linbpq/md5.c

333 lines
10 KiB
C

/*
Copyright 2001-2018 John Wiseman G8BPQ
This file is part of LinBPQ/BPQ32.
LinBPQ/BPQ32 is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
LinBPQ/BPQ32 is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with LinBPQ/BPQ32. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses
*/
/*
* This code implements the MD5 message-digest algorithm.
* The algorithm is due to Ron Rivest. This code was
* written by Colin Plumb in 1993, no copyright is claimed.
* This code is in the public domain; do with it what you wish.
*
* Equivalent code is available from RSA Data Security, Inc.
* This code has been tested against that, and is equivalent,
* except that you don't need to include two pages of legalese
* with every copy.
*
* To compute the message digest of a chunk of bytes, declare an
* MD5Context structure, pass it to MD5Init, call MD5Update as
* needed on buffers full of bytes, and then call MD5Final, which
* will fill a supplied 16-byte array with the digest.
*/
/* This code was modified in 1997 by Jim Kingdon of Cyclic Software to
not require an integer type which is exactly 32 bits. This work
draws on the changes for the same purpose by Tatu Ylonen
<ylo@cs.hut.fi> as part of SSH, but since I didn't actually use
that code, there is no copyright issue. I hereby disclaim
copyright in any changes I have made; this code remains in the
public domain. */
/* Note regarding cvs_* namespace: this avoids potential conflicts
with libraries such as some versions of Kerberos. No particular
need to worry about whether the system supplies an MD5 library, as
this file is only about 3k of object code. */
#define WIN32_LEAN_AND_MEAN // Exclude rarely-used stuff from Windows headers
#define _CRT_SECURE_NO_DEPRECATE
#include "compatbits.h"
#include <string.h>
#include "md5.h"
#ifndef WIN32
#define APIENTRY
#define DllExport
#define VOID void
#else
#include <windows.h>
#endif
/* Little-endian byte-swapping routines. Note that these do not
depend on the size of datatypes such as cvs_uint32, nor do they require
us to detect the endianness of the machine we are running on. It
is possible they should be macros for speed, but I would be
surprised if they were a performance bottleneck for MD5. */
static cvs_uint32
getu32 (addr)
const unsigned char *addr;
{
return (((((uint32_t)addr[3] << 8) | addr[2]) << 8)
| addr[1]) << 8 | addr[0];
}
static void
putu32 (data, addr)
cvs_uint32 data;
unsigned char *addr;
{
addr[0] = (unsigned char)data;
addr[1] = (unsigned char)(data >> 8);
addr[2] = (unsigned char)(data >> 16);
addr[3] = (unsigned char)(data >> 24);
}
/*
* Start MD5 accumulation. Set bit count to 0 and buffer to mysterious
* initialization constants.
*/
void
cvs_MD5Init (ctx)
struct cvs_MD5Context *ctx;
{
ctx->buf[0] = 0x67452301;
ctx->buf[1] = 0xefcdab89;
ctx->buf[2] = 0x98badcfe;
ctx->buf[3] = 0x10325476;
ctx->bits[0] = 0;
ctx->bits[1] = 0;
}
/*
* Update context to reflect the concatenation of another buffer full
* of bytes.
