boringssl/crypto/fipsmodule/rand/rand.c
David Benjamin 2e819d8be4 Unwind RDRAND functions correctly on Windows.
But for the ABI conversion bits, these are just leaf functions and don't
even need unwind tables. Just renumber the registers on Windows to only
used volatile ones.

In doing so, this switches to writing rdrand explicitly. perlasm already
knows how to manually encode it and our minimum assembler versions
surely cover rdrand by now anyway. Also add the .size directive. I'm not
sure what it's used for, but the other files have it.

(This isn't a generally reusable technique. The more complex functions
will need actual unwind codes.)

Bug: 259
Change-Id: I1d5669bcf8b6e34939885d78aea6f60597be1528
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/c/34867
Commit-Queue: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
2019-02-12 20:24:27 +00:00

352 lines
11 KiB
C

/* Copyright (c) 2014, Google Inc.
*
* Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any
* purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above
* copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies.
*
* THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE AUTHOR DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES
* WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
* MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY
* SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES
* WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION
* OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN
* CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. */
#include <openssl/rand.h>
#include <assert.h>
#include <limits.h>
#include <string.h>
#if defined(BORINGSSL_FIPS)
#include <unistd.h>
#endif
#include <openssl/chacha.h>
#include <openssl/cpu.h>
#include <openssl/mem.h>
#include "internal.h"
#include "../../internal.h"
#include "../delocate.h"
// It's assumed that the operating system always has an unfailing source of
// entropy which is accessed via |CRYPTO_sysrand|. (If the operating system
// entropy source fails, it's up to |CRYPTO_sysrand| to abort the process—we
// don't try to handle it.)
//
// In addition, the hardware may provide a low-latency RNG. Intel's rdrand
// instruction is the canonical example of this. When a hardware RNG is
// available we don't need to worry about an RNG failure arising from fork()ing
// the process or moving a VM, so we can keep thread-local RNG state and use it
// as an additional-data input to CTR-DRBG.
//
// (We assume that the OS entropy is safe from fork()ing and VM duplication.
// This might be a bit of a leap of faith, esp on Windows, but there's nothing
// that we can do about it.)
// kReseedInterval is the number of generate calls made to CTR-DRBG before
// reseeding.
static const unsigned kReseedInterval = 4096;
// CRNGT_BLOCK_SIZE is the number of bytes in a “block” for the purposes of the
// continuous random number generator test in FIPS 140-2, section 4.9.2.
#define CRNGT_BLOCK_SIZE 16
// rand_thread_state contains the per-thread state for the RNG.
struct rand_thread_state {
CTR_DRBG_STATE drbg;
// calls is the number of generate calls made on |drbg| since it was last
// (re)seeded. This is bound by |kReseedInterval|.
unsigned calls;
// last_block_valid is non-zero iff |last_block| contains data from
// |CRYPTO_sysrand|.
int last_block_valid;
#if defined(BORINGSSL_FIPS)
// last_block contains the previous block from |CRYPTO_sysrand|.
uint8_t last_block[CRNGT_BLOCK_SIZE];
// next and prev form a NULL-terminated, double-linked list of all states in
// a process.
struct rand_thread_state *next, *prev;
#endif
};
#if defined(BORINGSSL_FIPS)
// thread_states_list is the head of a linked-list of all |rand_thread_state|
// objects in the process, one per thread. This is needed because FIPS requires
// that they be zeroed on process exit, but thread-local destructors aren't
// called when the whole process is exiting.
