plugeth/vendor/golang.org/x/crypto/scrypt/scrypt.go
Péter Szilágyi 289b30715d Godeps, vendor: convert dependency management to trash (#3198)
This commit converts the dependency management from Godeps to the vendor
folder, also switching the tool from godep to trash. Since the upstream tool
lacks a few features proposed via a few PRs, until those PRs are merged in
(if), use github.com/karalabe/trash.

You can update dependencies via trash --update.

All dependencies have been updated to their latest version.

Parts of the build system are reworked to drop old notions of Godeps and
invocation of the go vet command so that it doesn't run against the vendor
folder, as that will just blow up during vetting.

The conversion drops OpenCL (and hence GPU mining support) from ethash and our
codebase. The short reasoning is that there's noone to maintain and having
opencl libs in our deps messes up builds as go install ./... tries to build
them, failing with unsatisfied link errors for the C OpenCL deps.

golang.org/x/net/context is not vendored in. We expect it to be fetched by the
user (i.e. using go get). To keep ci.go builds reproducible the package is
"vendored" in build/_vendor.
2016-10-28 19:05:01 +02:00

244 lines
5.7 KiB
Go

// Copyright 2012 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
// Package scrypt implements the scrypt key derivation function as defined in
// Colin Percival's paper "Stronger Key Derivation via Sequential Memory-Hard
// Functions" (http://www.tarsnap.com/scrypt/scrypt.pdf).
package scrypt // import "golang.org/x/crypto/scrypt"
import (
"crypto/sha256"
"errors"
"golang.org/x/crypto/pbkdf2"
)
const maxInt = int(^uint(0) >> 1)
// blockCopy copies n numbers from src into dst.
func blockCopy(dst, src []uint32, n int) {
copy(dst, src[:n])
}
// blockXOR XORs numbers from dst with n numbers from src.
func blockXOR(dst, src []uint32, n int) {
for i, v := range src[:n] {
dst[i] ^= v
}
}
// salsaXOR applies Salsa20/8 to the XOR of 16 numbers from tmp and in,
// and puts the result into both both tmp and out.
func salsaXOR(tmp *[16]uint32, in, out []uint32) {
w0 := tmp[0] ^ in[0]
w1 := tmp[1] ^ in[1]
w2 := tmp[2] ^ in[2]
w3 := tmp[3] ^ in[3]
w4 := tmp[4] ^ in[4]
w5 := tmp[5] ^ in[5]
w6 := tmp[6] ^ in[6]
w7 := tmp[7] ^ in[7]
w8 := tmp[8] ^ in[8]
w9 := tmp[9] ^ in[9]
w10 := tmp[10] ^ in[10]
w11 := tmp[11] ^ in[11]
w12 := tmp[12] ^ in[12]
w13 := tmp[13] ^ in[13]
w14 := tmp[14] ^ in[14]
w15 := tmp[15] ^ in[15]
x0, x1, x2, x3, x4, x5, x6, x7, x8 := w0, w1, w2, w3, w4, w5, w6, w7, w8
x9, x10, x11, x12, x13, x14, x15 := w9, w10, w11, w12, w13, w14, w15
for i := 0; i < 8; i += 2 {
u := x0 + x12
x4 ^= u<<7 | u>>(32-7)
u = x4 + x0
x8 ^= u<<9 | u>>(32-9)
u = x8 + x4
x12 ^= u<<13 | u>>(32-13)
u = x12 + x8
x0 ^= u<<18 | u>>(32-18)
u = x5 + x1
x9 ^= u<<7 | u>>(32-7)
u = x9 + x5
x13 ^= u<<9 | u>>(32-9)
u = x13 + x9
x1 ^= u<<13 | u>>(32-13)
u = x1 + x13
x5 ^= u<<18 | u>>(32-18)
u = x10 + x6
x14 ^= u<<7 | u>>(32-7)
u = x14 + x10
x2 ^= u<<9 | u>>(32-9)
u = x2 + x14
x6 ^= u<<13 | u>>(32-13)
u = x6 + x2
x10 ^= u<<18 | u>>(32-18)
u = x15 + x11
x3 ^= u<<7 | u>>(32-7)
u = x3 + x15
x7 ^= u<<9 | u>>(32-9)
u = x7 + x3
x11 ^= u<<13 | u>>(32-13)
u = x11 + x7
x15 ^= u<<18 | u>>(32-18)
u = x0 + x3
x1 ^= u<<7 | u>>(32-7)
u = x1 + x0
x2 ^= u<<9 | u>>(32-9)
u = x2 + x1
x3 ^= u<<13 | u>>(32-13)
u = x3 + x2
x0 ^= u<<18 | u>>(32-18)
