From 5846551bb147d2ae4a47f36de3c4ea46892ba180 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Mauro Carvalho Chehab Date: Mon, 15 Jun 2020 08:50:09 +0200 Subject: docs: crypto: convert api-intro.txt to ReST format - Change title markups; - Mark literal blocks; - Use list markups at authors/credits; - Add blank lines when needed; - Remove trailing whitespaces. Signed-off-by: Mauro Carvalho Chehab Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/c71e2c73a787ec7814db09bec3c1359779785bfa.1592203650.git.mchehab+huawei@kernel.org Signed-off-by: Jonathan Corbet --- Documentation/crypto/api-intro.rst | 262 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 262 insertions(+) create mode 100644 Documentation/crypto/api-intro.rst (limited to 'Documentation/crypto/api-intro.rst') diff --git a/Documentation/crypto/api-intro.rst b/Documentation/crypto/api-intro.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..bcff47d42189 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/crypto/api-intro.rst @@ -0,0 +1,262 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 + +============================= +Scatterlist Cryptographic API +============================= + +Introduction +============ + +The Scatterlist Crypto API takes page vectors (scatterlists) as +arguments, and works directly on pages. In some cases (e.g. ECB +mode ciphers), this will allow for pages to be encrypted in-place +with no copying. + +One of the initial goals of this design was to readily support IPsec, +so that processing can be applied to paged skb's without the need +for linearization. + + +Details +======= + +At the lowest level are algorithms, which register dynamically with the +API. + +'Transforms' are user-instantiated objects, which maintain state, handle all +of the implementation logic (e.g. manipulating page vectors) and provide an +abstraction to the underlying algorithms. However, at the user +level they are very simple. + +Conceptually, the API layering looks like this:: + + [transform api] (user interface) + [transform ops] (per-type logic glue e.g. cipher.c, compress.c) + [algorithm api] (for registering algorithms) + +The idea is to make the user interface and algorithm registration API +very simple, while hiding the core logic from both. Many good ideas +from existing APIs such as Cryptoapi and Nettle have been adapted for this. + +The API currently supports five main types of transforms: AEAD (Authenticated +Encryption with Associated Data), Block Ciphers, Ciphers, Compressors and +Hashes. + +Please note that Block Ciphers is somewhat of a misnomer. It is in fact +meant to support all ciphers including stream ciphers. The difference +between Block Ciphers and Ciphers is that the latter operates on exactly +one block while the former can operate on an arbitrary amount of data, +subject to block size requirements (i.e., non-stream ciphers can only +process multiples of blocks). + +Here's an example of how to use the API:: + + #include + #include + #include + + struct scatterlist sg[2]; + char result[128]; + struct crypto_ahash *tfm; + struct ahash_request *req; + + tfm = crypto_alloc_ahash("md5", 0, CRYPTO_ALG_ASYNC); + if (IS_ERR(tfm)) + fail(); + + /* ... set up the scatterlists ... */ + + req = ahash_request_alloc(tfm, GFP_ATOMIC); + if (!req) + fail(); + + ahash_request_set_callback(req, 0, NULL, NULL); + ahash_request_set_crypt(req, sg, result, 2); + + if (crypto_ahash_digest(req)) + fail(); + + ahash_request_free(req); + crypto_free_ahash(tfm); + + +Many real examples are available in the regression test module (tcrypt.c). + + +Developer Notes +=============== + +Transforms may only be allocated in user context, and cryptographic +methods may only be called from softirq and user contexts. For +transforms with a setkey method it too should only be called from +user context. + +When using the API for ciphers, performance will be optimal if each +scatterlist contains data which is a multiple of the cipher's block +size (typically 