oracular (3) afnix-sec.3.gz

Provided by: afnix_3.8.0-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       sec - standard security module

STANDARD SECURITY MODULE

       The  Standard  Security  module is an original implementation of several standards and techniques used in
       the field of cryptography. The module provides the objects than enables  message  hashing,  symetric  and
       assymetric  ciphers and digital signature computation. The implementation follows the recommendation from
       NIST and PKCS and the standard reference that it implements is always attached to the underlying object.

       Hash objects
       Hashing is the ability to generate an almost unique representation from a string. Although, there  is  no
       guarantee  that  two  different  string  will  not produce the same result -- known as a collision -- the
       sophistication of the hashing function attempt to minimize such eventuality. The hashing process  is  not
       reversible. There are several hashing functions available in the public domain. To name a few, MD5 is the
       message digest 5, and SHA is the secure hash algorithm. The following table illustrates the size  of  the
       result with different hashing functions.

       Function   Result size
       MD-2       128 bits
       MD-4       128 bits
       MD-5       128 bits
       SHA-1      160 bits
       SHA-224    224 bits
       SHA-256    256 bits
       SHA-384    384 bits
       SHA-512    512 bits

       Hasher object
       The  Hasher  class  is  a text hashing computation class. The class computes a hash value  from a literal
       object, a buffer or an input stream. Once computed, the hash value is stored as an array  of  bytes  that
       can be retrieved one by one or at all in the form of a string representation.

       Creating a hasher
       Several hasher objects are available in the module. For example, the Md5 object is the hasher object that
       implements the MD-5 algorithm. The constructor does not take any argument.

       # get a  MD-5 hasher
       const md (afnix:sec:Md5)
       # check the object
       afnix:sec:hasher-p md # true

       The  compute  method  computes  the  hash  value.  For  example,  the  string  "abc"  returns  the  value
       "900150983CD24FB0D6963F7D28E17F72" which is 16 bytes long.

       const hval (md:compute "abc")

       Creating a SHA hasher
       There are several SHA objects that produces results of different size as indicated in the next table.

       Hasher    Size       Constructor
       SHA-1     160 bits   Sha1
       SHA-224   224 bits   Sha224
       SHA-256   256 bits   Sha256
       SHA-384   384 bits   Sha384
       SHA-512   512 bits   Sha512

       The compute method computes the hash value. For example, the string "abc" returns with SHA-1 the 20 bytes
       long value: "A9993E364706816ABA3E25717850C26C9CD0D89D"

       Cipher key principles
       Cipher key management is an important concept in the ciphering land. In a simple mode, a key is used by a
       cipher  to  encode some data. Although the key can be any sequence of bytes, it is preferable to have the
       key built from a specific source such like a pass-phrase. A cipher key comes basically into two  flavors:
       keys  for  symmetric  ciphers  and  keys  for asymmetric ciphers. A key for a symmetric cipher is easy to
       derive and generally follows a standard process which is independent of the cipher itself. A key  for  an
       asymmetric cipher is more complex to derive and is generally dependent on the cipher itself.

       Key operations
       The  basic  operations associated with a key are the key identification by type and size. The key type is
       an item that identifies the key nature. The get-type method returns the key  type  as  specified  by  the
       table below.

       Key    Description
       KSYM   Symmetric cipher key
       KRSA   Asymmetric RSA cipher key
       KMAC   Message authentication key
       KDSA   Message signature key

       The message authentication key as represented by the KMAC symbol is similar to the symmetric key. The key
       type can be obtained with the get-type method.

       # get the key type
       const type (key:get-type)

       The key size is the canonical size as specified by the key or  the  cipher  specification.  The  get-bits
       returns  the  key  size in bits. The get-size returns the key size in bytes rounded to the nearest value.
       The table below describes the nature of the key size returned.

       Key    Type   Description
       KSYM   byte   Byte array size
       KRSA   bits   Modulus size
       KMAC   byte   Byte array size
       KDSA   bits   Signature size

       const bits (key:get-bits)
       const size (key:get-size)

       Key representation
       Unfortunately, it is not easy to represent a key, since the representation depends on the key's type. For
       example,  a symmetric key can be formatted as a simple octet string. On the other hand, a RSA key has two
       components; namely the modulus and the exponent, which needs to be distinguished and therefore making the
       representation  more  difficult.  Other  cipher  keys  are  even  more  complicated. For this reason, the
       representation model is a relaxed one. The format method can be called  without  argument  to  obtain  an
       unique octet string representation if this representation is possible. If the key representation requires
       some parameters, the format method may accept one or several arguments to distinguish the key components.

       Key    Argument               Description
       KSYM   none                   Symmetric key octet string
       KRSA   RSA-MODULUS            RSA modulus octet string
       KRSA   RSA-PUBLIC-EXPONENT    RSA public exponent octet string
       KRSA   RSA-SECRET-EXPONENT    RSA secret exponent octet string
       KMAC   none                   Message authentication key octet string
       KDSA   DSA-P-PRIME            DSA secret prime octet string
       KDSA   DSA-Q-PRIME            DSA secret prime octet string
       KDSA   DSA-SECRET-KEY         DSA secret key
       KDSA   DSA-PUBLIC-KEY         DSA public key
       KDSA   DSA-PUBLIC-GENERATOR   DSA public generator

       # get a simple key representation
       println (key:format)
       # get a rsa modulus key representation
       println (key:format afnix:sec:Key:RSA-MODULUS)

       There are other key representations. The natural one is the byte  representation  for  a  symmetric  key,
       while  a  number  based  representation  is  generally more convenient with asymmetric keys. The get-byte
       method returns a key byte by index if possible. The get-relatif-key returns a key value by relatif number
       if possible.