*/
void
cvs_MD5Update (ctx, buf, len)
struct cvs_MD5Context *ctx;
unsigned char const *buf;
unsigned len;
{
cvs_uint32 t;
/* Update bitcount */
t = ctx->bits[0];
if ((ctx->bits[0] = (t + ((cvs_uint32)len << 3)) & 0xffffffff) < t)
ctx->bits[1]++; /* Carry from low to high */
ctx->bits[1] += len >> 29;
t = (t >> 3) & 0x3f; /* Bytes already in shsInfo->data */
/* Handle any leading odd-sized chunks */
if ( t ) {
unsigned char *p = ctx->in + t;
t = 64-t;
if (len < t) {
memcpy(p, buf, len);
return;
}
memcpy(p, buf, t);
cvs_MD5Transform (ctx->buf, ctx->in);
buf += t;
len -= t;
}
/* Process data in 64-byte chunks */
while (len >= 64) {
memcpy(ctx->in, buf, 64);
cvs_MD5Transform (ctx->buf, ctx->in);
buf += 64;
len -= 64;
}
/* Handle any remaining bytes of data. */
memcpy(ctx->in, buf, len);
}
/*
* Final wrapup - pad to 64-byte boundary with the bit pattern
* 1 0* (64-bit count of bits processed, MSB-first)
*/
void
cvs_MD5Final (digest, ctx)
unsigned char digest[16];
struct cvs_MD5Context *ctx;
{
unsigned count;
unsigned char *p;
/* Compute number of bytes mod 64 */
count = (ctx->bits[0] >> 3) & 0x3F;
/* Set the first char of padding to 0x80. This is safe since there is
always at least one byte free */
p = ctx->in + count;
*p++ = 0x80;
/* Bytes of padding needed to make 64 bytes */
count = 64 - 1 - count;
/* Pad out to 56 mod 64 */
if (count < 8) {
/* Two lots of padding: Pad the first block to 64 bytes */
memset(p, 0, count);
cvs_MD5Transform (ctx->buf, ctx->in);
/* Now fill the next block with 56 bytes */
memset(ctx->in, 0, 56);
} else {
/* Pad block to 56 bytes */
memset(p, 0, count-8);
}
/* Append length in bits and transform */
putu32(ctx->bits[0], ctx->in + 56);
putu32(ctx->bits[1], ctx->in + 60);
cvs_MD5Transform (ctx->buf, ctx->in);
putu32(ctx->buf[0], digest);
putu32(ctx->buf[1], digest + 4);
putu32(ctx->buf[2], digest + 8);
putu32(ctx->buf[3], digest + 12);
memset(ctx, 0, sizeof(ctx)); /* In case it's sensitive */
}
#ifndef ASM_MD5
/* The four core functions - F1 is optimized somewhat */
/* #define F1(x, y, z) (x & y | ~x & z) */
#define F1(x, y, z) (z ^ (x & (y ^ z)))
#define F2(x, y, z) F1(z, x, y)
#define F3(x, y, z) (x ^ y ^ z)
#define F4(x, y, z) (y ^ (x | ~z))
/* This is the central step in the MD5 algorithm. */
#define MD5STEP(f, w, x, y, z, data, s) \
( w += f(x, y, z) + data, w &= 0xffffffff, w = w<<s | w>>(32-s), w += x )
/*
* The core of the MD5 algorithm, this alters an existing MD5 hash to
* reflect the addition of 16 longwords of new data. MD5Update blocks
* the data and converts bytes into longwords for this routine.
*/
void
cvs_MD5Transform (buf, inraw)
cvs_uint32 buf[4];
const unsigned char inraw[64];
{
register cvs_uint32 a, b, c, d;
cvs_uint32 in[16];
int i;
for (i = 0; i < 16; ++i)
in[i] = getu32 (inraw + 4 * i);
a = buf[0];
b = buf[1];
c = buf[2];
d = buf[3];
MD5STEP(F1, a, b, c, d, in[ 0]+0xd76aa478, 7);
MD5STEP(F1, d, a, b, c, in[ 1]+0xe8c7b756, 12);
MD5STEP(F1, c, d, a, b, in[ 2]+0x242070db, 17);
MD5STEP(F1, b, c, d, a, in[ 3]+0xc1bdceee, 22);
MD5STEP(F1, a, b, c, d, in[ 4]+0xf57c0faf, 7);
