xref: /freebsd/contrib/bearssl/src/inner.h (revision cc9e6590)
1 /*
2  * Copyright (c) 2016 Thomas Pornin <pornin@bolet.org>
3  *
4  * Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining
5  * a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
6  * "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
7  * without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
8  * distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
9  * permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
10  * the following conditions:
11  *
12  * The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be
13  * included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
14  *
15  * THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
16  * EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
17  * MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
18  * NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS
19  * BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN
20  * ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN
21  * CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE
22  * SOFTWARE.
23  */
24 
25 #ifndef INNER_H__
26 #define INNER_H__
27 
28 #include <string.h>
29 #include <limits.h>
30 
31 #include "config.h"
32 #include "bearssl.h"
33 
34 /*
35  * On MSVC, disable the warning about applying unary minus on an
36  * unsigned type: it is standard, we do it all the time, and for
37  * good reasons.
38  */
39 #if _MSC_VER
40 #pragma warning( disable : 4146 )
41 #endif
42 
43 /*
44  * Maximum size for a RSA modulus (in bits). Allocated stack buffers
45  * depend on that size, so this value should be kept small. Currently,
46  * 2048-bit RSA keys offer adequate security, and should still do so for
47  * the next few decades; however, a number of widespread PKI have
48  * already set their root keys to RSA-4096, so we should be able to
49  * process such keys.
50  *
51  * This value MUST be a multiple of 64. This value MUST NOT exceed 47666
52  * (some computations in RSA key generation rely on the factor size being
53  * no more than 23833 bits). RSA key sizes beyond 3072 bits don't make a
54  * lot of sense anyway.
55  */
56 #define BR_MAX_RSA_SIZE   4096
57 
58 /*
59  * Minimum size for a RSA modulus (in bits); this value is used only to
60  * filter out invalid parameters for key pair generation. Normally,
61  * applications should not use RSA keys smaller than 2048 bits; but some
62  * specific cases might need shorter keys, for legacy or research
63  * purposes.
64  */
65 #define BR_MIN_RSA_SIZE   512
66 
67 /*
68  * Maximum size for a RSA factor (in bits). This is for RSA private-key
69  * operations. Default is to support factors up to a bit more than half
70  * the maximum modulus size.
71  *
72  * This value MUST be a multiple of 32.
73  */
74 #define BR_MAX_RSA_FACTOR   ((BR_MAX_RSA_SIZE + 64) >> 1)
75 
76 /*
77  * Maximum size for an EC curve (modulus or order), in bits. Size of
78  * stack buffers depends on that parameter. This size MUST be a multiple
79  * of 8 (so that decoding an integer with that many bytes does not
80  * overflow).
81  */
82 #define BR_MAX_EC_SIZE   528
83 
84 /*
85  * Some macros to recognize the current architecture. Right now, we are
86  * interested into automatically recognizing architecture with efficient
87  * 64-bit types so that we may automatically use implementations that
88  * use 64-bit registers in that case. Future versions may detect, e.g.,
89  * availability of SSE2 intrinsics.
90  *
91  * If 'unsigned long' is a 64-bit type, then we assume that 64-bit types
92  * are efficient. Otherwise, we rely on macros that depend on compiler,
93  * OS and architecture. In any case, failure to detect the architecture
94  * as 64-bit means that the 32-bit code will be used, and that code
95  * works also on 64-bit architectures (the 64-bit code may simply be
96  * more efficient).
97  *
98  * The test on 'unsigned long' should already catch most cases, the one
99  * notable exception being Windows code where 'unsigned long' is kept to
100  * 32-bit for compatibility with all the legacy code that liberally uses
101  * the 'DWORD' type for 32-bit values.
102  *
103  * Macro names are taken from: http://nadeausoftware.com/articles/2012/02/c_c_tip_how_detect_processor_type_using_compiler_predefined_macros
104  */
105 #ifndef BR_64
106 #if ((ULONG_MAX >> 31) >> 31) == 3
107 #define BR_64   1
108 #elif defined(__ia64) || defined(__itanium__) || defined(_M_IA64)
109 #define BR_64   1
110 #elif defined(__powerpc64__) || defined(__ppc64__) || defined(__PPC64__) \
111 	|| defined(__64BIT__) || defined(_LP64) || defined(__LP64__)
112 #define BR_64   1
113 #elif defined(__sparc64__)
114 #define BR_64   1
115 #elif defined(__x86_64__) || defined(_M_X64)
116 #define BR_64   1
117 #elif defined(__aarch64__) || defined(_M_ARM64)
118 #define BR_64   1
119 #elif defined(__mips64)
120 #define BR_64   1
121 #endif
122 #endif
123 
124 /*
125  * Set BR_LOMUL on platforms where it makes sense.
126  */
127 #ifndef BR_LOMUL
128 #if BR_ARMEL_CORTEXM_GCC
129 #define BR_LOMUL   1
130 #endif
131 #endif
132 
133 /*
134  * Architecture detection.
135  */
136 #ifndef BR_i386
137 #if __i386__ || _M_IX86
138 #define BR_i386   1
139 #endif
140 #endif
141 
142 #ifndef BR_amd64
143 #if __x86_64__ || _M_X64
144 #define BR_amd64   1
145 #endif
146 #endif
147 
148 /*
149  * Compiler brand and version.
150  *
151  * Implementations that use intrinsics need to detect the compiler type
152  * and version because some specific actions may be needed to activate
153  * the corresponding opcodes, both for header inclusion, and when using
154  * them in a function.
155  *
156  * BR_GCC, BR_CLANG and BR_MSC will be set to 1 for, respectively, GCC,
157  * Clang and MS Visual C. For each of them, sub-macros will be defined
158  * for versions; each sub-macro is set whenever the compiler version is
159  * at least as recent as the one corresponding to the macro.
160  */
161 
162 /*
163  * GCC thresholds are on versions 4.4 to 4.9 and 5.0.
164  */
165 #ifndef BR_GCC
166 #if __GNUC__ && !__clang__
167 #define BR_GCC   1
168 
169 #if __GNUC__ > 4
170 #define BR_GCC_5_0   1
171 #elif __GNUC__ == 4 && __GNUC_MINOR__ >= 9
172 #define BR_GCC_4_9   1
173 #elif __GNUC__ == 4 && __GNUC_MINOR__ >= 8
174 #define BR_GCC_4_8   1
175 #elif __GNUC__ == 4 && __GNUC_MINOR__ >= 7
176 #define BR_GCC_4_7   1
177 #elif __GNUC__ == 4 && __GNUC_MINOR__ >= 6
178 #define BR_GCC_4_6   1
179 #elif __GNUC__ == 4 && __GNUC_MINOR__ >= 5
180 #define BR_GCC_4_5   1
181 #elif __GNUC__ == 4 && __GNUC_MINOR__ >= 4
182 #define BR_GCC_4_4   1
183 #endif
184 
185 #if BR_GCC_5_0
186 #define BR_GCC_4_9   1
187 #endif
188 #if BR_GCC_4_9
189 #define BR_GCC_4_8   1
190 #endif
191 #if BR_GCC_4_8
192 #define BR_GCC_4_7   1
193 #endif
194 #if BR_GCC_4_7
195 #define BR_GCC_4_6   1
196 #endif
197 #if BR_GCC_4_6
198 #define BR_GCC_4_5   1
199 #endif
200 #if BR_GCC_4_5
201 #define BR_GCC_4_4   1
202 #endif
203 
204 #endif
205 #endif
206 
207 /*
208  * Clang thresholds are on versions 3.7.0 and 3.8.0.
209  */
210 #ifndef BR_CLANG
211 #if __clang__
212 #define BR_CLANG   1
213 
214 #if __clang_major__ > 3 || (__clang_major__ == 3 && __clang_minor__ >= 8)
215 #define BR_CLANG_3_8   1
216 #elif __clang_major__ == 3 && __clang_minor__ >= 7
217 #define BR_CLANG_3_7   1
218 #endif
219 
220 #if BR_CLANG_3_8
221 #define BR_CLANG_3_7   1
222 #endif
223 
224 #endif
225 #endif
226 
227 /*
228  * MS Visual C thresholds are on Visual Studio 2005 to 2015.
229  */
230 #ifndef BR_MSC
231 #if _MSC_VER
232 #define BR_MSC   1
233 
234 #if _MSC_VER >= 1900
235 #define BR_MSC_2015   1
236 #elif _MSC_VER >= 1800
237 #define BR_MSC_2013   1
238 #elif _MSC_VER >= 1700
239 #define BR_MSC_2012   1
240 #elif _MSC_VER >= 1600
241 #define BR_MSC_2010   1
242 #elif _MSC_VER >= 1500
243 #define BR_MSC_2008   1
244 #elif _MSC_VER >= 1400
245 #define BR_MSC_2005   1
246 #endif
247 
248 #if BR_MSC_2015
249 #define BR_MSC_2013   1
250 #endif
251 #if BR_MSC_2013
252 #define BR_MSC_2012   1
253 #endif
254 #if BR_MSC_2012
255 #define BR_MSC_2010   1
256 #endif
257 #if BR_MSC_2010
258 #define BR_MSC_2008   1
259 #endif
260 #if BR_MSC_2008
261 #define BR_MSC_2005   1
262 #endif
263 
264 #endif
265 #endif
266 
267 /*
268  * GCC 4.4+ and Clang 3.7+ allow tagging specific functions with a
269  * 'target' attribute that activates support for specific opcodes.
270  */
271 #if BR_GCC_4_4 || BR_CLANG_3_7
272 #define BR_TARGET(x)   __attribute__((target(x)))
273 #else
274 #define BR_TARGET(x)
275 #endif
276 
277 /*
278  * AES-NI intrinsics are available on x86 (32-bit and 64-bit) with
279  * GCC 4.8+, Clang 3.7+ and MSC 2012+.
280  */
281 #ifndef BR_AES_X86NI
282 #if (BR_i386 || BR_amd64) && (BR_GCC_4_8 || BR_CLANG_3_7 || BR_MSC_2012)
283 #define BR_AES_X86NI   1
284 #endif
285 #endif
286 
287 /*
288  * SSE2 intrinsics are available on x86 (32-bit and 64-bit) with
289  * GCC 4.4+, Clang 3.7+ and MSC 2005+.
290  */
291 #ifndef BR_SSE2
292 #if (BR_i386 || BR_amd64) && (BR_GCC_4_4 || BR_CLANG_3_7 || BR_MSC_2005)
293 #define BR_SSE2   1
294 #endif
295 #endif
296 
297 /*
298  * RDRAND intrinsics are available on x86 (32-bit and 64-bit) with
299  * GCC 4.6+, Clang 3.7+ and MSC 2012+.
300  */
301 #ifndef BR_RDRAND
302 #if (BR_i386 || BR_amd64) && (BR_GCC_4_6 || BR_CLANG_3_7 || BR_MSC_2012)
303 #define BR_RDRAND   1
304 #endif
305 #endif
306 
307 /*
308  * Determine type of OS for random number generation. Macro names and
309  * values are documented on:
310  *    https://sourceforge.net/p/predef/wiki/OperatingSystems/
311  *
312  * Win32's CryptGenRandom() should be available on Windows systems.
313  *
314  * /dev/urandom should work on all Unix-like systems (including macOS X).
315  *
316  * getentropy() is present on Linux (Glibc 2.25+), FreeBSD (12.0+) and
317  * OpenBSD (5.6+). For OpenBSD, there does not seem to be easy to use
318  * macros to test the minimum version, so we just assume that it is
319  * recent enough (last version without getentropy() has gone out of
320  * support in May 2015).
321  *
322  * Ideally we should use getentropy() on macOS (10.12+) too, but I don't
323  * know how to test the exact OS version with preprocessor macros.
324  *
325  * TODO: enrich the list of detected system.
326  */
327 
328 #ifndef BR_USE_URANDOM
329 #if defined _AIX \
330 	|| defined __ANDROID__ \
331 	|| defined __FreeBSD__ \
332 	|| defined __NetBSD__ \
333 	|| defined __OpenBSD__ \
334 	|| defined __DragonFly__ \
335 	|| defined __linux__ \
336 	|| (defined __sun && (defined __SVR4 || defined __svr4__)) \
337 	|| (defined __APPLE__ && defined __MACH__)
338 #define BR_USE_URANDOM   1
339 #endif
340 #endif
341 
342 #ifndef BR_USE_GETENTROPY
343 #if (defined __linux__ \
344 	&& (__GLIBC__ > 2 || (__GLIBC__ == 2 && __GLIBC_MINOR__ >= 25))) \
345 	|| (defined __FreeBSD__ && __FreeBSD__ >= 12) \
346 	|| defined __OpenBSD__
347 #define BR_USE_GETENTROPY   1
348 #endif
349 #endif
350 
351 #ifndef BR_USE_WIN32_RAND
352 #if defined _WIN32 || defined _WIN64
353 #define BR_USE_WIN32_RAND   1
354 #endif
355 #endif
356 
357 /*
358  * POWER8 crypto support. We rely on compiler macros for the
359  * architecture, since we do not have a reliable, simple way to detect
360  * the required support at runtime (we could try running an opcode, and
361  * trapping the exception or signal on illegal instruction, but this
362  * induces some non-trivial OS dependencies that we would prefer to
363  * avoid if possible).
364  */
365 #ifndef BR_POWER8
366 #if __GNUC__ && ((_ARCH_PWR8 || _ARCH_PPC) && __CRYPTO__)
367 #define BR_POWER8   1
368 #endif
369 #endif
370 
371 /*
372  * Detect endinanness on POWER8.
