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					1092 lines
				
				38 KiB
			| 
											2 years ago
										 | /** | ||
|  |  * Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) implementation. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * This implementation is based on the public domain library 'jscrypto' which | ||
|  |  * was written by: | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * Emily Stark (estark@stanford.edu) | ||
|  |  * Mike Hamburg (mhamburg@stanford.edu) | ||
|  |  * Dan Boneh (dabo@cs.stanford.edu) | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * Parts of this code are based on the OpenSSL implementation of AES: | ||
|  |  * http://www.openssl.org
 | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * @author Dave Longley | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * Copyright (c) 2010-2014 Digital Bazaar, Inc. | ||
|  |  */ | ||
|  | var forge = require('./forge'); | ||
|  | require('./cipher'); | ||
|  | require('./cipherModes'); | ||
|  | require('./util'); | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | /* AES API */ | ||
|  | module.exports = forge.aes = forge.aes || {}; | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | /** | ||
|  |  * Deprecated. Instead, use: | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * var cipher = forge.cipher.createCipher('AES-<mode>', key); | ||
|  |  * cipher.start({iv: iv}); | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * Creates an AES cipher object to encrypt data using the given symmetric key. | ||
|  |  * The output will be stored in the 'output' member of the returned cipher. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * The key and iv may be given as a string of bytes, an array of bytes, | ||
|  |  * a byte buffer, or an array of 32-bit words. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * @param key the symmetric key to use. | ||
|  |  * @param iv the initialization vector to use. | ||
|  |  * @param output the buffer to write to, null to create one. | ||
|  |  * @param mode the cipher mode to use (default: 'CBC'). | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * @return the cipher. | ||
|  |  */ | ||
|  | forge.aes.startEncrypting = function(key, iv, output, mode) { | ||
|  |   var cipher = _createCipher({ | ||
|  |     key: key, | ||
|  |     output: output, | ||
|  |     decrypt: false, | ||
|  |     mode: mode | ||
|  |   }); | ||
|  |   cipher.start(iv); | ||
|  |   return cipher; | ||
|  | }; | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | /** | ||
|  |  * Deprecated. Instead, use: | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * var cipher = forge.cipher.createCipher('AES-<mode>', key); | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * Creates an AES cipher object to encrypt data using the given symmetric key. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * The key may be given as a string of bytes, an array of bytes, a | ||
|  |  * byte buffer, or an array of 32-bit words. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * @param key the symmetric key to use. | ||
|  |  * @param mode the cipher mode to use (default: 'CBC'). | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * @return the cipher. | ||
|  |  */ | ||
|  | forge.aes.createEncryptionCipher = function(key, mode) { | ||
|  |   return _createCipher({ | ||
|  |     key: key, | ||
|  |     output: null, | ||
|  |     decrypt: false, | ||
|  |     mode: mode | ||
|  |   }); | ||
|  | }; | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | /** | ||
|  |  * Deprecated. Instead, use: | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * var decipher = forge.cipher.createDecipher('AES-<mode>', key); | ||
|  |  * decipher.start({iv: iv}); | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * Creates an AES cipher object to decrypt data using the given symmetric key. | ||
|  |  * The output will be stored in the 'output' member of the returned cipher. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * The key and iv may be given as a string of bytes, an array of bytes, | ||
|  |  * a byte buffer, or an array of 32-bit words. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * @param key the symmetric key to use. | ||
|  |  * @param iv the initialization vector to use. | ||
|  |  * @param output the buffer to write to, null to create one. | ||
|  |  * @param mode the cipher mode to use (default: 'CBC'). | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * @return the cipher. | ||
|  |  */ | ||
|  | forge.aes.startDecrypting = function(key, iv, output, mode) { | ||
|  |   var cipher = _createCipher({ | ||
|  |     key: key, | ||
|  |     output: output, | ||
|  |     decrypt: true, | ||
|  |     mode: mode | ||
|  |   }); | ||
|  |   cipher.start(iv); | ||
|  |   return cipher; | ||
|  | }; | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | /** | ||
|  |  * Deprecated. Instead, use: | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * var decipher = forge.cipher.createDecipher('AES-<mode>', key); | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * Creates an AES cipher object to decrypt data using the given symmetric key. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * The key may be given as a string of bytes, an array of bytes, a | ||
|  |  * byte buffer, or an array of 32-bit words. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * @param key the symmetric key to use. | ||
|  |  * @param mode the cipher mode to use (default: 'CBC'). | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * @return the cipher. | ||
|  |  */ | ||
|  | forge.aes.createDecryptionCipher = function(key, mode) { | ||
|  |   return _createCipher({ | ||
|  |     key: key, | ||
|  |     output: null, | ||
|  |     decrypt: true, | ||
|  |     mode: mode | ||
|  |   }); | ||
|  | }; | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | /** | ||
|  |  * Creates a new AES cipher algorithm object. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * @param name the name of the algorithm. | ||