MD5STEP(F1, d, a, b, c, in[ 5]+0x4787c62a, 12);
MD5STEP(F1, c, d, a, b, in[ 6]+0xa8304613, 17);
MD5STEP(F1, b, c, d, a, in[ 7]+0xfd469501, 22);
MD5STEP(F1, a, b, c, d, in[ 8]+0x698098d8, 7);
MD5STEP(F1, d, a, b, c, in[ 9]+0x8b44f7af, 12);
MD5STEP(F1, c, d, a, b, in[10]+0xffff5bb1, 17);
MD5STEP(F1, b, c, d, a, in[11]+0x895cd7be, 22);
MD5STEP(F1, a, b, c, d, in[12]+0x6b901122, 7);
MD5STEP(F1, d, a, b, c, in[13]+0xfd987193, 12);
MD5STEP(F1, c, d, a, b, in[14]+0xa679438e, 17);
MD5STEP(F1, b, c, d, a, in[15]+0x49b40821, 22);
MD5STEP(F2, a, b, c, d, in[ 1]+0xf61e2562, 5);
MD5STEP(F2, d, a, b, c, in[ 6]+0xc040b340, 9);
MD5STEP(F2, c, d, a, b, in[11]+0x265e5a51, 14);
MD5STEP(F2, b, c, d, a, in[ 0]+0xe9b6c7aa, 20);
MD5STEP(F2, a, b, c, d, in[ 5]+0xd62f105d, 5);
MD5STEP(F2, d, a, b, c, in[10]+0x02441453, 9);
MD5STEP(F2, c, d, a, b, in[15]+0xd8a1e681, 14);
MD5STEP(F2, b, c, d, a, in[ 4]+0xe7d3fbc8, 20);
MD5STEP(F2, a, b, c, d, in[ 9]+0x21e1cde6, 5);
MD5STEP(F2, d, a, b, c, in[14]+0xc33707d6, 9);
MD5STEP(F2, c, d, a, b, in[ 3]+0xf4d50d87, 14);
MD5STEP(F2, b, c, d, a, in[ 8]+0x455a14ed, 20);
MD5STEP(F2, a, b, c, d, in[13]+0xa9e3e905, 5);
MD5STEP(F2, d, a, b, c, in[ 2]+0xfcefa3f8, 9);
MD5STEP(F2, c, d, a, b, in[ 7]+0x676f02d9, 14);
MD5STEP(F2, b, c, d, a, in[12]+0x8d2a4c8a, 20);
MD5STEP(F3, a, b, c, d, in[ 5]+0xfffa3942, 4);
MD5STEP(F3, d, a, b, c, in[ 8]+0x8771f681, 11);
MD5STEP(F3, c, d, a, b, in[11]+0x6d9d6122, 16);
MD5STEP(F3, b, c, d, a, in[14]+0xfde5380c, 23);
MD5STEP(F3, a, b, c, d, in[ 1]+0xa4beea44, 4);
MD5STEP(F3, d, a, b, c, in[ 4]+0x4bdecfa9, 11);
MD5STEP(F3, c, d, a, b, in[ 7]+0xf6bb4b60, 16);
MD5STEP(F3, b, c, d, a, in[10]+0xbebfbc70, 23);
MD5STEP(F3, a, b, c, d, in[13]+0x289b7ec6, 4);
MD5STEP(F3, d, a, b, c, in[ 0]+0xeaa127fa, 11);
MD5STEP(F3, c, d, a, b, in[ 3]+0xd4ef3085, 16);
MD5STEP(F3, b, c, d, a, in[ 6]+0x04881d05, 23);
MD5STEP(F3, a, b, c, d, in[ 9]+0xd9d4d039, 4);
MD5STEP(F3, d, a, b, c, in[12]+0xe6db99e5, 11);
MD5STEP(F3, c, d, a, b, in[15]+0x1fa27cf8, 16);
MD5STEP(F3, b, c, d, a, in[ 2]+0xc4ac5665, 23);
MD5STEP(F4, a, b, c, d, in[ 0]+0xf4292244, 6);
MD5STEP(F4, d, a, b, c, in[ 7]+0x432aff97, 10);
MD5STEP(F4, c, d, a, b, in[14]+0xab9423a7, 15);
MD5STEP(F4, b, c, d, a, in[ 5]+0xfc93a039, 21);
MD5STEP(F4, a, b, c, d, in[12]+0x655b59c3, 6);
MD5STEP(F4, d, a, b, c, in[ 3]+0x8f0ccc92, 10);
MD5STEP(F4, c, d, a, b, in[10]+0xffeff47d, 15);
MD5STEP(F4, b, c, d, a, in[ 1]+0x85845dd1, 21);
MD5STEP(F4, a, b, c, d, in[ 8]+0x6fa87e4f, 6);
MD5STEP(F4, d, a, b, c, in[15]+0xfe2ce6e0, 10);
MD5STEP(F4, c, d, a, b, in[ 6]+0xa3014314, 15);
MD5STEP(F4, b, c, d, a, in[13]+0x4e0811a1, 21);
MD5STEP(F4, a, b, c, d, in[ 4]+0xf7537e82, 6);
MD5STEP(F4, d, a, b, c, in[11]+0xbd3af235, 10);
MD5STEP(F4, c, d, a, b, in[ 2]+0x2ad7d2bb, 15);
MD5STEP(F4, b, c, d, a, in[ 9]+0xeb86d391, 21);
buf[0] += a;
buf[1] += b;
buf[2] += c;
buf[3] += d;
}
#endif
DllExport VOID APIENTRY md5 (char *arg, unsigned char * checksum)
{
struct cvs_MD5Context context;
cvs_MD5Init (&context);
cvs_MD5Update (&context, arg, (int)strlen (arg));
cvs_MD5Final (checksum, &context);
return;
}