373  */
374 #if BR_POWER8
375 #if defined BR_POWER8_LE
376 #undef BR_POWER8_BE
377 #if BR_POWER8_LE
378 #define BR_POWER8_BE   0
379 #else
380 #define BR_POWER8_BE   1
381 #endif
382 #elif defined BR_POWER8_BE
383 #undef BR_POWER8_LE
384 #if BR_POWER8_BE
385 #define BR_POWER8_LE   0
386 #else
387 #define BR_POWER8_LE   1
388 #endif
389 #else
390 #if __LITTLE_ENDIAN__
391 #define BR_POWER8_LE   1
392 #define BR_POWER8_BE   0
393 #else
394 #define BR_POWER8_LE   0
395 #define BR_POWER8_BE   1
396 #endif
397 #endif
398 #endif
399 
400 /*
401  * Detect support for 128-bit integers.
402  */
403 #if !defined BR_INT128 && !defined BR_UMUL128
404 #ifdef __SIZEOF_INT128__
405 #define BR_INT128    1
406 #elif _M_X64
407 #define BR_UMUL128   1
408 #endif
409 #endif
410 
411 /*
412  * Detect support for unaligned accesses with known endianness.
413  *
414  *  x86 (both 32-bit and 64-bit) is little-endian and allows unaligned
415  *  accesses.
416  *
417  *  POWER/PowerPC allows unaligned accesses when big-endian. POWER8 and
418  *  later also allow unaligned accesses when little-endian.
419  */
420 #if !defined BR_LE_UNALIGNED && !defined BR_BE_UNALIGNED
421 
422 #if __i386 || __i386__ || __x86_64__ || _M_IX86 || _M_X64
423 #define BR_LE_UNALIGNED   1
424 #elif BR_POWER8_BE
425 #define BR_BE_UNALIGNED   1
426 #elif BR_POWER8_LE
427 #define BR_LE_UNALIGNED   1
428 #elif (__powerpc__ || __powerpc64__ || _M_PPC || _ARCH_PPC || _ARCH_PPC64) \
429 	&& __BIG_ENDIAN__
430 #define BR_BE_UNALIGNED   1
431 #endif
432 
433 #endif
434 
435 /*
436  * Detect support for an OS-provided time source.
437  */
438 
439 #ifndef BR_USE_UNIX_TIME
440 #if defined __unix__ || defined __linux__ \
441 	|| defined _POSIX_SOURCE || defined _POSIX_C_SOURCE \
442 	|| (defined __APPLE__ && defined __MACH__)
443 #define BR_USE_UNIX_TIME   1
444 #endif
445 #endif
446 
447 #ifndef BR_USE_WIN32_TIME
448 #if defined _WIN32 || defined _WIN64
449 #define BR_USE_WIN32_TIME   1
450 #endif
451 #endif
452 
453 /* ==================================================================== */
454 /*
455  * Encoding/decoding functions.
456  *
457  * 32-bit and 64-bit decoding, both little-endian and big-endian, is
458  * implemented with the inline functions below.
459  *
460  * When allowed by some compile-time options (autodetected or provided),
461  * optimised code is used, to perform direct memory access when the
462  * underlying architecture supports it, both for endianness and
463  * alignment. This, however, may trigger strict aliasing issues; the
464  * code below uses unions to perform (supposedly) safe type punning.
465  * Since the C aliasing rules are relatively complex and were amended,
466  * or at least re-explained with different phrasing, in all successive
467  * versions of the C standard, it is always a bit risky to bet that any
468  * specific version of a C compiler got it right, for some notion of
469  * "right".
470  */
471 
472 typedef union {
473 	uint16_t u;
474 	unsigned char b[sizeof(uint16_t)];
475 } br_union_u16;
476 
477 typedef union {
478 	uint32_t u;
479 	unsigned char b[sizeof(uint32_t)];
480 } br_union_u32;
481 
482 typedef union {
483 	uint64_t u;
484 	unsigned char b[sizeof(uint64_t)];
485 } br_union_u64;
486 
487 static inline void
br_enc16le(void * dst,unsigned x)488 br_enc16le(void *dst, unsigned x)
489 {
490 #if BR_LE_UNALIGNED
491 	((br_union_u16 *)dst)->u = x;
492 #else
493 	unsigned char *buf;
494 
495 	buf = dst;
496 	buf[0] = (unsigned char)x;
497 	buf[1] = (unsigned char)(x >> 8);
498 #endif
499 }
500 
501 static inline void
br_enc16be(void * dst,unsigned x)502 br_enc16be(void *dst, unsigned x)
503 {
504 #if BR_BE_UNALIGNED
505 	((br_union_u16 *)dst)->u = x;
506 #else
507 	unsigned char *buf;
508 
509 	buf = dst;
510 	buf[0] = (unsigned char)(x >> 8);
511 	buf[1] = (unsigned char)x;
512 #endif
513 }
514 
515 static inline unsigned
br_dec16le(const void * src)516 br_dec16le(const void *src)
517 {
518 #if BR_LE_UNALIGNED
519 	return ((const br_union_u16 *)src)->u;
520 #else
521 	const unsigned char *buf;
522 
523 	buf = src;
524 	return (unsigned)buf[0] | ((unsigned)buf[1] << 8);
525 #endif
526 }
527 
528 static inline unsigned
br_dec16be(const void * src)529 br_dec16be(const void *src)
530 {
531 #if BR_BE_UNALIGNED
532 	return ((const br_union_u16 *)src)->u;
533 #else
534 	const unsigned char *buf;
535 
536 	buf = src;
537 	return ((unsigned)buf[0] << 8) | (unsigned)buf[1];
538 #endif
539 }
540 
541 static inline void
br_enc32le(void * dst,uint32_t x)542 br_enc32le(void *dst, uint32_t x)
543 {
544 #if BR_LE_UNALIGNED
545 	((br_union_u32 *)dst)->u = x;
546 #else
547 	unsigned char *buf;
548 
549 	buf = dst;
550 	buf[0] = (unsigned char)x;
551 	buf[1] = (unsigned char)(x >> 8);
552 	buf[2] = (unsigned char)(x >> 16);
553 	buf[3] = (unsigned char)(x >> 24);
554 #endif
555 }
556 
557 static inline void
br_enc32be(void * dst,uint32_t x)558 br_enc32be(void *dst, uint32_t x)
559 {
560 #if BR_BE_UNALIGNED
561 	((br_union_u32 *)dst)->u = x;
562 #else
563 	unsigned char *buf;
564 
565 	buf = dst;
566 	buf[0] = (unsigned char)(x >> 24);
567 	buf[1] = (unsigned char)(x >> 16);
568 	buf[2] = (unsigned char)(x >> 8);
569 	buf[3] = (unsigned char)x;
570 #endif
571 }
572 
573 static inline uint32_t
br_dec32le(const void * src)574 br_dec32le(const void *src)
575 {
576 #if BR_LE_UNALIGNED
577 	return ((const br_union_u32 *)src)->u;
578 #else
579 	const unsigned char *buf;
580 
581 	buf = src;
582 	return (uint32_t)buf[0]
583 		| ((uint32_t)buf[1] << 8)
584 		| ((uint32_t)buf[2] << 16)
585 		| ((uint32_t)buf[3] << 24);
586 #endif
587 }
588 
589 static inline uint32_t
br_dec32be(const void * src)590 br_dec32be(const void *src)
591 {
592 #if BR_BE_UNALIGNED
593 	return ((const br_union_u32 *)src)->u;
594 #else
595 	const unsigned char *buf;
596 
597 	buf = src;
598 	return ((uint32_t)buf[0] << 24)
599 		| ((uint32_t)buf[1] << 16)
600 		| ((uint32_t)buf[2] << 8)
601 		| (uint32_t)buf[3];
602 #endif
603 }
604 
605 static inline void
br_enc64le(void * dst,uint64_t x)606 br_enc64le(void *dst, uint64_t x)
607 {
608 #if BR_LE_UNALIGNED
609 	((br_union_u64 *)dst)->u = x;
610 #else
611 	unsigned char *buf;
612 
613 	buf = dst;
614 	br_enc32le(buf, (uint32_t)x);
615 	br_enc32le(buf + 4, (uint32_t)(x >> 32));
616 #endif
617 }
618 
619 static inline void
br_enc64be(void * dst,uint64_t x)620 br_enc64be(void *dst, uint64_t x)
621 {
622 #if BR_BE_UNALIGNED
623 	((br_union_u64 *)dst)->u = x;
624 #else
625 	unsigned char *buf;
626 
627 	buf = dst;
628 	br_enc32be(buf, (uint32_t)(x >> 32));
629 	br_enc32be(buf + 4, (uint32_t)x);
630 #endif
631 }
632 
633 static inline uint64_t
br_dec64le(const void * src)634 br_dec64le(const void *src)
635 {
636 #if BR_LE_UNALIGNED
637 	return ((const br_union_u64 *)src)->u;
638 #else
639 	const unsigned char *buf;
640 
641 	buf = src;
642 	return (uint64_t)br_dec32le(buf)
643 		| ((uint64_t)br_dec32le(buf + 4) << 32);
644 #endif
645 }
646 
647 static inline uint64_t
br_dec64be(const void * src)648 br_dec64be(const void *src)
649 {
650 #if BR_BE_UNALIGNED
651 	return ((const br_union_u64 *)src)->u;
652 #else
653 	const unsigned char *buf;
654 
655 	buf = src;
656 	return ((uint64_t)br_dec32be(buf) << 32)
657 		| (uint64_t)br_dec32be(buf + 4);
658 #endif
659 }
660 
661 /*
662  * Range decoding and encoding (for several successive values).
663  */
664 void br_range_dec16le(uint16_t *v, size_t num, const void *src);
665 void br_range_dec16be(uint16_t *v, size_t num, const void *src);
666 void br_range_enc16le(void *dst, const uint16_t *v, size_t num);
667 void br_range_enc16be(void *dst, const uint16_t *v, size_t num);
668 
669 void br_range_dec32le(uint32_t *v, size_t num, const void *src);
670 void br_range_dec32be(uint32_t *v, size_t num, const void *src);
671 void br_range_enc32le(void *dst, const uint32_t *v, size_t num);
672 void br_range_enc32be(void *dst, const uint32_t *v, size_t num);
673 
674 void br_range_dec64le(uint64_t *v, size_t num, const void *src);
675 void br_range_dec64be(uint64_t *v, size_t num, const void *src);
676 void br_range_enc64le(void *dst, const uint64_t *v, size_t num);
677 void br_range_enc64be(void *dst, const uint64_t *v, size_t num);
678 
679 /*
680  * Byte-swap a 32-bit integer.
681  */
682 static inline uint32_t
br_swap32(uint32_t x)683 br_swap32(uint32_t x)
684 {
685 	x = ((x & (uint32_t)0x00FF00FF) << 8)
686 		| ((x >> 8) & (uint32_t)0x00FF00FF);
687 	return (x << 16) | (x >> 16);
688 }
689 
690 /* ==================================================================== */
691 /*
692  * Support code for hash functions.
693  */
694 
695 /*
696  * IV for MD5, SHA-1, SHA-224 and SHA-256.
697  */
698 extern const uint32_t br_md5_IV[];
699 extern const uint32_t br_sha1_IV[];
700 extern const uint32_t br_sha224_IV[];
701 extern const uint32_t br_sha256_IV[];
702 
703 /*
704  * Round functions for MD5, SHA-1, SHA-224 and SHA-256 (SHA-224 and
705  * SHA-256 use the same round function).
706  */
707 void br_md5_round(const unsigned char *buf, uint32_t *val);
708 void br_sha1_round(const unsigned char *buf, uint32_t *val);
709 void br_sha2small_round(const unsigned char *buf, uint32_t *val);
710 
711 /*
712  * The core function for the TLS PRF. It computes
713  * P_hash(secret, label + seed), and XORs the result into the dst buffer.
714  */
715 void br_tls_phash(void *dst, size_t len,
716 	const br_hash_class *dig,
717 	const void *secret, size_t secret_len, const char *label,
718 	size_t seed_num, const br_tls_prf_seed_chunk *seed);
719 
720 /*
721  * Copy all configured hash implementations from a multihash context
722  * to another.
723  */
724 static inline void
br_multihash_copyimpl(br_multihash_context * dst,const br_multihash_context * src)725 br_multihash_copyimpl(br_multihash_context *dst,
726 	const br_multihash_context *src)
727 {
728 	memcpy((void *)dst->impl, src->impl, sizeof src->impl);
729 }
730 
731 /* ==================================================================== */
732 /*
733  * Constant-time primitives. These functions manipulate 32-bit values in
734  * order to provide constant-time comparisons and multiplexers.
735  *
736  * Boolean values (the "ctl" bits) MUST have value 0 or 1.
737  *
738  * Implementation notes:
739  * =====================
740  *
741  * The uintN_t types are unsigned and with width exactly N bits; the C
742  * standard guarantees that computations are performed modulo 2^N, and
743  * there can be no overflow. Negation (unary '-') works on unsigned types
744  * as well.
745  *
746  * The intN_t types are guaranteed to have width exactly N bits, with no
747  * padding bit, and using two's complement representation. Casting
748  * intN_t to uintN_t really is conversion modulo 2^N. Beware that intN_t
749  * types, being signed, trigger implementation-defined behaviour on
750  * overflow (including raising some signal): with GCC, while modular
751  * arithmetics are usually applied, the optimizer may assume that
752  * overflows don't occur (unless the -fwrapv command-line option is
753  * added); Clang has the additional -ftrapv option to explicitly trap on
754  * integer overflow or underflow.
755  */
756 
757 /*
758  * Negate a boolean.
