I have been looking for some time but have not found anywhere near sufficient documentation / examples on how to use the CryptoAPI that comes with linux in the creation of syscalls / in kernel land.
If anyone knows of a good source please let me know, I would like to know how to do SHA1 / MD5 and Blowfish / AES within the kernel space only.
#include <linux/kernel.h>
#include <linux/init.h>
#include <linux/module.h>
#include <linux/crypto.h>
#include <linux/err.h>
#include <linux/scatterlist.h>
#define SHA1_LENGTH 20
static int __init sha1_init(void)
{
struct scatterlist sg;
struct crypto_hash *tfm;
struct hash_desc desc;
unsigned char output[SHA1_LENGTH];
unsigned char buf[10];
int i;
printk(KERN_INFO "sha1: %s\n", __FUNCTION__);
memset(buf, 'A', 10);
memset(output, 0x00, SHA1_LENGTH);
tfm = crypto_alloc_hash("sha1", 0, CRYPTO_ALG_ASYNC);
desc.tfm = tfm;
desc.flags = 0;
sg_init_one(&sg, buf, 10);
crypto_hash_init(&desc);
crypto_hash_update(&desc, &sg, 10);
crypto_hash_final(&desc, output);
for (i = 0; i < 20; i++) {
printk(KERN_ERR "%d-%d\n", output[i], i);
}
crypto_free_hash(tfm);
return 0;
}
static void __exit sha1_exit(void)
{
printk(KERN_INFO "sha1: %s\n", __FUNCTION__);
}
module_init(sha1_init);
module_exit(sha1_exit);
MODULE_LICENSE("Dual MIT/GPL");
MODULE_AUTHOR("Me");
There are a couple of places in the kernel which use the crypto module: the eCryptfs file system (linux/fs/ecryptfs/) and the 802.11 wireless stack (linux/drivers/staging/rtl8187se/ieee80211/). Both of these use AES, but you may be able to extrapolate what you find there to MD5.
Another good example is from the 2.6.18 kernel source in security/seclvl.c
Note: You can change CRYPTO_TFM_REQ_MAY_SLEEP if needed
static int
plaintext_to_sha1(unsigned char *hash, const char *plaintext, unsigned int len)
{
struct crypto_tfm *tfm;
struct scatterlist sg;
if (len > PAGE_SIZE) {
seclvl_printk(0, KERN_ERR, "Plaintext password too large (%d "
"characters). Largest possible is %lu "
"bytes.\n", len, PAGE_SIZE);
return -EINVAL;
}
tfm = crypto_alloc_tfm("sha1", CRYPTO_TFM_REQ_MAY_SLEEP);
if (tfm == NULL) {
seclvl_printk(0, KERN_ERR,
"Failed to load transform for SHA1\n");
return -EINVAL;
}
sg_init_one(&sg, (u8 *)plaintext, len);
crypto_digest_init(tfm);
crypto_digest_update(tfm, &sg, 1);
crypto_digest_final(tfm, hash);
crypto_free_tfm(tfm);
return 0;
}
Cryptodev-linux
https://github.com/cryptodev-linux/cryptodev-linux
It is a kernel module that exposes the kernel crypto API to userspace through /dev/crypto
.
SHA calculation example: https://github.com/cryptodev-linux/cryptodev-linux/blob/da730106c2558c8e0c8e1b1b1812d32ef9574ab7/examples/sha.c
As others have mentioned, the kernel does not seem to expose the crypto API to userspace itself, which is a shame since the kernel can already use native hardware accelerated crypto functions internally.
Crypto operations cryptodev supports: https://github.com/nmav/cryptodev-linux/blob/383922cabeea7dca354415e8c590f8e932f4d7a8/crypto/cryptodev.h
Crypto operations Linux x86 supports: https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/arch/x86/crypto?id=refs/tags/v4.0
The best place to start is Documentation/crytpo in the kernel sources. dm-crypt is one of the many components that probably uses the kernel crypto API and you can refer to it to get an idea about usage.
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