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Paul Kehrerb6d764c2014-01-27 22:32:11 -06001.. hazmat::
2
3Key Derivation Functions
4========================
5
6.. currentmodule:: cryptography.hazmat.primitives.kdf
7
Paul Kehrer0b181182014-01-29 16:34:47 -06008Key derivation functions derive bytes suitable for cryptographic operations
9from passwords or other data sources using a pseudo-random function (PRF).
10Different KDFs are suitable for different tasks such as:
Paul Kehrer1cab1042014-01-29 14:30:11 -060011
Paul Kehrer0b181182014-01-29 16:34:47 -060012* Cryptographic key derivation
Paul Kehrer1cab1042014-01-29 14:30:11 -060013
14 Deriving a key suitable for use as input to an encryption algorithm.
15 Typically this means taking a password and running it through an algorithm
David Reidc0248b92014-01-30 15:23:33 -080016 such as :class:`~cryptography.hazmat.primitives.kdf.pbkdf2.PBKDF2HMAC` or
17 :class:`~cryptography.hazmat.primitives.kdf.hkdf.HKDF`.
Paul Kehrer1cab1042014-01-29 14:30:11 -060018 This process is typically known as `key stretching`_.
19
Paul Kehrer0b181182014-01-29 16:34:47 -060020* Password storage
Paul Kehrer1cab1042014-01-29 14:30:11 -060021
22 When storing passwords you want to use an algorithm that is computationally
23 intensive. Legitimate users will only need to compute it once (for example,
24 taking the user's password, running it through the KDF, then comparing it
25 to the stored value), while attackers will need to do it billions of times.
26 Ideal password storage KDFs will be demanding on both computational and
27 memory resources.
Paul Kehrerb6d764c2014-01-27 22:32:11 -060028
Paul Kehrer0b181182014-01-29 16:34:47 -060029.. currentmodule:: cryptography.hazmat.primitives.kdf.pbkdf2
30
31.. class:: PBKDF2HMAC(algorithm, length, salt, iterations, backend)
Paul Kehrerb6d764c2014-01-27 22:32:11 -060032
Paul Kehrer5d1af212014-01-28 12:19:32 -060033 .. versionadded:: 0.2
34
Paul Kehrer298e5332014-01-29 11:16:22 -060035 `PBKDF2`_ (Password Based Key Derivation Function 2) is typically used for
Paul Kehrer3d8c66f2014-01-28 17:36:50 -060036 deriving a cryptographic key from a password. It may also be used for
Paul Kehrer0b181182014-01-29 16:34:47 -060037 key storage, but an alternate key storage KDF such as `scrypt`_ is generally
Paul Kehrer1cab1042014-01-29 14:30:11 -060038 considered a better solution.
Paul Kehrer3d8c66f2014-01-28 17:36:50 -060039
Paul Kehrer5d1af212014-01-28 12:19:32 -060040 This class conforms to the
41 :class:`~cryptography.hazmat.primitives.interfaces.KeyDerivationFunction`
42 interface.
43
Paul Kehrerb6d764c2014-01-27 22:32:11 -060044 .. doctest::
45
Paul Kehrer5d1af212014-01-28 12:19:32 -060046 >>> import os
47 >>> from cryptography.hazmat.primitives import hashes
Paul Kehrerb3f763f2014-01-28 16:42:15 -060048 >>> from cryptography.hazmat.primitives.kdf.pbkdf2 import PBKDF2HMAC
Paul Kehrerb6d764c2014-01-27 22:32:11 -060049 >>> from cryptography.hazmat.backends import default_backend
50 >>> backend = default_backend()
51 >>> salt = os.urandom(16)
52 >>> # derive
Paul Kehrerb3f763f2014-01-28 16:42:15 -060053 >>> kdf = PBKDF2HMAC(
54 ... algorithm=hashes.SHA256(),
55 ... length=32,
56 ... salt=salt,
Paul Kehrer1277bc72014-01-28 17:09:59 -060057 ... iterations=100000,
Paul Kehrerb3f763f2014-01-28 16:42:15 -060058 ... backend=backend
59 ... )
Paul Kehrerb6d764c2014-01-27 22:32:11 -060060 >>> key = kdf.derive(b"my great password")
61 >>> # verify
Paul Kehrerb3f763f2014-01-28 16:42:15 -060062 >>> kdf = PBKDF2HMAC(
63 ... algorithm=hashes.SHA256(),
64 ... length=32,
65 ... salt=salt,
Paul Kehrer1277bc72014-01-28 17:09:59 -060066 ... iterations=100000,
Paul Kehrerb3f763f2014-01-28 16:42:15 -060067 ... backend=backend
68 ... )
Paul Kehrerb6d764c2014-01-27 22:32:11 -060069 >>> kdf.verify(b"my great password", key)
Paul Kehrerb6d764c2014-01-27 22:32:11 -060070
Paul Kehrer5d1af212014-01-28 12:19:32 -060071 :param algorithm: An instance of a
72 :class:`~cryptography.hazmat.primitives.interfaces.HashAlgorithm`
73 provider.
74 :param int length: The desired length of the derived key. Maximum is
Paul Kehrerb3f763f2014-01-28 16:42:15 -060075 (2\ :sup:`32` - 1) * ``algorithm.digest_size``.
Paul Kehrer5d1af212014-01-28 12:19:32 -060076 :param bytes salt: A salt. `NIST SP 800-132`_ recommends 128-bits or
77 longer.
78 :param int iterations: The number of iterations to perform of the hash
Paul Kehrerc58b4782014-01-29 13:56:25 -060079 function. This can be used to control the length of time the operation
80 takes. Higher numbers help mitigate brute force attacks against derived
81 keys. See OWASP's `Password Storage Cheat Sheet`_ for more
Paul Kehrer3d8c66f2014-01-28 17:36:50 -060082 detailed recommendations if you intend to use this for password storage.