759  */
760 static inline uint32_t
NOT(uint32_t ctl)761 NOT(uint32_t ctl)
762 {
763 	return ctl ^ 1;
764 }
765 
766 /*
767  * Multiplexer: returns x if ctl == 1, y if ctl == 0.
768  */
769 static inline uint32_t
MUX(uint32_t ctl,uint32_t x,uint32_t y)770 MUX(uint32_t ctl, uint32_t x, uint32_t y)
771 {
772 	return y ^ (-ctl & (x ^ y));
773 }
774 
775 /*
776  * Equality check: returns 1 if x == y, 0 otherwise.
777  */
778 static inline uint32_t
EQ(uint32_t x,uint32_t y)779 EQ(uint32_t x, uint32_t y)
780 {
781 	uint32_t q;
782 
783 	q = x ^ y;
784 	return NOT((q | -q) >> 31);
785 }
786 
787 /*
788  * Inequality check: returns 1 if x != y, 0 otherwise.
789  */
790 static inline uint32_t
NEQ(uint32_t x,uint32_t y)791 NEQ(uint32_t x, uint32_t y)
792 {
793 	uint32_t q;
794 
795 	q = x ^ y;
796 	return (q | -q) >> 31;
797 }
798 
799 /*
800  * Comparison: returns 1 if x > y, 0 otherwise.
801  */
802 static inline uint32_t
GT(uint32_t x,uint32_t y)803 GT(uint32_t x, uint32_t y)
804 {
805 	/*
806 	 * If both x < 2^31 and x < 2^31, then y-x will have its high
807 	 * bit set if x > y, cleared otherwise.
808 	 *
809 	 * If either x >= 2^31 or y >= 2^31 (but not both), then the
810 	 * result is the high bit of x.
811 	 *
812 	 * If both x >= 2^31 and y >= 2^31, then we can virtually
813 	 * subtract 2^31 from both, and we are back to the first case.
814 	 * Since (y-2^31)-(x-2^31) = y-x, the subtraction is already
815 	 * fine.
816 	 */
817 	uint32_t z;
818 
819 	z = y - x;
820 	return (z ^ ((x ^ y) & (x ^ z))) >> 31;
821 }
822 
823 /*
824  * Other comparisons (greater-or-equal, lower-than, lower-or-equal).
825  */
826 #define GE(x, y)   NOT(GT(y, x))
827 #define LT(x, y)   GT(y, x)
828 #define LE(x, y)   NOT(GT(x, y))
829 
830 /*
831  * General comparison: returned value is -1, 0 or 1, depending on
832  * whether x is lower than, equal to, or greater than y.
833  */
834 static inline int32_t
CMP(uint32_t x,uint32_t y)835 CMP(uint32_t x, uint32_t y)
836 {
837 	return (int32_t)GT(x, y) | -(int32_t)GT(y, x);
838 }
839 
840 /*
841  * Returns 1 if x == 0, 0 otherwise. Take care that the operand is signed.
842  */
843 static inline uint32_t
EQ0(int32_t x)844 EQ0(int32_t x)
845 {
846 	uint32_t q;
847 
848 	q = (uint32_t)x;
849 	return ~(q | -q) >> 31;
850 }
851 
852 /*
853  * Returns 1 if x > 0, 0 otherwise. Take care that the operand is signed.
854  */
855 static inline uint32_t
GT0(int32_t x)856 GT0(int32_t x)
857 {
858 	/*
859 	 * High bit of -x is 0 if x == 0, but 1 if x > 0.
860 	 */
861 	uint32_t q;
862 
863 	q = (uint32_t)x;
864 	return (~q & -q) >> 31;
865 }
866 
867 /*
868  * Returns 1 if x >= 0, 0 otherwise. Take care that the operand is signed.
869  */
870 static inline uint32_t
GE0(int32_t x)871 GE0(int32_t x)
872 {
873 	return ~(uint32_t)x >> 31;
874 }
875 
876 /*
877  * Returns 1 if x < 0, 0 otherwise. Take care that the operand is signed.
878  */
879 static inline uint32_t
LT0(int32_t x)880 LT0(int32_t x)
881 {
882 	return (uint32_t)x >> 31;
883 }
884 
885 /*
886  * Returns 1 if x <= 0, 0 otherwise. Take care that the operand is signed.
887  */
888 static inline uint32_t
LE0(int32_t x)889 LE0(int32_t x)
890 {
891 	uint32_t q;
892 
893 	/*
894 	 * ~-x has its high bit set if and only if -x is nonnegative (as
895 	 * a signed int), i.e. x is in the -(2^31-1) to 0 range. We must
896 	 * do an OR with x itself to account for x = -2^31.
897 	 */
898 	q = (uint32_t)x;
899 	return (q | ~-q) >> 31;
900 }
901 
902 /*
903  * Conditional copy: src[] is copied into dst[] if and only if ctl is 1.
904  * dst[] and src[] may overlap completely (but not partially).
905  */
906 void br_ccopy(uint32_t ctl, void *dst, const void *src, size_t len);
907 
908 #define CCOPY   br_ccopy
909 
910 /*
911  * Compute the bit length of a 32-bit integer. Returned value is between 0
912  * and 32 (inclusive).
913  */
914 static inline uint32_t
BIT_LENGTH(uint32_t x)915 BIT_LENGTH(uint32_t x)
916 {
917 	uint32_t k, c;
918 
919 	k = NEQ(x, 0);
920 	c = GT(x, 0xFFFF); x = MUX(c, x >> 16, x); k += c << 4;
921 	c = GT(x, 0x00FF); x = MUX(c, x >>  8, x); k += c << 3;
922 	c = GT(x, 0x000F); x = MUX(c, x >>  4, x); k += c << 2;
923 	c = GT(x, 0x0003); x = MUX(c, x >>  2, x); k += c << 1;
924 	k += GT(x, 0x0001);
925 	return k;
926 }
927 
928 /*
929  * Compute the minimum of x and y.
930  */
931 static inline uint32_t
MIN(uint32_t x,uint32_t y)932 MIN(uint32_t x, uint32_t y)
933 {
934 	return MUX(GT(x, y), y, x);
935 }
936 
937 /*
938  * Compute the maximum of x and y.
939  */
940 static inline uint32_t
MAX(uint32_t x,uint32_t y)941 MAX(uint32_t x, uint32_t y)
942 {
943 	return MUX(GT(x, y), x, y);
944 }
945 
946 /*
947  * Multiply two 32-bit integers, with a 64-bit result. This default
948  * implementation assumes that the basic multiplication operator
949  * yields constant-time code.
950  */
951 #define MUL(x, y)   ((uint64_t)(x) * (uint64_t)(y))
952 
953 #if BR_CT_MUL31
954 
955 /*
956  * Alternate implementation of MUL31, that will be constant-time on some
957  * (old) platforms where the default MUL31 is not. Unfortunately, it is
958  * also substantially slower, and yields larger code, on more modern
959  * platforms, which is why it is deactivated by default.
960  *
961  * MUL31_lo() must do some extra work because on some platforms, the
962  * _signed_ multiplication may return early if the top bits are 1.
963  * Simply truncating (casting) the output of MUL31() would not be
964  * sufficient, because the compiler may notice that we keep only the low
965  * word, and then replace automatically the unsigned multiplication with
966  * a signed multiplication opcode.
967  */
968 #define MUL31(x, y)   ((uint64_t)((x) | (uint32_t)0x80000000) \
969                        * (uint64_t)((y) | (uint32_t)0x80000000) \
970                        - ((uint64_t)(x) << 31) - ((uint64_t)(y) << 31) \
971                        - ((uint64_t)1 << 62))
972 static inline uint32_t
MUL31_lo(uint32_t x,uint32_t y)973 MUL31_lo(uint32_t x, uint32_t y)
974 {
975 	uint32_t xl, xh;
976 	uint32_t yl, yh;
977 
978 	xl = (x & 0xFFFF) | (uint32_t)0x80000000;
979 	xh = (x >> 16) | (uint32_t)0x80000000;
980 	yl = (y & 0xFFFF) | (uint32_t)0x80000000;
981 	yh = (y >> 16) | (uint32_t)0x80000000;
982 	return (xl * yl + ((xl * yh + xh * yl) << 16)) & (uint32_t)0x7FFFFFFF;
983 }
984 
985 #else
986 
987 /*
988  * Multiply two 31-bit integers, with a 62-bit result. This default
989  * implementation assumes that the basic multiplication operator
990  * yields constant-time code.
991  * The MUL31_lo() macro returns only the low 31 bits of the product.
992  */
993 #define MUL31(x, y)     ((uint64_t)(x) * (uint64_t)(y))
994 #define MUL31_lo(x, y)  (((uint32_t)(x) * (uint32_t)(y)) & (uint32_t)0x7FFFFFFF)
995 
996 #endif
997 
998 /*
999  * Multiply two words together; the sum of the lengths of the two
1000  * operands must not exceed 31 (for instance, one operand may use 16
1001  * bits if the other fits on 15). If BR_CT_MUL15 is non-zero, then the
1002  * macro will contain some extra operations that help in making the
1003  * operation constant-time on some platforms, where the basic 32-bit
1004  * multiplication is not constant-time.
1005  */
1006 #if BR_CT_MUL15
1007 #define MUL15(x, y)   (((uint32_t)(x) | (uint32_t)0x80000000) \
1008                        * ((uint32_t)(y) | (uint32_t)0x80000000) \
1009 		       & (uint32_t)0x7FFFFFFF)
1010 #else
1011 #define MUL15(x, y)   ((uint32_t)(x) * (uint32_t)(y))
1012 #endif
1013 
1014 /*
1015  * Arithmetic right shift (sign bit is copied). What happens when
1016  * right-shifting a negative value is _implementation-defined_, so it
1017  * does not trigger undefined behaviour, but it is still up to each
1018  * compiler to define (and document) what it does. Most/all compilers
1019  * will do an arithmetic shift, the sign bit being used to fill the
1020  * holes; this is a native operation on the underlying CPU, and it would
1021  * make little sense for the compiler to do otherwise. GCC explicitly
1022  * documents that it follows that convention.
1023  *
1024  * Still, if BR_NO_ARITH_SHIFT is defined (and non-zero), then an
1025  * alternate version will be used, that does not rely on such
1026  * implementation-defined behaviour. Unfortunately, it is also slower
1027  * and yields bigger code, which is why it is deactivated by default.
1028  */
1029 #if BR_NO_ARITH_SHIFT
1030 #define ARSH(x, n)   (((uint32_t)(x) >> (n)) \
1031                       | ((-((uint32_t)(x) >> 31)) << (32 - (n))))
1032 #else
1033 #define ARSH(x, n)   ((*(int32_t *)&(x)) >> (n))
1034 #endif
1035 
1036 /*
1037  * Constant-time division. The dividend hi:lo is divided by the
1038  * divisor d; the quotient is returned and the remainder is written
1039  * in *r. If hi == d, then the quotient does not fit on 32 bits;
1040  * returned value is thus truncated. If hi > d, returned values are
1041  * indeterminate.
1042  */
1043 uint32_t br_divrem(uint32_t hi, uint32_t lo, uint32_t d, uint32_t *r);
1044 
1045 /*
1046  * Wrapper for br_divrem(); the remainder is returned, and the quotient
1047  * is discarded.
1048  */
1049 static inline uint32_t
br_rem(uint32_t hi,uint32_t lo,uint32_t d)1050 br_rem(uint32_t hi, uint32_t lo, uint32_t d)
1051 {
1052 	uint32_t r;
1053 
1054 	br_divrem(hi, lo, d, &r);
1055 	return r;
1056 }
1057 
1058 /*
1059  * Wrapper for br_divrem(); the quotient is returned, and the remainder
1060  * is discarded.
1061  */
1062 static inline uint32_t
br_div(uint32_t hi,uint32_t lo,uint32_t d)1063 br_div(uint32_t hi, uint32_t lo, uint32_t d)
1064 {
1065 	uint32_t r;
1066 
1067 	return br_divrem(hi, lo, d, &r);
1068 }
1069 
1070 /* ==================================================================== */
1071 
1072 /*
1073  * Integers 'i32'
1074  * --------------
1075  *
1076  * The 'i32' functions implement computations on big integers using
1077  * an internal representation as an array of 32-bit integers. For
1078  * an array x[]:
1079  *  -- x[0] contains the "announced bit length" of the integer
1080  *  -- x[1], x[2]... contain the value in little-endian order (x[1]
1081  *     contains the least significant 32 bits)
1082  *
1083  * Multiplications rely on the elementary 32x32->64 multiplication.
1084  *
1085  * The announced bit length specifies the number of bits that are
1086  * significant in the subsequent 32-bit words. Unused bits in the
1087  * last (most significant) word are set to 0; subsequent words are
1088  * uninitialized and need not exist at all.
1089  *
1090  * The execution time and memory access patterns of all computations
1091  * depend on the announced bit length, but not on the actual word
1092  * values. For modular integers, the announced bit length of any integer
1093  * modulo n is equal to the actual bit length of n; thus, computations
1094  * on modular integers are "constant-time" (only the modulus length may
1095  * leak).
1096  */
1097 
1098 /*
1099  * Compute the actual bit length of an integer. The argument x should
1100  * point to the first (least significant) value word of the integer.
1101  * The len 'xlen' contains the number of 32-bit words to access.
1102  *
1103  * CT: value or length of x does not leak.
1104  */
1105 uint32_t br_i32_bit_length(uint32_t *x, size_t xlen);
1106 
1107 /*
1108  * Decode an integer from its big-endian unsigned representation. The
1109  * "true" bit length of the integer is computed, but all words of x[]
1110  * corresponding to the full 'len' bytes of the source are set.
1111  *
1112  * CT: value or length of x does not leak.
