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Kirill Smelkov
cpython
Commits
9df73dac
Commit
9df73dac
authored
Jun 24, 2012
by
Antoine Pitrou
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Larry's suggested rewording of the compare_digest() docs.
parent
39e810eb
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Doc/library/hmac.rst
Doc/library/hmac.rst
+12
-29
Modules/operator.c
Modules/operator.c
+8
-7
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Doc/library/hmac.rst
View file @
9df73dac
...
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@@ -54,11 +54,10 @@ An HMAC object has the following methods:
.. warning::
The output of :meth:`hexdigest` should not be compared directly to an
externally-supplied digest during a verification routine. Instead, the
externally supplied digest should be converted to a :class:`bytes`
value and compared to the output of :meth:`digest` with
:func:`compare_digest`.
When comparing the output of :meth:`hexdigest` to an externally-supplied
digest during a verification routine, it is recommended to use the
:func:`compare_digest` function instead of the ``==`` operator
to reduce the vulnerability to timing attacks.
.. method:: HMAC.copy()
...
...
@@ -71,32 +70,16 @@ This module also provides the following helper function:
.. function:: compare_digest(a, b)
Returns the equivalent of ``a == b``, but avoids content based
short circuiting behaviour to reduce the vulnerability to timing
analysis. The inputs must either both support the buffer protocol (e.g.
:class:`bytes` and :class:`bytearray` instances) or be ASCII only
:class:`str` instances as returned by :meth:`hexdigest`.
:class:`bytes` and :class:`str` instances can't be mixed.
Using a short circuiting comparison (that is, one that terminates as soon
as it finds any difference between the values) to check digests for
correctness can be problematic, as it introduces a potential
vulnerability when an attacker can control both the message to be checked
*and* the purported signature value. By keeping the plaintext consistent
and supplying different signature values, an attacker may be able to use
timing variations to search the signature space for the expected value in
O(n) time rather than the desired O(2**n).
Return ``a == b``. This function uses an approach designed to prevent
timing analysis, making it appropriate for cryptography. *a* and *b*
must both be of the same type: either :class:`str` (ASCII only, as e.g.
returned by :meth:`HMAC.hexdigest`), or any type that supports the
:term:`buffer protocol` (e.g. :class:`bytes`).
.. note::
While this function reduces the likelihood of leaking the contents of
the expected digest via a timing attack, it still may leak some timing
information when the input values differ in lengths as well as in error
cases like unsupported types or non ASCII strings. When the inputs have
different length the timing depends solely on the length of ``b``. It
is assumed that the expected length of the digest is not a secret, as
it is typically published as part of a file format, network protocol
or API definition.
If *a* and *b* are different lengths, or if an error occurs,
a timing attack may be able to infer information about the types
and lengths of *a* and *b*, but not their values.
.. versionadded:: 3.3
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Modules/operator.c
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9df73dac
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@@ -211,14 +211,15 @@ _tscmp(const unsigned char *a, const unsigned char *b,
PyDoc_STRVAR
(
compare_digest__doc__
,
"compare_digest(a, b) -> bool
\n
"
"
\n
"
"Return the equivalent of 'a == b', but avoid any short circuiting to
\n
"
"counterfeit timing analysis of input data. The function should be used to
\n
"
"compare cryptographic secrets. a and b must both either support the buffer
\n
"
"protocol (e.g. bytes) or be ASCII only str instances at the same time.
\n
"
"Return ``a == b``. This function uses an approach designed to prevent
\n
"
"timing analysis, making it appropriate for cryptography. *a* and *b*
\n
"
"must both be of the same type: either `str` (ASCII only, as e.g.
\n
"
"returned by HMAC.hexdigest()), or any type that supports the buffer
\n
"
"protocol, (e.g. `bytes`).
\n
"
"
\n
"
"Note: I
n case of an error or different lengths the function may disclose
\n
"
"
some timing information about the types and lengths of a and b.
\n
"
);
"Note: I
f *a* and *b* are different lengths, or if an error occurs,
\n
"
"
a timing attack may be able to infer information about the types
\n
"
"and lengths of *a* and *b*, but not their values.
\n
"
);
static
PyObject
*
compare_digest
(
PyObject
*
self
,
PyObject
*
args
)
...
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