|  |  * @param mode the mode factory function. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * @return the AES algorithm object. | ||
|  |  */ | ||
|  | forge.aes.Algorithm = function(name, mode) { | ||
|  |   if(!init) { | ||
|  |     initialize(); | ||
|  |   } | ||
|  |   var self = this; | ||
|  |   self.name = name; | ||
|  |   self.mode = new mode({ | ||
|  |     blockSize: 16, | ||
|  |     cipher: { | ||
|  |       encrypt: function(inBlock, outBlock) { | ||
|  |         return _updateBlock(self._w, inBlock, outBlock, false); | ||
|  |       }, | ||
|  |       decrypt: function(inBlock, outBlock) { | ||
|  |         return _updateBlock(self._w, inBlock, outBlock, true); | ||
|  |       } | ||
|  |     } | ||
|  |   }); | ||
|  |   self._init = false; | ||
|  | }; | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | /** | ||
|  |  * Initializes this AES algorithm by expanding its key. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * @param options the options to use. | ||
|  |  *          key the key to use with this algorithm. | ||
|  |  *          decrypt true if the algorithm should be initialized for decryption, | ||
|  |  *            false for encryption. | ||
|  |  */ | ||
|  | forge.aes.Algorithm.prototype.initialize = function(options) { | ||
|  |   if(this._init) { | ||
|  |     return; | ||
|  |   } | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |   var key = options.key; | ||
|  |   var tmp; | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |   /* Note: The key may be a string of bytes, an array of bytes, a byte | ||
|  |     buffer, or an array of 32-bit integers. If the key is in bytes, then | ||
|  |     it must be 16, 24, or 32 bytes in length. If it is in 32-bit | ||
|  |     integers, it must be 4, 6, or 8 integers long. */ | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |   if(typeof key === 'string' && | ||
|  |     (key.length === 16 || key.length === 24 || key.length === 32)) { | ||
|  |     // convert key string into byte buffer
 | ||
|  |     key = forge.util.createBuffer(key); | ||
|  |   } else if(forge.util.isArray(key) && | ||
|  |     (key.length === 16 || key.length === 24 || key.length === 32)) { | ||
|  |     // convert key integer array into byte buffer
 | ||
|  |     tmp = key; | ||
|  |     key = forge.util.createBuffer(); | ||
|  |     for(var i = 0; i < tmp.length; ++i) { | ||
|  |       key.putByte(tmp[i]); | ||
|  |     } | ||
|  |   } | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |   // convert key byte buffer into 32-bit integer array
 | ||
|  |   if(!forge.util.isArray(key)) { | ||
|  |     tmp = key; | ||
|  |     key = []; | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |     // key lengths of 16, 24, 32 bytes allowed
 | ||
|  |     var len = tmp.length(); | ||
|  |     if(len === 16 || len === 24 || len === 32) { | ||
|  |       len = len >>> 2; | ||
|  |       for(var i = 0; i < len; ++i) { | ||
|  |         key.push(tmp.getInt32()); | ||
|  |       } | ||
|  |     } | ||
|  |   } | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |   // key must be an array of 32-bit integers by now
 | ||
|  |   if(!forge.util.isArray(key) || | ||
|  |     !(key.length === 4 || key.length === 6 || key.length === 8)) { | ||
|  |     throw new Error('Invalid key parameter.'); | ||
|  |   } | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |   // encryption operation is always used for these modes
 | ||
|  |   var mode = this.mode.name; | ||
|  |   var encryptOp = (['CFB', 'OFB', 'CTR', 'GCM'].indexOf(mode) !== -1); | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |   // do key expansion
 | ||
|  |   this._w = _expandKey(key, options.decrypt && !encryptOp); | ||
|  |   this._init = true; | ||
|  | }; | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | /** | ||
|  |  * Expands a key. Typically only used for testing. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * @param key the symmetric key to expand, as an array of 32-bit words. | ||
|  |  * @param decrypt true to expand for decryption, false for encryption. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * @return the expanded key. | ||
|  |  */ | ||
|  | forge.aes._expandKey = function(key, decrypt) { | ||
|  |   if(!init) { | ||
|  |     initialize(); | ||
|  |   } | ||
|  |   return _expandKey(key, decrypt); | ||
|  | }; | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | /** | ||
|  |  * Updates a single block. Typically only used for testing. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * @param w the expanded key to use. | ||
|  |  * @param input an array of block-size 32-bit words. | ||
|  |  * @param output an array of block-size 32-bit words. | ||
|  |  * @param decrypt true to decrypt, false to encrypt. | ||
|  |  */ | ||
|  | forge.aes._updateBlock = _updateBlock; | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | /** Register AES algorithms **/ | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | registerAlgorithm('AES-ECB', forge.cipher.modes.ecb); | ||
|  | registerAlgorithm('AES-CBC', forge.cipher.modes.cbc); | ||
|  | registerAlgorithm('AES-CFB', forge.cipher.modes.cfb); | ||
|  | registerAlgorithm('AES-OFB', forge.cipher.modes.ofb); | ||
|  | registerAlgorithm('AES-CTR', forge.cipher.modes.ctr); | ||
|  | registerAlgorithm('AES-GCM', forge.cipher.modes.gcm); | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | function registerAlgorithm(name, mode) { | ||
|  |   var factory = function() { | ||
|  |     return new forge.aes.Algorithm(name, mode); | ||
|  |   }; | ||
|  |   forge.cipher.registerAlgorithm(name, factory); | ||
|  | } | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | /** AES implementation **/ | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | var init = false; // not yet initialized
 | ||
|  | var Nb = 4;       // number of words comprising the state (AES = 4)
 | ||
|  | var sbox;         // non-linear substitution table used in key expansion