1113  */
1114 void br_i32_decode(uint32_t *x, const void *src, size_t len);
1115 
1116 /*
1117  * Decode an integer from its big-endian unsigned representation. The
1118  * integer MUST be lower than m[]; the announced bit length written in
1119  * x[] will be equal to that of m[]. All 'len' bytes from the source are
1120  * read.
1121  *
1122  * Returned value is 1 if the decode value fits within the modulus, 0
1123  * otherwise. In the latter case, the x[] buffer will be set to 0 (but
1124  * still with the announced bit length of m[]).
1125  *
1126  * CT: value or length of x does not leak. Memory access pattern depends
1127  * only of 'len' and the announced bit length of m. Whether x fits or
1128  * not does not leak either.
1129  */
1130 uint32_t br_i32_decode_mod(uint32_t *x,
1131 	const void *src, size_t len, const uint32_t *m);
1132 
1133 /*
1134  * Reduce an integer (a[]) modulo another (m[]). The result is written
1135  * in x[] and its announced bit length is set to be equal to that of m[].
1136  *
1137  * x[] MUST be distinct from a[] and m[].
1138  *
1139  * CT: only announced bit lengths leak, not values of x, a or m.
1140  */
1141 void br_i32_reduce(uint32_t *x, const uint32_t *a, const uint32_t *m);
1142 
1143 /*
1144  * Decode an integer from its big-endian unsigned representation, and
1145  * reduce it modulo the provided modulus m[]. The announced bit length
1146  * of the result is set to be equal to that of the modulus.
1147  *
1148  * x[] MUST be distinct from m[].
1149  */
1150 void br_i32_decode_reduce(uint32_t *x,
1151 	const void *src, size_t len, const uint32_t *m);
1152 
1153 /*
1154  * Encode an integer into its big-endian unsigned representation. The
1155  * output length in bytes is provided (parameter 'len'); if the length
1156  * is too short then the integer is appropriately truncated; if it is
1157  * too long then the extra bytes are set to 0.
1158  */
1159 void br_i32_encode(void *dst, size_t len, const uint32_t *x);
1160 
1161 /*
1162  * Multiply x[] by 2^32 and then add integer z, modulo m[]. This
1163  * function assumes that x[] and m[] have the same announced bit
1164  * length, and the announced bit length of m[] matches its true
1165  * bit length.
1166  *
1167  * x[] and m[] MUST be distinct arrays.
1168  *
1169  * CT: only the common announced bit length of x and m leaks, not
1170  * the values of x, z or m.
1171  */
1172 void br_i32_muladd_small(uint32_t *x, uint32_t z, const uint32_t *m);
1173 
1174 /*
1175  * Extract one word from an integer. The offset is counted in bits.
1176  * The word MUST entirely fit within the word elements corresponding
1177  * to the announced bit length of a[].
1178  */
1179 static inline uint32_t
br_i32_word(const uint32_t * a,uint32_t off)1180 br_i32_word(const uint32_t *a, uint32_t off)
1181 {
1182 	size_t u;
1183 	unsigned j;
1184 
1185 	u = (size_t)(off >> 5) + 1;
1186 	j = (unsigned)off & 31;
1187 	if (j == 0) {
1188 		return a[u];
1189 	} else {
1190 		return (a[u] >> j) | (a[u + 1] << (32 - j));
1191 	}
1192 }
1193 
1194 /*
1195  * Test whether an integer is zero.
1196  */
1197 uint32_t br_i32_iszero(const uint32_t *x);
1198 
1199 /*
1200  * Add b[] to a[] and return the carry (0 or 1). If ctl is 0, then a[]
1201  * is unmodified, but the carry is still computed and returned. The
1202  * arrays a[] and b[] MUST have the same announced bit length.
1203  *
1204  * a[] and b[] MAY be the same array, but partial overlap is not allowed.
1205  */
1206 uint32_t br_i32_add(uint32_t *a, const uint32_t *b, uint32_t ctl);
1207 
1208 /*
1209  * Subtract b[] from a[] and return the carry (0 or 1). If ctl is 0,
1210  * then a[] is unmodified, but the carry is still computed and returned.
1211  * The arrays a[] and b[] MUST have the same announced bit length.
1212  *
1213  * a[] and b[] MAY be the same array, but partial overlap is not allowed.
1214  */
1215 uint32_t br_i32_sub(uint32_t *a, const uint32_t *b, uint32_t ctl);
1216 
1217 /*
1218  * Compute d+a*b, result in d. The initial announced bit length of d[]
1219  * MUST match that of a[]. The d[] array MUST be large enough to
1220  * accommodate the full result, plus (possibly) an extra word. The
1221  * resulting announced bit length of d[] will be the sum of the announced
1222  * bit lengths of a[] and b[] (therefore, it may be larger than the actual
1223  * bit length of the numerical result).
1224  *
1225  * a[] and b[] may be the same array. d[] must be disjoint from both a[]
1226  * and b[].
1227  */
1228 void br_i32_mulacc(uint32_t *d, const uint32_t *a, const uint32_t *b);
1229 
1230 /*
1231  * Zeroize an integer. The announced bit length is set to the provided
1232  * value, and the corresponding words are set to 0.
1233  */
1234 static inline void
br_i32_zero(uint32_t * x,uint32_t bit_len)1235 br_i32_zero(uint32_t *x, uint32_t bit_len)
1236 {
1237 	*x ++ = bit_len;
1238 	memset(x, 0, ((bit_len + 31) >> 5) * sizeof *x);
1239 }
1240 
1241 /*
1242  * Compute -(1/x) mod 2^32. If x is even, then this function returns 0.
1243  */
1244 uint32_t br_i32_ninv32(uint32_t x);
1245 
1246 /*
1247  * Convert a modular integer to Montgomery representation. The integer x[]
1248  * MUST be lower than m[], but with the same announced bit length.
1249  */
1250 void br_i32_to_monty(uint32_t *x, const uint32_t *m);
1251 
1252 /*
1253  * Convert a modular integer back from Montgomery representation. The
1254  * integer x[] MUST be lower than m[], but with the same announced bit
1255  * length. The "m0i" parameter is equal to -(1/m0) mod 2^32, where m0 is
1256  * the least significant value word of m[] (this works only if m[] is
1257  * an odd integer).
1258  */
1259 void br_i32_from_monty(uint32_t *x, const uint32_t *m, uint32_t m0i);
1260 
1261 /*
1262  * Compute a modular Montgomery multiplication. d[] is filled with the
1263  * value of x*y/R modulo m[] (where R is the Montgomery factor). The
1264  * array d[] MUST be distinct from x[], y[] and m[]. x[] and y[] MUST be
1265  * numerically lower than m[]. x[] and y[] MAY be the same array. The
1266  * "m0i" parameter is equal to -(1/m0) mod 2^32, where m0 is the least
1267  * significant value word of m[] (this works only if m[] is an odd
1268  * integer).
1269  */
1270 void br_i32_montymul(uint32_t *d, const uint32_t *x, const uint32_t *y,
1271 	const uint32_t *m, uint32_t m0i);
1272 
1273 /*
1274  * Compute a modular exponentiation. x[] MUST be an integer modulo m[]
1275  * (same announced bit length, lower value). m[] MUST be odd. The
1276  * exponent is in big-endian unsigned notation, over 'elen' bytes. The
1277  * "m0i" parameter is equal to -(1/m0) mod 2^32, where m0 is the least
1278  * significant value word of m[] (this works only if m[] is an odd
1279  * integer). The t1[] and t2[] parameters must be temporary arrays,
1280  * each large enough to accommodate an integer with the same size as m[].
1281  */
1282 void br_i32_modpow(uint32_t *x, const unsigned char *e, size_t elen,
1283 	const uint32_t *m, uint32_t m0i, uint32_t *t1, uint32_t *t2);
1284 
1285 /* ==================================================================== */
1286 
1287 /*
1288  * Integers 'i31'
1289  * --------------
1290  *
1291  * The 'i31' functions implement computations on big integers using
1292  * an internal representation as an array of 32-bit integers. For
1293  * an array x[]:
1294  *  -- x[0] encodes the array length and the "announced bit length"
1295  *     of the integer: namely, if the announced bit length is k,
1296  *     then x[0] = ((k / 31) << 5) + (k % 31).
1297  *  -- x[1], x[2]... contain the value in little-endian order, 31
1298  *     bits per word (x[1] contains the least significant 31 bits).
1299  *     The upper bit of each word is 0.
1300  *
1301  * Multiplications rely on the elementary 32x32->64 multiplication.
1302  *
1303  * The announced bit length specifies the number of bits that are
1304  * significant in the subsequent 32-bit words. Unused bits in the
1305  * last (most significant) word are set to 0; subsequent words are
1306  * uninitialized and need not exist at all.
1307  *
1308  * The execution time and memory access patterns of all computations
1309  * depend on the announced bit length, but not on the actual word
1310  * values. For modular integers, the announced bit length of any integer
1311  * modulo n is equal to the actual bit length of n; thus, computations
1312  * on modular integers are "constant-time" (only the modulus length may
1313  * leak).
1314  */
1315 
1316 /*
1317  * Test whether an integer is zero.
1318  */
1319 uint32_t br_i31_iszero(const uint32_t *x);
1320 
1321 /*
1322  * Add b[] to a[] and return the carry (0 or 1). If ctl is 0, then a[]
1323  * is unmodified, but the carry is still computed and returned. The
1324  * arrays a[] and b[] MUST have the same announced bit length.
1325  *
1326  * a[] and b[] MAY be the same array, but partial overlap is not allowed.
1327  */
1328 uint32_t br_i31_add(uint32_t *a, const uint32_t *b, uint32_t ctl);
1329 
1330 /*
1331  * Subtract b[] from a[] and return the carry (0 or 1). If ctl is 0,
1332  * then a[] is unmodified, but the carry is still computed and returned.
1333  * The arrays a[] and b[] MUST have the same announced bit length.
1334  *
1335  * a[] and b[] MAY be the same array, but partial overlap is not allowed.
1336  */
1337 uint32_t br_i31_sub(uint32_t *a, const uint32_t *b, uint32_t ctl);
1338 
1339 /*
1340  * Compute the ENCODED actual bit length of an integer. The argument x
1341  * should point to the first (least significant) value word of the
1342  * integer. The len 'xlen' contains the number of 32-bit words to
1343  * access. The upper bit of each value word MUST be 0.
1344  * Returned value is ((k / 31) << 5) + (k % 31) if the bit length is k.
1345  *
1346  * CT: value or length of x does not leak.
1347  */
1348 uint32_t br_i31_bit_length(uint32_t *x, size_t xlen);
1349 
1350 /*
1351  * Decode an integer from its big-endian unsigned representation. The
1352  * "true" bit length of the integer is computed and set in the encoded
1353  * announced bit length (x[0]), but all words of x[] corresponding to
1354  * the full 'len' bytes of the source are set.
1355  *
1356  * CT: value or length of x does not leak.
1357  */
1358 void br_i31_decode(uint32_t *x, const void *src, size_t len);
1359 
1360 /*
1361  * Decode an integer from its big-endian unsigned representation. The
1362  * integer MUST be lower than m[]; the (encoded) announced bit length
1363  * written in x[] will be equal to that of m[]. All 'len' bytes from the
1364  * source are read.
1365  *
1366  * Returned value is 1 if the decode value fits within the modulus, 0
1367  * otherwise. In the latter case, the x[] buffer will be set to 0 (but
1368  * still with the announced bit length of m[]).
1369  *
1370  * CT: value or length of x does not leak. Memory access pattern depends
1371  * only of 'len' and the announced bit length of m. Whether x fits or
1372  * not does not leak either.
1373  */
1374 uint32_t br_i31_decode_mod(uint32_t *x,
1375 	const void *src, size_t len, const uint32_t *m);
1376 
1377 /*
1378  * Zeroize an integer. The announced bit length is set to the provided
1379  * value, and the corresponding words are set to 0. The ENCODED bit length
1380  * is expected here.
1381  */
1382 static inline void
br_i31_zero(uint32_t * x,uint32_t bit_len)1383 br_i31_zero(uint32_t *x, uint32_t bit_len)
1384 {
1385 	*x ++ = bit_len;
1386 	memset(x, 0, ((bit_len + 31) >> 5) * sizeof *x);
1387 }
1388 
1389 /*
1390  * Right-shift an integer. The shift amount must be lower than 31
1391  * bits.
1392  */
1393 void br_i31_rshift(uint32_t *x, int count);
1394 
1395 /*
1396  * Reduce an integer (a[]) modulo another (m[]). The result is written
1397  * in x[] and its announced bit length is set to be equal to that of m[].
1398  *
1399  * x[] MUST be distinct from a[] and m[].
1400  *
1401  * CT: only announced bit lengths leak, not values of x, a or m.
1402  */
1403 void br_i31_reduce(uint32_t *x, const uint32_t *a, const uint32_t *m);
1404 
1405 /*
1406  * Decode an integer from its big-endian unsigned representation, and
1407  * reduce it modulo the provided modulus m[]. The announced bit length
1408  * of the result is set to be equal to that of the modulus.
1409  *
1410  * x[] MUST be distinct from m[].
1411  */
1412 void br_i31_decode_reduce(uint32_t *x,
1413 	const void *src, size_t len, const uint32_t *m);
1414 
1415 /*
1416  * Multiply x[] by 2^31 and then add integer z, modulo m[]. This
1417  * function assumes that x[] and m[] have the same announced bit
1418  * length, the announced bit length of m[] matches its true
1419  * bit length.
1420  *
1421  * x[] and m[] MUST be distinct arrays. z MUST fit in 31 bits (upper
1422  * bit set to 0).
