使用RSA私钥加密消息(如OpenSSL的RSA_private_encrypt)
I'm trying to implement Chef API client in Go, but stuck trying to create correct request header RSA signature. According to documentation:
A canonical header is signed with the private key used by the client machine from which the request is sent, and is also encoded using Base64.
The following ruby call to OpenSSL::PKey::RSA.private_encrypt()
can be found in mixlib-authentication
gem code, it uses OpenSSL bindings, private_encrypt()
method calls RSA_private_encrypt
openssl function.
Unfortunately, I cannot find matching function in Go's standard library; crypto/rsa
looks close, but it only implements conventional cryptography methods: encryption with public key, hash signing with private key. OpenSSL's RSA_private_encrypt
does the opposite: it encrypts (small) message with private key (akin to creating a signature from message hash).
This "signing" can also be achieved with this command:
openssl rsautl -sign -inkey path/to/private/key.pem \
-in file/to/encrypt -out encrypted/output
Are there any native Go libraries to achieve the same result as OpenSSL's RSA_private_encrypt
, or the only way is using Cgo to call this function from OpenSSL library? Maybe I'm missing something. My idea was implementing the client without any non-go dependencies.
I'm a Go newbie, so I'm not sure I can dive into crypto/rsa
module sources.
Found the similar question, but the answer to use SignPKCS1v15
is obviously wrong (this function encrypts message's hash, not the message itself).
With great help of the golang community, the solution was found:
Original code posted at http://play.golang.org/p/jrqN2KnUEM by Alex (see mailing list).
I've added input block size check as specified in Section 8 of rfc2313: http://play.golang.org/p/dGTl9siO8E
Here's the code:
package main
import (
"crypto/rsa"
"crypto/x509"
"encoding/pem"
"errors"
"fmt"
"io/ioutil"
"math/big"
"os/exec"
)
var (
ErrInputSize = errors.New("input size too large")
ErrEncryption = errors.New("encryption error")
)
func PrivateEncrypt(priv *rsa.PrivateKey, data []byte) (enc []byte, err error) {
k := (priv.N.BitLen() + 7) / 8
tLen := len(data)
// rfc2313, section 8:
// The length of the data D shall not be more than k-11 octets
if tLen > k-11 {
err = ErrInputSize
return
}
em := make([]byte, k)
em[1] = 1
for i := 2; i < k-tLen-1; i++ {
em[i] = 0xff
}
copy(em[k-tLen:k], data)
c := new(big.Int).SetBytes(em)
if c.Cmp(priv.N) > 0 {
err = ErrEncryption
return
}
var m *big.Int
var ir *big.Int
if priv.Precomputed.Dp == nil {
m = new(big.Int).Exp(c, priv.D, priv.N)
} else {
// We have the precalculated values needed for the CRT.
m = new(big.Int).Exp(c, priv.Precomputed.Dp, priv.Primes[0])
m2 := new(big.Int).Exp(c, priv.Precomputed.Dq, priv.Primes[1])
m.Sub(m, m2)
if m.Sign() < 0 {
m.Add(m, priv.Primes[0])
}
m.Mul(m, priv.Precomputed.Qinv)
m.Mod(m, priv.Primes[0])
m.Mul(m, priv.Primes[1])
m.Add(m, m2)
for i, values := range priv.Precomputed.CRTValues {
prime := priv.Primes[2+i]
m2.Exp(c, values.Exp, prime)
m2.Sub(m2, m)
m2.Mul(m2, values.Coeff)
m2.Mod(m2, prime)
if m2.Sign() < 0 {
m2.Add(m2, prime)
}
m2.Mul(m2, values.R)
m.Add(m, m2)
}
}
if ir != nil {
// Unblind.
m.Mul(m, ir)
m.Mod(m, priv.N)
}
enc = m.Bytes()
return
}
func main() {
// o is output from openssl
o, _ := exec.Command("openssl", "rsautl", "-sign", "-inkey", "t.key", "-in", "in.txt").Output()
// t.key is private keyfile
// in.txt is what to encode
kt, _ := ioutil.ReadFile("t.key")
e, _ := ioutil.ReadFile("in.txt")
block, _ := pem.Decode(kt)
privkey, _ := x509.ParsePKCS1PrivateKey(block.Bytes)
encData, _ := PrivateEncrypt(privkey, e)
fmt.Println(encData)
fmt.Println(o)
fmt.Println(string(o) == string(encData))
}
Update: we can expect to have a native support for this kind of signing in Go 1.3, see the appropriate commit.
Welcome to the joys of openssl... That is an incredibly poorly named function. If you poke around in the ruby code it's calling this openssl function
http://www.openssl.org/docs/crypto/RSA_private_encrypt.html
Reading the documentation, this is actually signing the buffer with the private key and not encrypting it.
DESCRIPTION
These functions handle RSA signatures at a low level.
RSA_private_encrypt() signs the flen bytes at from (usually a message digest with an algorithm identifier) using the private key rsa and stores the signature in to. to must point to RSA_size(rsa) bytes of memory.
Since go 1.3
, you can easily do this using SignPKCS1v15
rsa.SignPKCS1v15(nil, priv, crypto.Hash(0), signedData)
refer: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/Golang-Nuts/Vocj33WNhJQ
I stuck on this question for a while.
Eventually, I soleved that with the code here: https://github.com/bitmartexchange/bitmart-go-api/blob/master/bm_client.go
// Sign secret with rsa with PKCS 1.5 as the padding algorithm
// The result should be exactly same as "openssl rsautl -sign -inkey "YOUR_RSA_PRIVATE_KEY" -in "YOUR_PLAIN_TEXT""
signer, err := rsa.SignPKCS1v15(rand.Reader, rsaPrivateKey.(*rsa.PrivateKey), crypto.Hash(0), []byte(message))