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// Copyright 1995-2016 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
//
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
// You may obtain a copy of the License at
//
// https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
// limitations under the License.
#ifndef OPENSSL_HEADER_CRYPTO_INTERNAL_H
#define OPENSSL_HEADER_CRYPTO_INTERNAL_H
#include <ring-core/base.h> // Must be first.
#include "ring-core/check.h"
#if defined(__clang__)
// Don't require prototypes for functions defined in C that are only
// used from Rust.
#pragma GCC diagnostic ignored "-Wmissing-prototypes"
#endif
#if defined(__GNUC__) && \
(__GNUC__ * 10000 + __GNUC_MINOR__ * 100 + __GNUC_PATCHLEVEL__) < 40800
// |alignas| and |alignof| were added in C11. GCC added support in version 4.8.
// Testing for __STDC_VERSION__/__cplusplus doesn't work because 4.7 already
// reports support for C11.
#define alignas(x) __attribute__ ((aligned (x)))
#elif defined(_MSC_VER) && !defined(__clang__)
#define alignas(x) __declspec(align(x))
#else
#include <stdalign.h>
#endif
#if defined(__clang__) || defined(__GNUC__)
#define RING_NOINLINE __attribute__((noinline))
#elif defined(_MSC_VER)
#define RING_NOINLINE __declspec(noinline)
#else
#define RING_NOINLINE
#endif
// Some C compilers require a useless cast when dealing with arrays for the
// reason explained in
// https://gustedt.wordpress.com/2011/02/12/const-and-arrays/
#if defined(__clang__) || defined(_MSC_VER)
#define RING_CORE_POINTLESS_ARRAY_CONST_CAST(cast)
#else
#define RING_CORE_POINTLESS_ARRAY_CONST_CAST(cast) cast
#endif
// `uint8_t` isn't guaranteed to be 'unsigned char' and only 'char' and
// 'unsigned char' are allowed to alias according to ISO C.
typedef unsigned char aliasing_uint8_t;
#if (!defined(_MSC_VER) || defined(__clang__)) && defined(OPENSSL_64_BIT)
#define BORINGSSL_HAS_UINT128
typedef __int128_t int128_t;
typedef __uint128_t uint128_t;
#endif
// GCC-like compilers indicate SSE2 with |__SSE2__|. MSVC leaves the caller to
// know that x86_64 has SSE2, and uses _M_IX86_FP to indicate SSE2 on x86.
// https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/preprocessor/predefined-macros?view=msvc-170
#if defined(OPENSSL_X86) || defined(OPENSSL_X86_64)
# if defined(_MSC_VER) && !defined(__clang__)
# if defined(_M_AMD64) || defined(_M_X64) || (defined(_M_IX86_FP) && _M_IX86_FP >= 2)
# define OPENSSL_SSE2
# else
# error "SSE2 is required."
# endif
# elif !defined(__SSE2__)
# error "SSE2 is required."
# endif
#endif
// For convenience in testing the fallback code, we allow disabling SSE2
// intrinsics via |OPENSSL_NO_SSE2_FOR_TESTING|. We require SSE2 on x86 and
// x86_64, so we would otherwise need to test such code on a non-x86 platform.
//
// This does not remove the above requirement for SSE2 support with assembly
// optimizations. It only disables some intrinsics-based optimizations so that
// we can test the fallback code on CI.
#if defined(OPENSSL_SSE2) && defined(OPENSSL_NO_SSE2_FOR_TESTING)
#undef OPENSSL_SSE2
#endif
// Pointer utility functions.
// buffers_alias returns one if |a| and |b| alias and zero otherwise.
static inline int buffers_alias(const void *a, size_t a_bytes,
const void *b, size_t b_bytes) {
// Cast |a| and |b| to integers. In C, pointer comparisons between unrelated
// objects are undefined whereas pointer to integer conversions are merely
// implementation-defined. We assume the implementation defined it in a sane
// way.
uintptr_t a_u = (uintptr_t)a;
uintptr_t b_u = (uintptr_t)b;
return a_u + a_bytes > b_u && b_u + b_bytes > a_u;
}
// Constant-time utility functions.
//
// The following methods return a bitmask of all ones (0xff...f) for true and 0
// for false. This is useful for choosing a value based on the result of a
// conditional in constant time. For example,
//
// if (a < b) {
// c = a;
// } else {
// c = b;
// }
//
// can be written as
//
// crypto_word_t lt = constant_time_lt_w(a, b);
// c = constant_time_select_w(lt, a, b);
#if defined(__GNUC__) || defined(__clang__)
#pragma GCC diagnostic push
#pragma GCC diagnostic ignored "-Wconversion"
#pragma GCC diagnostic ignored "-Wsign-conversion"
#endif
#if defined(_MSC_VER) && !defined(__clang__)
#pragma warning(push)
// '=': conversion from 'crypto_word_t' to 'uint8_t', possible loss of data
#pragma warning(disable: 4242)
// 'initializing': conversion from 'crypto_word_t' to 'uint8_t', ...
