Skip to main content

hash, hmac, RSA, ECC, X.509, TLS, DTLS, handshakes, and secrets with an mbed TLS back end

Project description

https://circleci.com/gh/Synss/python-mbedtls/tree/develop.svg?style=svg https://travis-ci.org/Synss/python-mbedtls.svg?branch=develop https://coveralls.io/repos/github/Synss/python-mbedtls/badge.svg?branch=master

python-mbedtls is a free cryptographic library for Python that uses mbed TLS for back end.

mbed TLS (formerly known as PolarSSL) makes it trivially easy for developers to include cryptographic and SSL/TLS capabilities in their (embedded) products, facilitating this functionality with a minimal coding footprint.

python-mbedtls API follows the recommendations from:

  • PEP 272 – API for Block Encryption Algorithms v1.0

  • PEP 452 – API for Cryptographic Hash Functions v2.0

  • PEP 506 – Adding a Secret Module to the Standard Library

  • PEP 543 – A Unified TLS API for Python

and therefore plays well with the cryptographic services from the Python standard library and many other cryptography libraries as well.

License

python-mbedtls is licensed under the MIT License (see LICENSE.txt). This enables the use of python-mbedtls in both open source and closed source projects. The MIT License is compatible with both GPL and Apache 2.0 license under which mbed TLS is distributed.

API documentation

https://synss.github.io/python-mbedtls/

Installation

The bindings are tested with Python 2.7, 3.4, 3.5, 3.6, and 3.7 on Linux and macOS.

manylinux1 wheels are available for 64-bit Linux systems. Install with pip install python-mbedtls.

Usage and examples

Now, let us see examples using the various parts of the library.

Check which version of mbed TLS is being used by python-mbedtls

The mbedtls.version module shows the run-time version information to mbed TLS.

>>> from mbedtls import version
>>> _ = version.version  # "mbed TLS 2.16.1"
>>> _ = version.version_info  # (2, 16, 1)

Message digest

The mbedtls.hash module supports MD2, MD4, MD5, SHA-1, SHA-2 (in 224, 256, 384, and 512-bits), and RIPEMD-160 secure hashes and message digests. Note that MD2 and MD4 are not included by default and are only present if they are compiled in mbedtls.

Here are the examples from hashlib ported to python-mbedtls:

>>> from mbedtls import hash as hashlib
>>> m = hashlib.md5()
>>> m.update(b"Nobody inspects")
>>> m.update(b" the spammish repetition")
>>> m.digest()
b'\xbbd\x9c\x83\xdd\x1e\xa5\xc9\xd9\xde\xc9\xa1\x8d\xf0\xff\xe9'
>>> m.digest_size
16
>>> m.block_size
64

More condensed:

>>> hashlib.sha224(b"Nobody inspects the spammish repetition").hexdigest()
'a4337bc45a8fc544c03f52dc550cd6e1e87021bc896588bd79e901e2'

Using new():

>>> h = hashlib.new('ripemd160')
>>> h.update(b"Nobody inspects the spammish repetition")
>>> h.hexdigest()
'cc4a5ce1b3df48aec5d22d1f16b894a0b894eccc'

HMAC algorithm

The mbedtls.hmac module computes HMAC.

Example:

>>> from mbedtls import hmac
>>> m = hmac.new(b"This is my secret key", digestmod="md5")
>>> m.update(b"Nobody inspects")
>>> m.update(b" the spammish repetition")
>>> m.digest()
b'\x9d-/rj\\\x98\x80\xb1rG\x87\x0f\xe9\xe4\xeb'

Warning:

The message is cleared after calculation of the digest. Only call mbedtls.hmac.Hmac.digest() or mbedtls.hmac.Hmac.hexdigest() once per message.

HMAC-based key derivation function (HKDF)

The mbedtls.hkdf module exposes extract-and-expand key derivation functions. The main function is hkdf() but extract() and expand() may be used as well.

Example:

>>> from mbedtls import hkdf
>>> hkdf.hkdf(
...     b"my secret key",
...     length=42,
...     info=b"my cool app",
...     salt=b"and pepper",
...     digestmod=hmac.sha256
... )
b'v,\xef\x90\xccU\x1d\x1b\xd7\\a\xaf\x92\xac\n\x90\xf9q\xf4)\xcd"\xf7\x1a\x94p\x03.\xa8e\x1e\xfb\x92\xe8l\x0cc\xf8e\rvj'

where info, salt, and digestmod are optional, although providing (at least) info is largely recommended.