1423  *
1424  * CT: only the common announced bit length of x and m leaks, not
1425  * the values of x, z or m.
1426  */
1427 void br_i31_muladd_small(uint32_t *x, uint32_t z, const uint32_t *m);
1428 
1429 /*
1430  * Encode an integer into its big-endian unsigned representation. The
1431  * output length in bytes is provided (parameter 'len'); if the length
1432  * is too short then the integer is appropriately truncated; if it is
1433  * too long then the extra bytes are set to 0.
1434  */
1435 void br_i31_encode(void *dst, size_t len, const uint32_t *x);
1436 
1437 /*
1438  * Compute -(1/x) mod 2^31. If x is even, then this function returns 0.
1439  */
1440 uint32_t br_i31_ninv31(uint32_t x);
1441 
1442 /*
1443  * Compute a modular Montgomery multiplication. d[] is filled with the
1444  * value of x*y/R modulo m[] (where R is the Montgomery factor). The
1445  * array d[] MUST be distinct from x[], y[] and m[]. x[] and y[] MUST be
1446  * numerically lower than m[]. x[] and y[] MAY be the same array. The
1447  * "m0i" parameter is equal to -(1/m0) mod 2^31, where m0 is the least
1448  * significant value word of m[] (this works only if m[] is an odd
1449  * integer).
1450  */
1451 void br_i31_montymul(uint32_t *d, const uint32_t *x, const uint32_t *y,
1452 	const uint32_t *m, uint32_t m0i);
1453 
1454 /*
1455  * Convert a modular integer to Montgomery representation. The integer x[]
1456  * MUST be lower than m[], but with the same announced bit length.
1457  */
1458 void br_i31_to_monty(uint32_t *x, const uint32_t *m);
1459 
1460 /*
1461  * Convert a modular integer back from Montgomery representation. The
1462  * integer x[] MUST be lower than m[], but with the same announced bit
1463  * length. The "m0i" parameter is equal to -(1/m0) mod 2^32, where m0 is
1464  * the least significant value word of m[] (this works only if m[] is
1465  * an odd integer).
1466  */
1467 void br_i31_from_monty(uint32_t *x, const uint32_t *m, uint32_t m0i);
1468 
1469 /*
1470  * Compute a modular exponentiation. x[] MUST be an integer modulo m[]
1471  * (same announced bit length, lower value). m[] MUST be odd. The
1472  * exponent is in big-endian unsigned notation, over 'elen' bytes. The
1473  * "m0i" parameter is equal to -(1/m0) mod 2^31, where m0 is the least
1474  * significant value word of m[] (this works only if m[] is an odd
1475  * integer). The t1[] and t2[] parameters must be temporary arrays,
1476  * each large enough to accommodate an integer with the same size as m[].
1477  */
1478 void br_i31_modpow(uint32_t *x, const unsigned char *e, size_t elen,
1479 	const uint32_t *m, uint32_t m0i, uint32_t *t1, uint32_t *t2);
1480 
1481 /*
1482  * Compute a modular exponentiation. x[] MUST be an integer modulo m[]
1483  * (same announced bit length, lower value). m[] MUST be odd. The
1484  * exponent is in big-endian unsigned notation, over 'elen' bytes. The
1485  * "m0i" parameter is equal to -(1/m0) mod 2^31, where m0 is the least
1486  * significant value word of m[] (this works only if m[] is an odd
1487  * integer). The tmp[] array is used for temporaries, and has size
1488  * 'twlen' words; it must be large enough to accommodate at least two
1489  * temporary values with the same size as m[] (including the leading
1490  * "bit length" word). If there is room for more temporaries, then this
1491  * function may use the extra room for window-based optimisation,
1492  * resulting in faster computations.
1493  *
1494  * Returned value is 1 on success, 0 on error. An error is reported if
1495  * the provided tmp[] array is too short.
1496  */
1497 uint32_t br_i31_modpow_opt(uint32_t *x, const unsigned char *e, size_t elen,
1498 	const uint32_t *m, uint32_t m0i, uint32_t *tmp, size_t twlen);
1499 
1500 /*
1501  * Compute d+a*b, result in d. The initial announced bit length of d[]
1502  * MUST match that of a[]. The d[] array MUST be large enough to
1503  * accommodate the full result, plus (possibly) an extra word. The
1504  * resulting announced bit length of d[] will be the sum of the announced
1505  * bit lengths of a[] and b[] (therefore, it may be larger than the actual
1506  * bit length of the numerical result).
1507  *
1508  * a[] and b[] may be the same array. d[] must be disjoint from both a[]
1509  * and b[].
1510  */
1511 void br_i31_mulacc(uint32_t *d, const uint32_t *a, const uint32_t *b);
1512 
1513 /*
1514  * Compute x/y mod m, result in x. Values x and y must be between 0 and
1515  * m-1, and have the same announced bit length as m. Modulus m must be
1516  * odd. The "m0i" parameter is equal to -1/m mod 2^31. The array 't'
1517  * must point to a temporary area that can hold at least three integers
1518  * of the size of m.
1519  *
1520  * m may not overlap x and y. x and y may overlap each other (this can
1521  * be useful to test whether a value is invertible modulo m). t must be
1522  * disjoint from all other arrays.
1523  *
1524  * Returned value is 1 on success, 0 otherwise. Success is attained if
1525  * y is invertible modulo m.
1526  */
1527 uint32_t br_i31_moddiv(uint32_t *x, const uint32_t *y,
1528 	const uint32_t *m, uint32_t m0i, uint32_t *t);
1529 
1530 /* ==================================================================== */
1531 
1532 /*
1533  * FIXME: document "i15" functions.
1534  */
1535 
1536 static inline void
br_i15_zero(uint16_t * x,uint16_t bit_len)1537 br_i15_zero(uint16_t *x, uint16_t bit_len)
1538 {
1539 	*x ++ = bit_len;
1540 	memset(x, 0, ((bit_len + 15) >> 4) * sizeof *x);
1541 }
1542 
1543 uint32_t br_i15_iszero(const uint16_t *x);
1544 
1545 uint16_t br_i15_ninv15(uint16_t x);
1546 
1547 uint32_t br_i15_add(uint16_t *a, const uint16_t *b, uint32_t ctl);
1548 
1549 uint32_t br_i15_sub(uint16_t *a, const uint16_t *b, uint32_t ctl);
1550 
1551 void br_i15_muladd_small(uint16_t *x, uint16_t z, const uint16_t *m);
1552 
1553 void br_i15_montymul(uint16_t *d, const uint16_t *x, const uint16_t *y,
1554 	const uint16_t *m, uint16_t m0i);
1555 
1556 void br_i15_to_monty(uint16_t *x, const uint16_t *m);
1557 
1558 void br_i15_modpow(uint16_t *x, const unsigned char *e, size_t elen,
1559 	const uint16_t *m, uint16_t m0i, uint16_t *t1, uint16_t *t2);
1560 
1561 uint32_t br_i15_modpow_opt(uint16_t *x, const unsigned char *e, size_t elen,
1562 	const uint16_t *m, uint16_t m0i, uint16_t *tmp, size_t twlen);
1563 
1564 void br_i15_encode(void *dst, size_t len, const uint16_t *x);
1565 
1566 uint32_t br_i15_decode_mod(uint16_t *x,
1567 	const void *src, size_t len, const uint16_t *m);
1568 
1569 void br_i15_rshift(uint16_t *x, int count);
1570 
1571 uint32_t br_i15_bit_length(uint16_t *x, size_t xlen);
1572 
1573 void br_i15_decode(uint16_t *x, const void *src, size_t len);
1574 
1575 void br_i15_from_monty(uint16_t *x, const uint16_t *m, uint16_t m0i);
1576 
1577 void br_i15_decode_reduce(uint16_t *x,
1578 	const void *src, size_t len, const uint16_t *m);
1579 
1580 void br_i15_reduce(uint16_t *x, const uint16_t *a, const uint16_t *m);
1581 
1582 void br_i15_mulacc(uint16_t *d, const uint16_t *a, const uint16_t *b);
1583 
1584 uint32_t br_i15_moddiv(uint16_t *x, const uint16_t *y,
1585 	const uint16_t *m, uint16_t m0i, uint16_t *t);
1586 
1587 /*
1588  * Variant of br_i31_modpow_opt() that internally uses 64x64->128
1589  * multiplications. It expects the same parameters as br_i31_modpow_opt(),
1590  * except that the temporaries should be 64-bit integers, not 32-bit
1591  * integers.
1592  */
1593 uint32_t br_i62_modpow_opt(uint32_t *x31, const unsigned char *e, size_t elen,
1594 	const uint32_t *m31, uint32_t m0i31, uint64_t *tmp, size_t twlen);
1595 
1596 /*
1597  * Type for a function with the same API as br_i31_modpow_opt() (some
1598  * implementations of this type may have stricter alignment requirements
1599  * on the temporaries).
1600  */
1601 typedef uint32_t (*br_i31_modpow_opt_type)(uint32_t *x,
1602 	const unsigned char *e, size_t elen,
1603 	const uint32_t *m, uint32_t m0i, uint32_t *tmp, size_t twlen);
1604 
1605 /*
1606  * Wrapper for br_i62_modpow_opt() that uses the same type as
1607  * br_i31_modpow_opt(); however, it requires its 'tmp' argument to the
1608  * 64-bit aligned.
1609  */
1610 uint32_t br_i62_modpow_opt_as_i31(uint32_t *x,
1611 	const unsigned char *e, size_t elen,
1612 	const uint32_t *m, uint32_t m0i, uint32_t *tmp, size_t twlen);
1613 
1614 /* ==================================================================== */
1615 
1616 static inline size_t
br_digest_size(const br_hash_class * digest_class)1617 br_digest_size(const br_hash_class *digest_class)
1618 {
1619 	return (size_t)(digest_class->desc >> BR_HASHDESC_OUT_OFF)
1620 		& BR_HASHDESC_OUT_MASK;
1621 }
1622 
1623 /*
1624  * Get the output size (in bytes) of a hash function.
1625  */
1626 size_t br_digest_size_by_ID(int digest_id);
1627 
1628 /*
1629  * Get the OID (encoded OBJECT IDENTIFIER value, without tag and length)
1630  * for a hash function. If digest_id is not a supported digest identifier
1631  * (in particular if it is equal to 0, i.e. br_md5sha1_ID), then NULL is
1632  * returned and *len is set to 0.
1633  */
1634 const unsigned char *br_digest_OID(int digest_id, size_t *len);
1635 
1636 /* ==================================================================== */
1637 /*
1638  * DES support functions.
1639  */
1640 
1641 /*
1642  * Apply DES Initial Permutation.
1643  */
1644 void br_des_do_IP(uint32_t *xl, uint32_t *xr);
1645 
1646 /*
1647  * Apply DES Final Permutation (inverse of IP).
1648  */
1649 void br_des_do_invIP(uint32_t *xl, uint32_t *xr);
1650 
1651 /*
1652  * Key schedule unit: for a DES key (8 bytes), compute 16 subkeys. Each
1653  * subkey is two 28-bit words represented as two 32-bit words; the PC-2
1654  * bit extration is NOT applied.
1655  */
1656 void br_des_keysched_unit(uint32_t *skey, const void *key);
1657 
1658 /*
1659  * Reversal of 16 DES sub-keys (for decryption).
1660  */
1661 void br_des_rev_skey(uint32_t *skey);
1662 
1663 /*
1664  * DES/3DES key schedule for 'des_tab' (encryption direction). Returned
1665  * value is the number of rounds.
1666  */
1667 unsigned br_des_tab_keysched(uint32_t *skey, const void *key, size_t key_len);
1668 
1669 /*
1670  * DES/3DES key schedule for 'des_ct' (encryption direction). Returned
1671  * value is the number of rounds.
1672  */
1673 unsigned br_des_ct_keysched(uint32_t *skey, const void *key, size_t key_len);
1674 
1675 /*
1676  * DES/3DES subkey decompression (from the compressed bitsliced subkeys).
1677  */
1678 void br_des_ct_skey_expand(uint32_t *sk_exp,
1679 	unsigned num_rounds, const uint32_t *skey);
1680 
1681 /*
1682  * DES/3DES block encryption/decryption ('des_tab').
1683  */
1684 void br_des_tab_process_block(unsigned num_rounds,
1685 	const uint32_t *skey, void *block);
1686 
1687 /*
1688  * DES/3DES block encryption/decryption ('des_ct').
1689  */
1690 void br_des_ct_process_block(unsigned num_rounds,
1691 	const uint32_t *skey, void *block);
1692 
1693 /* ==================================================================== */
1694 /*
1695  * AES support functions.
1696  */
1697 
1698 /*
1699  * The AES S-box (256-byte table).
1700  */
1701 extern const unsigned char br_aes_S[];
1702 
1703 /*
1704  * AES key schedule. skey[] is filled with n+1 128-bit subkeys, where n
1705  * is the number of rounds (10 to 14, depending on key size). The number
1706  * of rounds is returned. If the key size is invalid (not 16, 24 or 32),
1707  * then 0 is returned.
1708  *
1709  * This implementation uses a 256-byte table and is NOT constant-time.
1710  */
1711 unsigned br_aes_keysched(uint32_t *skey, const void *key, size_t key_len);
1712 
1713 /*
1714  * AES key schedule for decryption ('aes_big' implementation).
1715  */
1716 unsigned br_aes_big_keysched_inv(uint32_t *skey,
1717 	const void *key, size_t key_len);
1718 
1719 /*
1720  * AES block encryption with the 'aes_big' implementation (fast, but
1721  * not constant-time). This function encrypts a single block "in place".
