xref: /linux/Documentation/crypto/architecture.rst (revision 547f574fd9d5e3925d47fd44decbf6ab6df94b0e)
1Kernel Crypto API Architecture
2==============================
3
4Cipher algorithm types
5----------------------
6
7The kernel crypto API provides different API calls for the following
8cipher types:
9
10-  Symmetric ciphers
11
12-  AEAD ciphers
13
14-  Message digest, including keyed message digest
15
16-  Random number generation
17
18-  User space interface
19
20Ciphers And Templates
21---------------------
22
23The kernel crypto API provides implementations of single block ciphers
24and message digests. In addition, the kernel crypto API provides
25numerous "templates" that can be used in conjunction with the single
26block ciphers and message digests. Templates include all types of block
27chaining mode, the HMAC mechanism, etc.
28
29Single block ciphers and message digests can either be directly used by
30a caller or invoked together with a template to form multi-block ciphers
31or keyed message digests.
32
33A single block cipher may even be called with multiple templates.
34However, templates cannot be used without a single cipher.
35
36See /proc/crypto and search for "name". For example:
37
38-  aes
39
40-  ecb(aes)
41
42-  cmac(aes)
43
44-  ccm(aes)
45
46-  rfc4106(gcm(aes))
47
48-  sha1
49
50-  hmac(sha1)
51
52-  authenc(hmac(sha1),cbc(aes))
53
54In these examples, "aes" and "sha1" are the ciphers and all others are
55the templates.
56
57Synchronous And Asynchronous Operation
58--------------------------------------
59
60The kernel crypto API provides synchronous and asynchronous API
61operations.
62
63When using the synchronous API operation, the caller invokes a cipher
64operation which is performed synchronously by the kernel crypto API.
65That means, the caller waits until the cipher operation completes.
66Therefore, the kernel crypto API calls work like regular function calls.
67For synchronous operation, the set of API calls is small and
68conceptually similar to any other crypto library.
69
70Asynchronous operation is provided by the kernel crypto API which
71implies that the invocation of a cipher operation will complete almost
72instantly. That invocation triggers the cipher operation but it does not
73signal its completion. Before invoking a cipher operation, the caller
74must provide a callback function the kernel crypto API can invoke to
75signal the completion of the cipher operation. Furthermore, the caller
76must ensure it can handle such asynchronous events by applying
77appropriate locking around its data. The kernel crypto API does not
78perform any special serialization operation to protect the caller's data
79integrity.
80
81Crypto API Cipher References And Priority
82-----------------------------------------
83
84A cipher is referenced by the caller with a string. That string has the
85following semantics:
86
87::
88
89        template(single block cipher)
90
91
92where "template" and "single block cipher" is the aforementioned
93template and single block cipher, respectively. If applicable,
94additional templates may enclose other templates, such as
95
96::
97
98        template1(template2(single block cipher)))
99
100
101The kernel crypto API may provide multiple implementations of a template
102or a single block cipher. For example, AES on newer Intel hardware has
103the following implementations: AES-NI, assembler implementation, or
104straight C. Now, when using the string "aes" with the kernel crypto API,
105which cipher implementation is used? The answer to that question is the
106priority number assigned to each cipher implementation by the kernel
107crypto API. When a caller uses the string to refer to a cipher during
108initialization of a cipher handle, the kernel crypto API looks up all
109implementations providing an implementation with that name and selects
110the implementation with the highest priority.
111
112Now, a caller may have the need to refer to a specific cipher
113implementation and thus does not want to rely on the priority-based
114selection. To accommodate this scenario, the kernel crypto API allows
115the cipher implementation to register a unique name in addition to
116common names. When using that unique name, a caller is therefore always
117sure to refer to the intended cipher implementation.
118
119The list of available ciphers is given in /proc/crypto. However, that
120list does not specify all possible permutations of templates and
121ciphers. Each block listed in /proc/crypto may contain the following
122information -- if one of the components listed as follows are not
123applicable to a cipher, it is not displayed:
124
125-  name: the generic name of the cipher that is subject to the
126   priority-based selection -- this name can be used by the cipher
127   allocation API calls (all names listed above are examples for such
128   generic names)
129
130-  driver: the unique name of the cipher -- this name can be used by the
131   cipher allocation API calls
132
133-  module: the kernel module providing the cipher implementation (or
134   "kernel" for statically linked ciphers)
135
136-  priority: the priority value of the cipher implementation
137
138-  refcnt: the reference count of the respective cipher (i.e. the number
139   of current consumers of this cipher)
140
141-  selftest: specification whether the self test for the cipher passed
142
143-  type:
144
145   -  skcipher for symmetric key ciphers
146
147   -  cipher for single block ciphers that may be used with an
148      additional template
149
150   -  shash for synchronous message digest
151
152   -  ahash for asynchronous message digest
153
154   -  aead for AEAD cipher type
155
156   -  compression for compression type transformations
157
158   -  rng for random number generator
159
160   -  kpp for a Key-agreement Protocol Primitive (KPP) cipher such as
161      an ECDH or DH implementation
162
163-  blocksize: blocksize of cipher in bytes
164
165-  keysize: key size in bytes
166
167-  ivsize: IV size in bytes
168
169-  seedsize: required size of seed data for random number generator
170
171-  digestsize: output size of the message digest
172
173-  geniv: IV generator (obsolete)
174
175Key Sizes
176---------
177
178When allocating a cipher handle, the caller only specifies the cipher
179type. Symmetric ciphers, however, typically support multiple key sizes
180(e.g. AES-128 vs. AES-192 vs. AES-256). These key sizes are determined
181with the length of the provided key. Thus, the kernel crypto API does
182not provide a separate way to select the particular symmetric cipher key
183size.