       Symmetric cipher key

       Creating a symmetric cipher key
       The  Key  class can be used to create a cipher key suitable for a symmetric cipher. By default a 128 bits
       random key is generated, but the key can be also generated from an octet string.

       const  key  (afnix:sec:Key)
       assert true (afnix:sec:key-p key)

       The constructor also supports the use of an octet string representation of the key.

       # create an octet string key
       const  key  (afnix:sec:Key "0123456789ABCDEF")
       assert true (afnix:sec:key-p key)

       Symmetric key functions
       The basic operation associated with a symmetric key is the byte extraction. The get-size  method  can  be
       used to determine the byte key size. Once the key size has been obtained, the key byte can be accessed by
       index with the get-byte method.

       # create a 256 random symmetric key
       const key  (afnix:sec:Key afnix:sec:Key:KSYM 256)
       # get the key size
       const size (key:get-size)
       # get the first byte
       const byte (key:get-byte 0)

       Asymmetric cipher key
       An asymmetric cipher key can be generated for a particular asymmetric cipher, such like  RSA.  Generally,
       the  key contains several components identified as the public and secret key components. These components
       are highly dependent on the cipher type. Under some circumstances, all components might not be available.

       Creating an asymmetric cipher key
       The Key class can be used to create a specific asymmetric cipher key. Generally, the key  is  created  by
       type and and bits size.

       # create a 1024 bits rsa key
       const  key  (afnix:sec:Key afnix:sec:Key:KRSA 1024)

       An asymmetric cipher key constructor is extremely dependent on the cipher type. For this reason, there is
       no constructor that can operate with a pass-phrase.

       Asymmetric key functions
       The basic operation associated with a asymmetric  key  is  the  relatif  based  representation  which  is
       generally  available for all key components. For example, in the case of the RSA cipher, the modulus, the
       public and secret exponents can be obtained in a relatif number based representation with the help of the
       get-relatif-key method.

       # create a 512 rsa key
       const key  (afnix:sec:Key afnix:sec:Key:KRSA 512)
       # get the key modulus
       const kmod (
         key:get-relatif-key afnix:sec:Key:RSA-MODULUS)
       # get the public exponent
       const pexp (
         key:get-relatif-key afnix:sec:Key:RSA-PUBLIC-EXPONENT)
       # get the secret exponent
       const sexp (
         key:get-relatif-key afnix:sec:Key:RSA-SECRET-EXPONENT)

       Message authentication key

       Creating a message authentication key
       The  Key  class  can  also  be  used  to  create  a  message  authentication  key  suitable for a message
       authentication code generator or validator. By default a 128 bits random key is generated,  but  the  key
       can be also generated from an octet string.

       const  key  (afnix:sec:Key afnix:sec:Key:KMAC)
       assert true (afnix:sec:key-p key)

       The constructor also supports the use of an octet string as a key representation.

       # create an octet string key
       const key (
         afnix:sec:Key afnix:sec:Key:KMAC "0123456789ABCDEF")
       assert true (afnix:sec:key-p key)

       Message authentication key functions
       The  basic  operation  associated  with a message authentication key is the byte extraction. The get-size
       method can be used to determine the byte key size. Once the key size has been obtained, the key byte  can
       be accessed by index with the get-byte method.

       # create a 256 random message authentication key
       const key  (afnix:sec:Key afnix:sec:Key:KMAC 256)
       # get the key size
       const size (key:get-size)
       # get the first byte
       const byte (key:get-byte 0)

       Signature key functions
       The  basic  operation  associated  with  a  signature  key  is  the relatif based representation which is
       generally available for all key components. For example, in  the  case  of  the  DSA  signer,  the  prime
       numbers,  the  public and secret components can be obtained in a relatif number based representation with
       the help of the get-relatif-key method.

       # create a 1024 dsa key
       const key  (afnix:sec:Key afnix:sec:Key:KDSA)
       # get the key size
       const size (key:get-size)
       # get the secret component
       const sexp (
         key:get-relatif-key afnix:sec:Key:DSA-SECRET-KEY)

       Stream cipher
       A stream cipher is an object that encodes an input stream into an output stream. The data are  read  from
       the input stream, encoded and transmitted onto the output stream. There are basically two types of stream
       ciphers known as symmetric cipher and asymmetric cipher.

       Symmetric cipher
       A symmetric cipher is a cipher that encodes and decode data with the same key. Normally, the key is  kept
       secret,  and  the  data  are  encoded  by  block. For this reason, symmetric cipher are also called block
       cipher. In normal mode, a symmetric cipher is created with key and the data are  encoded  from  an  input
       stream  as  long  as they are available. The block size depends on the nature of the cipher. As of today,
       the recommended symmetric cipher is the Advanced Encryption Standard or AES, also known as Rijndael.

       Asymmetric cipher
       An asymmetric cipher is a cipher that encodes and decode data with  two  keys.  Normally,  the  data  are
       encoded  with  a  public  key  and  decoded  with a private key. In this model, anybody can encode a data
       stream, but only one person can read them. Obviously, the model can be reverse to operate in  a  kind  of
       signature  mode,  where  only one person can encode the data stream and anybody can read them. Asymmetric
       cipher are particularly useful when operating on unsecured channels. In this model, one end can send  its
       public  key  as a mean for other people to crypt data that can only be read by the sender who is supposed
       to have the private key. As of today, the recommended asymmetric ciphers are RSA and DH.