1722  */
1723 void br_aes_big_encrypt(unsigned num_rounds, const uint32_t *skey, void *data);
1724 
1725 /*
1726  * AES block decryption with the 'aes_big' implementation (fast, but
1727  * not constant-time). This function decrypts a single block "in place".
1728  */
1729 void br_aes_big_decrypt(unsigned num_rounds, const uint32_t *skey, void *data);
1730 
1731 /*
1732  * AES block encryption with the 'aes_small' implementation (small, but
1733  * slow and not constant-time). This function encrypts a single block
1734  * "in place".
1735  */
1736 void br_aes_small_encrypt(unsigned num_rounds,
1737 	const uint32_t *skey, void *data);
1738 
1739 /*
1740  * AES block decryption with the 'aes_small' implementation (small, but
1741  * slow and not constant-time). This function decrypts a single block
1742  * "in place".
1743  */
1744 void br_aes_small_decrypt(unsigned num_rounds,
1745 	const uint32_t *skey, void *data);
1746 
1747 /*
1748  * The constant-time implementation is "bitsliced": the 128-bit state is
1749  * split over eight 32-bit words q* in the following way:
1750  *
1751  * -- Input block consists in 16 bytes:
1752  *    a00 a10 a20 a30 a01 a11 a21 a31 a02 a12 a22 a32 a03 a13 a23 a33
1753  * In the terminology of FIPS 197, this is a 4x4 matrix which is read
1754  * column by column.
1755  *
1756  * -- Each byte is split into eight bits which are distributed over the
1757  * eight words, at the same rank. Thus, for a byte x at rank k, bit 0
1758  * (least significant) of x will be at rank k in q0 (if that bit is b,
1759  * then it contributes "b << k" to the value of q0), bit 1 of x will be
1760  * at rank k in q1, and so on.
1761  *
1762  * -- Ranks given to bits are in "row order" and are either all even, or
1763  * all odd. Two independent AES states are thus interleaved, one using
1764  * the even ranks, the other the odd ranks. Row order means:
1765  *    a00 a01 a02 a03 a10 a11 a12 a13 a20 a21 a22 a23 a30 a31 a32 a33
1766  *
1767  * Converting input bytes from two AES blocks to bitslice representation
1768  * is done in the following way:
1769  * -- Decode first block into the four words q0 q2 q4 q6, in that order,
1770  * using little-endian convention.
1771  * -- Decode second block into the four words q1 q3 q5 q7, in that order,
1772  * using little-endian convention.
1773  * -- Call br_aes_ct_ortho().
1774  *
1775  * Converting back to bytes is done by using the reverse operations. Note
1776  * that br_aes_ct_ortho() is its own inverse.
1777  */
1778 
1779 /*
1780  * Perform bytewise orthogonalization of eight 32-bit words. Bytes
1781  * of q0..q7 are spread over all words: for a byte x that occurs
1782  * at rank i in q[j] (byte x uses bits 8*i to 8*i+7 in q[j]), the bit
1783  * of rank k in x (0 <= k <= 7) goes to q[k] at rank 8*i+j.
1784  *
1785  * This operation is an involution.
1786  */
1787 void br_aes_ct_ortho(uint32_t *q);
1788 
1789 /*
1790  * The AES S-box, as a bitsliced constant-time version. The input array
1791  * consists in eight 32-bit words; 32 S-box instances are computed in
1792  * parallel. Bits 0 to 7 of each S-box input (bit 0 is least significant)
1793  * are spread over the words 0 to 7, at the same rank.
1794  */
1795 void br_aes_ct_bitslice_Sbox(uint32_t *q);
1796 
1797 /*
1798  * Like br_aes_bitslice_Sbox(), but for the inverse S-box.
1799  */
1800 void br_aes_ct_bitslice_invSbox(uint32_t *q);
1801 
1802 /*
1803  * Compute AES encryption on bitsliced data. Since input is stored on
1804  * eight 32-bit words, two block encryptions are actually performed
1805  * in parallel.
1806  */
1807 void br_aes_ct_bitslice_encrypt(unsigned num_rounds,
1808 	const uint32_t *skey, uint32_t *q);
1809 
1810 /*
1811  * Compute AES decryption on bitsliced data. Since input is stored on
1812  * eight 32-bit words, two block decryptions are actually performed
1813  * in parallel.
1814  */
1815 void br_aes_ct_bitslice_decrypt(unsigned num_rounds,
1816 	const uint32_t *skey, uint32_t *q);
1817 
1818 /*
1819  * AES key schedule, constant-time version. skey[] is filled with n+1
1820  * 128-bit subkeys, where n is the number of rounds (10 to 14, depending
1821  * on key size). The number of rounds is returned. If the key size is
1822  * invalid (not 16, 24 or 32), then 0 is returned.
1823  */
1824 unsigned br_aes_ct_keysched(uint32_t *comp_skey,
1825 	const void *key, size_t key_len);
1826 
1827 /*
1828  * Expand AES subkeys as produced by br_aes_ct_keysched(), into
1829  * a larger array suitable for br_aes_ct_bitslice_encrypt() and
1830  * br_aes_ct_bitslice_decrypt().
1831  */
1832 void br_aes_ct_skey_expand(uint32_t *skey,
1833 	unsigned num_rounds, const uint32_t *comp_skey);
1834 
1835 /*
1836  * For the ct64 implementation, the same bitslicing technique is used,
1837  * but four instances are interleaved. First instance uses bits 0, 4,
1838  * 8, 12,... of each word; second instance uses bits 1, 5, 9, 13,...
1839  * and so on.
1840  */
1841 
1842 /*
1843  * Perform bytewise orthogonalization of eight 64-bit words. Bytes
1844  * of q0..q7 are spread over all words: for a byte x that occurs
1845  * at rank i in q[j] (byte x uses bits 8*i to 8*i+7 in q[j]), the bit
1846  * of rank k in x (0 <= k <= 7) goes to q[k] at rank 8*i+j.
1847  *
1848  * This operation is an involution.
1849  */
1850 void br_aes_ct64_ortho(uint64_t *q);
1851 
1852 /*
1853  * Interleave bytes for an AES input block. If input bytes are
1854  * denoted 0123456789ABCDEF, and have been decoded with little-endian
1855  * convention (w[0] contains 0123, with '3' being most significant;
1856  * w[1] contains 4567, and so on), then output word q0 will be
1857  * set to 08192A3B (again little-endian convention) and q1 will
1858  * be set to 4C5D6E7F.
1859  */
1860 void br_aes_ct64_interleave_in(uint64_t *q0, uint64_t *q1, const uint32_t *w);
1861 
1862 /*
1863  * Perform the opposite of br_aes_ct64_interleave_in().
1864  */
1865 void br_aes_ct64_interleave_out(uint32_t *w, uint64_t q0, uint64_t q1);
1866 
1867 /*
1868  * The AES S-box, as a bitsliced constant-time version. The input array
1869  * consists in eight 64-bit words; 64 S-box instances are computed in
1870  * parallel. Bits 0 to 7 of each S-box input (bit 0 is least significant)
1871  * are spread over the words 0 to 7, at the same rank.
1872  */
1873 void br_aes_ct64_bitslice_Sbox(uint64_t *q);
1874 
1875 /*
1876  * Like br_aes_bitslice_Sbox(), but for the inverse S-box.
1877  */
1878 void br_aes_ct64_bitslice_invSbox(uint64_t *q);
1879 
1880 /*
1881  * Compute AES encryption on bitsliced data. Since input is stored on
1882  * eight 64-bit words, four block encryptions are actually performed
1883  * in parallel.
1884  */
1885 void br_aes_ct64_bitslice_encrypt(unsigned num_rounds,
1886 	const uint64_t *skey, uint64_t *q);
1887 
1888 /*
1889  * Compute AES decryption on bitsliced data. Since input is stored on
1890  * eight 64-bit words, four block decryptions are actually performed
1891  * in parallel.
1892  */
1893 void br_aes_ct64_bitslice_decrypt(unsigned num_rounds,
1894 	const uint64_t *skey, uint64_t *q);
1895 
1896 /*
1897  * AES key schedule, constant-time version. skey[] is filled with n+1
1898  * 128-bit subkeys, where n is the number of rounds (10 to 14, depending
1899  * on key size). The number of rounds is returned. If the key size is
1900  * invalid (not 16, 24 or 32), then 0 is returned.
1901  */
1902 unsigned br_aes_ct64_keysched(uint64_t *comp_skey,
1903 	const void *key, size_t key_len);
1904 
1905 /*
1906  * Expand AES subkeys as produced by br_aes_ct64_keysched(), into
1907  * a larger array suitable for br_aes_ct64_bitslice_encrypt() and
1908  * br_aes_ct64_bitslice_decrypt().
1909  */
1910 void br_aes_ct64_skey_expand(uint64_t *skey,
1911 	unsigned num_rounds, const uint64_t *comp_skey);
1912 
1913 /*
1914  * Test support for AES-NI opcodes.
1915  */
1916 int br_aes_x86ni_supported(void);
1917 
1918 /*
1919  * AES key schedule, using x86 AES-NI instructions. This yields the
1920  * subkeys in the encryption direction. Number of rounds is returned.
1921  * Key size MUST be 16, 24 or 32 bytes; otherwise, 0 is returned.
1922  */
1923 unsigned br_aes_x86ni_keysched_enc(unsigned char *skni,
1924 	const void *key, size_t len);
1925 
1926 /*
1927  * AES key schedule, using x86 AES-NI instructions. This yields the
1928  * subkeys in the decryption direction. Number of rounds is returned.
1929  * Key size MUST be 16, 24 or 32 bytes; otherwise, 0 is returned.
1930  */
1931 unsigned br_aes_x86ni_keysched_dec(unsigned char *skni,
1932 	const void *key, size_t len);
1933 
1934 /*
1935  * Test support for AES POWER8 opcodes.
1936  */
1937 int br_aes_pwr8_supported(void);
1938 
1939 /*
1940  * AES key schedule, using POWER8 instructions. This yields the
1941  * subkeys in the encryption direction. Number of rounds is returned.
1942  * Key size MUST be 16, 24 or 32 bytes; otherwise, 0 is returned.
1943  */
1944 unsigned br_aes_pwr8_keysched(unsigned char *skni,
1945 	const void *key, size_t len);
1946 
1947 /* ==================================================================== */
1948 /*
1949  * RSA.
1950  */
1951 
1952 /*
1953  * Apply proper PKCS#1 v1.5 padding (for signatures). 'hash_oid' is
1954  * the encoded hash function OID, or NULL.
1955  */
1956 uint32_t br_rsa_pkcs1_sig_pad(const unsigned char *hash_oid,
1957 	const unsigned char *hash, size_t hash_len,
1958 	uint32_t n_bitlen, unsigned char *x);
1959 
1960 /*
1961  * Check PKCS#1 v1.5 padding (for signatures). 'hash_oid' is the encoded
1962  * hash function OID, or NULL. The provided 'sig' value is _after_ the
1963  * modular exponentiation, i.e. it should be the padded hash. On
1964  * success, the hashed message is extracted.
1965  */
1966 uint32_t br_rsa_pkcs1_sig_unpad(const unsigned char *sig, size_t sig_len,
1967 	const unsigned char *hash_oid, size_t hash_len,
1968 	unsigned char *hash_out);
1969 
1970 /*
1971  * Apply proper PSS padding. The 'x' buffer is output only: it
1972  * receives the value that is to be exponentiated.
1973  */
1974 uint32_t br_rsa_pss_sig_pad(const br_prng_class **rng,
1975 	const br_hash_class *hf_data, const br_hash_class *hf_mgf1,
1976 	const unsigned char *hash, size_t salt_len,
1977 	uint32_t n_bitlen, unsigned char *x);
1978 
1979 /*
1980  * Check PSS padding. The provided value is the one _after_
1981  * the modular exponentiation; it is modified by this function.
1982  * This function infers the signature length from the public key
1983  * size, i.e. it assumes that this has already been verified (as
1984  * part of the exponentiation).
1985  */
1986 uint32_t br_rsa_pss_sig_unpad(
1987 	const br_hash_class *hf_data, const br_hash_class *hf_mgf1,
1988 	const unsigned char *hash, size_t salt_len,
1989 	const br_rsa_public_key *pk, unsigned char *x);
1990 
1991 /*
1992  * Apply OAEP padding. Returned value is the actual padded string length,
1993  * or zero on error.
1994  */
1995 size_t br_rsa_oaep_pad(const br_prng_class **rnd, const br_hash_class *dig,
1996 	const void *label, size_t label_len, const br_rsa_public_key *pk,
1997 	void *dst, size_t dst_nax_len, const void *src, size_t src_len);
1998 
1999 /*
2000  * Unravel and check OAEP padding. If the padding is correct, then 1 is
2001  * returned, '*len' is adjusted to the length of the message, and the
2002  * data is moved to the start of the 'data' buffer. If the padding is
2003  * incorrect, then 0 is returned and '*len' is untouched. Either way,
2004  * the complete buffer contents are altered.
2005  */
2006 uint32_t br_rsa_oaep_unpad(const br_hash_class *dig,
2007 	const void *label, size_t label_len, void *data, size_t *len);
2008 
2009 /*
2010  * Compute MGF1 for a given seed, and XOR the output into the provided
2011  * buffer.
2012  */
2013 void br_mgf1_xor(void *data, size_t len,
2014 	const br_hash_class *dig, const void *seed, size_t seed_len);
2015 
2016 /*
2017  * Inner function for RSA key generation; used by the "i31" and "i62"
2018  * implementations.