 | ||
|  | var isbox;        // inversion of sbox
 | ||
|  | var rcon;         // round constant word array
 | ||
|  | var mix;          // mix-columns table
 | ||
|  | var imix;         // inverse mix-columns table
 | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | /** | ||
|  |  * Performs initialization, ie: precomputes tables to optimize for speed. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * One way to understand how AES works is to imagine that 'addition' and | ||
|  |  * 'multiplication' are interfaces that require certain mathematical | ||
|  |  * properties to hold true (ie: they are associative) but they might have | ||
|  |  * different implementations and produce different kinds of results ... | ||
|  |  * provided that their mathematical properties remain true. AES defines | ||
|  |  * its own methods of addition and multiplication but keeps some important | ||
|  |  * properties the same, ie: associativity and distributivity. The | ||
|  |  * explanation below tries to shed some light on how AES defines addition | ||
|  |  * and multiplication of bytes and 32-bit words in order to perform its | ||
|  |  * encryption and decryption algorithms. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * The basics: | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * The AES algorithm views bytes as binary representations of polynomials | ||
|  |  * that have either 1 or 0 as the coefficients. It defines the addition | ||
|  |  * or subtraction of two bytes as the XOR operation. It also defines the | ||
|  |  * multiplication of two bytes as a finite field referred to as GF(2^8) | ||
|  |  * (Note: 'GF' means "Galois Field" which is a field that contains a finite | ||
|  |  * number of elements so GF(2^8) has 256 elements). | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * This means that any two bytes can be represented as binary polynomials; | ||
|  |  * when they multiplied together and modularly reduced by an irreducible | ||
|  |  * polynomial of the 8th degree, the results are the field GF(2^8). The | ||
|  |  * specific irreducible polynomial that AES uses in hexadecimal is 0x11b. | ||
|  |  * This multiplication is associative with 0x01 as the identity: | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * (b * 0x01 = GF(b, 0x01) = b). | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * The operation GF(b, 0x02) can be performed at the byte level by left | ||
|  |  * shifting b once and then XOR'ing it (to perform the modular reduction) | ||
|  |  * with 0x11b if b is >= 128. Repeated application of the multiplication | ||
|  |  * of 0x02 can be used to implement the multiplication of any two bytes. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * For instance, multiplying 0x57 and 0x13, denoted as GF(0x57, 0x13), can | ||
|  |  * be performed by factoring 0x13 into 0x01, 0x02, and 0x10. Then these | ||
|  |  * factors can each be multiplied by 0x57 and then added together. To do | ||
|  |  * the multiplication, values for 0x57 multiplied by each of these 3 factors | ||
|  |  * can be precomputed and stored in a table. To add them, the values from | ||
|  |  * the table are XOR'd together. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * AES also defines addition and multiplication of words, that is 4-byte | ||
|  |  * numbers represented as polynomials of 3 degrees where the coefficients | ||
|  |  * are the values of the bytes. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * The word [a0, a1, a2, a3] is a polynomial a3x^3 + a2x^2 + a1x + a0. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * Addition is performed by XOR'ing like powers of x. Multiplication | ||
|  |  * is performed in two steps, the first is an algebriac expansion as | ||
|  |  * you would do normally (where addition is XOR). But the result is | ||
|  |  * a polynomial larger than 3 degrees and thus it cannot fit in a word. So | ||
|  |  * next the result is modularly reduced by an AES-specific polynomial of | ||
|  |  * degree 4 which will always produce a polynomial of less than 4 degrees | ||
|  |  * such that it will fit in a word. In AES, this polynomial is x^4 + 1. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * The modular product of two polynomials 'a' and 'b' is thus: | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * d(x) = d3x^3 + d2x^2 + d1x + d0 | ||
|  |  * with | ||
|  |  * d0 = GF(a0, b0) ^ GF(a3, b1) ^ GF(a2, b2) ^ GF(a1, b3) | ||
|  |  * d1 = GF(a1, b0) ^ GF(a0, b1) ^ GF(a3, b2) ^ GF(a2, b3) | ||
|  |  * d2 = GF(a2, b0) ^ GF(a1, b1) ^ GF(a0, b2) ^ GF(a3, b3) | ||
|  |  * d3 = GF(a3, b0) ^ GF(a2, b1) ^ GF(a1, b2) ^ GF(a0, b3) | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * As a matrix: | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * [d0] = [a0 a3 a2 a1][b0] | ||
|  |  * [d1]   [a1 a0 a3 a2][b1] | ||
|  |  * [d2]   [a2 a1 a0 a3][b2] | ||
|  |  * [d3]   [a3 a2 a1 a0][b3] | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * Special polynomials defined by AES (0x02 == {02}): | ||
|  |  * a(x)    = {03}x^3 + {01}x^2 + {01}x + {02} | ||
|  |  * a^-1(x) = {0b}x^3 + {0d}x^2 + {09}x + {0e}. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * These polynomials are used in the MixColumns() and InverseMixColumns() | ||
|  |  * operations, respectively, to cause each element in the state to affect | ||
|  |  * the output (referred to as diffusing). | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * RotWord() uses: a0 = a1 = a2 = {00} and a3 = {01}, which is the | ||
|  |  * polynomial x3. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * The ShiftRows() method modifies the last 3 rows in the state (where | ||
|  |  * the state is 4 words with 4 bytes per word) by shifting bytes cyclically. | ||
|  |  * The 1st byte in the second row is moved to the end of the row. The 1st | ||
|  |  * and 2nd bytes in the third row are moved to the end of the row. The 1st, | ||