       Serial cipher
       A serial cipher is a cipher that encodes and decode data on a byte basis. Normally, the data are  encoded
       and  decoded  with  the  same key, thus making the symmetric cipher key, the ideal candidate for a serial
       cipher key. Since the data is encoded on a byte basis, it can be used efficiently with a stream. However,
       the  serial  cipher does not define a block size and therefore require some mechanism to prevent a buffer
       overrun when reading bytes from a stream. For this reason, the serial cipher  defines  a  default  serial
       block  size  that can be used to buffer the stream data. A method is provided in the class to control the
       buffer size and is by default set to 4Kib bytes.

       Cipher base class
       The Cipher base class is an abstract class that supports the  symmetric,  asymmetric  and  serial  cipher
       models.  A  cipher object has a name and is bound to a key that is used by the cipher. The class provides
       some base methods that can be used to retrieve some information about the  cipher.  The  get-name  method
       returns the cipher name. The set-key and get-key methods are both used to set or retrieve the cipher key.
       The cipher operating mode can be found with the get-reverse method. If  the  get-reverse  method  returns
       true, the cipher is operating in decoding mode. Note that a set-reverse method also exists.

       Block cipher
       A  block  cipher is an object that encodes an input stream with a symmetric cipher bound to a unique key.
       Since a block cipher is symmetric, the data can be coded and later decoded to their  original  form.  The
       difference  with  the  Cipher  base  class is that the BlockCipher class provides a get-block-size method
       which returns the cipher block size.

       Block Cipher base
       The BlockCipher class is a base class for the block cipher engine. The class implements the stream method
       that  reads  from  an  input stream and write into an output stream. The BlockCipher class is an abstract
       class and cannot be instantiated by itself. The object is actually created by using  a  cipher  algorithm
       class such like the Aes class.

       trans count (cipher:stream os is)

       The stream method returns the number of characters that have been encoded. Care should be taken that most
       of the stream cipher operates by block and therefore, will block until a complete  block  has  been  read
       from  the  input  stream,  unless the end of stream is read. The block cipher is always associated with a
       padding scheme. By default, the NIST 800-38A recommendation is associated with the block cipher, but  can
       be changed with the set-padding-mode.

       Creating a block cipher
       A  BlockCipher  object  can  be  created  with a cipher constructor. As of today, the Advanced Encryption
       Standard or AES is the recommended symmetric cipher. The Aes  class  creates  a  new  block  cipher  that
       conforms to the AES standard.

       const cipher (afnix:sec:Aes)

       A  block  cipher  can  be  created with a key and eventually a reverse flag. With one argument, the block
       cipher key is associated with the cipher. Such key can be created as indicated in the  previous  section.
       The reverse flag is used to determine if the cipher operate in encoding or decoding mode. By default, the
       cipher operates in coding mode.

       # create a 256 bits random key
       const key (afnix:sec:Key afnix:sec:KSYM 256)
       # create an aes block cipher
       const aes (afnix:sec:Aes key)

       Block cipher information
       The BlockCipher class is derived from  the  Cipher  class  and  contains  several  methods  that  provide
       information about the cipher. This include the cipher block size with the get-block-size method.

       println (aes:get-block-size)

       Input cipher
       In the presence of a Cipher object, it is difficult to read an input stream and encode the character of a
       block basis. Furthermore, the existence of various method for block padding makes  the  coding  operation
       even  more  difficult.  For  this  reason, the InputCipher class provides the necessary method to code or
       decode an input stream in various mode of operations.

       Input cipher mode
       The InputCipher class is an input stream that binds an input stream with a cipher. The class acts like an
       input  stream, read the character from the bounded input stream and encode or decode them from the bended
       cipher. The InputCipher defines several modes of operations. In electronic  codebook  mode  or  ECB,  the
       character  are encoded in a block basis. In cipher block chaining mode, the block are encoded by doing an
       XOR operation with the previous block. Other modes are also available such like cipher feedback mode  and
       output feedback mode.

       Creating an input cipher
       By  default an input cipher is created with a cipher object. Eventually, an input stream and/or the input
       mode can be specified at the object construction.

       # create a key
       const key (afnix:sec:Key "hello world")
       # create a direct cipher
       const aes (afnix:sec:Aes key)
       # create an input cipher
       const ic (afnix:sec:InputCipher aes)

       In this example, the input cipher is created in ECB mode. The input stream is later associated  with  the
       set-is method.

       Input cipher operation
       The  InputCipher  class  operates  with  one  or  several input streams. The set-is method sets the input
       stream. Read operation can be made with the help of the valid-p predicate.

       while (ic:valid-p) (os:write (ic:read))

       Since the InputCipher operates like an input stream, the stream can  be  read  as  long  as  the  valid-p
       predicate  returns  true. Note that the InputCipher manages automatically the padding operations with the
       mode associated with the block cipher.

       Asymmetric cipher
       A public cipher is an object that encodes an input stream with a asymmetric cipher bound to a public  and
       secret  key.  In  theory, there is no difference between a block cipher and a public cipher. Furthermore,
       the interface provided by the engine is the same for both objects.

