1VERSION:
2
3This is version 1.0 RELEASE
4
5While this is my "release" version, due to lack of additional
6official test vectors against which to verify this implementation's
7correctness, beware that there may be implementation bugs. Also,
8it has not yet been tested on very many other architectures,
9big-endian machines in particular.
10
11
12LICENSE:
13
14This implementation is released freely under an open-source BSD
15license which appears at the top of each source code file.
16
17
18WHAT IT IS:
19
20The files sha2.h and sha2.c implement the SHA-256, SHA-384, and SHA-512
21hash algorithms as described in the PDF document found at the following
22web address:
23
24 http://csrc.nist.gov/cryptval/shs/sha256-384-512.pdf
25
26The interface is similar to the interface to SHA-1 found in the OpenSSL
27library.
28
29The file sha2prog.c is a simple program that accepts input from either
30STDIN or reads one or more files specified on the command line, and then
31generates the specified hash (either SHA-256, SHA-384, SHA-512, or any
32combination thereof, including all three at once).
33
34
35LIMITATIONS:
36
37This implementation has several limitations:
38
39 * Input data is only accepted in octet-length increments. No sub-byte
40 data is handled. The NIST document describes how to handle sub-byte
41 input data, but for ease of implementation this version will only
42 accept message data in multiples of bytes.
43 * This implementation utilizes 64-bit integer data types. If your
44 system and compiler does not have a 64-bit integer data type, this
45 implementation will not work.
46 * Because of the use of 64-bit operations, many 32-bit architectures
47 that do have 64-bit data types but do operations most efficiently
48 on 32-bit words, this implementation may be slower than an
49 implementation designed to use only 32-bit words (emulating the
50 64-bit operations).
51 * On platforms with 128-bit integer data types, the SHA-384 and SHA-512
52 bit counters used by this implementation might be better off using
53 the 128-bit type instead of simulating it with two 64-bit integers.
54 * This implementation was written in C in hopes of portability and for
55 the fun of it during my spare time. It is probably not the most
56 efficient or fastest C implementation. I welcome suggestions,
57 however, that suggest ways to speed things up without breaking
58 portability. I also welcome suggestions to improve portability.
59 * As mentioned above, this code has NOT been thoroughly tested.
60 This is perhaps the most severe limitation.
61
62
63BEFORE YOU COMPILE (OPTIONS):
64
65Each of the options described below may either be defined in the sha2.h
66header file (or in the sha2.c file in some cases), or on the command
67line at compile time if your compiler supports such things. For
68example:
69
70 #define SHA2_USE_INTTYPES_H
71 #define SHA2_UNROLL_TRANSFORM
72
73Or:
74
75 cc -c -DSHA2_UNROLL_TRANSFORM sha2.c
76 cc -c -DBYTE_ORDER=4321 -DBIG_ENDIAN=4321 sha2.c
77
78Here are the available options. Read on below for a description of
79each one:
80
81 SHA2_USE_INTTYPES_H
82 SHA2_USE_MEMSET_MEMCPY/SHA2_USE_BZERO_BCOPY
83 SHA2_UNROLL_TRANSFORM
84 BYTE_ORDER (LITTLE_ENDIAN/BIG_ENDIAN)
85
86* SHA2_USE_INTTYPES_H option:
87By default, this code uses u_intXX_t data types for 8 bit, 32 bit, and
8864 bit unsigned integer type definitions. Most BSD systems define these,
89as does Linux. However, some (like Compaq's Tru64 Unix) may instead
90use uintXX_t data types as defined by recent ANSI C standards and as
91included in the inttypes.h header file. Those wanting to use inttypes.h
92need to define this either in sha.h or at compile time.
93
94On those systems where NEITHER definitions are available, you will need
95to edit both sha2.h and sha2.c and define things by hand in the appropriate
96sections.