|  |  * 2nd, and 3rd bytes are moved in the fourth row. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * More details on how AES arithmetic works: | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * In the polynomial representation of binary numbers, XOR performs addition | ||
|  |  * and subtraction and multiplication in GF(2^8) denoted as GF(a, b) | ||
|  |  * corresponds with the multiplication of polynomials modulo an irreducible | ||
|  |  * polynomial of degree 8. In other words, for AES, GF(a, b) will multiply | ||
|  |  * polynomial 'a' with polynomial 'b' and then do a modular reduction by | ||
|  |  * an AES-specific irreducible polynomial of degree 8. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * A polynomial is irreducible if its only divisors are one and itself. For | ||
|  |  * the AES algorithm, this irreducible polynomial is: | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * m(x) = x^8 + x^4 + x^3 + x + 1, | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * or {01}{1b} in hexadecimal notation, where each coefficient is a bit: | ||
|  |  * 100011011 = 283 = 0x11b. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * For example, GF(0x57, 0x83) = 0xc1 because | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * 0x57 = 87  = 01010111 = x^6 + x^4 + x^2 + x + 1 | ||
|  |  * 0x85 = 131 = 10000101 = x^7 + x + 1 | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * (x^6 + x^4 + x^2 + x + 1) * (x^7 + x + 1) | ||
|  |  * =  x^13 + x^11 + x^9 + x^8 + x^7 + | ||
|  |  *    x^7 + x^5 + x^3 + x^2 + x + | ||
|  |  *    x^6 + x^4 + x^2 + x + 1 | ||
|  |  * =  x^13 + x^11 + x^9 + x^8 + x^6 + x^5 + x^4 + x^3 + 1 = y | ||
|  |  *    y modulo (x^8 + x^4 + x^3 + x + 1) | ||
|  |  * =  x^7 + x^6 + 1. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * The modular reduction by m(x) guarantees the result will be a binary | ||
|  |  * polynomial of less than degree 8, so that it can fit in a byte. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * The operation to multiply a binary polynomial b with x (the polynomial | ||
|  |  * x in binary representation is 00000010) is: | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * b_7x^8 + b_6x^7 + b_5x^6 + b_4x^5 + b_3x^4 + b_2x^3 + b_1x^2 + b_0x^1 | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * To get GF(b, x) we must reduce that by m(x). If b_7 is 0 (that is the | ||
|  |  * most significant bit is 0 in b) then the result is already reduced. If | ||
|  |  * it is 1, then we can reduce it by subtracting m(x) via an XOR. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * It follows that multiplication by x (00000010 or 0x02) can be implemented | ||
|  |  * by performing a left shift followed by a conditional bitwise XOR with | ||
|  |  * 0x1b. This operation on bytes is denoted by xtime(). Multiplication by | ||
|  |  * higher powers of x can be implemented by repeated application of xtime(). | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * By adding intermediate results, multiplication by any constant can be | ||
|  |  * implemented. For instance: | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * GF(0x57, 0x13) = 0xfe because: | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * xtime(b) = (b & 128) ? (b << 1 ^ 0x11b) : (b << 1) | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * Note: We XOR with 0x11b instead of 0x1b because in javascript our | ||
|  |  * datatype for b can be larger than 1 byte, so a left shift will not | ||
|  |  * automatically eliminate bits that overflow a byte ... by XOR'ing the | ||
|  |  * overflow bit with 1 (the extra one from 0x11b) we zero it out. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * GF(0x57, 0x02) = xtime(0x57) = 0xae | ||
|  |  * GF(0x57, 0x04) = xtime(0xae) = 0x47 | ||
|  |  * GF(0x57, 0x08) = xtime(0x47) = 0x8e | ||
|  |  * GF(0x57, 0x10) = xtime(0x8e) = 0x07 | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * GF(0x57, 0x13) = GF(0x57, (0x01 ^ 0x02 ^ 0x10)) | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * And by the distributive property (since XOR is addition and GF() is | ||
|  |  * multiplication): | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * = GF(0x57, 0x01) ^ GF(0x57, 0x02) ^ GF(0x57, 0x10) | ||
|  |  * = 0x57 ^ 0xae ^ 0x07 | ||
|  |  * = 0xfe. | ||
|  |  */ | ||
|  | function initialize() { | ||
|  |   init = true; | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |   /* Populate the Rcon table. These are the values given by | ||
|  |     [x^(i-1),{00},{00},{00}] where x^(i-1) are powers of x (and x = 0x02) | ||
|  |     in the field of GF(2^8), where i starts at 1. | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |     rcon[0] = [0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00] | ||
|  |     rcon[1] = [0x01, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00] 2^(1-1) = 2^0 = 1 | ||
|  |     rcon[2] = [0x02, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00] 2^(2-1) = 2^1 = 2 | ||
|  |     ... | ||
|  |     rcon[9]  = [0x1B, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00] 2^(9-1)  = 2^8 = 0x1B | ||
|  |     rcon[10] = [0x36, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00] 2^(10-1) = 2^9 = 0x36 | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |     We only store the first byte because it is the only one used. | ||
|  |   */ | ||
|  |   rcon = [0x00, 0x01, 0x02, 0x04, 0x08, 0x10, 0x20, 0x40, 0x80, 0x1B, 0x36]; | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |   // compute xtime table which maps i onto GF(i, 0x02)
 | ||
|  |   var xtime = new Array(256); | ||
|  |   for(var i = 0; i < 128; ++i) { | ||
|  |     xtime[i] = i << 1; | ||
|  |     xtime[i + 128] = (i + 128) << 1 ^ 0x11B; | ||
|  |   } | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |   // compute all other tables
 | ||
|  |   sbox = new Array(256); | ||
|  |   isbox = new Array(256); | ||
|  |   mix = new Array(4); | ||
|  |   imix = new Array(4); | ||
|  |   for(var i = 0; i < 4; ++i) { | ||
|  |     mix[i] = new Array(256); | ||
|  |     imix[i] = new Array(256); | ||
