EVP_KDF-SCRYPT(7SSL) | OpenSSL | EVP_KDF-SCRYPT(7SSL) |
EVP_KDF-SCRYPT - The scrypt EVP_KDF implementation
Support for computing the scrypt password-based KDF through the EVP_KDF API.
The EVP_KDF-SCRYPT algorithm implements the scrypt password-based key derivation function, as described in RFC 7914. It is memory-hard in the sense that it deliberately requires a significant amount of RAM for efficient computation. The intention of this is to render brute forcing of passwords on systems that lack large amounts of main memory (such as GPUs or ASICs) computationally infeasible.
scrypt provides three work factors that can be customized: N, r and p. N, which has to be a positive power of two, is the general work factor and scales CPU time in an approximately linear fashion. r is the block size of the internally used hash function and p is the parallelization factor. Both r and p need to be greater than zero. The amount of RAM that scrypt requires for its computation is roughly (128 * N * r * p) bytes.
In the original paper of Colin Percival ("Stronger Key Derivation via Sequential Memory-Hard Functions", 2009), the suggested values that give a computation time of less than 5 seconds on a 2.5 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo are N = 2^20 = 1048576, r = 8, p = 1. Consequently, the required amount of memory for this computation is roughly 1 GiB. On a more recent CPU (Intel i7-5930K at 3.5 GHz), this computation takes about 3 seconds. When N, r or p are not specified, they default to 1048576, 8, and 1, respectively. The maximum amount of RAM that may be used by scrypt defaults to 1025 MiB.
"SCRYPT" is the name for this implementation; it can be used with the EVP_KDF_fetch() function.
The supported parameters are:
A context for scrypt can be obtained by calling:
EVP_KDF *kdf = EVP_KDF_fetch(NULL, "SCRYPT", NULL); EVP_KDF_CTX *kctx = EVP_KDF_CTX_new(kdf);
The output length of an scrypt key derivation is specified via the "keylen" parameter to the EVP_KDF_derive(3) function.
This example derives a 64-byte long test vector using scrypt with the password "password", salt "NaCl" and N = 1024, r = 8, p = 16.
EVP_KDF *kdf; EVP_KDF_CTX *kctx; unsigned char out[64]; OSSL_PARAM params[6], *p = params; kdf = EVP_KDF_fetch(NULL, "SCRYPT", NULL); kctx = EVP_KDF_CTX_new(kdf); EVP_KDF_free(kdf); *p++ = OSSL_PARAM_construct_octet_string(OSSL_KDF_PARAM_PASSWORD, "password", (size_t)8); *p++ = OSSL_PARAM_construct_octet_string(OSSL_KDF_PARAM_SALT, "NaCl", (size_t)4); *p++ = OSSL_PARAM_construct_uint64(OSSL_KDF_PARAM_SCRYPT_N, (uint64_t)1024); *p++ = OSSL_PARAM_construct_uint32(OSSL_KDF_PARAM_SCRYPT_R, (uint32_t)8); *p++ = OSSL_PARAM_construct_uint32(OSSL_KDF_PARAM_SCRYPT_P, (uint32_t)16); *p = OSSL_PARAM_construct_end(); if (EVP_KDF_derive(kctx, out, sizeof(out), params) <= 0) { error("EVP_KDF_derive"); } { const unsigned char expected[sizeof(out)] = { 0xfd, 0xba, 0xbe, 0x1c, 0x9d, 0x34, 0x72, 0x00, 0x78, 0x56, 0xe7, 0x19, 0x0d, 0x01, 0xe9, 0xfe, 0x7c, 0x6a, 0xd7, 0xcb, 0xc8, 0x23, 0x78, 0x30, 0xe7, 0x73, 0x76, 0x63, 0x4b, 0x37, 0x31, 0x62, 0x2e, 0xaf, 0x30, 0xd9, 0x2e, 0x22, 0xa3, 0x88, 0x6f, 0xf1, 0x09, 0x27, 0x9d, 0x98, 0x30, 0xda, 0xc7, 0x27, 0xaf, 0xb9, 0x4a, 0x83, 0xee, 0x6d, 0x83, 0x60, 0xcb, 0xdf, 0xa2, 0xcc, 0x06, 0x40 }; assert(!memcmp(out, expected, sizeof(out))); } EVP_KDF_CTX_free(kctx);
RFC 7914
EVP_KDF(3), EVP_KDF_CTX_new(3), EVP_KDF_CTX_free(3), EVP_KDF_CTX_set_params(3), EVP_KDF_derive(3), "PARAMETERS" in EVP_KDF(3)
This functionality was added in OpenSSL 3.0.
Copyright 2017-2021 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License"). You may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at <https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>.
2023-10-23 | 3.0.11 |