97
98* BYTE_ORDER definitions:
99This code assumes that BYTE_ORDER will be defined by the system during
100compile to either equal LITTLE_ENDIAN or BIG_ENDIAN. If your system
101does not define these, you may need to define them by hand in the sha.c
102file according to the byte ordering conventions of your system.
103
104* SHA2_USE_MEMSET_MEMCPY or SHA2_USE_BZERO_BCOPY
105The code in sha2.c can use either memset()/memcpy() for memory block
106operations, or bzero()/mcopy(). If you define neither of these, the
107code will default to memset()/memcpy(). You can define either at the
108command line or in sha2.h or in sha2.c.
109
110* SHA2_UNROLL_TRANSFORM
111By defining this either on the command line or in sha2.h or sha2.c,
112the code will use macros to partially "unroll" the SHA transform
113function. This usually generates bigger executables. It CAN (but
114not necessarily WILL) generate faster code when you tell your compiler
115to optimize things. For example, on the FreeBSD and Linux x86 systems
116I tested things on (using gcc), when I optimized with just -O2 and
117unrolled the transform, the hash transform was faster by 15-30%. On
118these same systems, if I did NO optimization, the unrolled transform
119was SLOWER, much slower (I'm guessing because the code was breaking
120the cache, but I'm not sure). Your mileage may vary.
121
122
123PORTABILITY:
124
125The code in sha2.c and sha2.h is intended to be portable. It may
126require that you do a few #definitions in the .h file. I've successfully
127compiled and tested the sha2.c and sha2.h code on Apple's OS X (on
128a PPC), FreeBSD 4.1.1 on Intel, Linux on Intel, FreeBSD on the Alpha,
129and even under Windows98SE using Metrowerks C. The utility/example
130programs (sha2prog.c, sha2test.c, and sha2speed.c) will very likely
131have more trouble in portability since they do I/O.
132
133To get sha2.c/sha2.h working under Windows, I had to define
134SHA2_USE_INTTYPES_H, BYTE_ORDER, LITTLE_ENDIAN, and had to comment
135out the include of <sys/types.h> in sha2.h. With a bit more work
136I got the test program to run and verified that all the test
137cases passed.
138
139
140SUGGESTIONS/BUG FIXES:
141
142If you make changes to get it working on other architectures, if you fix
143any bugs, or if you make changes that improve this implementation's
144efficiency that would be relatively portable and you're willing to release
145your changes under the same license, please send them to me for possible
146inclusion in future versions.
147
148If you know where I can find some additional test vectors, please let me
149know.
150
151
152CHANGE HISTORY:
153
1540.8 to 0.9 - Fixed spelling errors, changed to u_intXX_t type usage,
155 removed names from prototypes, added prototypes to sha2.c,
156 and a few things I can't recall.
157
1580.9 to 0.9.5 - Add a new define in sha2.c that permits one to compile
159 it to either use memcpy()/memset() or bcopy()/bzero()
160 for memory block copying and zeroing. Added support
161 for unrolled SHA-256/384/512 transform loops. Just
162 compile with SHA2_UNROLL_TRANSFORM to enable. It takes
163 longer to compile, but I hope it is a bit faster. I
164 need to do some test to see whether or not it is. Oh,
165 in sha2.c, you either need to define SHA2_USE_BZERO_BCOPY
166 or SHA2_USE_MEMSET_MEMCPY to choose which way you want
167 to compile. *Whew* It's amazing how quickly something
168 simple starts to grow more complex even in the span of
169 just a few hours. I didn't really intend to do this much.
1700.9.5 to 0.9.6 - Added a test program (sha2test) which tests against several
171 known test vectors. WARNING: Some of the test output
172 hashes are NOT from NIST's documentation and are the
173 output of this implementation and so may be incorrect.
1740.9.6 to 0.9.7 - Fixed a bug that could cause invalid output in certain
175 cases and added an assumed scenario where zero-length
176 data is hashed. Also changed the rotation macros to use
177 a temporary variable as this reduces the number of operations.