|  |   } | ||
|  |   var e = 0, ei = 0, e2, e4, e8, sx, sx2, me, ime; | ||
|  |   for(var i = 0; i < 256; ++i) { | ||
|  |     /* We need to generate the SubBytes() sbox and isbox tables so that | ||
|  |       we can perform byte substitutions. This requires us to traverse | ||
|  |       all of the elements in GF, find their multiplicative inverses, | ||
|  |       and apply to each the following affine transformation: | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       bi' = bi ^ b(i + 4) mod 8 ^ b(i + 5) mod 8 ^ b(i + 6) mod 8 ^ | ||
|  |             b(i + 7) mod 8 ^ ci | ||
|  |       for 0 <= i < 8, where bi is the ith bit of the byte, and ci is the | ||
|  |       ith bit of a byte c with the value {63} or {01100011}. | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       It is possible to traverse every possible value in a Galois field | ||
|  |       using what is referred to as a 'generator'. There are many | ||
|  |       generators (128 out of 256): 3,5,6,9,11,82 to name a few. To fully | ||
|  |       traverse GF we iterate 255 times, multiplying by our generator | ||
|  |       each time. | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       On each iteration we can determine the multiplicative inverse for | ||
|  |       the current element. | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       Suppose there is an element in GF 'e'. For a given generator 'g', | ||
|  |       e = g^x. The multiplicative inverse of e is g^(255 - x). It turns | ||
|  |       out that if use the inverse of a generator as another generator | ||
|  |       it will produce all of the corresponding multiplicative inverses | ||
|  |       at the same time. For this reason, we choose 5 as our inverse | ||
|  |       generator because it only requires 2 multiplies and 1 add and its | ||
|  |       inverse, 82, requires relatively few operations as well. | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       In order to apply the affine transformation, the multiplicative | ||
|  |       inverse 'ei' of 'e' can be repeatedly XOR'd (4 times) with a | ||
|  |       bit-cycling of 'ei'. To do this 'ei' is first stored in 's' and | ||
|  |       'x'. Then 's' is left shifted and the high bit of 's' is made the | ||
|  |       low bit. The resulting value is stored in 's'. Then 'x' is XOR'd | ||
|  |       with 's' and stored in 'x'. On each subsequent iteration the same | ||
|  |       operation is performed. When 4 iterations are complete, 'x' is | ||
|  |       XOR'd with 'c' (0x63) and the transformed value is stored in 'x'. | ||
|  |       For example: | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       s = 01000001 | ||
|  |       x = 01000001 | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       iteration 1: s = 10000010, x ^= s | ||
|  |       iteration 2: s = 00000101, x ^= s | ||
|  |       iteration 3: s = 00001010, x ^= s | ||
|  |       iteration 4: s = 00010100, x ^= s | ||
|  |       x ^= 0x63 | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       This can be done with a loop where s = (s << 1) | (s >> 7). However, | ||
|  |       it can also be done by using a single 16-bit (in this case 32-bit) | ||
|  |       number 'sx'. Since XOR is an associative operation, we can set 'sx' | ||
|  |       to 'ei' and then XOR it with 'sx' left-shifted 1,2,3, and 4 times. | ||
|  |       The most significant bits will flow into the high 8 bit positions | ||
|  |       and be correctly XOR'd with one another. All that remains will be | ||
|  |       to cycle the high 8 bits by XOR'ing them all with the lower 8 bits | ||
|  |       afterwards. | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       At the same time we're populating sbox and isbox we can precompute | ||
|  |       the multiplication we'll need to do to do MixColumns() later. | ||
|  |     */ | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |     // apply affine transformation
 | ||
|  |     sx = ei ^ (ei << 1) ^ (ei << 2) ^ (ei << 3) ^ (ei << 4); | ||
|  |     sx = (sx >> 8) ^ (sx & 255) ^ 0x63; | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |     // update tables
 | ||
|  |     sbox[e] = sx; | ||
|  |     isbox[sx] = e; | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |     /* Mixing columns is done using matrix multiplication. The columns | ||
|  |       that are to be mixed are each a single word in the current state. | ||
|  |       The state has Nb columns (4 columns). Therefore each column is a | ||
|  |       4 byte word. So to mix the columns in a single column 'c' where | ||
|  |       its rows are r0, r1, r2, and r3, we use the following matrix | ||
|  |       multiplication: | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       [2 3 1 1]*[r0,c]=[r'0,c] | ||
|  |       [1 2 3 1] [r1,c] [r'1,c] | ||
|  |       [1 1 2 3] [r2,c] [r'2,c] | ||
|  |       [3 1 1 2] [r3,c] [r'3,c] | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       r0, r1, r2, and r3 are each 1 byte of one of the words in the | ||
|  |       state (a column). To do matrix multiplication for each mixed | ||
|  |       column c' we multiply the corresponding row from the left matrix | ||
|  |       with the corresponding column from the right matrix. In total, we | ||
|  |       get 4 equations: | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       r0,c' = 2*r0,c + 3*r1,c + 1*r2,c + 1*r3,c | ||
|  |       r1,c' = 1*r0,c + 2*r1,c + 3*r2,c + 1*r3,c | ||
|  |       r2,c' = 1*r0,c + 1*r1,c + 2*r2,c + 3*r3,c | ||
|  |       r3,c' = 3*r0,c + 1*r1,c + 1*r2,c + 2*r3,c | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       As usual, the multiplication is as previously defined and the | ||
|  |       addition is XOR. In order to optimize mixing columns we can store | ||
|  |       the multiplication results in tables. If you think of the whole | ||
|  |       column as a word (it might help to visualize by mentally rotating | ||
|  |       the equations above by counterclockwise 90 degrees) then you can | ||
