Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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This disrupts building at least with Visual Studio.
Signed-off-by: Alexey Rusakov <ktirf@users.sf.net>
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olm_import_inbound_group_session, which reads the format written by
olm_export_inbound_group_session to initialise a group session.
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A pair of functions which allow you to export the megolm keys for an inbound
group session, so that an application can save/restore them.
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All the other methods clear their random inputs. This one needs to do the same,
to reduce the risk of the randomness being used elsewhere and leaking key info.
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Applications can use the index to detect replays of the same message.
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Document what it actually returns.
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Remove the messsage index from olm_init_inbound_group_session
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read from the session_key
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Add ed25519 keys to the inbound and outbound sessions, and use them to sign and
verify megolm messages.
We just stuff the ed25519 public key in alongside the megolm session key (and
add a version byte), to save adding more boilerplate to the JS/python/etc
layers.
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Remove redundant args from some js funcs, and fix a comment typo
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... so that I can use them from the group session bits.
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OlmSession.has_received_message
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I find myself wanting to know if an OlmSession is in the pre-key state or not,
to help debugging at the application level.
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We were using olm::KEY_LENGTH for everything under the sun which happened to be
32 bytes long, and making a bunch of assumptions in the process. Create a bunch
of new constants (as C #defines rather than C++ consts so that I can use them
in another forthcoming refactor).
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Ed25519 private keys, it turns out, have 64 bytes, not 32.
We were previously generating only 32 bytes (which is all that is required to
generate the public key), and then using the public key as the upper 32 bytes
when generating the per-message session key. This meant that everything
appeared to work, but the security of the private key was severely compromised.
By way of fixes:
* Use the correct algorithm for generating the Ed25519 private key, and store
all 512 bits of it.
* Update the account pickle format and refuse to load the old format (since we
should consider it compromised).
* Bump the library version, and add a function to retrieve the library
version, so that applications can verify that they are linked against a
fixed version of the library.
* Remove the curve25519_{sign, verify} functions which were unused and of
dubious quality.
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Keeping track of the chain index is a useful thing to do, but is only required
if we've enabled diagnostics. Extend the session pickle format to make a space
for it, so that pickles can be transferred between the logging_enabled branch
and the master branch without loss of information.
Also add some tests for session pickling which explicitly check that we can
unpickle both formats of pickle.
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This was introduced when I was experimenting with support for logging progress
in Olm. That is now relegated to the logging_enabled branch, so this should
probably be removed.
This also fixes the incompatibility of session pickles from the current master
branch with those from olm 0.1.0.
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Putting the session_id inside the packed message body makes it hard to extract
so that we can decide which session to use. We don't think there is any
advantage to having thes sesion_id protected by the HMACs, so we're going to
move it to the JSON framing.
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Factor the actual message encoding/decoding and encrypting/decrypting out to
separate functions from the top-level functions which do the base64-wrangling.
This is particularly helpful in the 'outbound' code-path where the offsets
required to allow room to base64-encode make the flow hard to see when it's all inline.
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Initialise megolm_cipher via the preprocessor macro, instead of with a
function.
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Make names (of session_key and message_index) more consistent.
Use our own protobuf tags rather than trying to piggyback on the one-to-one
structure.
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Includes creation of inbound sessions, etc
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We need to be able to inspect an outbound session so that we can tell our peer
how to set up an inbound session.
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We don't need to have all of the top-level pickling functions in olm.cpp;
factor out the utilities to support it to pickle_encoding.cpp (and make sure
that they have plain-C bindings).
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I want to be able to use this functionality from elsewhere, so factor it out to
its own file.
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Replace the init-static-var dance with some preprocessor macros
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We never delete a cipher, and the destruct op is empty, so it's a bit pointless
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Give a load of internal symbols "_olm_" prefixes. This better delineates the
public and private interfaces in the module, and helps avoid internal symbols
leaking out and possibly being abused.
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We don't want anything which does dynamic memory allocation in the library.
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Remove the (now non-functional) declarations of olm_set_log_level in the C and
js wrappers.
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Concerns have been raised that including logging functionality makes it harder
to audit the implementation to ensure that no secret information is leaked. We
are therefore removing it from the master branch.
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