#pragma warning(disable: 4244)
#endif
// crypto_word_t is the type that most constant-time functions use. Ideally we
// would like it to be |size_t|, but NaCl builds in 64-bit mode with 32-bit
// pointers, which means that |size_t| can be 32 bits when |BN_ULONG| is 64
// bits. Since we want to be able to do constant-time operations on a
// |BN_ULONG|, |crypto_word_t| is defined as an unsigned value with the native
// word length.
#if defined(OPENSSL_64_BIT)
typedef uint64_t crypto_word_t;
#define CRYPTO_WORD_BITS (64u)
#elif defined(OPENSSL_32_BIT)
typedef uint32_t crypto_word_t;
#define CRYPTO_WORD_BITS (32u)
#else
#error "Must define either OPENSSL_32_BIT or OPENSSL_64_BIT"
#endif
#define CONSTTIME_TRUE_W ~((crypto_word_t)0)
#define CONSTTIME_FALSE_W ((crypto_word_t)0)
// value_barrier_w returns |a|, but prevents GCC and Clang from reasoning about
// the returned value. This is used to mitigate compilers undoing constant-time
// code, until we can express our requirements directly in the language.
//
// Note the compiler is aware that |value_barrier_w| has no side effects and
// always has the same output for a given input. This allows it to eliminate
// dead code, move computations across loops, and vectorize.
static inline crypto_word_t value_barrier_w(crypto_word_t a) {
#if defined(__GNUC__) || defined(__clang__)
__asm__("" : "+r"(a) : /* no inputs */);
#endif
return a;
}
// value_barrier_u32 behaves like |value_barrier_w| but takes a |uint32_t|.
static inline uint32_t value_barrier_u32(uint32_t a) {
#if defined(__GNUC__) || defined(__clang__)
__asm__("" : "+r"(a) : /* no inputs */);
#endif
return a;
}
// |value_barrier_u8| could be defined as above, but compilers other than
// clang seem to still materialize 0x00..00MM instead of reusing 0x??..??MM.
// constant_time_msb_w returns the given value with the MSB copied to all the
// other bits.
static inline crypto_word_t constant_time_msb_w(crypto_word_t a) {
return 0u - (a >> (sizeof(a) * 8 - 1));
}
// constant_time_is_zero returns 0xff..f if a == 0 and 0 otherwise.
static inline crypto_word_t constant_time_is_zero_w(crypto_word_t a) {
// Here is an SMT-LIB verification of this formula:
//
// (define-fun is_zero ((a (_ BitVec 32))) (_ BitVec 32)
// (bvand (bvnot a) (bvsub a #x00000001))
// )
//
// (declare-fun a () (_ BitVec 32))
//
// (assert (not (= (= #x00000001 (bvlshr (is_zero a) #x0000001f)) (= a #x00000000))))
// (check-sat)
// (get-model)
return constant_time_msb_w(~a & (a - 1));
}
static inline crypto_word_t constant_time_is_nonzero_w(crypto_word_t a) {
return ~constant_time_is_zero_w(a);
}
// constant_time_eq_w returns 0xff..f if a == b and 0 otherwise.
static inline crypto_word_t constant_time_eq_w(crypto_word_t a,
crypto_word_t b) {
return constant_time_is_zero_w(a ^ b);
}
// constant_time_select_w returns (mask & a) | (~mask & b). When |mask| is all
// 1s or all 0s (as returned by the methods above), the select methods return
// either |a| (if |mask| is nonzero) or |b| (if |mask| is zero).
static inline crypto_word_t constant_time_select_w(crypto_word_t mask,
crypto_word_t a,
crypto_word_t b) {
// Clang recognizes this pattern as a select. While it usually transforms it
// to a cmov, it sometimes further transforms it into a branch, which we do
// not want.
//
// Hiding the value of the mask from the compiler evades this transformation.
mask = value_barrier_w(mask);
return (mask & a) | (~mask & b);
}
// constant_time_select_8 acts like |constant_time_select| but operates on
// 8-bit values.
static inline uint8_t constant_time_select_8(crypto_word_t mask, uint8_t a,
uint8_t b) {
// |mask| is a word instead of |uint8_t| to avoid materializing 0x000..0MM
// Making both |mask| and its value barrier |uint8_t| would allow the compiler
// to materialize 0x????..?MM instead, but only clang is that clever.