Symmetric cipher

The mbedtls.cipher module provides symmetric encryption. The API follows the recommendations from PEP 272 so that it can be used as a drop-in replacement to other libraries.

python-mbedtls provides the following algorithms:

  • AES encryption/decryption (128, 192, and 256 bits) in ECB, CBC, CFB128, CTR, OFB, or XTS mode;

  • AES AEAD (128, 192, and 256 bits) in GCM, or CCM mode;

  • ARC4 encryption/decryption;

  • ARIA encryption/decryption (128, 192, and 256 bits) in ECB, CBC, CTR, or GCM modes;

  • Blowfish encryption/decryption in ECB, CBC, CFB64, or CTR mode;

  • Camellia encryption/decryption (128, 192, and 256 bits) in ECB, CBC, CFB128, CTR, or GCM mode;

  • DES, DES3, and double DES3 encryption/decryption in ECB, or CBC mode;

  • CHACHA20 and CHACHA0/POLY1305 encryption/decryption.

Example:

>>> from mbedtls import cipher
>>> c = cipher.AES.new(b"My 16-bytes key.", cipher.MODE_CBC, b"CBC needs an IV.")
>>> enc = c.encrypt(b"This is a super-secret message!")
>>> enc
b'*`k6\x98\x97=[\xdf\x7f\x88\x96\xf5\t\x19J7\x93\xb5\xe0~\t\x9e\x968m\xcd\x9c3\x04o\xe6'
>>> c.decrypt(enc)
b'This is a super-secret message!'

RSA public key

The mbedtls.pk module provides the RSA cryptosystem. This includes:

  • Public-private key generation and key import/export in PEM and DER formats;

  • asymmetric encryption and decryption;

  • message signature and verification.

Key generation, the default size is 2048 bits:

>>> from mbedtls import pk
>>> rsa = pk.RSA()
>>> prv = rsa.generate()
>>> rsa.key_size
256

Message encryption and decryption:

>>> enc = rsa.encrypt(b"secret message")
>>> rsa.decrypt(enc)
b'secret message'

Message signature and verification:

>>> sig = rsa.sign(b"Please sign here.")
>>> rsa.verify(b"Please sign here.", sig)
True
>>> rsa.verify(b"Sorry, wrong message.", sig)
False
>>> pub = rsa.export_public_key(format="DER")
>>> other = pk.RSA.from_buffer(pub)
>>> other.verify(b"Please sign here.", sig)
True

Static and ephemeral Elliptic curve Diffie-Hellman

The mbedtls.pk module provides the ECC cryptosystem. This includes:

  • Public-private key generation and key import/export in the PEM and DER formats;

  • asymmetric encrypt and decryption;

  • message signature and verification;

  • ephemeral ECDH key exchange.

get_supported_curves() returns the list of supported curves.

The API of the ECC class is the same as the API of the RSA class but ciphering (encrypt() and decrypt() is not supported by Mbed TLS).

Message signature and verification—elliptic curve digital signature algorithm (ECDSA):

>>> from mbedtls import pk
>>> ecdsa = pk.ECC()
>>> prv = ecdsa.generate()
>>> sig = ecdsa.sign(b"Please sign here.")
>>> ecdsa.verify(b"Please sign here.", sig)
True
>>> ecdsa.verify(b"Sorry, wrong message.", sig)
False
>>> pub = ecdsa.export_public_key(format="DER")
>>> other = pk.ECC.from_buffer(pub)
>>> other.verify(b"Please sign here.", sig)
True

The classes ECDHServer and ECDHClient may be used for ephemeral ECDH. The key exchange is as follows:

>>> ecdh_srv = pk.ECDHServer()
>>> ecdh_cli = pk.ECDHClient()

The server generates the ServerKeyExchange encrypted payload and passes it to the client:

>>> ske = ecdh_srv.generate()
>>> ecdh_cli.import_SKE(ske)

then the client generates the ClientKeyExchange encrypted payload and passes it back to the server:

>>> cke = ecdh_cli.generate()
>>> ecdh_srv.import_CKE(cke)

Now, client and server may generate their shared secret:

>>> secret = ecdh_srv.generate_secret()
>>> ecdh_cli.generate_secret() == secret
True
>>> ecdh_srv.shared_secret == ecdh_cli.shared_secret
True

Diffie-Hellman-Merkle key exchange

The classes DHServer and DHClient may be used for DH Key exchange. The classes have the same API as ECDHServer and ECDHClient, respectively.