178 When data is fed in blocks of the right length, copying of
179 data is reduced in this version. Added SHAYXZ_Data()
180 functions for ease of hashing a set of data. Added another
181 file sha2speed.c for doing speed testing. Added another test
182 vector with a larger data size (16KB). Fixed u_intXX_t and
183 uintXX_t handling by adding a define for SHA2_USE_INTTYPES_H
184 as well as made a few other minor changes to get rid of
185 warnings when compiling on Compaq's Tru64 Unix.
1860.9.7 to 0.9.8 - The bug fix in 0.9.7 was incomplete and in some cases made
187 things worse. I believe that 0.9.8 fixes the bug completely
188 so that output is correct. I cannot verify this, however,
189 because of the lack of test vectors against which to do such
190 verification. All versions correctly matched the very few
191 NIST-provided vectors, but unfortunately the bug only
192 appeared in longer message data sets.
1930.9.8 to 0.9.9 - Fixed some really bad typos and mistakes on my part that
194 only affected big-endian systems. I didn't have direct
195 access for testing before this version. Thanks to
196 Lucas Marshall for giving me access to his OS X system.
1970.9.9 to 1.0.0b1 Added a few more test samples and made a few changes to
198 make things easier compiling on several other platforms.
199 Also I experimented with alternate macro definitions
200 in the SHA2_UNROLL_TRANSFORM version (see sha2.slower.c)
201 and eliminated the T1 temporary variable (the compiler
202 would of course still use internal temporary storage
203 during expression evaluation, but I'd hoped the compiler
204 would be more efficient), but unfortunately under FreeBSD
205 4.1.1-STABLE on an x86 platform, the change slowed things
206 down.
2071.0.0b1 to 1.0 RELEASE Fixed an off-by-one implementation bug that affected
208 SHA-256 when hashed data length L = 55 + 64 * X where X is
209 either zero or a positive integer, and another (basically
210 the same bug) bug in SHA-384 and SHA-512 that showed up when
211 hashed data lengths L = 111 + 128 * X. Thanks to Rogier
212 van de Pol for sending me test data that revealed the bug.
213 The fix was very simple (just two tiny changes). Also,
214 I finally put the files into RCS so future changes will be
215 easier to manage. The sha2prog.c file was rewritten to
216 be more useful to me, and I got rid of the old C testing
217 program and now use a perl script with a subdirectory full
218 of test data. It's a more flexible test system.
219
220
221LATEST VERSION:
222
223The latest version and documentation (if any ;) should always be available
224on the web at:
225
226 http://www.aarongifford.com/computers/sha.html
227
228
229CONTACT ME:
230
231I can be reached via email at:
232
233 Aaron Gifford <m e @ a a r o n g i f f o r d . c o m>
234
235Please don't send support questions. I don't have the time to answer and
236they'll probably be ignored. Bug fixes, or patches that add something useful
237will be gratefully accepted, however.
238
239If you use this implementation, I would enjoy getting a brief email message
240letting me know who you are and what use to which it is being put. There
241is no requirement to do so. I just think it would be fun.
242
243
244EXAMPLES:
245
246Here's an example of compiling and using the sha2 program (in this example
247I build it using the unrolled transform version with -O2 optimizations),
248and then running the perl testing script:
249
250 cc -O2 -DSHA2_UNROLL_TRANSFORM -Wall -o sha2 sha2prog.c sha2.c
251 % ./sha2test.pl
252
253 [most of the perl script output deleted for brevity]
254
255 ===== RESULTS (18 VECTOR DATA FILES HASHED) =====
256
257 HASH TYPE NO. OF TESTS PASSED FAILED
258 --------- ------------ ------ ------
259 SHA-256 18 18 0
260 SHA-384 18 18 0
261 SHA-512 18 18 0
262 ----------------------------------------------
263 TOTAL: 54 54 0
264
265 NO ERRORS! ALL TESTS WERE SUCCESSFUL!
266
267 ALL TEST VECTORS PASSED!
268
269That's all folks! Have fun!
270
271Aaron out.
272
273