       Public cipher
       A public cipher is an asymmetric stream cipher which operates with an asymmetric key. The main difference
       between  a  block cipher and a public cipher is the key nature as well as the encoded block size. With an
       asymmetric cipher, the size of the message to encode is generally not the  same  as  the  encoded  block,
       because a message padding operation must occurs for each message block.

       trans count (cipher:stream os is)

       The  stream  method  returns  the number of characters that have been encoded. Like the block cipher, the
       stream method encodes an input stream or a buffer object. The number of encoded bytes is returned by  the
       method.

       Creating a public cipher
       A  PublicCipher object can be created with a cipher constructor. The RSA asymmetric cipher is the typical
       example of public cipher. It is created by binding a RSA key to it. For security reasons,  the  key  size
       must be large enough, typically with a size of at lease 1024 bits.

       const key (afnix:sec:Key afnix:sec:Key:KRSA 1024)
       const rsa (afnix:sec:Rsa key)

       A  block  cipher  can  be  created  with a key and eventually a reverse flag. Additional constructors are
       available to support various padding mode. Such padding mode depends on the cipher type. For example, the
       RSA  cipher supports the ISO 18033-2 padding mode with a KDF1 or KDF2 object. Such constructor requires a
       hasher object as well.

       # create a 1024 bits rsa key
       const key (afnix:sec:Key afnix:sec:KRSA 1024)
       # create a SHA-1 hasher
       const ash (afnix:sec:Sha1)
       # create a rsa public cipher
       const rsa (afnix:sec:Rsa key ash "Demo")
       # set the padding mode
       rsa:set-padding-mode afnix:sec:Rsa:PAD-OAEP-K1

       Public cipher padding mode
       Like any cipher, a padding mode can be associated with the cipher. The  set-padding-mode  method  can  be
       used  to  set or change the padding mode. Depending on the padding mode type, additional objects might be
       needed at construction.

       Cipher   Padding mode                          Default
       RSA      PKCS 1.5, PKCS 2.1, ISO/IEC 18033-2   PKCS 1.5

       The default padding mode depends on the cipher type. For RSA, the default padding mode is set to PKCS 1.5
       for compatibility reason.

       Signature objects
       A  digital  signature  is  a  unique representation, supposedly non forgeable, designed to authenticate a
       document, in whatever form it is represented. For example, a signature is  used  to  sign  a  certificate
       which  is  used  during  the process of establish a secured connection over the Internet. A signature can
       also be used to sign a courrier or keys as it is in the Openssh protocol. Digital  signatures  come  into
       several  flavors  eventually  associated  with  the  signed  document. Sometimes, the signature acts as a
       container and permits to retrieve the document itself. Whatever the method,  the  principle  remains  the
       same. As of today technology, there are two standards used to sign document as indicated below.

       Standard   Name
       DSS        Digital Signature Standard
       RSA        RSA based signature

       Signer and signature objects
       The  process  of  generating  a  signature is done with the help of a Signer object. A signer object is a
       generic object, similar in functionality to the hasher object. The result produced by a signer object  is
       a Signature object which holds the generated signature.

       Signature key
       The process of generating a signature often requires the use of a key. Such key can be generated with the
       help of the Key object. The nature of the key will depend on the target signature. The following table is
       a resume of the supported keys.

       Standard   Key    Signer
       DSS        KDSA   Dsa

       In  the  case  of DSS, a key can be generated automatically, although this process is time consuming. The
       default key size is 1024 bits.

       const key (afnix:sec:Key afnix:sec:Key:KDSA)
       assert 1024 (key:get-bits)

       Creating a signer
       A Signer object is created with a particular signature object such like DSA. The Dsa object is  a  signer
       object  that  implements  the  Digital Signature Algorithm as specified by the Digital Signature Standard
       (DSS) in FIPS-PUB 186-3.

       # create a dsa signer
       const dsa (afnix:sec:Dsa key)
       assert true (afnix:sec:dsa-p dsa)

       Creating a signature
       A signature is created with the help of the compute method. The Signature object is similar to the Hasher
       and operates with string or streams.

       # create a signature object
       const sgn   (dsa:compute "afnix")
       assert true (afnix:sec:signature-p sgn)

       Once  the  signature is created, each data can be accessed directly with the associated component mapper.
       In the case of DSS, there are two components as show below.

       # get the DSS S component
       sgn:get-relatif-component
       afnix:sec:Signature:DSA-S-COMPONENT
       # get the DSS R component
       sgn:get-relatif-component
       afnix:sec:Signature:DSA-R-COMPONENT

STANDARD SECURITY REFERENCE

       Hasher
       The Hasher class is a base class that is used to build a message hash. The hash result is  stored  in  an
       array  of bytes and can be retrieved byte by byte or as a formatted printable string. This class does not
       have a constructor.

       Predicate

              hasher-p

       Inheritance

              Nameable

       Methods

              reset -> none (none)
              The reset method reset the hasher object with its associated internal states.

              hash-p -> Boolean (String)
              The hash-p predicate returns true if the string argument is potentially a hash value.  It  is  not
              possible,  with our current technology, to reverse a hash value to one or several representations,
              nor it is possible to assert that such value exists.

              get-byte -> Byte (Integer)
              The get-byte method returns the hash byte value by index. The argument is  the  byte  index  which
              must be in the range of the hash result length.

              format -> String (none)
              The format method return a string representation of the hash value.

              compute -> String (Literal|Buffer|InputStream)
              The  compute method computes the hash value from a string, a buffer or an input stream. The method
              returns a string representation of the result hash value. When the argument is a buffer object  or
              an input stream, the characters are consumed from the object.

              derive -> String (String)
              The  derive method computes the hash value from an octet string which is converted before the hash
              computation. The method returns a string representation of the result hash value.

              get-hash-length -> Integer (none)
              The get-hash-length method returns the hasher length in bytes.

              get-result-length -> Integer (none)
              The get-result-length method returns the hasher result length in bytes. The result length is  less
              or equal to the hasher length and is set at construction.