2019  */
2020 uint32_t br_rsa_i31_keygen_inner(const br_prng_class **rng,
2021 	br_rsa_private_key *sk, void *kbuf_priv,
2022 	br_rsa_public_key *pk, void *kbuf_pub,
2023 	unsigned size, uint32_t pubexp, br_i31_modpow_opt_type mp31);
2024 
2025 /* ==================================================================== */
2026 /*
2027  * Elliptic curves.
2028  */
2029 
2030 /*
2031  * Type for generic EC parameters: curve order (unsigned big-endian
2032  * encoding) and encoded conventional generator.
2033  */
2034 typedef struct {
2035 	int curve;
2036 	const unsigned char *order;
2037 	size_t order_len;
2038 	const unsigned char *generator;
2039 	size_t generator_len;
2040 } br_ec_curve_def;
2041 
2042 extern const br_ec_curve_def br_secp256r1;
2043 extern const br_ec_curve_def br_secp384r1;
2044 extern const br_ec_curve_def br_secp521r1;
2045 
2046 /*
2047  * For Curve25519, the advertised "order" really is 2^255-1, since the
2048  * point multipliction function really works over arbitrary 255-bit
2049  * scalars. This value is only meant as a hint for ECDH key generation;
2050  * only ECDSA uses the exact curve order, and ECDSA is not used with
2051  * that specific curve.
2052  */
2053 extern const br_ec_curve_def br_curve25519;
2054 
2055 /*
2056  * Decode some bytes as an i31 integer, with truncation (corresponding
2057  * to the 'bits2int' operation in RFC 6979). The target ENCODED bit
2058  * length is provided as last parameter. The resulting value will have
2059  * this declared bit length, and consists the big-endian unsigned decoding
2060  * of exactly that many bits in the source (capped at the source length).
2061  */
2062 void br_ecdsa_i31_bits2int(uint32_t *x,
2063 	const void *src, size_t len, uint32_t ebitlen);
2064 
2065 /*
2066  * Decode some bytes as an i15 integer, with truncation (corresponding
2067  * to the 'bits2int' operation in RFC 6979). The target ENCODED bit
2068  * length is provided as last parameter. The resulting value will have
2069  * this declared bit length, and consists the big-endian unsigned decoding
2070  * of exactly that many bits in the source (capped at the source length).
2071  */
2072 void br_ecdsa_i15_bits2int(uint16_t *x,
2073 	const void *src, size_t len, uint32_t ebitlen);
2074 
2075 /* ==================================================================== */
2076 /*
2077  * ASN.1 support functions.
2078  */
2079 
2080 /*
2081  * A br_asn1_uint structure contains encoding information about an
2082  * INTEGER nonnegative value: pointer to the integer contents (unsigned
2083  * big-endian representation), length of the integer contents,
2084  * and length of the encoded value. The data shall have minimal length:
2085  *  - If the integer value is zero, then 'len' must be zero.
2086  *  - If the integer value is not zero, then data[0] must be non-zero.
2087  *
2088  * Under these conditions, 'asn1len' is necessarily equal to either len
2089  * or len+1.
2090  */
2091 typedef struct {
2092 	const unsigned char *data;
2093 	size_t len;
2094 	size_t asn1len;
2095 } br_asn1_uint;
2096 
2097 /*
2098  * Given an encoded integer (unsigned big-endian, with possible leading
2099  * bytes of value 0), returned the "prepared INTEGER" structure.
2100  */
2101 br_asn1_uint br_asn1_uint_prepare(const void *xdata, size_t xlen);
2102 
2103 /*
2104  * Encode an ASN.1 length. The length of the encoded length is returned.
2105  * If 'dest' is NULL, then no encoding is performed, but the length of
2106  * the encoded length is still computed and returned.
2107  */
2108 size_t br_asn1_encode_length(void *dest, size_t len);
2109 
2110 /*
2111  * Convenient macro for computing lengths of lengths.
2112  */
2113 #define len_of_len(len)   br_asn1_encode_length(NULL, len)
2114 
2115 /*
2116  * Encode a (prepared) ASN.1 INTEGER. The encoded length is returned.
2117  * If 'dest' is NULL, then no encoding is performed, but the length of
2118  * the encoded integer is still computed and returned.
2119  */
2120 size_t br_asn1_encode_uint(void *dest, br_asn1_uint pp);
2121 
2122 /*
2123  * Get the OID that identifies an elliptic curve. Returned value is
2124  * the DER-encoded OID, with the length (always one byte) but without
2125  * the tag. Thus, the first byte of the returned buffer contains the
2126  * number of subsequent bytes in the value. If the curve is not
2127  * recognised, NULL is returned.
2128  */
2129 const unsigned char *br_get_curve_OID(int curve);
2130 
2131 /*
2132  * Inner function for EC private key encoding. This is equivalent to
2133  * the API function br_encode_ec_raw_der(), except for an extra
2134  * parameter: if 'include_curve_oid' is zero, then the curve OID is
2135  * _not_ included in the output blob (this is for PKCS#8 support).
2136  */
2137 size_t br_encode_ec_raw_der_inner(void *dest,
2138 	const br_ec_private_key *sk, const br_ec_public_key *pk,
2139 	int include_curve_oid);
2140 
2141 /* ==================================================================== */
2142 /*
2143  * SSL/TLS support functions.
2144  */
2145 
2146 /*
2147  * Record types.
2148  */
2149 #define BR_SSL_CHANGE_CIPHER_SPEC    20
2150 #define BR_SSL_ALERT                 21
2151 #define BR_SSL_HANDSHAKE             22
2152 #define BR_SSL_APPLICATION_DATA      23
2153 
2154 /*
2155  * Handshake message types.
2156  */
2157 #define BR_SSL_HELLO_REQUEST          0
2158 #define BR_SSL_CLIENT_HELLO           1
2159 #define BR_SSL_SERVER_HELLO           2
2160 #define BR_SSL_CERTIFICATE           11
2161 #define BR_SSL_SERVER_KEY_EXCHANGE   12
2162 #define BR_SSL_CERTIFICATE_REQUEST   13
2163 #define BR_SSL_SERVER_HELLO_DONE     14
2164 #define BR_SSL_CERTIFICATE_VERIFY    15
2165 #define BR_SSL_CLIENT_KEY_EXCHANGE   16
2166 #define BR_SSL_FINISHED              20
2167 
2168 /*
2169  * Alert levels.
2170  */
2171 #define BR_LEVEL_WARNING   1
2172 #define BR_LEVEL_FATAL     2
2173 
2174 /*
2175  * Low-level I/O state.
2176  */
2177 #define BR_IO_FAILED   0
2178 #define BR_IO_IN       1
2179 #define BR_IO_OUT      2
2180 #define BR_IO_INOUT    3
2181 
2182 /*
2183  * Mark a SSL engine as failed. The provided error code is recorded if
2184  * the engine was not already marked as failed. If 'err' is 0, then the
2185  * engine is marked as closed (without error).
2186  */
2187 void br_ssl_engine_fail(br_ssl_engine_context *cc, int err);
2188 
2189 /*
2190  * Test whether the engine is closed (normally or as a failure).
2191  */
2192 static inline int
br_ssl_engine_closed(const br_ssl_engine_context * cc)2193 br_ssl_engine_closed(const br_ssl_engine_context *cc)
2194 {
2195 	return cc->iomode == BR_IO_FAILED;
2196 }
2197 
2198 /*
2199  * Configure a new maximum fragment length. If possible, the maximum
2200  * length for outgoing records is immediately adjusted (if there are
2201  * not already too many buffered bytes for that).
2202  */
2203 void br_ssl_engine_new_max_frag_len(
2204 	br_ssl_engine_context *rc, unsigned max_frag_len);
2205 
2206 /*
2207  * Test whether the current incoming record has been fully received
2208  * or not. This functions returns 0 only if a complete record header
2209  * has been received, but some of the (possibly encrypted) payload
2210  * has not yet been obtained.
2211  */
2212 int br_ssl_engine_recvrec_finished(const br_ssl_engine_context *rc);
2213 
2214 /*
2215  * Flush the current record (if not empty). This is meant to be called
2216  * from the handshake processor only.
2217  */
2218 void br_ssl_engine_flush_record(br_ssl_engine_context *cc);
2219 
2220 /*
2221  * Test whether there is some accumulated payload to send.
2222  */
2223 static inline int
br_ssl_engine_has_pld_to_send(const br_ssl_engine_context * rc)2224 br_ssl_engine_has_pld_to_send(const br_ssl_engine_context *rc)
2225 {
2226 	return rc->oxa != rc->oxb && rc->oxa != rc->oxc;
2227 }
2228 
2229 /*
2230  * Initialize RNG in engine. Returned value is 1 on success, 0 on error.
2231  * This function will try to use the OS-provided RNG, if available. If
2232  * there is no OS-provided RNG, or if it failed, and no entropy was
2233  * injected by the caller, then a failure will be reported. On error,
2234  * the context error code is set.
2235  */
2236 int br_ssl_engine_init_rand(br_ssl_engine_context *cc);
2237 
2238 /*
2239  * Reset the handshake-related parts of the engine.
2240  */
2241 void br_ssl_engine_hs_reset(br_ssl_engine_context *cc,
2242 	void (*hsinit)(void *), void (*hsrun)(void *));
2243 
2244 /*
2245  * Get the PRF to use for this context, for the provided PRF hash
2246  * function ID.
2247  */
2248 br_tls_prf_impl br_ssl_engine_get_PRF(br_ssl_engine_context *cc, int prf_id);
2249 
2250 /*
2251  * Consume the provided pre-master secret and compute the corresponding
2252  * master secret. The 'prf_id' is the ID of the hash function to use
2253  * with the TLS 1.2 PRF (ignored if the version is TLS 1.0 or 1.1).
2254  */
2255 void br_ssl_engine_compute_master(br_ssl_engine_context *cc,
2256 	int prf_id, const void *pms, size_t len);
2257 
2258 /*
2259  * Switch to CBC decryption for incoming records.
2260  *    cc               the engine context
2261  *    is_client        non-zero for a client, zero for a server
2262  *    prf_id           id of hash function for PRF (ignored if not TLS 1.2+)
2263  *    mac_id           id of hash function for HMAC
2264  *    bc_impl          block cipher implementation (CBC decryption)
2265  *    cipher_key_len   block cipher key length (in bytes)
2266  */
2267 void br_ssl_engine_switch_cbc_in(br_ssl_engine_context *cc,
2268 	int is_client, int prf_id, int mac_id,
2269 	const br_block_cbcdec_class *bc_impl, size_t cipher_key_len);
2270 
2271 /*
2272  * Switch to CBC encryption for outgoing records.
2273  *    cc               the engine context
2274  *    is_client        non-zero for a client, zero for a server
2275  *    prf_id           id of hash function for PRF (ignored if not TLS 1.2+)
2276  *    mac_id           id of hash function for HMAC
2277  *    bc_impl          block cipher implementation (CBC encryption)
2278  *    cipher_key_len   block cipher key length (in bytes)
2279  */
2280 void br_ssl_engine_switch_cbc_out(br_ssl_engine_context *cc,
2281 	int is_client, int prf_id, int mac_id,
2282 	const br_block_cbcenc_class *bc_impl, size_t cipher_key_len);
2283 
2284 /*
2285  * Switch to GCM decryption for incoming records.
2286  *    cc               the engine context
2287  *    is_client        non-zero for a client, zero for a server
2288  *    prf_id           id of hash function for PRF
2289  *    bc_impl          block cipher implementation (CTR)
2290  *    cipher_key_len   block cipher key length (in bytes)
2291  */
2292 void br_ssl_engine_switch_gcm_in(br_ssl_engine_context *cc,
2293 	int is_client, int prf_id,
2294 	const br_block_ctr_class *bc_impl, size_t cipher_key_len);
2295 
2296 /*
2297  * Switch to GCM encryption for outgoing records.
2298  *    cc               the engine context
2299  *    is_client        non-zero for a client, zero for a server
2300  *    prf_id           id of hash function for PRF
2301  *    bc_impl          block cipher implementation (CTR)
2302  *    cipher_key_len   block cipher key length (in bytes)
2303  */
2304 void br_ssl_engine_switch_gcm_out(br_ssl_engine_context *cc,
2305 	int is_client, int prf_id,
2306 	const br_block_ctr_class *bc_impl, size_t cipher_key_len);
2307 
2308 /*
2309  * Switch to ChaCha20+Poly1305 decryption for incoming records.
2310  *    cc               the engine context
2311  *    is_client        non-zero for a client, zero for a server
2312  *    prf_id           id of hash function for PRF
2313  */
2314 void br_ssl_engine_switch_chapol_in(br_ssl_engine_context *cc,
2315 	int is_client, int prf_id);
2316 
2317 /*
2318  * Switch to ChaCha20+Poly1305 encryption for outgoing records.
2319  *    cc               the engine context
2320  *    is_client        non-zero for a client, zero for a server
2321  *    prf_id           id of hash function for PRF
2322  */
2323 void br_ssl_engine_switch_chapol_out(br_ssl_engine_context *cc,
2324 	int is_client, int prf_id);
2325 
2326 /*
2327  * Switch to CCM decryption for incoming records.
2328  *    cc               the engine context
2329  *    is_client        non-zero for a client, zero for a server
2330  *    prf_id           id of hash function for PRF
2331  *    bc_impl          block cipher implementation (CTR+CBC)
2332  *    cipher_key_len   block cipher key length (in bytes)
2333  *    tag_len          tag length (in bytes)
2334  */
2335 void br_ssl_engine_switch_ccm_in(br_ssl_engine_context *cc,
2336 	int is_client, int prf_id,
2337 	const br_block_ctrcbc_class *bc_impl,
2338 	size_t cipher_key_len, size_t tag_len);
2339 
2340 /*
2341  * Switch to GCM encryption for outgoing records.