|  |       see that it would be useful to map the multiplications performed on | ||
|  |       each byte (r0, r1, r2, r3) onto a word as well. For instance, we | ||
|  |       could map 2*r0,1*r0,1*r0,3*r0 onto a word by storing 2*r0 in the | ||
|  |       highest 8 bits and 3*r0 in the lowest 8 bits (with the other two | ||
|  |       respectively in the middle). This means that a table can be | ||
|  |       constructed that uses r0 as an index to the word. We can do the | ||
|  |       same with r1, r2, and r3, creating a total of 4 tables. | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       To construct a full c', we can just look up each byte of c in | ||
|  |       their respective tables and XOR the results together. | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       Also, to build each table we only have to calculate the word | ||
|  |       for 2,1,1,3 for every byte ... which we can do on each iteration | ||
|  |       of this loop since we will iterate over every byte. After we have | ||
|  |       calculated 2,1,1,3 we can get the results for the other tables | ||
|  |       by cycling the byte at the end to the beginning. For instance | ||
|  |       we can take the result of table 2,1,1,3 and produce table 3,2,1,1 | ||
|  |       by moving the right most byte to the left most position just like | ||
|  |       how you can imagine the 3 moved out of 2,1,1,3 and to the front | ||
|  |       to produce 3,2,1,1. | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       There is another optimization in that the same multiples of | ||
|  |       the current element we need in order to advance our generator | ||
|  |       to the next iteration can be reused in performing the 2,1,1,3 | ||
|  |       calculation. We also calculate the inverse mix column tables, | ||
|  |       with e,9,d,b being the inverse of 2,1,1,3. | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       When we're done, and we need to actually mix columns, the first | ||
|  |       byte of each state word should be put through mix[0] (2,1,1,3), | ||
|  |       the second through mix[1] (3,2,1,1) and so forth. Then they should | ||
|  |       be XOR'd together to produce the fully mixed column. | ||
|  |     */ | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |     // calculate mix and imix table values
 | ||
|  |     sx2 = xtime[sx]; | ||
|  |     e2 = xtime[e]; | ||
|  |     e4 = xtime[e2]; | ||
|  |     e8 = xtime[e4]; | ||
|  |     me = | ||
|  |       (sx2 << 24) ^  // 2
 | ||
|  |       (sx << 16) ^   // 1
 | ||
|  |       (sx << 8) ^    // 1
 | ||
|  |       (sx ^ sx2);    // 3
 | ||
|  |     ime = | ||
|  |       (e2 ^ e4 ^ e8) << 24 ^  // E (14)
 | ||
|  |       (e ^ e8) << 16 ^        // 9
 | ||
|  |       (e ^ e4 ^ e8) << 8 ^    // D (13)
 | ||
|  |       (e ^ e2 ^ e8);          // B (11)
 | ||
|  |     // produce each of the mix tables by rotating the 2,1,1,3 value
 | ||
|  |     for(var n = 0; n < 4; ++n) { | ||
|  |       mix[n][e] = me; | ||
|  |       imix[n][sx] = ime; | ||
|  |       // cycle the right most byte to the left most position
 | ||
|  |       // ie: 2,1,1,3 becomes 3,2,1,1
 | ||
|  |       me = me << 24 | me >>> 8; | ||
|  |       ime = ime << 24 | ime >>> 8; | ||
|  |     } | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |     // get next element and inverse
 | ||
|  |     if(e === 0) { | ||
|  |       // 1 is the inverse of 1
 | ||
|  |       e = ei = 1; | ||
|  |     } else { | ||
|  |       // e = 2e + 2*2*2*(10e)) = multiply e by 82 (chosen generator)
 | ||
|  |       // ei = ei + 2*2*ei = multiply ei by 5 (inverse generator)
 | ||
|  |       e = e2 ^ xtime[xtime[xtime[e2 ^ e8]]]; | ||
|  |       ei ^= xtime[xtime[ei]]; | ||
|  |     } | ||
|  |   } | ||
|  | } | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | /** | ||
|  |  * Generates a key schedule using the AES key expansion algorithm. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * The AES algorithm takes the Cipher Key, K, and performs a Key Expansion | ||
|  |  * routine to generate a key schedule. The Key Expansion generates a total | ||
|  |  * of Nb*(Nr + 1) words: the algorithm requires an initial set of Nb words, | ||
|  |  * and each of the Nr rounds requires Nb words of key data. The resulting | ||
|  |  * key schedule consists of a linear array of 4-byte words, denoted [wi ], | ||
|  |  * with i in the range 0 <= i < Nb(Nr + 1). | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * KeyExpansion(byte key[4*Nk], word w[Nb*(Nr+1)], Nk) | ||
|  |  * AES-128 (Nb=4, Nk=4, Nr=10) | ||
|  |  * AES-192 (Nb=4, Nk=6, Nr=12) | ||
|  |  * AES-256 (Nb=4, Nk=8, Nr=14) | ||
|  |  * Note: Nr=Nk+6. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * Nb is the number of columns (32-bit words) comprising the State (or | ||
|  |  * number of bytes in a block). For AES, Nb=4. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * @param key the key to schedule (as an array of 32-bit words). | ||
|  |  * @param decrypt true to modify the key schedule to decrypt, false not to. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * @return the generated key schedule. | ||
|  |  */ | ||
|  | function _expandKey(key, decrypt) { | ||
|  |   // copy the key's words to initialize the key schedule
 | ||
|  |   var w = key.slice(0); | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |   /* RotWord() will rotate a word, moving the first byte to the last | ||
|  |     byte's position (shifting the other bytes left). | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |     We will be getting the value of Rcon at i / Nk. 'i' will iterate | ||
|  |     from Nk to (Nb * Nr+1). Nk = 4 (4 byte key), Nb = 4 (4 words in | ||
|  |     a block), Nr = Nk + 6 (10). Therefore 'i' will iterate from | ||
|  |     4 to 44 (exclusive). Each time we iterate 4 times, i / Nk will | ||
|  |     increase by 1. We use a counter iNk to keep track of this. | ||
|  |    */ | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |   // go through the rounds expanding the key