The key exchange is as follow:

>>> from mbedtls.mpi import MPI
>>> from mbedtls import pk
>>> dh_srv = pk.DHServer(MPI.prime(128), MPI.prime(96))
>>> dh_cli = pk.DHClient(MPI.prime(128), MPI.prime(96))

The 128-bytes prime and the 96-bytes prime are the modulus P and the generator G.

The server generates the ServerKeyExchange payload:

>>> ske = dh_srv.generate()
>>> dh_cli.import_SKE(ske)

The payload ends with G^X mod P where X is the secret value of the server.

>>> cke = dh_cli.generate()
>>> dh_srv.import_CKE(cke)

cke is G^Y mod P (with Y the secret value from the client) returned as its representation in bytes so that it can be readily transported over the network.

As in ECDH, client and server may now generate their shared secret:

>>> secret = dh_srv.generate_secret()
>>> dh_cli.generate_secret() == secret
True
>>> dh_srv.shared_secret == dh_cli.shared_secret
True

X.509 Certificate writing and parsing

The mbedtls.x509 module can be used to parse X.509 certificates or create and verify a certificate chain.

Here, the trusted root is a self-signed CA certificate ca0_crt signed by ca0_key.

>>> import datetime as dt
>>>
>>> from mbedtls import hash as hashlib
>>> from mbedtls import pk
>>> from mbedtls import x509
>>>
>>> now = dt.datetime.utcnow()
>>> ca0_key = pk.RSA()
>>> _ = ca0_key.generate()
>>> ca0_csr = x509.CSR.new(ca0_key, "CN=Trusted CA", hashlib.sha256())
>>> ca0_crt = x509.CRT.selfsign(
...     ca0_csr, ca0_key,
...     not_before=now, not_after=now + dt.timedelta(days=90),
...     serial_number=0x123456,
...     basic_constraints=x509.BasicConstraints(True, 1))
...

An intermediate then issues a Certificate Singing Request (CSR) that the root CA signs:

>>> ca1_key = pk.ECC()
>>> _ = ca1_key.generate()
>>> ca1_csr = x509.CSR.new(ca1_key, "CN=Intermediate CA", hashlib.sha256())
>>>
>>> ca1_crt = ca0_crt.sign(
...     ca1_csr, ca0_key, now, now + dt.timedelta(days=90), 0x123456,
...     basic_constraints=x509.BasicConstraints(ca=True, max_path_length=3))
...

And finally, the intermediate CA signs a certificate for the End Entity on the basis of a new CSR:

>>> ee0_key = pk.ECC()
>>> _ = ee0_key.generate()
>>> ee0_csr = x509.CSR.new(ee0_key, "CN=End Entity", hashlib.sha256())
>>>
>>> ee0_crt = ca1_crt.sign(
...     ee0_csr, ca1_key, now, now + dt.timedelta(days=90), 0x987654)
...

The emitting certificate can be used to verify the next certificate in the chain:

>>> ca1_crt.verify(ee0_crt)
True
>>> ca0_crt.verify(ca1_crt)
True

Note, however, that this verification is only one step in a private key infrastructure and does not take CRLs, path length, etc. into account.

TLS client and server

The mbedtls.tls module provides TLS clients and servers. The API follows the recommendations of PEP 543. Note, however, that the Python standard SSL library does not follow the PEP so that this library may not be a drop-in replacement.

Here are some simple HTTP messages to pass from the client to the server and back.

>>> get_request = "\r\n".join((
...     "GET / HTTP/1.0",
...     "",
...     "")).encode("ascii")
...
>>> http_response = "\r\n".join((
...     "HTTP/1.0 200 OK",
...     "Content-Type: text/html",
...     "",
...     "<h2>Test Server</h2>",
...     "<p>Successful connection.</p>",
...     "")).encode("ascii")
...
>>> http_error = "\r\n".join((
...     "HTTP/1.0 400 Bad Request",
...     "",
...     ""))
...

For this example, the trust store just consists in the root certificate ca0_crt from the previous section.

>>> from mbedtls import tls
>>> trust_store = tls.TrustStore()
>>> trust_store.add(ca0_crt)

The next step is to configure the TLS contexts for server and client.