// However, vectorization of bitwise operations seems to work better on
// |uint8_t| than a mix of |uint64_t| and |uint8_t|, so |m| is cast to
// |uint8_t| after the value barrier but before the bitwise operations.
uint8_t m = value_barrier_w(mask);
return (m & a) | (~m & b);
}
// constant_time_conditional_memcpy copies |n| bytes from |src| to |dst| if
// |mask| is 0xff..ff and does nothing if |mask| is 0. The |n|-byte memory
// ranges at |dst| and |src| must not overlap, as when calling |memcpy|.
static inline void constant_time_conditional_memcpy(void *dst, const void *src,
const size_t n,
const crypto_word_t mask) {
debug_assert_nonsecret(!buffers_alias(dst, n, src, n));
uint8_t *out = (uint8_t *)dst;
const uint8_t *in = (const uint8_t *)src;
for (size_t i = 0; i < n; i++) {
out[i] = constant_time_select_8(mask, in[i], out[i]);
}
}
// constant_time_conditional_memxor xors |n| bytes from |src| to |dst| if
// |mask| is 0xff..ff and does nothing if |mask| is 0. The |n|-byte memory
// ranges at |dst| and |src| must not overlap, as when calling |memcpy|.
static inline void constant_time_conditional_memxor(void *dst, const void *src,
size_t n,
const crypto_word_t mask) {
debug_assert_nonsecret(!buffers_alias(dst, n, src, n));
aliasing_uint8_t *out = dst;
const aliasing_uint8_t *in = src;
#if defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__clang__)
// gcc 13.2.0 doesn't automatically vectorize this loop regardless of barrier
typedef aliasing_uint8_t v32u8 __attribute__((vector_size(32), aligned(1), may_alias));
size_t n_vec = n&~(size_t)31;
v32u8 masks = ((aliasing_uint8_t)mask-(v32u8){}); // broadcast
for (size_t i = 0; i < n_vec; i += 32) {
*(v32u8*)&out[i] ^= masks & *(v32u8 const*)&in[i];
}
out += n_vec;
n -= n_vec;
#endif
for (size_t i = 0; i < n; i++) {
out[i] ^= value_barrier_w(mask) & in[i];
}
}
#if defined(BORINGSSL_CONSTANT_TIME_VALIDATION)
// CONSTTIME_SECRET takes a pointer and a number of bytes and marks that region
// of memory as secret. Secret data is tracked as it flows to registers and
// other parts of a memory. If secret data is used as a condition for a branch,
// or as a memory index, it will trigger warnings in valgrind.
#define CONSTTIME_SECRET(ptr, len) VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_UNDEFINED(ptr, len)
// CONSTTIME_DECLASSIFY takes a pointer and a number of bytes and marks that
// region of memory as public. Public data is not subject to constant-time
// rules.
#define CONSTTIME_DECLASSIFY(ptr, len) VALGRIND_MAKE_MEM_DEFINED(ptr, len)
#else
#define CONSTTIME_SECRET(ptr, len)
#define CONSTTIME_DECLASSIFY(ptr, len)
#endif // BORINGSSL_CONSTANT_TIME_VALIDATION
static inline crypto_word_t constant_time_declassify_w(crypto_word_t v) {
// Return |v| through a value barrier to be safe. Valgrind-based constant-time
// validation is partly to check the compiler has not undone any constant-time
// work. Any place |BORINGSSL_CONSTANT_TIME_VALIDATION| influences
// optimizations, this validation is inaccurate.
//
// However, by sending pointers through valgrind, we likely inhibit escape
// analysis. On local variables, particularly booleans, we likely
// significantly impact optimizations.
//
// Thus, to be safe, stick a value barrier, in hopes of comparably inhibiting
// compiler analysis.
CONSTTIME_DECLASSIFY(&v, sizeof(v));
return value_barrier_w(v);
}
static inline int constant_time_declassify_int(int v) {
OPENSSL_STATIC_ASSERT(sizeof(uint32_t) == sizeof(int),
"int is not the same size as uint32_t");
// See comment above.
CONSTTIME_DECLASSIFY(&v, sizeof(v));
return value_barrier_u32((uint32_t)v);
}
#if defined(_MSC_VER) && !defined(__clang__)
// '=': conversion from 'int64_t' to 'int32_t', possible loss of data
#pragma warning(pop)
#endif
#if defined(__GNUC__) || defined(__clang__)
#pragma GCC diagnostic pop
#endif
// declassify_assert behaves like |assert| but declassifies the result of
// evaluating |expr|. This allows the assertion to branch on the (presumably
// public) result, but still ensures that values leading up to the computation
// were secret.