 | ||
|  |   var temp, iNk = 1; | ||
|  |   var Nk = w.length; | ||
|  |   var Nr1 = Nk + 6 + 1; | ||
|  |   var end = Nb * Nr1; | ||
|  |   for(var i = Nk; i < end; ++i) { | ||
|  |     temp = w[i - 1]; | ||
|  |     if(i % Nk === 0) { | ||
|  |       // temp = SubWord(RotWord(temp)) ^ Rcon[i / Nk]
 | ||
|  |       temp = | ||
|  |         sbox[temp >>> 16 & 255] << 24 ^ | ||
|  |         sbox[temp >>> 8 & 255] << 16 ^ | ||
|  |         sbox[temp & 255] << 8 ^ | ||
|  |         sbox[temp >>> 24] ^ (rcon[iNk] << 24); | ||
|  |       iNk++; | ||
|  |     } else if(Nk > 6 && (i % Nk === 4)) { | ||
|  |       // temp = SubWord(temp)
 | ||
|  |       temp = | ||
|  |         sbox[temp >>> 24] << 24 ^ | ||
|  |         sbox[temp >>> 16 & 255] << 16 ^ | ||
|  |         sbox[temp >>> 8 & 255] << 8 ^ | ||
|  |         sbox[temp & 255]; | ||
|  |     } | ||
|  |     w[i] = w[i - Nk] ^ temp; | ||
|  |   } | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |   /* When we are updating a cipher block we always use the code path for | ||
|  |      encryption whether we are decrypting or not (to shorten code and | ||
|  |      simplify the generation of look up tables). However, because there | ||
|  |      are differences in the decryption algorithm, other than just swapping | ||
|  |      in different look up tables, we must transform our key schedule to | ||
|  |      account for these changes: | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |      1. The decryption algorithm gets its key rounds in reverse order. | ||
|  |      2. The decryption algorithm adds the round key before mixing columns | ||
|  |        instead of afterwards. | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |      We don't need to modify our key schedule to handle the first case, | ||
|  |      we can just traverse the key schedule in reverse order when decrypting. | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |      The second case requires a little work. | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |      The tables we built for performing rounds will take an input and then | ||
|  |      perform SubBytes() and MixColumns() or, for the decrypt version, | ||
|  |      InvSubBytes() and InvMixColumns(). But the decrypt algorithm requires | ||
|  |      us to AddRoundKey() before InvMixColumns(). This means we'll need to | ||
|  |      apply some transformations to the round key to inverse-mix its columns | ||
|  |      so they'll be correct for moving AddRoundKey() to after the state has | ||
|  |      had its columns inverse-mixed. | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |      To inverse-mix the columns of the state when we're decrypting we use a | ||
|  |      lookup table that will apply InvSubBytes() and InvMixColumns() at the | ||
|  |      same time. However, the round key's bytes are not inverse-substituted | ||
|  |      in the decryption algorithm. To get around this problem, we can first | ||
|  |      substitute the bytes in the round key so that when we apply the | ||
|  |      transformation via the InvSubBytes()+InvMixColumns() table, it will | ||
|  |      undo our substitution leaving us with the original value that we | ||
|  |      want -- and then inverse-mix that value. | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |      This change will correctly alter our key schedule so that we can XOR | ||
|  |      each round key with our already transformed decryption state. This | ||
|  |      allows us to use the same code path as the encryption algorithm. | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |      We make one more change to the decryption key. Since the decryption | ||
|  |      algorithm runs in reverse from the encryption algorithm, we reverse | ||
|  |      the order of the round keys to avoid having to iterate over the key | ||
|  |      schedule backwards when running the encryption algorithm later in | ||
|  |      decryption mode. In addition to reversing the order of the round keys, | ||
|  |      we also swap each round key's 2nd and 4th rows. See the comments | ||
|  |      section where rounds are performed for more details about why this is | ||
|  |      done. These changes are done inline with the other substitution | ||
|  |      described above. | ||
|  |   */ | ||
|  |   if(decrypt) { | ||
|  |     var tmp; | ||
|  |     var m0 = imix[0]; | ||
|  |     var m1 = imix[1]; | ||
|  |     var m2 = imix[2]; | ||
|  |     var m3 = imix[3]; | ||
|  |     var wnew = w.slice(0); | ||
|  |     end = w.length; | ||
|  |     for(var i = 0, wi = end - Nb; i < end; i += Nb, wi -= Nb) { | ||
|  |       // do not sub the first or last round key (round keys are Nb
 | ||
|  |       // words) as no column mixing is performed before they are added,
 | ||
|  |       // but do change the key order
 | ||
|  |       if(i === 0 || i === (end - Nb)) { | ||
|  |         wnew[i] = w[wi]; | ||
|  |         wnew[i + 1] = w[wi + 3]; | ||
|  |         wnew[i + 2] = w[wi + 2]; | ||
|  |         wnew[i + 3] = w[wi + 1]; | ||
|  |       } else { | ||
|  |         // substitute each round key byte because the inverse-mix
 | ||
|  |         // table will inverse-substitute it (effectively cancel the
 | ||
|  |         // substitution because round key bytes aren't sub'd in
 | ||
|  |         // decryption mode) and swap indexes 3 and 1
 | ||
|  |         for(var n = 0; n < Nb; ++n) { | ||
|  |           tmp = w[wi + n]; | ||
|  |           wnew[i + (3&-n)] = | ||
|  |             m0[sbox[tmp >>> 24]] ^ | ||
|  |             m1[sbox[tmp >>> 16 & 255]] ^ | ||
|  |             m2[sbox[tmp >>> 8 & 255]] ^ | ||
|  |             m3[sbox[tmp & 255]]; | ||
|  |         } | ||
|  |       } | ||
|  |     } | ||
|  |     w = wnew; | ||
|  |   } | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |   return w; | ||
|  | } | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | /** | ||
|  |  * Updates a single block (16 bytes) using AES. The update will either | ||