184
185Cipher Allocation Type And Masks
186--------------------------------
187
188The different cipher handle allocation functions allow the specification
189of a type and mask flag. Both parameters have the following meaning (and
190are therefore not covered in the subsequent sections).
191
192The type flag specifies the type of the cipher algorithm. The caller
193usually provides a 0 when the caller wants the default handling.
194Otherwise, the caller may provide the following selections which match
195the aforementioned cipher types:
196
197-  CRYPTO_ALG_TYPE_CIPHER Single block cipher
198
199-  CRYPTO_ALG_TYPE_COMPRESS Compression
200
201-  CRYPTO_ALG_TYPE_AEAD Authenticated Encryption with Associated Data
202   (MAC)
203
204-  CRYPTO_ALG_TYPE_KPP Key-agreement Protocol Primitive (KPP) such as
205   an ECDH or DH implementation
206
207-  CRYPTO_ALG_TYPE_HASH Raw message digest
208
209-  CRYPTO_ALG_TYPE_SHASH Synchronous multi-block hash
210
211-  CRYPTO_ALG_TYPE_AHASH Asynchronous multi-block hash
212
213-  CRYPTO_ALG_TYPE_RNG Random Number Generation
214
215-  CRYPTO_ALG_TYPE_AKCIPHER Asymmetric cipher
216
217-  CRYPTO_ALG_TYPE_PCOMPRESS Enhanced version of
218   CRYPTO_ALG_TYPE_COMPRESS allowing for segmented compression /
219   decompression instead of performing the operation on one segment
220   only. CRYPTO_ALG_TYPE_PCOMPRESS is intended to replace
221   CRYPTO_ALG_TYPE_COMPRESS once existing consumers are converted.
222
223The mask flag restricts the type of cipher. The only allowed flag is
224CRYPTO_ALG_ASYNC to restrict the cipher lookup function to
225asynchronous ciphers. Usually, a caller provides a 0 for the mask flag.
226
227When the caller provides a mask and type specification, the caller
228limits the search the kernel crypto API can perform for a suitable
229cipher implementation for the given cipher name. That means, even when a
230caller uses a cipher name that exists during its initialization call,
231the kernel crypto API may not select it due to the used type and mask
232field.
233
234Internal Structure of Kernel Crypto API
235---------------------------------------
236
237The kernel crypto API has an internal structure where a cipher
238implementation may use many layers and indirections. This section shall
239help to clarify how the kernel crypto API uses various components to
240implement the complete cipher.
241
242The following subsections explain the internal structure based on
243existing cipher implementations. The first section addresses the most
244complex scenario where all other scenarios form a logical subset.
245
246Generic AEAD Cipher Structure
247~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
248
249The following ASCII art decomposes the kernel crypto API layers when
250using the AEAD cipher with the automated IV generation. The shown
251example is used by the IPSEC layer.
252
253For other use cases of AEAD ciphers, the ASCII art applies as well, but
254the caller may not use the AEAD cipher with a separate IV generator. In
255this case, the caller must generate the IV.
256
257The depicted example decomposes the AEAD cipher of GCM(AES) based on the
258generic C implementations (gcm.c, aes-generic.c, ctr.c, ghash-generic.c,
259seqiv.c). The generic implementation serves as an example showing the
260complete logic of the kernel crypto API.
261
262It is possible that some streamlined cipher implementations (like
263AES-NI) provide implementations merging aspects which in the view of the
264kernel crypto API cannot be decomposed into layers any more. In case of
265the AES-NI implementation, the CTR mode, the GHASH implementation and
266the AES cipher are all merged into one cipher implementation registered
267with the kernel crypto API. In this case, the concept described by the
268following ASCII art applies too. However, the decomposition of GCM into
269the individual sub-components by the kernel crypto API is not done any
270more.