>>> tls_srv_ctx = tls.ServerContext(tls.TLSConfiguration(
...     trust_store=trust_store,
...     certificate_chain=([ee0_crt, ca1_crt], ee0_key),
...     validate_certificates=False,
... ))
...
>>> tls_cli_ctx = tls.ClientContext(tls.TLSConfiguration(
...     trust_store=trust_store,
...     validate_certificates=True,
... ))
...

The contexts are used to wrap TCP sockets.

>>> import socket
>>> tls_srv = tls_srv_ctx.wrap_socket(
...     socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
... )
...
>>> from contextlib import suppress
>>> def block(callback, *args, **kwargs):
...     while True:
...         with suppress(tls.WantReadError, tls.WantWriteError):
...             return callback(*args, **kwargs)
...

The server starts in its own process in this example because accept() is blocking.

>>> def server_main_loop(sock):
...     conn, addr = sock.accept()
...     block(conn.do_handshake)
...     data = conn.recv(1024)
...     if data == get_request:
...         conn.sendall(http_response)
...     else:
...         conn.sendall(http_error)
...
>>> port = 4433
>>> tls_srv.setsockopt(socket.SOL_SOCKET, socket.SO_REUSEADDR, 1)
>>> tls_srv.bind(("0.0.0.0", port))
>>> tls_srv.listen(1)
>>> import multiprocessing as mp
>>> runner = mp.Process(target=server_main_loop, args=(tls_srv, ))
>>> runner.start()

Finally, a client queries the server with the get_request:

>>> tls_cli = tls_cli_ctx.wrap_socket(
...     socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM),
...     server_hostname=None,
... )
...
>>> tls_cli.connect(("localhost", port))
>>> block(tls_cli.do_handshake)
>>> tls_cli.send(get_request)
18
>>> response = block(tls_cli.recv, 1024)
>>> print(response.decode("ascii").replace("\r\n", "\n"))
HTTP/1.0 200 OK
Content-Type: text/html
<BLANKLINE>
<h2>Test Server</h2>
<p>Successful connection.</p>
<BLANKLINE>

The last step is to stop the extra process and close the sockets.

>>> tls_cli.close()
>>> runner.join(1.0)
>>> tls_srv.close()

DTLS client and server

The mbedtls.tls module further provides DTLS (encrypted UDP traffic). Client and server must be bound and connected for the handshake so that DTLS should use recv() and send() as well.

The example reuses the certificate and trust store from the TLS example. However server and client are now initialized with DTLSConfiguration instances instead of TLSConfiguration.

>>> dtls_srv_ctx = tls.ServerContext(tls.DTLSConfiguration(
...     trust_store=trust_store,
...     certificate_chain=([ee0_crt, ca1_crt], ee0_key),
...     validate_certificates=False,
... ))
...
>>> dtls_cli_ctx = tls.ClientContext(tls.DTLSConfiguration(
...     trust_store=trust_store,
...     validate_certificates=True,
... ))

The DTLS contexts can now wrap UDP sockets.

>>> dtls_srv = dtls_srv_ctx.wrap_socket(
...     socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_DGRAM)
... )
...

Here again, the accept() method blocks until the server receives a datagram. The DTLS server handshake is performed in two steps. The first handshake is interrupted by an HelloVerifyRequest exception. The server should then set a client-specific cookie and resume the handshake. The second step of the handshake should succeed.

>>> def dtls_server_main_loop(sock):
...     """A simple DTLS echo server."""
...     conn, addr = sock.accept()
...     conn.setcookieparam(addr[0].encode())
...     with suppress(tls.HelloVerifyRequest):
...        block(conn.do_handshake)
...     conn, addr = conn.accept()
...     conn.setcookieparam(addr[0].encode())
...     block(conn.do_handshake)
...     data = conn.recv(4096)
...     conn.send(data)
...
>>> port = 4443
>>> dtls_srv.setsockopt(socket.SOL_SOCKET, socket.SO_REUSEADDR, 1)
>>> dtls_srv.bind(("0.0.0.0", port))

In contrast with TCP (TLS), there is not call to listen() for UDP.