#define declassify_assert(expr) dev_assert_secret(constant_time_declassify_int(expr))
// Endianness conversions.
#if defined(__GNUC__) && __GNUC__ >= 2
static inline uint32_t CRYPTO_bswap4(uint32_t x) {
return __builtin_bswap32(x);
}
static inline uint64_t CRYPTO_bswap8(uint64_t x) {
return __builtin_bswap64(x);
}
#elif defined(_MSC_VER)
#pragma warning(push, 3)
#include <stdlib.h>
#pragma warning(pop)
#pragma intrinsic(_byteswap_ulong)
static inline uint32_t CRYPTO_bswap4(uint32_t x) {
return _byteswap_ulong(x);
}
#endif
#if !defined(RING_CORE_NOSTDLIBINC)
#include <string.h>
#endif
static inline void *OPENSSL_memcpy(void *dst, const void *src, size_t n) {
#if !defined(RING_CORE_NOSTDLIBINC)
if (n == 0) {
return dst;
}
return memcpy(dst, src, n);
#else
aliasing_uint8_t *d = dst;
const aliasing_uint8_t *s = src;
for (size_t i = 0; i < n; ++i) {
d[i] = s[i];
}
return dst;
#endif
}
static inline void *OPENSSL_memset(void *dst, int c, size_t n) {
#if !defined(RING_CORE_NOSTDLIBINC)
if (n == 0) {
return dst;
}
return memset(dst, c, n);
#else
aliasing_uint8_t *d = dst;
for (size_t i = 0; i < n; ++i) {
d[i] = (aliasing_uint8_t)c;
}
return dst;
#endif
}
// Loads and stores.
//
// The following functions load and store sized integers with the specified
// endianness. They use |memcpy|, and so avoid alignment or strict aliasing
// requirements on the input and output pointers.
#if defined(__BYTE_ORDER__) && defined(__ORDER_BIG_ENDIAN__)
#if __BYTE_ORDER__ == __ORDER_BIG_ENDIAN__
#define RING_BIG_ENDIAN
#endif
#endif
static inline uint32_t CRYPTO_load_u32_le(const void *in) {
uint32_t v;
OPENSSL_memcpy(&v, in, sizeof(v));
#if defined(RING_BIG_ENDIAN)
return CRYPTO_bswap4(v);
#else
return v;
#endif
}
static inline void CRYPTO_store_u32_le(void *out, uint32_t v) {
#if defined(RING_BIG_ENDIAN)
v = CRYPTO_bswap4(v);
#endif
OPENSSL_memcpy(out, &v, sizeof(v));
}
static inline uint32_t CRYPTO_load_u32_be(const void *in) {
uint32_t v;
OPENSSL_memcpy(&v, in, sizeof(v));
#if !defined(RING_BIG_ENDIAN)
return CRYPTO_bswap4(v);
#else
return v;
#endif
}
static inline void CRYPTO_store_u32_be(void *out, uint32_t v) {
#if !defined(RING_BIG_ENDIAN)
v = CRYPTO_bswap4(v);
#endif
OPENSSL_memcpy(out, &v, sizeof(v));
}
// Runtime CPU feature support
#if defined(OPENSSL_X86) || defined(OPENSSL_X86_64)
// OPENSSL_ia32cap_P contains the Intel CPUID bits when running on an x86 or
// x86-64 system.
//
// Index 0:
// EDX for CPUID where EAX = 1
// Bit 30 is used to indicate an Intel CPU
// Index 1:
// ECX for CPUID where EAX = 1
// Index 2:
// EBX for CPUID where EAX = 7, ECX = 0
// Bit 14 (for removed feature MPX) is used to indicate a preference for ymm
// registers over zmm even when zmm registers are supported
// Index 3:
// ECX for CPUID where EAX = 7, ECX = 0
//
// Note: the CPUID bits are pre-adjusted for the OSXSAVE bit and the XMM, YMM,
// and AVX512 bits in XCR0, so it is not necessary to check those. (WARNING: See
// caveats in cpu_intel.c.)
#if defined(OPENSSL_X86_64)
extern uint32_t avx2_available;
extern uint32_t adx_bmi2_available;
#endif
#endif
#if defined(OPENSSL_ARM)
extern alignas(4) uint32_t neon_available;
#endif // OPENSSL_ARM
#endif // OPENSSL_HEADER_CRYPTO_INTERNAL_H
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