       Md2
       The Md2 class is a hashing class that implements the MD-2 algorithm.

       Predicate

              md2-p

       Inheritance

              Hasher

       Constructors

              Md2 (none)
              The Md2 constructor creates a default hashing object that implements the MD-2 algorithm.

              Md2 (Integer)
              The Md2 constructor creates a MD-2 hashing object with a result length. The argument is the hasher
              result length that must be less or equal to the hasher length.

       Md4
       The Md4 class is a hashing class that implements the MD-4 algorithm.

       Predicate

              md4-p

       Inheritance

              Hasher

       Constructors

              Md4 (none)
              The Md4 constructor creates a default hashing object that implements the MD-4 algorithm.

              Md4 (Integer)
              The Md4 constructor creates a MD-4 hashing object with a result length. The argument is the hasher
              result length that must be less or equal to the hasher length.

       Md5
       The Md5 class is a hashing class that implements the MD-5 algorithm.

       Predicate

              md5-p

       Inheritance

              Hasher

       Constructors

              Md5 (none)
              The Md5 constructor creates a default hashing object that implements the MD-5 algorithm.

              Md5 (Integer)
              The Md5 constructor creates a MD-5 hashing object with a result length. The argument is the hasher
              result length that must be less or equal to the hasher length.

       Sha1
       The Sha1 class is a hashing class that implements the SHA-1 algorithm.

       Predicate

              sha1-p

       Inheritance

              Hasher

       Constructors

              Sha1 (none)
              The Sha1 constructor creates a default hashing object that implements the SHA-1 algorithm.

              Sha1 (Integer)
              The Sha1 constructor creates a SHA-1 hashing object with a result  length.  The  argument  is  the
              hasher result length that must be less or equal to the hasher length.

       Sha224
       The Sha224 class is a hashing class that implements the SHA-224 algorithm.

       Predicate

              sha224-p

       Inheritance

              Hasher

       Constructors

              Sha224 (none)
              The Sha224 constructor creates a default hashing object that implements the SHA-224 algorithm.

              Sha224 (Integer)
              The  Sha224 constructor creates a SHA-224 hashing object with a result length. The argument is the
              hasher result length that must be less or equal to the hasher length.

       Sha256
       The Sha256 class is a hashing class that implements the SHA-256 algorithm.

       Predicate

              sha256-p

       Inheritance

              Hasher

       Constructors

              Sha256 (none)
              The Sha256 constructor creates a default hashing object that implements the SHA-256 algorithm.

              Sha256 (Integer)
              The Sha256 constructor creates a SHA-256 hashing object with a result length. The argument is  the
              hasher result length that must be less or equal to the hasher length.

       Sha384
       The Sha384 class is a hashing class that implements the SHA-384 algorithm.

       Predicate

              sha384-p

       Inheritance

              Hasher

       Constructors

              Sha384 (none)
              The Sha384 constructor creates a default hashing object that implements the SHA-384 algorithm.

              Sha384 (Integer)
              The  Sha384 constructor creates a SHA-384 hashing object with a result length. The argument is the
              hasher result length that must be less or equal to the hasher length.

       Sha512
       The Sha512 class is a hashing class that implements the SHA-512 algorithm.

       Predicate

              sha512-p

       Inheritance

              Hasher

       Constructors

              Sha512 (none)
              The Sha512 constructor creates a default hashing object that implements the SHA-512 algorithm.

              Sha512 (Integer)
              The Sha512 constructor creates a SHA-512 hashing object with a result length. The argument is  the
              hasher result length that must be less or equal to the hasher length.

       Key
       The  Key  class is an original class used to store a particular key or to generate one. A key is designed
       to operate with a variety of cipher that can be either symmetric or asymmetric. In  the  symmetric  case,
       the  key  is  generally an array of bytes. Asymmetric key are generally stored in the form of number list
       that can be computed or loaded by value. By default, a random 128 bit symmetric key is created.

       Predicate

              key-p

       Inheritance

              Object

       Constructors

              Key (none)
              The Key constructor creates a default cipher key. The key is generated with random  bytes  and  is
              128 bits long.

              Key (String)
              The  Key  constructor  creates  a  symmetric  key  from an octet string. The octet string argument
              determines the size of the key. The octet string argument is compatible with the  string  obtained
              from the format method.

              Key (Item)
              The  Key  constructor creates a key by type. If the key type is KSYM, a symmetric 128 bytes random
              key is generated. If the key type is KRSA, a 1024 bits RSA random key is generated.

              Key (Item Integer|String|Vector)
              The Key constructor creates a key by type. The first argument is the key  type  to  generate.  The
              second  argument is either the key size, the key octet string or the key byte values. In the first
              form, an integer argument specifies the key size in bytes or bits depending on the key nature.  In
              the  second  form,  a  string  is  used as octet string to represent the key. In the third form, a
              vector of byte values can be used to load the key.