DEFINE_BSS_GET(struct rand_thread_state *, thread_states_list);
DEFINE_STATIC_MUTEX(thread_states_list_lock);
static void rand_thread_state_clear_all(void) __attribute__((destructor));
static void rand_thread_state_clear_all(void) {
CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX_lock_write(thread_states_list_lock_bss_get());
for (struct rand_thread_state *cur = *thread_states_list_bss_get();
cur != NULL; cur = cur->next) {
CTR_DRBG_clear(&cur->drbg);
}
// |thread_states_list_lock is deliberately left locked so that any threads
// that are still running will hang if they try to call |RAND_bytes|.
}
#endif
// rand_thread_state_free frees a |rand_thread_state|. This is called when a
// thread exits.
static void rand_thread_state_free(void *state_in) {
struct rand_thread_state *state = state_in;
if (state_in == NULL) {
return;
}
#if defined(BORINGSSL_FIPS)
CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX_lock_write(thread_states_list_lock_bss_get());
if (state->prev != NULL) {
state->prev->next = state->next;
} else {
*thread_states_list_bss_get() = state->next;
}
if (state->next != NULL) {
state->next->prev = state->prev;
}
CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX_unlock_write(thread_states_list_lock_bss_get());
CTR_DRBG_clear(&state->drbg);
#endif
OPENSSL_free(state);
}
#if defined(OPENSSL_X86_64) && !defined(OPENSSL_NO_ASM) && \
!defined(BORINGSSL_UNSAFE_DETERMINISTIC_MODE)
static int hwrand(uint8_t *buf, const size_t len) {
if (!have_rdrand()) {
return 0;
}
const size_t len_multiple8 = len & ~7;
if (!CRYPTO_rdrand_multiple8_buf(buf, len_multiple8)) {
return 0;
}
const size_t remainder = len - len_multiple8;
if (remainder != 0) {
assert(remainder < 8);
uint8_t rand_buf[8];
if (!CRYPTO_rdrand(rand_buf)) {
return 0;
}
OPENSSL_memcpy(buf + len_multiple8, rand_buf, remainder);
}
#if defined(BORINGSSL_FIPS_BREAK_CRNG)
// This breaks the "continuous random number generator test" defined in FIPS
// 140-2, section 4.9.2, and implemented in rand_get_seed().
OPENSSL_memset(buf, 0, len);
#endif
return 1;
}
#else
static int hwrand(uint8_t *buf, size_t len) {
return 0;
}
#endif
#if defined(BORINGSSL_FIPS)
static void rand_get_seed(struct rand_thread_state *state,
uint8_t seed[CTR_DRBG_ENTROPY_LEN]) {
if (!state->last_block_valid) {
if (!hwrand(state->last_block, sizeof(state->last_block))) {
CRYPTO_sysrand(state->last_block, sizeof(state->last_block));
}
state->last_block_valid = 1;
}
// We overread from /dev/urandom or RDRAND by a factor of 10 and XOR to
// whiten.
#define FIPS_OVERREAD 10
uint8_t entropy[CTR_DRBG_ENTROPY_LEN * FIPS_OVERREAD];
if (!hwrand(entropy, sizeof(entropy))) {
CRYPTO_sysrand(entropy, sizeof(entropy));
}
// See FIPS 140-2, section 4.9.2. This is the “continuous random number
// generator test” which causes the program to randomly abort. Hopefully the
// rate of failure is small enough not to be a problem in practice.
if (CRYPTO_memcmp(state->last_block, entropy, CRNGT_BLOCK_SIZE) == 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "CRNGT failed.\n");
BORINGSSL_FIPS_abort();
}
for (size_t i = CRNGT_BLOCK_SIZE; i < sizeof(entropy);
i += CRNGT_BLOCK_SIZE) {
if (CRYPTO_memcmp(entropy + i - CRNGT_BLOCK_SIZE, entropy + i,
CRNGT_BLOCK_SIZE) == 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "CRNGT failed.\n");
BORINGSSL_FIPS_abort();
}
}
OPENSSL_memcpy(state->last_block,
entropy + sizeof(entropy) - CRNGT_BLOCK_SIZE,
CRNGT_BLOCK_SIZE);
OPENSSL_memcpy(seed, entropy, CTR_DRBG_ENTROPY_LEN);
for (size_t i = 1; i < FIPS_OVERREAD; i++) {
for (size_t j = 0; j < CTR_DRBG_ENTROPY_LEN; j++) {
seed[j] ^= entropy[CTR_DRBG_ENTROPY_LEN * i + j];
}
}
}
#else
static void rand_get_seed(struct rand_thread_state *state,
uint8_t seed[CTR_DRBG_ENTROPY_LEN]) {
// If not in FIPS mode, we don't overread from the system entropy source and
// we don't depend only on the hardware RDRAND.
CRYPTO_sysrand(seed, CTR_DRBG_ENTROPY_LEN);