2342  *    cc               the engine context
2343  *    is_client        non-zero for a client, zero for a server
2344  *    prf_id           id of hash function for PRF
2345  *    bc_impl          block cipher implementation (CTR+CBC)
2346  *    cipher_key_len   block cipher key length (in bytes)
2347  *    tag_len          tag length (in bytes)
2348  */
2349 void br_ssl_engine_switch_ccm_out(br_ssl_engine_context *cc,
2350 	int is_client, int prf_id,
2351 	const br_block_ctrcbc_class *bc_impl,
2352 	size_t cipher_key_len, size_t tag_len);
2353 
2354 /*
2355  * Calls to T0-generated code.
2356  */
2357 void br_ssl_hs_client_init_main(void *ctx);
2358 void br_ssl_hs_client_run(void *ctx);
2359 void br_ssl_hs_server_init_main(void *ctx);
2360 void br_ssl_hs_server_run(void *ctx);
2361 
2362 /*
2363  * Get the hash function to use for signatures, given a bit mask of
2364  * supported hash functions. This implements a strict choice order
2365  * (namely SHA-256, SHA-384, SHA-512, SHA-224, SHA-1). If the mask
2366  * does not document support of any of these hash functions, then this
2367  * functions returns 0.
2368  */
2369 int br_ssl_choose_hash(unsigned bf);
2370 
2371 /* ==================================================================== */
2372 
2373 /*
2374  * PowerPC / POWER assembly stuff. The special BR_POWER_ASM_MACROS macro
2375  * must be defined before including this file; this is done by source
2376  * files that use some inline assembly for PowerPC / POWER machines.
2377  */
2378 
2379 #if BR_POWER_ASM_MACROS
2380 
2381 #define lxvw4x(xt, ra, rb)        lxvw4x_(xt, ra, rb)
2382 #define stxvw4x(xt, ra, rb)       stxvw4x_(xt, ra, rb)
2383 
2384 #define bdnz(foo)                 bdnz_(foo)
2385 #define bdz(foo)                  bdz_(foo)
2386 #define beq(foo)                  beq_(foo)
2387 
2388 #define li(rx, value)             li_(rx, value)
2389 #define addi(rx, ra, imm)         addi_(rx, ra, imm)
2390 #define cmpldi(rx, imm)           cmpldi_(rx, imm)
2391 #define mtctr(rx)                 mtctr_(rx)
2392 #define vspltb(vrt, vrb, uim)     vspltb_(vrt, vrb, uim)
2393 #define vspltw(vrt, vrb, uim)     vspltw_(vrt, vrb, uim)
2394 #define vspltisb(vrt, imm)        vspltisb_(vrt, imm)
2395 #define vspltisw(vrt, imm)        vspltisw_(vrt, imm)
2396 #define vrlw(vrt, vra, vrb)       vrlw_(vrt, vra, vrb)
2397 #define vsbox(vrt, vra)           vsbox_(vrt, vra)
2398 #define vxor(vrt, vra, vrb)       vxor_(vrt, vra, vrb)
2399 #define vand(vrt, vra, vrb)       vand_(vrt, vra, vrb)
2400 #define vsro(vrt, vra, vrb)       vsro_(vrt, vra, vrb)
2401 #define vsl(vrt, vra, vrb)        vsl_(vrt, vra, vrb)
2402 #define vsldoi(vt, va, vb, sh)    vsldoi_(vt, va, vb, sh)
2403 #define vsr(vrt, vra, vrb)        vsr_(vrt, vra, vrb)
2404 #define vaddcuw(vrt, vra, vrb)    vaddcuw_(vrt, vra, vrb)
2405 #define vadduwm(vrt, vra, vrb)    vadduwm_(vrt, vra, vrb)
2406 #define vsububm(vrt, vra, vrb)    vsububm_(vrt, vra, vrb)
2407 #define vsubuwm(vrt, vra, vrb)    vsubuwm_(vrt, vra, vrb)
2408 #define vsrw(vrt, vra, vrb)       vsrw_(vrt, vra, vrb)
2409 #define vcipher(vt, va, vb)       vcipher_(vt, va, vb)
2410 #define vcipherlast(vt, va, vb)   vcipherlast_(vt, va, vb)
2411 #define vncipher(vt, va, vb)      vncipher_(vt, va, vb)
2412 #define vncipherlast(vt, va, vb)  vncipherlast_(vt, va, vb)
2413 #define vperm(vt, va, vb, vc)     vperm_(vt, va, vb, vc)
2414 #define vpmsumd(vt, va, vb)       vpmsumd_(vt, va, vb)
2415 #define xxpermdi(vt, va, vb, d)   xxpermdi_(vt, va, vb, d)
2416 
2417 #define lxvw4x_(xt, ra, rb)       "\tlxvw4x\t" #xt "," #ra "," #rb "\n"
2418 #define stxvw4x_(xt, ra, rb)      "\tstxvw4x\t" #xt "," #ra "," #rb "\n"
2419 
2420 #define label(foo)                #foo "%=:\n"
2421 #define bdnz_(foo)                "\tbdnz\t" #foo "%=\n"
2422 #define bdz_(foo)                 "\tbdz\t" #foo "%=\n"
2423 #define beq_(foo)                 "\tbeq\t" #foo "%=\n"
2424 
2425 #define li_(rx, value)            "\tli\t" #rx "," #value "\n"
2426 #define addi_(rx, ra, imm)        "\taddi\t" #rx "," #ra "," #imm "\n"
2427 #define cmpldi_(rx, imm)          "\tcmpldi\t" #rx "," #imm "\n"
2428 #define mtctr_(rx)                "\tmtctr\t" #rx "\n"
2429 #define vspltb_(vrt, vrb, uim)    "\tvspltb\t" #vrt "," #vrb "," #uim "\n"
2430 #define vspltw_(vrt, vrb, uim)    "\tvspltw\t" #vrt "," #vrb "," #uim "\n"
2431 #define vspltisb_(vrt, imm)       "\tvspltisb\t" #vrt "," #imm "\n"
2432 #define vspltisw_(vrt, imm)       "\tvspltisw\t" #vrt "," #imm "\n"
2433 #define vrlw_(vrt, vra, vrb)      "\tvrlw\t" #vrt "," #vra "," #vrb "\n"
2434 #define vsbox_(vrt, vra)          "\tvsbox\t" #vrt "," #vra "\n"
2435 #define vxor_(vrt, vra, vrb)      "\tvxor\t" #vrt "," #vra "," #vrb "\n"
2436 #define vand_(vrt, vra, vrb)      "\tvand\t" #vrt "," #vra "," #vrb "\n"
2437 #define vsro_(vrt, vra, vrb)      "\tvsro\t" #vrt "," #vra "," #vrb "\n"
2438 #define vsl_(vrt, vra, vrb)       "\tvsl\t" #vrt "," #vra "," #vrb "\n"
2439 #define vsldoi_(vt, va, vb, sh)   "\tvsldoi\t" #vt "," #va "," #vb "," #sh "\n"
2440 #define vsr_(vrt, vra, vrb)       "\tvsr\t" #vrt "," #vra "," #vrb "\n"
2441 #define vaddcuw_(vrt, vra, vrb)   "\tvaddcuw\t" #vrt "," #vra "," #vrb "\n"
2442 #define vadduwm_(vrt, vra, vrb)   "\tvadduwm\t" #vrt "," #vra "," #vrb "\n"
2443 #define vsububm_(vrt, vra, vrb)   "\tvsububm\t" #vrt "," #vra "," #vrb "\n"
2444 #define vsubuwm_(vrt, vra, vrb)   "\tvsubuwm\t" #vrt "," #vra "," #vrb "\n"
2445 #define vsrw_(vrt, vra, vrb)      "\tvsrw\t" #vrt "," #vra "," #vrb "\n"
2446 #define vcipher_(vt, va, vb)      "\tvcipher\t" #vt "," #va "," #vb "\n"
2447 #define vcipherlast_(vt, va, vb)  "\tvcipherlast\t" #vt "," #va "," #vb "\n"
2448 #define vncipher_(vt, va, vb)     "\tvncipher\t" #vt "," #va "," #vb "\n"
2449 #define vncipherlast_(vt, va, vb) "\tvncipherlast\t" #vt "," #va "," #vb "\n"
2450 #define vperm_(vt, va, vb, vc)    "\tvperm\t" #vt "," #va "," #vb "," #vc "\n"
2451 #define vpmsumd_(vt, va, vb)      "\tvpmsumd\t" #vt "," #va "," #vb "\n"
2452 #define xxpermdi_(vt, va, vb, d)  "\txxpermdi\t" #vt "," #va "," #vb "," #d "\n"
2453 
2454 #endif
2455 
2456 /* ==================================================================== */
2457 /*
2458  * Special "activate intrinsics" code, needed for some compiler versions.
2459  * This is defined at the end of this file, so that it won't impact any
2460  * of the inline functions defined previously; and it is controlled by
2461  * a specific macro defined in the caller code.
2462  *
2463  * Calling code conventions:
2464  *
2465  *  - Caller must define BR_ENABLE_INTRINSICS before including "inner.h".
2466  *  - Functions that use intrinsics must be enclosed in an "enabled"
2467  *    region (between BR_TARGETS_X86_UP and BR_TARGETS_X86_DOWN).
2468  *  - Functions that use intrinsics must be tagged with the appropriate
2469  *    BR_TARGET().
2470  */
2471 
2472 #if BR_ENABLE_INTRINSICS && (BR_GCC_4_4 || BR_CLANG_3_7 || BR_MSC_2005)
2473 
2474 /*
2475  * x86 intrinsics (both 32-bit and 64-bit).
2476  */
2477 #if BR_i386 || BR_amd64
2478 
2479 /*
2480  * On GCC before version 5.0, we need to use the pragma to enable the
2481  * target options globally, because the 'target' function attribute
2482  * appears to be unreliable. Before 4.6 we must also avoid the
2483  * push_options / pop_options mechanism, because it tends to trigger
2484  * some internal compiler errors.
2485  */
2486 #if BR_GCC && !BR_GCC_5_0
2487 #if BR_GCC_4_6
2488 #define BR_TARGETS_X86_UP \
2489 	_Pragma("GCC push_options") \
2490 	_Pragma("GCC target(\"sse2,ssse3,sse4.1,aes,pclmul,rdrnd\")")
2491 #define BR_TARGETS_X86_DOWN \
2492 	_Pragma("GCC pop_options")
2493 #else
2494 #define BR_TARGETS_X86_UP \
2495 	_Pragma("GCC target(\"sse2,ssse3,sse4.1,aes,pclmul\")")
2496 #define BR_TARGETS_X86_DOWN
2497 #endif
2498 #pragma GCC diagnostic ignored "-Wpsabi"
2499 #endif
2500 
2501 #if BR_CLANG && !BR_CLANG_3_8
2502 #undef __SSE2__
2503 #undef __SSE3__
2504 #undef __SSSE3__
2505 #undef __SSE4_1__
2506 #undef __AES__
2507 #undef __PCLMUL__
2508 #undef __RDRND__
2509 #define __SSE2__     1
2510 #define __SSE3__     1
2511 #define __SSSE3__    1
2512 #define __SSE4_1__   1
2513 #define __AES__      1
2514 #define __PCLMUL__   1
2515 #define __RDRND__    1
2516 #endif
2517 
2518 #ifndef BR_TARGETS_X86_UP
2519 #define BR_TARGETS_X86_UP
2520 #endif
2521 #ifndef BR_TARGETS_X86_DOWN
2522 #define BR_TARGETS_X86_DOWN
2523 #endif
2524 
2525 #if BR_GCC || BR_CLANG
2526 BR_TARGETS_X86_UP
2527 #include <x86intrin.h>
2528 #include <cpuid.h>
2529 #define br_bswap32   __builtin_bswap32
2530 BR_TARGETS_X86_DOWN
2531 #endif
2532 
2533 #if BR_MSC
2534 #include <stdlib.h>
2535 #include <intrin.h>
2536 #include <immintrin.h>
2537 #define br_bswap32   _byteswap_ulong
2538 #endif
2539 
2540 static inline int
br_cpuid(uint32_t mask_eax,uint32_t mask_ebx,uint32_t mask_ecx,uint32_t mask_edx)2541 br_cpuid(uint32_t mask_eax, uint32_t mask_ebx,
2542 	uint32_t mask_ecx, uint32_t mask_edx)
2543 {
2544 #if BR_GCC || BR_CLANG
2545 	unsigned eax, ebx, ecx, edx;
2546 
2547 	if (__get_cpuid(1, &eax, &ebx, &ecx, &edx)) {
2548 		if ((eax & mask_eax) == mask_eax
2549 			&& (ebx & mask_ebx) == mask_ebx
2550 			&& (ecx & mask_ecx) == mask_ecx
2551 			&& (edx & mask_edx) == mask_edx)
2552 		{
2553 			return 1;
2554 		}
2555 	}
2556 #elif BR_MSC
2557 	int info[4];
2558 
2559 	__cpuid(info, 1);
2560 	if (((uint32_t)info[0] & mask_eax) == mask_eax
2561 		&& ((uint32_t)info[1] & mask_ebx) == mask_ebx
2562 		&& ((uint32_t)info[2] & mask_ecx) == mask_ecx
2563 		&& ((uint32_t)info[3] & mask_edx) == mask_edx)
2564 	{
2565 		return 1;
2566 	}
2567 #endif
2568 	return 0;
2569 }
2570 
2571 #endif
2572 
2573 #endif
2574 
2575 /* ==================================================================== */
2576 
2577 #endif
2578