       Constants

              KSYM
              The KSYM constant indicates that the key is a symmetric key.

              KRSA
              The KRSA constant indicates that the key is a asymmetric RSA key.

              KMAC
              The KMAC constant indicates that the key is a message authentication (MAC) key.

              RSA-MODULUS
              The RSA-MODULUS constant corresponds to the RSA modulus value.

              RSA-PUBLIC-EXPONENT
              The RSA-PUBLIC-EXPONENT constant corresponds to the RSA public exponent value which  is  generally
              65537.

              RSA-SECRET-EXPONENT
              The RSA-SECRET-EXPONENT constant corresponds to the RSA secret exponent value.

       Methods

              get-byte -> Byte (Integer)
              The  get-byte  method  returns a key byte value by index. The index must be in the key range or an
              exception is raised. This method is primarily used with symmetric key.

              get-type -> Item (none)
              The get-type method returns the key type in the form of an item object.

              get-bits -> Integer (none)
              The get-bits method returns the key size in bits.

              get-size -> Integer (none)
              The get-size method returns the key size in bytes.

              format -> String (none|Item)
              The format method returns a string representation of the key. In the first form, without argument,
              the  key is returned as an octet string if possible. In the second form, the key value is returned
              as an octet string based on the key element to access.

              get-relatif-key -> Relatif (Item)
              The get-relatif-key method returns a relatif representation of a key element. This method is  well
              suited  for  asymmetric  key.  The  key value is returned as a relatif based on the key element to
              access.

       Kdf
       The Kdf class is an abstract class used to model key derivation function. The class provides only a  byte
       buffer  which  can  be  accessed  by  index.  In  the  key  derivation functions land, there are numerous
       standards, such like PKCS 2.1, IEEE P1363-2000, ISO/IEC 18033-2. All of these  standards  have  sometimes
       conflicting definitions.

       Predicate

              kdf-p

       Inheritance

              Nameable

       Methods

              reset -> none (none)
              The reset method reset the internal state of the kdf object.

              get-size -> Integer (none)
              The get-size method returns the kdf size in bytes.

              get-byte -> Byte (Integer)
              The  get-byte  method  returns a kdf byte value by index. The index must be in the key range or an
              exception is raised.

              format -> String (none)
              The format method returns a string representation of the derived key.

              derive -> String (String)
              The derive method returns a string representation of a derived key computed from the octet  string
              argument.

              compute -> String (String)
              The  compute  method  returns  a  string  representation of a derived key computed from the string
              argument.

       Hkdf
       The Hkdf class is an abstract class used to model key derivation function based  on  hash  function.  The
       class maintains a hasher object that is used to derive the key from an octet string.

       Predicate

              hashed-kdf-p

       Inheritance

              Kdf

       Methods

              get-hasher -> none (none)
              The  get-hasher  method  returns  the  hasher  object  associated with the key derivation function
              object. object.

       Kdf1
       The Kdf1 class is a hashed key derivation function  class  that  implements  the  KDF1  specification  as
       defined  by  ISO/IEC  18033-2.  The  class  is strictly equivalent to the mask generation function (MGF1)
       defined in PKCS 2.1. On the other hand, this implementation does not conform to the KDF1 specification of
       IEEE  1363-2000  which  is  somehow  rather bizarre. The class operates in theory with any type of hasher
       object as long as the octet string is not too long.

       Predicate

              kdf1-p

       Inheritance

              Hkdf

       Constructors

              Kdf1 (Hasher Integer)
              The Kdf1 constructor creates a KDF1 key derivation function object.  The  first  argument  is  the
              hasher object to bind and the second argument is the kdf size.

       Kdf2
       The  Kdf2  class  is  a  hashed  key  derivation function class that implements the KDF2 specification as
       defined by ISO/IEC 18033-2. The class is strictly equivalent to the key function derivation (KDF1) except
       that  the  internal  counter  runs from 1 to k instead of 0 to k-1. The class operates in theory with any
       type of hasher object as long as the octet string is not too long.

       Predicate

              kdf2-p

       Inheritance

              Hkdf

       Constructors

              Kdf2 (Hasher Integer)
              The Kdf2 constructor creates a KDF2 key derivation function object.  The  first  argument  is  the
              hasher object to bind and the second argument is the kdf size.

       Cipher
       The  Cipher  class  is  a  base  class that is used to implement a cipher. A cipher is used to encrypt or
       decrypt a message. There are basically two types of  ciphers,  namely  symmetric  cipher  and  asymmetric
       cipher.  For  the  base  class operation, only the cipher name and key is needed. A reverse flag controls
       whether or not an encryption operation must be reversed. A reset method can also be  used  to  reset  the
       internal cipher state.

       Predicate

              cipher-p

       Inheritance

              Nameable

       Methods

              reset -> none (none)
              The reset method reset the cipher internal state.

              stream -> Integer (OutputStream InputStream)
              The  stream method process an input stream and write into an output stream. The method returns the
              number of character processed. The first argument is the output stream used  to  write  the  coded
              characters. The second argument is the input stream used to read the characters.

              set-key -> none (Key)
              The set-key method sets the cipher key. The first argument is the key to set.

              get-key -> Key (none)
              The get-key method returns the cipher key.

              set-reverse -> none (Boolean)
              The set-reverse method sets the cipher reverse flag. The first argument is the flag to set. If the
              flag is true, the cipher operates in reverse mode. If the flag is false, the  cipher  operates  in
              direct mode.

              get-reverse -> Boolean (none)
              The  get-reverse  method returns the cipher reverse flag. If the flag is true, the cipher operates
              in reverse mode. If the flag is false, the cipher operates in direct mode.

