2023-08-23 17:09:04 +00:00
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# Real World Crypto 101
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My notes when reading
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[Real-World Cryptography](https://www.manning.com/books/real-world-cryptography)
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2023-09-10 18:03:48 +00:00
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## **Hash** function convert from input to digest
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2023-08-23 17:09:04 +00:00
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- Pre-image resistance: Given digest, can not find input
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- Second pre-image resistance: Given input, digest, can not find another input
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produce same digest. Small change to input make digest big change.
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- Collision resistance: Can not find 2 input produce same digest.
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2023-09-10 18:03:48 +00:00
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## **MAC** aka Message Authentication Code produce from key, message to authentication tag.
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2023-08-24 04:44:53 +00:00
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- A send B message with MAC (generate from message and A key).
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- B double check message with MAC (generate from receive message and B key).
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- A and B use same key.
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2023-09-10 16:39:41 +00:00
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2023-09-10 18:03:48 +00:00
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```mermaid
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sequenceDiagram
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participant alice
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participant bob
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alice ->> bob: send alice, mac(secret_key_alice, alice)
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bob ->> bob: compare mac(secret_key_alice, alice) with mac(secret_key_bob, alice)
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```
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- Prevent forgery: without secret_key, can not generate MAC even if knowing **a
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lot of** alice and mac(secret_key, alice),
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- Prevent collisions: keep MAC long enough (256-bit),
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- Replay attacks: send transaction 2 times with perfectly MAC and u know why ->
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instead of mac(secret_key, alice), use **counter** as mac(secret_key, counter,
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alice).
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- Verify must be done in **constant time**: if not, probaly return error the
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moment the bytes differ -> attacker recreate byte by byte by measuring how
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long -> timing attacks
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Constant time comparision:
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```go
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for i := 0; i < len(x); i++ {
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// Use XOR instead of compare x[i] == y[i]
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// If x[i] == y[i] -> XOR is 1
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// Otherwise XOR is 0
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v |= x[i] ^ y[i]
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}
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// v == 1 means all XOR is 1 means x == y
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```
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Use for:
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- Integrity: because MAC ensure no one can tamper with message without noticing
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2023-09-10 16:41:21 +00:00
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```mermaid
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2023-09-10 16:39:41 +00:00
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sequenceDiagram
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participant alice
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participant bob
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alice ->> bob: send username, password
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2023-09-10 18:03:48 +00:00
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bob -->> alice: return alice|mac(secret_key, alice)
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alice ->> bob: send alice|mac(secret_key, alice)
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2023-09-10 16:39:41 +00:00
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bob -->> alice: return OK
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2023-09-10 18:03:48 +00:00
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alice ->> bob: send bob|mac(secret_key, alice)
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2023-09-10 16:39:41 +00:00
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bob -->> alice: return ERROR
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```
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2023-09-10 18:03:48 +00:00
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**HMAC** is MAC using hash
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2023-11-07 17:56:37 +00:00
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2023-12-08 17:47:17 +00:00
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## AES (Advanced Encryption Standard)
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2023-11-07 17:56:37 +00:00
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2023-12-08 17:47:17 +00:00
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Currently (2023) the world using AES-128 which take a key 128 bits == 16 bytes
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2023-11-07 17:56:37 +00:00
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- Take a variable-length key
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- Take plaintext of 128 bits
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- Give ciphertext of 128 bits
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AES is kind of cipher, handle fixed-size plaintext so we called **block
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2023-12-08 17:47:17 +00:00
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cipher**. AES is deterministic so we can encrypt and decrypt.
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## AES-CBC (Cipher Block Chaining)
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What if text you want to encrypt longer than 128 bytes ? We add **padding** for
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text to become multi block which has 128 bytes, then encrypt each block.
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Adding padding bytes is easy, remove it after decrypt is hard. How do you know
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which is padding bytes you add if you use random bytes ?
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Just use **PKCS#7 padding**. Example AES-128 use block of 16 bytes but only have
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9 bytes, should add 7 bytes padding. Just fill all padding bytes with padding
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length aka value `07`.
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```txt
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XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX XX 07 07 07 07 07 07 07
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```
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So to know how much padding bytes should we remove -> read last bytes (`07`) to
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know the length to remove trailing padding bytes.
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The problem with naive way to split text, add padding bytes then encrypt each
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block using AES-128 is repeated text. Because it leaks information if text is
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made up from many repeated text (ECB penguin).
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CBC = deterministic block cipher + IV (initialization vector)
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AES-CBC encrypt:
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- IV XOR first plaintext -> AES encrypt -> first ciphertext. ciphertext.
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- Use first ciphertext as IV to second ciphertext and so on.
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AES-CBC decrypt:
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- AES decrypt first ciphertext -> XOR IV -> first plaintext.
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- Use first ciphertext as IV to second block and so on.
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Because IV, same plaintext can encrypt to different ciphertext.
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**WARNING** If IV become predictable, AES-CBC become deterministic -> BEAST
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attack (Browser Exploit Against SSL/TLS).
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## AEAD (Authenticated Encryption with Associated Data)
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Because AES-CBC requires IV which shows public -> attacker can change IV -> lack
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of authenticity -> use AES-CBC-HMAC or AEAD.
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AEAD provides a way to authenticate **associated data**.
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## AES-GCM (Galois/Counter Mode) AEAD
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AES-GCM = AES-CTR (Counter) + GMAC message authentication code
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AES-CTR encrypt:
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- Create nonce 12 bytes (same purpose as IV).
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- Concatenate nonce with counter 4 bytes: 1, 2, 3, ...
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- Encrypt AES from concatenated none with counter to **keystream**.
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- XOR keystream with plaintext -> ciphertext.
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Limit is counter only up to 4 bytes so only handle plaintext of 2^32 - 1 blocks
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of 16 bytes aka 69 GBs.
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AES-CTR no need padding because if keystream is longer than plaintext, it is
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truncated to plaintext length before XOR.
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This is stream cipher, differ from block cipher.
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GMAC is MAC with GHASH. GHASH resembles CBC mode.
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## ChaCha20-Poly1305 AED
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ChaCha20-Poly1305 = ChaCha20 stream cipher + Poly1305 MAC
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