8 bytes). This prevents having to do any copying +across non-aligned page fragment boundaries. + + +Adding New Algorithms +===================== + +When submitting a new algorithm for inclusion, a mandatory requirement +is that at least a few test vectors from known sources (preferably +standards) be included. + +Converting existing well known code is preferred, as it is more likely +to have been reviewed and widely tested. If submitting code from LGPL +sources, please consider changing the license to GPL (see section 3 of +the LGPL). + +Algorithms submitted must also be generally patent-free (e.g. IDEA +will not be included in the mainline until around 2011), and be based +on a recognized standard and/or have been subjected to appropriate +peer review. + +Also check for any RFCs which may relate to the use of specific algorithms, +as well as general application notes such as RFC2451 ("The ESP CBC-Mode +Cipher Algorithms"). + +It's a good idea to avoid using lots of macros and use inlined functions +instead, as gcc does a good job with inlining, while excessive use of +macros can cause compilation problems on some platforms. + +Also check the TODO list at the web site listed below to see what people +might already be working on. + + +Bugs +==== + +Send bug reports to: + linux-crypto@vger.kernel.org + +Cc: + Herbert Xu , + David S. Miller + + +Further Information +=================== + +For further patches and various updates, including the current TODO +list, see: +http://gondor.apana.org.au/~herbert/crypto/ + + +Authors +======= + +- James Morris +- David S. Miller +- Herbert Xu + + +Credits +======= + +The following people provided invaluable feedback during the development +of the API: + + - Alexey Kuznetzov + - Rusty Russell + - Herbert Valerio Riedel + - Jeff Garzik + - Michael Richardson + - Andrew Morton + - Ingo Oeser + - Christoph Hellwig + +Portions of this API were derived from the following projects: + + Kerneli Cryptoapi (http://www.kerneli.org/) + - Alexander Kjeldaas + - Herbert Valerio Riedel + - Kyle McMartin + - Jean-Luc Cooke + - David Bryson + - Clemens Fruhwirth + - Tobias Ringstrom + - Harald Welte + +and; + + Nettle (http://www.lysator.liu.se/~nisse/nettle/) + - Niels Möller + +Original developers of the crypto algorithms: + + - Dana L. How (DES) + - Andrew Tridgell and Steve French (MD4) + - Colin Plumb (MD5) + - Steve Reid (SHA1) + - Jean-Luc Cooke (SHA256, SHA384, SHA512) + - Kazunori Miyazawa / USAGI (HMAC) + - Matthew Skala (Twofish) + - Dag Arne Osvik (Serpent) + - Brian Gladman (AES) + - Kartikey Mahendra Bhatt (CAST6) + - Jon Oberheide (ARC4) + - Jouni Malinen (Michael MIC) + - NTT(Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation) (Camellia) + +SHA1 algorithm contributors: + - Jean-Francois Dive + +DES algorithm contributors: + - Raimar Falke + - Gisle Sælensminde + - Niels Möller + +Blowfish algorithm contributors: + - Herbert Valerio Riedel + - Kyle McMartin + +Twofish algorithm contributors: + - Werner Koch + - Marc Mutz + +SHA256/384/512 algorithm contributors: + - Andrew McDonald + - Kyle McMartin + - Herbert Valerio Riedel + +AES algorithm contributors: + - Alexander Kjeldaas + - Herbert Valerio Riedel + - Kyle McMartin + - Adam J. Richter + - Fruhwirth Clemens (i586) + - Linus Torvalds (i586) + +CAST5 algorithm contributors: + - Kartikey Mahendra Bhatt (original developers unknown, FSF copyright). + +TEA/XTEA algorithm contributors: + - Aaron Grothe + - Michael Ringe + +Khazad algorithm contributors: + - Aaron Grothe + +Whirlpool algorithm contributors: + - Aaron Grothe + - Jean-Luc Cooke + +Anubis algorithm contributors: + - Aaron Grothe + +Tiger algorithm contributors: + - Aaron Grothe + +VIA PadLock contributors: + - Michal Ludvig + +Camellia algorithm contributors: + - NTT(Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation) (Camellia) + +Generic scatterwalk code by Adam J. Richter + +Please send any credits updates or corrections to: +Herbert Xu -- cgit v1.2.3