271
272Each block in the following ASCII art is an independent cipher instance
273obtained from the kernel crypto API. Each block is accessed by the
274caller or by other blocks using the API functions defined by the kernel
275crypto API for the cipher implementation type.
276
277The blocks below indicate the cipher type as well as the specific logic
278implemented in the cipher.
279
280The ASCII art picture also indicates the call structure, i.e. who calls
281which component. The arrows point to the invoked block where the caller
282uses the API applicable to the cipher type specified for the block.
283
284::
285
286
287    kernel crypto API                                |   IPSEC Layer
288                                                     |
289    +-----------+                                    |
290    |           |            (1)
291    |   aead    | <-----------------------------------  esp_output
292    |  (seqiv)  | ---+
293    +-----------+    |
294                     | (2)
295    +-----------+    |
296    |           | <--+                (2)
297    |   aead    | <-----------------------------------  esp_input
298    |   (gcm)   | ------------+
299    +-----------+             |
300          | (3)               | (5)
301          v                   v
302    +-----------+       +-----------+
303    |           |       |           |
304    |  skcipher |       |   ahash   |
305    |   (ctr)   | ---+  |  (ghash)  |
306    +-----------+    |  +-----------+
307                     |
308    +-----------+    | (4)
309    |           | <--+
310    |   cipher  |
311    |   (aes)   |
312    +-----------+
313
314
315
316The following call sequence is applicable when the IPSEC layer triggers
317an encryption operation with the esp_output function. During
318configuration, the administrator set up the use of seqiv(rfc4106(gcm(aes)))
319as the cipher for ESP. The following call sequence is now depicted in
320the ASCII art above:
321
3221. esp_output() invokes crypto_aead_encrypt() to trigger an
323   encryption operation of the AEAD cipher with IV generator.
324
325   The SEQIV generates the IV.
326
3272. Now, SEQIV uses the AEAD API function calls to invoke the associated
328   AEAD cipher. In our case, during the instantiation of SEQIV, the
329   cipher handle for GCM is provided to SEQIV. This means that SEQIV
330   invokes AEAD cipher operations with the GCM cipher handle.
331
332   During instantiation of the GCM handle, the CTR(AES) and GHASH
333   ciphers are instantiated. The cipher handles for CTR(AES) and GHASH
334   are retained for later use.
335
336   The GCM implementation is responsible to invoke the CTR mode AES and
337   the GHASH cipher in the right manner to implement the GCM
338   specification.
339
3403. The GCM AEAD cipher type implementation now invokes the SKCIPHER API
341   with the instantiated CTR(AES) cipher handle.
342
343   During instantiation of the CTR(AES) cipher, the CIPHER type
344   implementation of AES is instantiated. The cipher handle for AES is
345   retained.
346
347   That means that the SKCIPHER implementation of CTR(AES) only
348   implements the CTR block chaining mode. After performing the block
349   chaining operation, the CIPHER implementation of AES is invoked.
350
3514. The SKCIPHER of CTR(AES) now invokes the CIPHER API with the AES
352   cipher handle to encrypt one block.
353
3545. The GCM AEAD implementation also invokes the GHASH cipher
355   implementation via the AHASH API.
356
357When the IPSEC layer triggers the esp_input() function, the same call
358sequence is followed with the only difference that the operation starts
359with step (2).
360
361Generic Block Cipher Structure
362~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
363
364Generic block ciphers follow the same concept as depicted with the ASCII
365art picture above.
366
367For example, CBC(AES) is implemented with cbc.c, and aes-generic.c. The
368ASCII art picture above applies as well with the difference that only
369step (4) is used and the SKCIPHER block chaining mode is CBC.
370
371Generic Keyed Message Digest Structure
372~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
373
374Keyed message digest implementations again follow the same concept as
375depicted in the ASCII art picture above.
376
377For example, HMAC(SHA256) is implemented with hmac.c and
378sha256_generic.c. The following ASCII art illustrates the
379implementation:
380
381::
382
383
384    kernel crypto API            |       Caller
385                                 |
386    +-----------+         (1)    |
387    |           | <------------------  some_function
388    |   ahash   |
389    |   (hmac)  | ---+
390    +-----------+    |
391                     | (2)
392    +-----------+    |
393    |           | <--+
394    |   shash   |
395    |  (sha256) |
396    +-----------+
397
398
399
400The following call sequence is applicable when a caller triggers an HMAC
401operation:
402
4031. The AHASH API functions are invoked by the caller. The HMAC
404   implementation performs its operation as needed.
405
406   During initialization of the HMAC cipher, the SHASH cipher type of
407   SHA256 is instantiated. The cipher handle for the SHA256 instance is
408   retained.
409
410   At one time, the HMAC implementation requires a SHA256 operation
411   where the SHA256 cipher handle is used.
412
4132. The HMAC instance now invokes the SHASH API with the SHA256 cipher
414   handle to calculate the message digest.
415