u = x5 + x4
x6 ^= u<<7 | u>>(32-7)
u = x6 + x5
x7 ^= u<<9 | u>>(32-9)
u = x7 + x6
x4 ^= u<<13 | u>>(32-13)
u = x4 + x7
x5 ^= u<<18 | u>>(32-18)
u = x10 + x9
x11 ^= u<<7 | u>>(32-7)
u = x11 + x10
x8 ^= u<<9 | u>>(32-9)
u = x8 + x11
x9 ^= u<<13 | u>>(32-13)
u = x9 + x8
x10 ^= u<<18 | u>>(32-18)
u = x15 + x14
x12 ^= u<<7 | u>>(32-7)
u = x12 + x15
x13 ^= u<<9 | u>>(32-9)
u = x13 + x12
x14 ^= u<<13 | u>>(32-13)
u = x14 + x13
x15 ^= u<<18 | u>>(32-18)
}
x0 += w0
x1 += w1
x2 += w2
x3 += w3
x4 += w4
x5 += w5
x6 += w6
x7 += w7
x8 += w8
x9 += w9
x10 += w10
x11 += w11
x12 += w12
x13 += w13
x14 += w14
x15 += w15
out[0], tmp[0] = x0, x0
out[1], tmp[1] = x1, x1
out[2], tmp[2] = x2, x2
out[3], tmp[3] = x3, x3
out[4], tmp[4] = x4, x4
out[5], tmp[5] = x5, x5
out[6], tmp[6] = x6, x6
out[7], tmp[7] = x7, x7
out[8], tmp[8] = x8, x8
out[9], tmp[9] = x9, x9
out[10], tmp[10] = x10, x10
out[11], tmp[11] = x11, x11
out[12], tmp[12] = x12, x12
out[13], tmp[13] = x13, x13
out[14], tmp[14] = x14, x14
out[15], tmp[15] = x15, x15
}
func blockMix(tmp *[16]uint32, in, out []uint32, r int) {
blockCopy(tmp[:], in[(2*r-1)*16:], 16)
for i := 0; i < 2*r; i += 2 {
salsaXOR(tmp, in[i*16:], out[i*8:])
salsaXOR(tmp, in[i*16+16:], out[i*8+r*16:])
}
}
func integer(b []uint32, r int) uint64 {
j := (2*r - 1) * 16
return uint64(b[j]) | uint64(b[j+1])<<32
}
func smix(b []byte, r, N int, v, xy []uint32) {
var tmp [16]uint32
x := xy
y := xy[32*r:]
j := 0
for i := 0; i < 32*r; i++ {
x[i] = uint32(b[j]) | uint32(b[j+1])<<8 | uint32(b[j+2])<<16 | uint32(b[j+3])<<24
j += 4
}
for i := 0; i < N; i += 2 {
blockCopy(v[i*(32*r):], x, 32*r)
blockMix(&tmp, x, y, r)
blockCopy(v[(i+1)*(32*r):], y, 32*r)
blockMix(&tmp, y, x, r)
}
for i := 0; i < N; i += 2 {
j := int(integer(x, r) & uint64(N-1))
blockXOR(x, v[j*(32*r):], 32*r)
blockMix(&tmp, x, y, r)
j = int(integer(y, r) & uint64(N-1))
blockXOR(y, v[j*(32*r):], 32*r)
blockMix(&tmp, y, x, r)
}
j = 0
for _, v := range x[:32*r] {
b[j+0] = byte(v >> 0)
b[j+1] = byte(v >> 8)
b[j+2] = byte(v >> 16)
b[j+3] = byte(v >> 24)
j += 4
}
}
// Key derives a key from the password, salt, and cost parameters, returning
// a byte slice of length keyLen that can be used as cryptographic key.
//
// N is a CPU/memory cost parameter, which must be a power of two greater than 1.
// r and p must satisfy r * p < 2³⁰. If the parameters do not satisfy the
// limits, the function returns a nil byte slice and an error.
//
// For example, you can get a derived key for e.g. AES-256 (which needs a
// 32-byte key) by doing:
//
// dk, err := scrypt.Key([]byte("some password"), salt, 16384, 8, 1, 32)
//
// The recommended parameters for interactive logins as of 2009 are N=16384,
// r=8, p=1. They should be increased as memory latency and CPU parallelism
// increases. Remember to get a good random salt.
func Key(password, salt []byte, N, r, p, keyLen int) ([]byte, error) {
if N <= 1 || N&(N-1) != 0 {
return nil, errors.New("scrypt: N must be > 1 and a power of 2")
}
if uint64(r)*uint64(p) >= 1<<30 || r > maxInt/128/p || r > maxInt/256 || N > maxInt/128/r {
return nil, errors.New("scrypt: parameters are too large")
}
xy := make([]uint32, 64*r)
v := make([]uint32, 32*N*r)
b := pbkdf2.Key(password, salt, 1, p*128*r, sha256.New)
for i := 0; i < p; i++ {
smix(b[i*128*r:], r, N, v, xy)
}
return pbkdf2.Key(password, b, 1, keyLen, sha256.New), nil
}