       BlockCipher
       The BlockCipher class is an abstract class that is used to implement a symmetric block cipher. By default
       the  cipher  operates in encryption mode. When the reverse flag is set, the decryption mode is activated.
       For a block cipher, a block size controls the cipher operations. The class  also  defines  the  constants
       that control the block padding with the associated methods.

       Predicate

              block-cipher-p

       Inheritance

              Cipher

       Constants

              PAD-NONE
              The PAD-NONE constant indicates that the block should not be padded.

              PAD-BIT-MODE
              The PAD-BIT constant indicates that the block should be padded in bit mode.

              PAD-ANSI-X923
              The  PAD-ANSI-X923  constant  indicates  that  the  block should be padded according to ANSI X 923
              standard.

              PAD-NIST-800
              The PAD-NIST-800 constant indicates that the block should be  padded  according  to  NIST  800-38A
              recommendations. This is the default mode.

       Methods

              get-block-size -> Integer (none)
              The get-block-size method returns the cipher block size.

              set-padding-mode -> none (Item)
              The set-padding-mode method sets the cipher padding mode.

              get-padding-mode -> Item (none)
              The get-padding-mode method returns the cipher padding mode.

       InputCipher
       The  InputCipher class is an stream interface that can stream out an input stream from a cipher. In other
       word, an input stream is read and block are encoded as long as the input stream read characters.  If  the
       cipher is nil, the input cipher simply read the input stream and is therefore transparent. The class acts
       like an input stream, read the character from the bounded input stream and encode or decode them from the
       bounded  cipher. The InputCipher defines several modes of operations. In electronic codebook mode or ECB,
       the character are encoded in a block basis. In cipher block chaining mode, the block are encoded by doing
       an  XOR operation with the previous block. Other modes such like cipher feedback mode and output feedback
       mode are also defined.

       Predicate

              input-cipher-p

       Inheritance

              Input

       Constructors

              InputCipher (Cipher)
              The InputCipher constructor creates an input cipher with a cipher object. The  first  argument  is
              the cipher to used for processing.

              InputCipher (Cipher Input)
              The  InputCipher constructor creates an input cipher with a cipher object and an input stream. The
              first argument is the cipher to used for processing. The  second  argument  is  the  input  stream
              object used for the character reading.

              InputCipher (Cipher InputStream Item)
              The  InputCipher  constructor  creates an input cipher with a cipher object, an input stream and a
              mode. The first argument is the cipher to used for processing. The second argument  is  the  input
              stream  object  used  for the character reading. The third argument is the input cipher mode which
              can be either ECB, CBC, CFB or OFB.

       Constants

              ECB
              The ECB constant indicates that the input cipher is to operate in electronic codebook  mode.  This
              mode is the default mode.

              CBC
              The CBC constant indicates that the input cipher is to operate in cipher chaining block mode.

              CFB
              The CFB constant indicates that the input cipher is to operate in cipher feedback block mode.

              OFB
              The OFB constant indicates that the input cipher is to operate in output feedback block mode.

       Methods

              reset -> none (none)
              The reset method reset the input cipher object.

              get-mode -> Item (none)
              The get-mode method returns the input cipher operating mode.

              set-iv -> none (String|Buffer)
              The  set-iv  method sets the input cipher initial vector. In the first form, the initial vector is
              set from an octet string. In the second form, the initial vector is set from a buffer object.

              get-iv -> String (none)
              The get-iv method returns the input cipher initial vector as an octet string.

              set-is -> none (InputStream)
              The set-is method sets the input cipher input stream. This method can be used  to  chain  multiple
              input streams in a unique coding session.

       Aes
       The  Aes class is a block cipher class that implements the advanced encryption standard (AES), originally
       known as Rijndael. This is an original implementation that conforms to the  standard  FIPS  PUB  197.  It
       should  be noted that the AES standard, unlike Rijndael, defines a fixed block size of 16 bytes (4 words)
       and 3 keys sizes (128, 192, 256).

       Predicate

              aes-p

       Inheritance

              BlockCipher

       Constructors

              Aes (Key)
              The Aes constructor creates a direct cipher with a key. The first argument is the key used by  the
              cipher.

              Aes (Key Boolean)
              The  Aes constructor creates a cipher with a key and a reverse flag. The first argument is the key
              used by the cipher. The second argument is the reverse flag.

       PublicCipher
       The PublicCipher class is an abstract class that is used to implement an asymmetric cipher. An asymmetric
       cipher  or  public key cipher is designed to operate with a public key and a secret key. Depending on the
       use model, the public key might be used to crypt the data, and the  secret  key  to  decrypt.  The  basic
       assumption around a public cipher is that the secret key cannot be derived from the public key.

       Predicate

              public-cipher-p

       Inheritance

              Cipher

       Methods

              get-message-size -> Integer (none)
              The get-message-size method returns the cipher message size.

              get-crypted-size -> Integer (none)
              The get-crypted-size method returns the cipher crypted block size.