>>> runner = mp.Process(target=dtls_server_main_loop, args=(dtls_srv, ))
>>> runner.start()

The DTLS client is mostly identical to the TLS client:

>>> dtls_cli = dtls_cli_ctx.wrap_socket(
...     socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_DGRAM),
...     server_hostname=None,
... )
>>> dtls_cli.connect(("localhost", port))
>>> block(dtls_cli.do_handshake)
>>> DATAGRAM = b"hello datagram"
>>> block(dtls_cli.send, DATAGRAM)
14
>>> block(dtls_cli.recv, 4096)
b'hello datagram'

Now, the DTLS communication is complete.

>>> dtls_cli.close()
>>> runner.join(0.1)
>>> dtls_srv.close()

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

python-mbedtls-1.0.0.tar.gz (118.7 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distributions

File details

Details for the file python-mbedtls-1.0.0.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: python-mbedtls-1.0.0.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 118.7 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: devpi-server/5.3.1 (py3.6.7; linux)

File hashes

Hashes for python-mbedtls-1.0.0.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 7c9749fe97e1bba02831c2fbfe8089432fe61c5ba9a671560e4b027e9afe7a1a
MD5 7171beb199f0335b6a72ae3a2817536a
BLAKE2b-256 7b31c6f72e4c0c3f5d882f35056f405eea23a42b8f4f19515cc10b3b2b3925c3

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file python_mbedtls-1.0.0-cp38-cp38-manylinux1_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for python_mbedtls-1.0.0-cp38-cp38-manylinux1_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 912c8d0c1a7e474fed83bba77997e8c265348db94157ee33b7866dd0686ce1c8
MD5 de428846ffcb9eed924b9ce65aa4fb76
BLAKE2b-256 ce826bc4b06fc78d89f316711d8cfd6a61d2029ab10747e40cb34eb22563e0bb

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file python_mbedtls-1.0.0-cp37-cp37m-manylinux1_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for python_mbedtls-1.0.0-cp37-cp37m-manylinux1_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 4af6c0ae73c209ec48ec6aed795b5926557833179706f41b4a7ce870bafb41bf
MD5 c2e94d67a179948377b0370f598704cb
BLAKE2b-256 0887eb2da2b434b31b019d74ee716aa244c6d00a56a4c53b9273ea1f470b638c

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file python_mbedtls-1.0.0-cp36-cp36m-manylinux1_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for python_mbedtls-1.0.0-cp36-cp36m-manylinux1_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 ae5d3a0c755bdedd430efca40d56a6dda4b538c471908a92356d944e3f218f8d
MD5 a19999dff711c7436c00f6336a696f41
BLAKE2b-256 e928857ccea633c9265118b53e74b5f1f02d0372ad60541ad36190fa17c81909

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file python_mbedtls-1.0.0-cp35-cp35m-manylinux1_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for python_mbedtls-1.0.0-cp35-cp35m-manylinux1_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 1dc8f6c78344547f45eb463835f9768d19231333d92ec210d647bba1892b6f8a
MD5 2c2901e452ec049120648cb93676e7f3
BLAKE2b-256 7e83aa290e0620d1a8e88a575463f3d2839f505cd3986c6c2a3e1b48833ef705

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file python_mbedtls-1.0.0-cp34-cp34m-manylinux1_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for python_mbedtls-1.0.0-cp34-cp34m-manylinux1_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 b038c41820a601acc923895a6e870ed5c09a64ef64efd213e62c10ae58bf7d59
MD5 b0949b0ca2990fa59e625ab744bdcaa2
BLAKE2b-256 89aaaf5b01f79b185f8cfd0f151c19910dadf91189b132df58b3dba925dd5715

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file python_mbedtls-1.0.0-cp27-cp27mu-manylinux1_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for python_mbedtls-1.0.0-cp27-cp27mu-manylinux1_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 dee2932f9e73e69079de8373aadce40c67c7921db921bb368b1ad33e1ecc8f97
MD5 561118467b9763b1f719741fd1f5a9f9
BLAKE2b-256 164b4c38ce190ee35906829c735af0afbcc0d12690b252c5360ca8f228753dc6

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file python_mbedtls-1.0.0-cp27-cp27m-manylinux1_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for python_mbedtls-1.0.0-cp27-cp27m-manylinux1_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 550e59f52bbaaca5c0a409cdb30e12705c65bd6fa585cc9942d697a194e5c986
MD5 6f42fd0d0b528a401e462dcc9993264c
BLAKE2b-256 7d0fc13c8445825deb65ceb745c135d201b294887e72fbe1b957bfcf12de0a3e

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page