Paul Kehrer5d1af212014-01-28 12:19:32 -060083 :param backend: A
Paul Kehrer15a86a02014-01-29 17:44:47 -060084 :class:`~cryptography.hazmat.backends.interfaces.PBKDF2HMACBackend`
Paul Kehrer5d1af212014-01-28 12:19:32 -060085 provider.
Paul Kehrerb6d764c2014-01-27 22:32:11 -060086
Paul Kehrer3d8c66f2014-01-28 17:36:50 -060087 .. method:: derive(key_material)
88
Alex Gaynora8e125f2014-01-29 19:21:03 -080089 :param bytes key_material: The input key material. For PBKDF2 this
Paul Kehrer3d8c66f2014-01-28 17:36:50 -060090 should be a password.
Paul Kehrer0b181182014-01-29 16:34:47 -060091 :return bytes: the derived key.
Paul Kehrer3d8c66f2014-01-28 17:36:50 -060092 :raises cryptography.exceptions.AlreadyFinalized: This is raised when
93 :meth:`derive` or
94 :meth:`verify` is
95 called more than
96 once.
97
98 This generates and returns a new key from the supplied password.
99
100 .. method:: verify(key_material, expected_key)
101
Alex Gaynora8e125f2014-01-29 19:21:03 -0800102 :param bytes key_material: The input key material. This is the same as
Paul Kehrer3d8c66f2014-01-28 17:36:50 -0600103 ``key_material`` in :meth:`derive`.
Alex Gaynora8e125f2014-01-29 19:21:03 -0800104 :param bytes expected_key: The expected result of deriving a new key,
Paul Kehrer3d8c66f2014-01-28 17:36:50 -0600105 this is the same as the return value of
106 :meth:`derive`.
107 :raises cryptography.exceptions.InvalidKey: This is raised when the
108 derived key does not match
109 the expected key.
110 :raises cryptography.exceptions.AlreadyFinalized: This is raised when
111 :meth:`derive` or
112 :meth:`verify` is
113 called more than
114 once.
115
116 This checks whether deriving a new key from the supplied
117 ``key_material`` generates the same key as the ``expected_key``, and
118 raises an exception if they do not match. This can be used for
Paul Kehrer99d51902014-01-28 20:16:20 -0600119 checking whether the password a user provides matches the stored derived
Paul Kehrer3d8c66f2014-01-28 17:36:50 -0600120 key.
121
David Reidc0248b92014-01-30 15:23:33 -0800122
123.. currentmodule:: cryptography.hazmat.primitives.kdf.hkdf
124
125.. class:: HKDF(algorithm, length, salt, info, backend)
126
127 .. versionadded:: 0.2
128
129 `HKDF`_ (HMAC-based Extract-and-Expand Key Derivation Function) suitable
130 for deriving keys of a fixed size used for other cryptographic operations.
131
132 It consists of two distinct phases "Extract" and "Expand". The "Extract"
133 stage takes a low-entropy key and extracts from it a fixed size
134 psuedorandom key. The "Expand" stage derives a large key of a user
135 determined size from the psuedorandom key.
136
137 :param algorithm: An instance of a
138 :class:`~cryptography.hazmat.primitives.interfaces.HashAlgorithm`
139 provider.
140
141 :param int length: The desired length of the derived key. Maximum is
142 255 * (``algorithm.digest_size`` // 8).
143
144 :param bytes salt: A salt. If ``None`` is explicitly passed a default salt
145 of ``algorithm.digest_size // 8`` null bytes.
146
147 :param bytes info: Application specific context information. If ``None``
148 is explicitly passed an empty byte string will be used.
149
150 :params backend: A
151 :class:`~cryptography.hazmat.backends.interfaces.HMACBackend`
152 provider.
153
154 .. method:: derive(key_material)
155
156 :param bytes key_material: The input key material.
157 :retunr bytes: The derived key.
158
159 Derives a new key from the input key material by performing both the
160 extract and expand operations.
161
162 .. method:: verify(key_material, expected_key)
163
164 :param key_material bytes: The input key material. This is the same as
165 ``key_material`` in :meth:`derive`.
166 :param expected_key bytes: The expected result of deriving a new key,
167 this is the same as the return value of
168 :meth:`derive`.
169 :raises cryptography.exceptions.InvalidKey: This is raised when the
170 derived key does not match
171 the expected key.
172 :raises cryptography.exceptions.AlreadyFinalized: This is raised when
173 :meth:`derive` or
174 :meth:`verify` is
175 called more than
176 once.
177
178 This checks whether deriving a new key from the supplied
179 ``key_material`` generates the same key as the ``expected_key``, and
180 raises an exception if they do not match. This can be used for
181 checking whether the password a user provides matches the stored derived
182 key.
183
Paul Kehrerb6d764c2014-01-27 22:32:11 -0600184.. _`NIST SP 800-132`: http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/nistpubs/800-132/nist-sp800-132.pdf
Paul Kehrerb3f763f2014-01-28 16:42:15 -0600185.. _`Password Storage Cheat Sheet`: https://www.owasp.org/index.php/Password_Storage_Cheat_Sheet
Paul Kehrer298e5332014-01-29 11:16:22 -0600186.. _`PBKDF2`: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PBKDF2
Paul Kehrer3d8c66f2014-01-28 17:36:50 -0600187.. _`scrypt`: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scrypt
Paul Kehrer1cab1042014-01-29 14:30:11 -0600188.. _`key stretching`: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Key_stretching
David Reidc0248b92014-01-30 15:23:33 -0800189.. _`HKDF`: http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5869