       Rsa
       The  Rsa  class  is a public cipher class that implements the RSA algorithm as described by PKCS 2.1, RFC
       2437 and ISO 18033-2. The class implements also some padding mechanism described in PKCS 1.5, 2.1 and ISO
       18033-2.  The RSA algorithm is a public cryptographic cipher based on a secret and public keys. The class
       operates in crypting mode by default and uses the public key to do the encryption while the secret key is
       used  in  reverse  (decryption)  mode.  By default, the PKCS 1.5 type 2 padding is used. The ISO RSA-REM1
       padding with a key derivation function (KDF1) is equivalent to PKCS 2.1 padding with the mask  generation
       function (MGF1). The ISO RSA-REM1 padding with KDF2 is not described in the PKCS 2.1.

       Predicate

              rsa-p

       Inheritance

              PublicCipher

       Constructors

              Rsa (none)
              The Rsa constructor creates a default RSA public cipher by binding a 1024 bits random key.

              Rsa (Key)
              The Rsa constructor creates a RSA public cipher by binding the key argument.

              Rsa (Key Boolean)
              The  Rsa constructor creates a RSA public cipher by binding the key argument and the reverse flag.
              The first argument is the key to bind. The second argument is the reverse flag to set.

              Rsa (Key Hasher String)
              The Rsa constructor creates a RSA public cipher by binding  the  key  argument  and  OAEP  padding
              objects.  The  first argument is the key to bind. The second argument is hasher object to use with
              the OAEP padding mode. The third argument is an optional label to be used by the KDF object.

       Constants

              PAD-PKCS-11
              The PAD-PKCS-11 constant indicates that the PKCS 1.5 type 1  block  should  be  used  to  pad  the
              message.

              PAD-PKCS-12
              The  PAD-PKCS-12  constant  indicates  that  the  PKCS  1.5 type 3 block should be used to pad the
              message.

              PAD-OAEP-K1
              The PAD-OAEP-K1 constant indicates that the ISO/IEC 18033-2 OAEP with KDF1 should be used  to  pad
              the message.

              PAD-OAEP-K2
              The  PAD-OAEP-K2  constant indicates that the ISO/IEC 18033-2 OAEP with KDF2 should be used to pad
              the message.

       Methods

              get-hasher -> Hasher (none)
              The get-hasher method returns the hasher object used by the OAEP padding mode.

              set-hasher -> none (Hasher)
              The set-hasher method sets the hasher object used by the OAEP padding mode.

              get-padding-mode -> Item (none)
              The get-padding-mode method returns the cipher padding mode.

              set-padding-mode -> none (Item)
              The set-padding-mode method sets the cipher padding mode.

              get-padding-label -> String (none)
              The get-padding-label method returns the cipher padding label.

              set-padding-label -> none (String)
              The set-padding-mode method sets the cipher padding label.

              get-padding-seed -> String (none)
              The get-padding-seed method returns the cipher padding seed.

              set-padding-seed -> none (String)
              The set-padding-seed method sets the cipher padding seed.

              pkcs-primitive -> Relatif (Integer|Relatif)
              The pkcs-primitive method compute a relatif value from a relatif argument by  either  crypting  or
              decrypting the argument. seed.

       Signer
       The  Signer  class  is  a  base  class that is used to build a message signature. The signature result is
       stored in a special signature object which is algorithm dependent.

       Predicate

              signer-p

       Inheritance

              Nameable

       Methods

              reset -> none (none)
              The reset method reset the signer object with its associated internal states.

              compute -> Signature (Literal|Buffer|InputStream)
              The compute method computes the signature from a string, a buffer or an input stream.  The  method
              returns  a  signature  object.  When  the  argument  is  a  buffer  object or an input stream, the
              characters are consumed from the object.

              derive -> Signature (String)
              The derive method computes the signature from an  octet  string  which  is  converted  before  the
              signature computation. The method returns a signature object.

       Signature
       The  Signature  class is a container class designed to store a message signature. The signature object is
       produced by a signing process, implemented in the form of a digital signature algorithm such like RSA  or
       DSA.

       Predicate

              signature-p

       Inheritance

              Object

       Constructors

              Signature (none)
              The Signature constructor creates an empty signature.

       Constants

              NIL
              The NIL constant indicates that the signature is a null signature.

              DSA
              The DSA constant indicates that the signature is conforming to DSS.

              DSA-S-COMPONENT
              The DSA-S-COMPONENT constant corresponds to the DSA S component value.

              DSA-R-COMPONENT
              The DSA-R-COMPONENT constant corresponds to the DSA R component value.

       Methods

              reset -> none (none)
              The reset method reset the signature object to a null signature.

              format -> String (Item)
              The  format  method  returns  a  string  representation  of the signature component. The signature
              component is returned as an octet string based on the signature component to access.

              get-relatif-component -> Relatif (Item)
              The get-relatif-component method returns a relatif representation of a signature component.

       Dsa
       The Dsa class is an original implementation of the Digital Signature Standard (DSS) as published in  FIPS
       PUB  186-3.  This  class  implements the Digital Signature Algorithm (DSA) with an approved key length of
       1024, 2048 and 3072 bits with a 160, 224 and 256 bits hash function which is part of the SHA family.

       Predicate

              dsa-p

       Inheritance

              Signer

       Constructors

              Dsa (none)
              The Dsa constructor creates a signer object with a default DSA key.

              Dsa (Key)
              The Dsa constructor creates a signer object with a DSA key as its argument.

              Dsa (Key Relatif)
              The Dsa constructor creates a signer object with a DSA key as its first argument  and  a  fixed  k
              argument as specified by DSS.