}
#endif
void RAND_bytes_with_additional_data(uint8_t *out, size_t out_len,
const uint8_t user_additional_data[32]) {
if (out_len == 0) {
return;
}
// Additional data is mixed into every CTR-DRBG call to protect, as best we
// can, against forks & VM clones. We do not over-read this information and
// don't reseed with it so, from the point of view of FIPS, this doesn't
// provide “prediction resistance”. But, in practice, it does.
uint8_t additional_data[32];
if (!hwrand(additional_data, sizeof(additional_data))) {
// Without a hardware RNG to save us from address-space duplication, the OS
// entropy is used. This can be expensive (one read per |RAND_bytes| call)
// and so can be disabled by applications that we have ensured don't fork
// and aren't at risk of VM cloning.
if (!rand_fork_unsafe_buffering_enabled()) {
CRYPTO_sysrand(additional_data, sizeof(additional_data));
} else {
OPENSSL_memset(additional_data, 0, sizeof(additional_data));
}
}
for (size_t i = 0; i < sizeof(additional_data); i++) {
additional_data[i] ^= user_additional_data[i];
}
struct rand_thread_state stack_state;
struct rand_thread_state *state =
CRYPTO_get_thread_local(OPENSSL_THREAD_LOCAL_RAND);
if (state == NULL) {
state = OPENSSL_malloc(sizeof(struct rand_thread_state));
if (state == NULL ||
!CRYPTO_set_thread_local(OPENSSL_THREAD_LOCAL_RAND, state,
rand_thread_state_free)) {
// If the system is out of memory, use an ephemeral state on the
// stack.
state = &stack_state;
}
state->last_block_valid = 0;
uint8_t seed[CTR_DRBG_ENTROPY_LEN];
rand_get_seed(state, seed);
if (!CTR_DRBG_init(&state->drbg, seed, NULL, 0)) {
abort();
}
state->calls = 0;
#if defined(BORINGSSL_FIPS)
if (state != &stack_state) {
CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX_lock_write(thread_states_list_lock_bss_get());
struct rand_thread_state **states_list = thread_states_list_bss_get();
state->next = *states_list;
if (state->next != NULL) {
state->next->prev = state;
}
state->prev = NULL;
*states_list = state;
CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX_unlock_write(thread_states_list_lock_bss_get());
}
#endif
}
if (state->calls >= kReseedInterval) {
uint8_t seed[CTR_DRBG_ENTROPY_LEN];
rand_get_seed(state, seed);
#if defined(BORINGSSL_FIPS)
// Take a read lock around accesses to |state->drbg|. This is needed to
// avoid returning bad entropy if we race with
// |rand_thread_state_clear_all|.
//
// This lock must be taken after any calls to |CRYPTO_sysrand| to avoid a
// bug on ppc64le. glibc may implement pthread locks by wrapping user code
// in a hardware transaction, but, on some older versions of glibc and the
// kernel, syscalls made with |syscall| did not abort the transaction.
CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX_lock_read(thread_states_list_lock_bss_get());
#endif
if (!CTR_DRBG_reseed(&state->drbg, seed, NULL, 0)) {
abort();
}
state->calls = 0;
} else {
#if defined(BORINGSSL_FIPS)
CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX_lock_read(thread_states_list_lock_bss_get());
#endif
}
int first_call = 1;
while (out_len > 0) {
size_t todo = out_len;
if (todo > CTR_DRBG_MAX_GENERATE_LENGTH) {
todo = CTR_DRBG_MAX_GENERATE_LENGTH;
}
if (!CTR_DRBG_generate(&state->drbg, out, todo, additional_data,
first_call ? sizeof(additional_data) : 0)) {
abort();
}
out += todo;
out_len -= todo;
// Though we only check before entering the loop, this cannot add enough to
// overflow a |size_t|.
state->calls++;
first_call = 0;
}
if (state == &stack_state) {
CTR_DRBG_clear(&state->drbg);
}
#if defined(BORINGSSL_FIPS)
CRYPTO_STATIC_MUTEX_unlock_read(thread_states_list_lock_bss_get());
#endif
}
int RAND_bytes(uint8_t *out, size_t out_len) {
static const uint8_t kZeroAdditionalData[32] = {0};
RAND_bytes_with_additional_data(out, out_len, kZeroAdditionalData);
return 1;
}
int RAND_pseudo_bytes(uint8_t *buf, size_t len) {
return RAND_bytes(buf, len);
}