/* Functions to compute MD5 message digest of files or memory blocks. according to the definition of MD5 in RFC 1321 from April 1992. Copyright (C) 1995,1996,1997,1999,2000,2001,2005,2006,2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of the GNU C Library. This program 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 2, or (at your option) any later version. This program 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 this program. If not, see . */ /* Written by Ulrich Drepper , 1995. */ #ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H # include #endif #include "mailutils/md5.h" #include #include #include #include #if USE_UNLOCKED_IO # include "unlocked-io.h" #endif #ifdef _LIBC # include # if __BYTE_ORDER == __BIG_ENDIAN # define WORDS_BIGENDIAN 1 # endif #endif /* We need to keep the namespace clean so define the MD5 function protected using leading __ . */ # define md5_init_ctx __md5_init_ctx # define md5_process_block __md5_process_block # define md5_process_bytes __md5_process_bytes # define md5_finish_ctx __md5_finish_ctx # define md5_read_ctx __md5_read_ctx # define md5_stream __md5_stream # define md5_buffer __md5_buffer #ifdef WORDS_BIGENDIAN # define SWAP(n) \ (((n) << 24) | (((n) & 0xff00) << 8) | (((n) >> 8) & 0xff00) | ((n) >> 24)) #else # define SWAP(n) (n) #endif #define BLOCKSIZE 4096 #if BLOCKSIZE % 64 != 0 # error "invalid BLOCKSIZE" #endif /* This array contains the bytes used to pad the buffer to the next 64-byte boundary. (RFC 1321, 3.1: Step 1) */ static const unsigned char fillbuf[64] = { 0x80, 0 /* , 0, 0, ... */ }; /* Initialize structure containing state of computation. (RFC 1321, 3.3: Step 3) */ void md5_init_ctx (struct md5_ctx *ctx) { ctx->A = 0x67452301; ctx->B = 0xefcdab89; ctx->C = 0x98badcfe; ctx->D = 0x10325476; ctx->total[0] = ctx->total[1] = 0; ctx->buflen = 0; } /* Put result from CTX in first 16 bytes following RESBUF. The result must be in little endian byte order. IMPORTANT: On some systems it is required that RESBUF is correctly aligned for a 32-bit value. */ void * md5_read_ctx (const struct md5_ctx *ctx, void *resbuf) { ((uint32_t *) resbuf)[0] = SWAP (ctx->A); ((uint32_t *) resbuf)[1] = SWAP (ctx->B); ((uint32_t *) resbuf)[2] = SWAP (ctx->C); ((uint32_t *) resbuf)[3] = SWAP (ctx->D); return resbuf; } /* Process the remaining bytes in the internal buffer and the usual prolog according to the standard and write the result to RESBUF. IMPORTANT: On some systems it is required that RESBUF is correctly aligned for a 32-bit value. */ void * md5_finish_ctx (struct md5_ctx *ctx, void *resbuf) { /* Take yet unprocessed bytes into account. */ uint32_t bytes = ctx->buflen; size_t size = (bytes < 56) ? 64 / 4 : 64 * 2 / 4; /* Now count remaining bytes. */ ctx->total[0] += bytes; if (ctx->total[0] < bytes) ++ctx->total[1]; /* Put the 64-bit file length in *bits* at the end of the buffer. */ ctx->buffer[size - 2] = SWAP (ctx->total[0] << 3); ctx->buffer[size - 1] = SWAP ((ctx->total[1] << 3) | (ctx->total[0] >> 29)); memcpy (&((char *) ctx->buffer)[bytes], fillbuf, (size - 2) * 4 - bytes); /* Process last bytes. */ md5_process_block (ctx->buffer, size * 4, ctx); return md5_read_ctx (ctx, resbuf); } /* Compute MD5 message digest for bytes read from STREAM. The resulting message digest number will be written into the 16 bytes beginning at RESBLOCK. */ int md5_stream (FILE *stream, void *resblock) { struct md5_ctx ctx; char buffer[BLOCKSIZE + 72]; size_t sum; /* Initialize the computation context. */ md5_init_ctx (&ctx); /* Iterate over full file contents. */ while (1) { /* We read the file in blocks of BLOCKSIZE bytes. One call of the computation function processes the whole buffer so that with the next round of the loop another block can be read. */ size_t n; sum = 0; /* Read block. Take care for partial reads. */ while (1) { n = fread (buffer + sum, 1, BLOCKSIZE - sum, stream); sum += n; if (sum == BLOCKSIZE) break; if (n == 0) { /* Check for the error flag IFF