementation and documentation of libSRTP was written
475by David McGrew of Cisco Systems, Inc. in order to promote the use,
476understanding, and interoperability of Secure RTP. Michael Jerris
477contributed support for building under MSVC. Andris Pavenis
478contributed many important fixes. Brian West contributed changes to
479enable dynamic linking. Yves Shumann reported documentation bugs.
480Randell Jesup contributed a working SRTCP implementation and other
481fixes. Steve Underwood contributed x86_64 portability changes. We also give
482thanks to Fredrik Thulin, Brian Weis, Mark Baugher, Jeff Chan, Bill
483Simon, Douglas Smith, Bill May, Richard Preistley, Joe Tardo and
484others for contributions, comments, and corrections.
485
486This reference material, when applicable, in this documenation was generated
487using the doxygen utility for automatic documentation of source code.
488
489Copyright 2001-2005 by David A. McGrew, Cisco Systems, Inc.
490
491--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
492
493<a name="references"></a>
494# References
495
496SRTP and ICM References
497September, 2005
498
499Secure RTP is defined in [RFC 3711](https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3711.txt).
500The counter mode definition is in Section 4.1.1.
501
502SHA-1 is defined in [FIPS PUB 180-4](http://nvlpubs.nist.gov/nistpubs/FIPS/NIST.FIPS.180-4.pdf).
503
504HMAC is defined in [RFC 2104](https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2104.txt)
505and HMAC-SHA1 test vectors are available
506in [RFC 2202](https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2202.txt).
507
508AES-GCM usage in SRTP is defined in [RFC 7714](https://www.ietf.org/html/rfc7714)
509