postgresql/contrib/pgcrypto
Tom Lane 84d630eb24 Dept of second thoughts: don't expose rijndael.tbl: rijndael.c dependency
to make.  We ship the table file in the tarball and so this dependency
just opens file timestamp skew problems without doing anything useful.
(Not that it should hurt, either ... except for cross-compile builds.)
2005-07-05 23:18:44 +00:00
..
expected Fix initialization bug in pgcrypto openssl code. Marko Kreen 2005-07-05 18:15:36 +00:00
sql Fix initialization bug in pgcrypto openssl code. Marko Kreen 2005-07-05 18:15:36 +00:00
API
blf.c
blf.h
crypt-blowfish.c
crypt-des.c
crypt-gensalt.c
crypt-md5.c
internal.c
Makefile Dept of second thoughts: don't expose rijndael.tbl: rijndael.c dependency 2005-07-05 23:18:44 +00:00
md5.c
md5.h
misc.c
openssl.c Fix initialization bug in pgcrypto openssl code. Marko Kreen 2005-07-05 18:15:36 +00:00
pgcrypto.c
pgcrypto.h
pgcrypto.sql.in
px-crypt.c
px-crypt.h
px-hmac.c
px.c
px.h
random.c
README.pgcrypto
rijndael.c
rijndael.h
rijndael.tbl
sha1.c
sha1.h

pgcrypto 0.4 - cryptographic functions for PostgreSQL.
======================================================
by Marko Kreen <marko@l-t.ee>


INSTALLATION
============

Edit makefile, if you want to use any external library.

NB!  Default randomness source is libc random() function.  This
is so only to get pgcrypto build everywhere.  Randomness is
needed for gen_salt() function.  So if you plan using it, you
should definitely change that by editing Makefile.  You should
be using urandom device if your OS supports it, otherwise link
pgcrypto against OpenSSL library and use its PRNG.

After editing Makefile:

make
make install

To run regression tests, install both PostgreSQL and pgcrypto
and then run

make installcheck

SQL FUNCTIONS
=============

	If any of arguments are NULL they return NULL.

digest(data::bytea, type::text)::bytea

	Type is here the algorithm to use. E.g. 'md5', 'sha1', ...
	Returns binary hash.

digest_exists(type::text)::bool

	Returns BOOL whether given hash exists.

hmac(data::bytea, key::bytea, type::text)::bytea

	Calculates Hashed MAC over data.  type is the same as
	in digest().  Returns binary hash.  Similar to digest()
	but noone can alter data and re-calculate hash without
	knowing key.  If the key is larger than hash blocksize
	it will first hashed and the hash will be used as key.
	
	[ HMAC is described in RFC2104. ]

hmac_exists(type::text)::bool
	Returns BOOL.  It is separate function because all hashes
	cannot be used in HMAC.

crypt(password::text, salt::text)::text

	Calculates UN*X crypt(3) style hash.  Useful for storing
	passwords.  For generating salt you should use the
	gen_salt() function.  Usage:

	New password:
	
	  UPDATE .. SET pswhash = crypt(new_psw, gen_salt('md5'));
	
	Authentication:

	  SELECT pswhash = crypt(given_psw, pswhash) WHERE .. ;
	
	returns BOOL whether the given_psw is correct.  DES crypt
	has max key of 8 bytes, MD5 has max key at least 2^32-1
	bytes but may be larger on some platforms...

	Builtin crypt() supports DES, Extended DES, MD5 and Blowfish
	(variant 2a) algorithms.

gen_salt(type::text)::text

	Generates a new random salt for usage in crypt().  Type
	
	'des'	- Old UNIX, not recommended
	'md5'	- md5-based crypt()
	'xdes'	- 'Extended DES'
	'bf'	- Blowfish-based, variant 2a

	When you use --enable-system-crypt then note that system
	libcrypt may not support them all.

gen_salt(type::text, rounds::int4)::text

	same as above, but lets user specify iteration count
	for algorithm.  Number is algorithm specific:

	type	default	min	max
	---------------------------------
	xdes	725	1	16777215
	bf	6	4	31

	In case of xdes there is a additional limitation that the
	count must be a odd number.

	The higher the count, the more time it takes to calculate
	crypt and therefore the more time to break it.  But beware!
	With too high count it takes a _very_long_ time to
	calculate it.

	For maximum security, you should choose the 'bf' crypt
	and use maximum number of rounds you can still tolerate.

encrypt(data::bytea, key::bytea, type::text)::bytea
decrypt(data::bytea, key::bytea, type::text)::bytea
encrypt_iv(data::bytea, key::bytea, iv::bytea, type::text)::bytea
decrypt_iv(data::bytea, key::bytea, iv::bytea, type::text)::bytea

	Encrypt/decrypt data with cipher, padding data if needed.

	Pseudo-noteup:

	algo ['-' mode] ['/pad:' padding]

	Supported algorithms:
	
		bf		- Blowfish
		aes, rijndael	- Rijndael-128

	Others depend on library and are not tested enough, so
	play on your own risk.

	Modes: 'cbc' (default), 'ecb'.  Again, library may support
	more.

	Padding is 'pkcs' (default), 'none'.  'none' is mostly for
	testing ciphers, you should not need it.

	So, example:

		encrypt(data, 'fooz', 'bf')
	
	is equal to

		encrypt(data, 'fooz', 'bf-cbc/pad:pkcs')

	IV is initial value for mode, defaults to all zeroes.
	It is ignored for ECB.  It is clipped or padded with zeroes
	if not exactly block size.


ALGORITHMS
==========

The standard functionality at the moment consists of

Hashes: md5, sha1
Ciphers: bf, aes
Modes: cbc, ecb

TODO: write standard names for optional ciphers too.

LIBRARIES
=========

* crypt()

    internal: des, xdes, md5, bf

    -lcrypt: ??? (whatever you have)

* other:

[ This only lists stuff that the libraries claim to support.  So
  pgcrypto may work with all of them.  But ATM tested are only the
  standard ciphers.  On others pgcrypto and library may mess something
  up. You have been warned.  ]

internal (default):
    Hashes: MD5, SHA1
    Ciphers: Blowfish, Rijndael-128


OpenSSL (0.9.7):
    Hashes:	MD5, SHA1, RIPEMD160, MD2   
    Ciphers:	Blowfish, AES, CAST5, DES, 3DES
    License:	BSD-like with strong advertisement
    Url:	http://www.openssl.org/


CREDITS
=======

I have used code from following sources:

DES crypt() by David Burren and others	FreeBSD libcrypt
MD5 crypt() by Poul-Henning Kamp	FreeBSD libcrypt
Blowfish crypt() by Solar Designer	www.openwall.com
Blowfish cipher by Niels Provos		OpenBSD sys/crypto
Rijndael cipher by Brian Gladman	OpenBSD sys/crypto
MD5 and SHA1 by WIDE Project		KAME kame/sys/crypto

LEGALESE
========

* I owe a beer to Poul-Henning.

* This product includes software developed by Niels Provos.