N == 0, so that we don't exit the loop after a partial read due to e.g., EAGAIN or EWOULDBLOCK. */ if (ferror (stream)) return 1; goto process_partial_block; } /* We've read at least one byte, so ignore errors. But always check for EOF, since feof may be true even though N > 0. Otherwise, we could end up calling fread after EOF. */ if (feof (stream)) goto process_partial_block; } /* Process buffer with BLOCKSIZE bytes. Note that BLOCKSIZE % 64 == 0 */ md5_process_block (buffer, BLOCKSIZE, &ctx); } process_partial_block: /* Process any remaining bytes. */ if (sum > 0) md5_process_bytes (buffer, sum, &ctx); /* Construct result in desired memory. */ md5_finish_ctx (&ctx, resblock); return 0; } /* Compute MD5 message digest for LEN bytes beginning at BUFFER. The result is always in little endian byte order, so that a byte-wise output yields to the wanted ASCII representation of the message digest. */ void * md5_buffer (const char *buffer, size_t len, void *resblock) { struct md5_ctx ctx; /* Initialize the computation context. */ md5_init_ctx (&ctx); /* Process whole buffer but last len % 64 bytes. */ md5_process_bytes (buffer, len, &ctx); /* Put result in desired memory area. */ return md5_finish_ctx (&ctx, resblock); } void md5_process_bytes (const void *buffer, size_t len, struct md5_ctx *ctx) { /* When we already have some bits in our internal buffer concatenate both inputs first. */ if (ctx->buflen != 0) { size_t left_over = ctx->buflen; size_t add = 128 - left_over > len ? len : 128 - left_over; memcpy (&((char *) ctx->buffer)[left_over], buffer, add); ctx->buflen += add; if (ctx->buflen > 64) { md5_process_block (ctx->buffer, ctx->buflen & ~63, ctx); ctx->buflen &= 63; /* The regions in the following copy operation cannot overlap. */ memcpy (ctx->buffer, &((char *) ctx->buffer)[(left_over + add) & ~63], ctx->buflen); } buffer = (const char *) buffer + add; len -= add; } /* Process available complete blocks. */ if (len >= 64) { #if !_STRING_ARCH_unaligned # define alignof(type) offsetof (struct { char c; type x; }, x) # define UNALIGNED_P(p) (((size_t) p) % alignof (uint32_t) != 0) if (UNALIGNED_P (buffer)) while (len > 64) { md5_process_block (memcpy (ctx->buffer, buffer, 64), 64, ctx); buffer = (const char *) buffer + 64; len -= 64; } else #endif { md5_process_block (buffer, len & ~63, ctx); buffer = (const char *) buffer + (len & ~63); len &= 63; } } /* Move remaining bytes in internal buffer. */ if (len > 0) { size_t left_over = ctx->buflen; memcpy (&((char *) ctx->buffer)[left_over], buffer, len); left_over += len; if (left_over >= 64) { md5_process_block (ctx->buffer, 64, ctx); left_over -= 64; memcpy (ctx->buffer, &ctx->buffer[16], left_over); } ctx->buflen = left_over; } } /* These are the four functions used in the four steps of the MD5 algorithm and defined in the RFC 1321. The first function is a little bit optimized (as found in Colin Plumbs public domain implementation). */ /* #define FF(b, c, d) ((b & c) | (~b & d)) */ #define FF(b, c, d) (d ^ (b & (c ^ d))) #define FG(b, c, d) FF (d, b, c) #define FH(b, c, d) (b ^ c ^ d) #define FI(b, c, d) (c ^ (b | ~d)) /* Process LEN bytes of BUFFER, accumulating context into CTX. It is assumed that LEN % 64 == 0. */ void md5_process_block (const void *buffer, size_t len, struct md5_ctx *ctx) { uint32_t correct_words[16]; const uint32_t *words = buffer; size_t nwords = len / sizeof (uint32_t); const uint32_t *endp = words + nwords; uint32_t A = ctx->A; uint32_t B = ctx->B; uint32_t C = ctx->C; uint32_t D = ctx->D; /* First increment the byte count. RFC 1321 specifies the possible length of the file up to 2^64 bits. Here we only compute the number of bytes. Do a double word increment. */ ctx->total[0] += len; if (ctx->total[0] < len) ++ctx->total[1]; /* Process all bytes in the buffer with 64 bytes in each round of the loop. */ while (words < endp) { uint32_t *cwp = correct_words; uint32_t A_save = A; uint32_t B_save = B; uint32_t C_save = C; uint32_t D_save = D; /* First round: using the given function, the context and a constant the next context is computed. Because the algorithms processing unit is a 32-bit word and it is determined to work on words in little endian byte order we perhaps have to change the byte order before the computation. To reduce the work for the next steps we store the swapped words in the array CORRECT_WORDS. */ #define OP(a, b, c, d, s, T) \ do \ { \ a += FF (b, c, d) + (*cwp++ = SWAP (*words)) + T; \ ++words; \ CYCLIC (a, s); \ a += b; \ } \ while (0) /* It is unfortunate that C does not provide an operator for cyclic rotation. Hope the C compiler is smart enough. */ #define CYCLIC(w, s) (w = (w << s) | (w >> (32 - s))) /* Before we start, one word to the strange constants. They are defined in RFC 1321 as T[i] = (int) (4294967296.0 * fabs (sin (i))), i=1..64 Here is an equivalent invocation using Perl: perl -e 'foreach(1..64){printf "0x%08x\n", int (4294967296 * abs (sin $_))}' */ /* Round 1. */ OP (A, B, C, D, 7, 0xd76aa478); OP (D, A, B, C, 12, 0xe8c7b756); OP (C, D, A, B, 17, 0x242070db); OP (B, C, D, A, 22, 0xc1bdceee); OP (A, B, C, D, 7, 0xf57c0faf); OP (D, A, B, C, 12, 0x4787c62a); OP (C, D, A, B, 17, 0xa8304613); OP (B, C, D, A, 22, 0xfd469501); OP (A, B, C, D, 7, 0x698098d8); OP (D, A, B, C, 12, 0x8b44f7af); OP (C, D, A, B, 17, 0xffff5bb1); OP (B, C, D, A, 22, 0x895cd7be); OP (A, B, C, D, 7, 0x6b901122); OP (D, A, B, C, 12, 0xfd987193); OP (C, D, A, B, 17, 0xa679438e); OP (B, C, D, A, 22, 0x49b40821); /* For the second to fourth round we have the possibly swapped words in CORRECT_WORDS. Redefine the macro to take an additional first argument specifying the function to use. */ #undef OP #define OP(f, a, b, c, d, k, s, T) \ do \ { \ a += f (b, c, d) + correct_words[k] + T; \ CYCLIC (a, s); \ a += b; \ } \ while (0) /* Round 2. */ OP (FG, A, B, C, D, 1, 5, 0xf61e2562); OP (FG, D, A, B, C, 6, 9, 0xc040b340); OP (FG, C, D, A, B, 11, 14, 0x265e5a51); OP (FG, B, C, D, A, 0, 20, 0xe9b6c7aa); OP (FG, A, B, C, D, 5, 5, 0xd62f105d); OP (FG, D, A, B, C, 10, 9, 0x02441453); OP (FG, C, D, A, B, 15, 14, 0xd8a1e681); OP (FG, B, C, D, A, 4, 20, 0xe7d3fbc8); OP (FG, A, B, C, D, 9, 5, 0x21e1cde6); OP (FG, D, A, B, C, 14, 9, 0xc33707d6); OP (FG, C, D, A, B, 3, 14, 0xf4d50d87); OP (FG, B, C, D, A, 8, 20, 0x455a14ed); OP (FG, A, B, C, D, 13, 5, 0xa9e3e905); OP (FG, D, A, B, C, 2, 9, 0xfcefa3f8); OP (FG, C, D, A, B, 7, 14, 0x676f02d9); OP (FG, B, C, D, A, 12, 20, 0x8d2a4c8a); /* Round 3. */ OP (FH, A, B, C, D, 5, 4, 0xfffa3942); OP (FH, D, A, B, C, 8, 11, 0x8771f681); OP (FH, C, D, A, B, 11, 16, 0x6d9d6122); OP (FH, B, C, D, A, 14, 23, 0xfde5380c); OP (FH, A, B, C, D, 1, 4, 0xa4beea44); OP (FH, D, A, B, C, 4, 11, 0x4bdecfa9); OP (FH, C, D, A, B, 7, 16, 0xf6bb4b60); OP (FH, B, C, D, A, 10, 23, 0xbebfbc70); OP (FH, A, B, C, D, 13, 4, 0x289b7ec6); OP (FH, D, A, B, C, 0, 11, 0xeaa127fa); OP (FH, C, D, A, B, 3, 16, 0xd4ef3085); OP (FH, B, C, D, A, 6, 23, 0x04881d05); OP (FH, A, B, C, D, 9, 4, 0xd9d4d039); OP (FH, D, A, B, C, 12, 11, 0xe6db99e5); OP (FH, C, D, A, B, 15, 16, 0x1fa27cf8); OP (FH, B, C, D, A, 2, 23, 0xc4ac5665); /* Round 4. */ OP (FI, A, B, C, D, 0, 6, 0xf4292244); OP (FI, D, A, B, C, 7, 10, 0x432aff97); OP (FI, C, D, A, B, 14, 15, 0xab9423a7); OP (FI, B, C, D, A, 5, 21, 0xfc93a039); OP (FI, A, B, C, D, 12, 6, 0x655b59c3); OP (FI, D, A, B, C, 3, 10, 0x8f0ccc92); OP (FI, C, D, A, B, 10, 15, 0xffeff47d); OP (FI, B, C, D, A, 1, 21, 0x85845dd1); OP (FI, A, B, C, D, 8, 6, 0x6fa87e4f); OP (FI, D, A, B, C, 15, 10, 0xfe2ce6e0); OP (FI, C, D, A, B, 6, 15, 0xa3014314); OP (FI, B, C, D, A, 13, 21, 0x4e0811a1); OP (FI, A, B, C, D, 4, 6, 0xf7537e82); OP (FI, D, A, B, C, 11, 10, 0xbd3af235); OP (FI, C, D, A, B, 2, 15, 0x2ad7d2bb); OP (FI, B, C, D, A, 9, 21, 0xeb86d391); /* Add the starting values of the context. */ A += A_save; B += B_save; C += C_save; D += D_save; } /* Put checksum in context given as argument. */ ctx->A = A; ctx->B = B; ctx->C = C; ctx->D = D; }