/* * RSA key generation. */ #include #include "ssh.h" #include "mpint.h" #define RSA_EXPONENT 37 /* we like this prime */ int rsa_generate(RSAKey *key, int bits, progfn_t pfn, void *pfnparam) { unsigned pfirst, qfirst; key->sshk.vt = &ssh_rsa; /* * Set up the phase limits for the progress report. We do this * by passing minus the phase number. * * For prime generation: our initial filter finds things * coprime to everything below 2^16. Computing the product of * (p-1)/p for all prime p below 2^16 gives about 20.33; so * among B-bit integers, one in every 20.33 will get through * the initial filter to be a candidate prime. * * Meanwhile, we are searching for primes in the region of 2^B; * since pi(x) ~ x/log(x), when x is in the region of 2^B, the * prime density will be d/dx pi(x) ~ 1/log(B), i.e. about * 1/0.6931B. So the chance of any given candidate being prime * is 20.33/0.6931B, which is roughly 29.34 divided by B. * * So now we have this probability P, we're looking at an * exponential distribution with parameter P: we will manage in * one attempt with probability P, in two with probability * P(1-P), in three with probability P(1-P)^2, etc. The * probability that we have still not managed to find a prime * after N attempts is (1-P)^N. * * We therefore inform the progress indicator of the number B * (29.34/B), so that it knows how much to increment by each * time. We do this in 16-bit fixed point, so 29.34 becomes * 0x1D.57C4. */ pfn(pfnparam, PROGFN_PHASE_EXTENT, 1, 0x10000); pfn(pfnparam, PROGFN_EXP_PHASE, 1, -0x1D57C4 / (bits / 2)); pfn(pfnparam, PROGFN_PHASE_EXTENT, 2, 0x10000); pfn(pfnparam, PROGFN_EXP_PHASE, 2, -0x1D57C4 / (bits - bits / 2)); pfn(pfnparam, PROGFN_PHASE_EXTENT, 3, 0x4000); pfn(pfnparam, PROGFN_LIN_PHASE, 3, 5); pfn(pfnparam, PROGFN_READY, 0, 0); /* * We don't generate e; we just use a standard one always. */ mp_int *exponent = mp_from_integer(RSA_EXPONENT); /* * Generate p and q: primes with combined length `bits', not * congruent to 1 modulo e. (Strictly speaking, we wanted (p-1) * and e to be coprime, and (q-1) and e to be coprime, but in * general that's slightly more fiddly to arrange. By choosing * a prime e, we can simplify the criterion.) */ invent_firstbits(&pfirst, &qfirst); mp_int *p = primegen(bits / 2, RSA_EXPONENT, 1, NULL, 1, pfn, pfnparam, pfirst); mp_int *q = primegen(bits - bits / 2, RSA_EXPONENT, 1, NULL, 2, pfn, pfnparam, qfirst); /* * Ensure p > q, by swapping them if not. */ mp_cond_swap(p, q, mp_cmp_hs(q, p)); /* * Now we have p, q and e. All we need to do now is work out * the other helpful quantities: n=pq, d=e^-1 mod (p-1)(q-1), * and (q^-1 mod p). */ pfn(pfnparam, PROGFN_PROGRESS, 3, 1); mp_int *modulus = mp_mul(p, q); pfn(pfnparam, PROGFN_PROGRESS, 3, 2); mp_int *pm1 = mp_copy(p); mp_sub_integer_into(pm1, pm1, 1); mp_int *qm1 = mp_copy(q); mp_sub_integer_into(qm1, qm1, 1); mp_int *phi_n = mp_mul(pm1, qm1); pfn(pfnparam, PROGFN_PROGRESS, 3, 3); mp_free(pm1); mp_free(qm1); mp_int *private_exponent = mp_invert(exponent, phi_n); pfn(pfnparam, PROGFN_PROGRESS, 3, 4); mp_free(phi_n); mp_int *iqmp = mp_invert(q, p); pfn(pfnparam, PROGFN_PROGRESS, 3, 5); /* * Populate the returned structure. */ key->modulus = modulus; key->exponent = exponent; key->private_exponent = private_exponent; key->p = p; key->q = q; key->iqmp = iqmp; return 1; }