|  |  * encrypt or decrypt the block. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * @param w the key schedule. | ||
|  |  * @param input the input block (an array of 32-bit words). | ||
|  |  * @param output the updated output block. | ||
|  |  * @param decrypt true to decrypt the block, false to encrypt it. | ||
|  |  */ | ||
|  | function _updateBlock(w, input, output, decrypt) { | ||
|  |   /* | ||
|  |   Cipher(byte in[4*Nb], byte out[4*Nb], word w[Nb*(Nr+1)]) | ||
|  |   begin | ||
|  |     byte state[4,Nb] | ||
|  |     state = in | ||
|  |     AddRoundKey(state, w[0, Nb-1]) | ||
|  |     for round = 1 step 1 to Nr-1 | ||
|  |       SubBytes(state) | ||
|  |       ShiftRows(state) | ||
|  |       MixColumns(state) | ||
|  |       AddRoundKey(state, w[round*Nb, (round+1)*Nb-1]) | ||
|  |     end for | ||
|  |     SubBytes(state) | ||
|  |     ShiftRows(state) | ||
|  |     AddRoundKey(state, w[Nr*Nb, (Nr+1)*Nb-1]) | ||
|  |     out = state | ||
|  |   end | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |   InvCipher(byte in[4*Nb], byte out[4*Nb], word w[Nb*(Nr+1)]) | ||
|  |   begin | ||
|  |     byte state[4,Nb] | ||
|  |     state = in | ||
|  |     AddRoundKey(state, w[Nr*Nb, (Nr+1)*Nb-1]) | ||
|  |     for round = Nr-1 step -1 downto 1 | ||
|  |       InvShiftRows(state) | ||
|  |       InvSubBytes(state) | ||
|  |       AddRoundKey(state, w[round*Nb, (round+1)*Nb-1]) | ||
|  |       InvMixColumns(state) | ||
|  |     end for | ||
|  |     InvShiftRows(state) | ||
|  |     InvSubBytes(state) | ||
|  |     AddRoundKey(state, w[0, Nb-1]) | ||
|  |     out = state | ||
|  |   end | ||
|  |   */ | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |   // Encrypt: AddRoundKey(state, w[0, Nb-1])
 | ||
|  |   // Decrypt: AddRoundKey(state, w[Nr*Nb, (Nr+1)*Nb-1])
 | ||
|  |   var Nr = w.length / 4 - 1; | ||
|  |   var m0, m1, m2, m3, sub; | ||
|  |   if(decrypt) { | ||
|  |     m0 = imix[0]; | ||
|  |     m1 = imix[1]; | ||
|  |     m2 = imix[2]; | ||
|  |     m3 = imix[3]; | ||
|  |     sub = isbox; | ||
|  |   } else { | ||
|  |     m0 = mix[0]; | ||
|  |     m1 = mix[1]; | ||
|  |     m2 = mix[2]; | ||
|  |     m3 = mix[3]; | ||
|  |     sub = sbox; | ||
|  |   } | ||
|  |   var a, b, c, d, a2, b2, c2; | ||
|  |   a = input[0] ^ w[0]; | ||
|  |   b = input[decrypt ? 3 : 1] ^ w[1]; | ||
|  |   c = input[2] ^ w[2]; | ||
|  |   d = input[decrypt ? 1 : 3] ^ w[3]; | ||
|  |   var i = 3; | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |   /* In order to share code we follow the encryption algorithm when both | ||
|  |     encrypting and decrypting. To account for the changes required in the | ||
|  |     decryption algorithm, we use different lookup tables when decrypting | ||
|  |     and use a modified key schedule to account for the difference in the | ||
|  |     order of transformations applied when performing rounds. We also get | ||
|  |     key rounds in reverse order (relative to encryption). */ | ||
|  |   for(var round = 1; round < Nr; ++round) { | ||
|  |     /* As described above, we'll be using table lookups to perform the | ||
|  |       column mixing. Each column is stored as a word in the state (the | ||
|  |       array 'input' has one column as a word at each index). In order to | ||
|  |       mix a column, we perform these transformations on each row in c, | ||
|  |       which is 1 byte in each word. The new column for c0 is c'0: | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |                m0      m1      m2      m3 | ||
|  |       r0,c'0 = 2*r0,c0 + 3*r1,c0 + 1*r2,c0 + 1*r3,c0 | ||
|  |       r1,c'0 = 1*r0,c0 + 2*r1,c0 + 3*r2,c0 + 1*r3,c0 | ||
|  |       r2,c'0 = 1*r0,c0 + 1*r1,c0 + 2*r2,c0 + 3*r3,c0 | ||
|  |       r3,c'0 = 3*r0,c0 + 1*r1,c0 + 1*r2,c0 + 2*r3,c0 | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       So using mix tables where c0 is a word with r0 being its upper | ||
|  |       8 bits and r3 being its lower 8 bits: | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       m0[c0 >> 24] will yield this word: [2*r0,1*r0,1*r0,3*r0] | ||
|  |       ... | ||
|  |       m3[c0 & 255] will yield this word: [1*r3,1*r3,3*r3,2*r3] | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       Therefore to mix the columns in each word in the state we | ||
|  |       do the following (& 255 omitted for brevity): | ||
|  |       c'0,r0 = m0[c0 >> 24] ^ m1[c1 >> 16] ^ m2[c2 >> 8] ^ m3[c3] | ||
|  |       c'0,r1 = m0[c0 >> 24] ^ m1[c1 >> 16] ^ m2[c2 >> 8] ^ m3[c3] | ||
|  |       c'0,r2 = m0[c0 >> 24] ^ m1[c1 >> 16] ^ m2[c2 >> 8] ^ m3[c3] | ||
|  |       c'0,r3 = m0[c0 >> 24] ^ m1[c1 >> 16] ^ m2[c2 >> 8] ^ m3[c3] | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       However, before mixing, the algorithm requires us to perform | ||
|  |       ShiftRows(). The ShiftRows() transformation cyclically shifts the | ||
|  |       last 3 rows of the state over different offsets. The first row | ||
|  |       (r = 0) is not shifted. | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       s'_r,c = s_r,(c + shift(r, Nb) mod Nb | ||
|  |       for 0 < r < 4 and 0 <= c < Nb and | ||
|  |       shift(1, 4) = 1 | ||
|  |       shift(2, 4) = 2 | ||
|  |       shift(3, 4) = 3. | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       This causes the first byte in r = 1 to be moved to the end of | ||
|  |       the row, the first 2 bytes in r = 2 to be moved to the end of | ||
|  |       the row, the first 3 bytes in r = 3 to be moved to the end of | ||
|  |       the row: | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       r1: [c0 c1 c2 c3] => [c1 c2 c3 c0] | ||
|  |       r2: [c0 c1 c2 c3]    [c2 c3 c0 c1] | ||
|  |       r3: [c0 c1 c2 c3]    [c3 c0 c1 c2] | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       We can make these substitutions inline with our column mixing to | ||
|  |       generate an updated set of equations to produce each word in the | ||
|  |       state (note the columns have changed positions): | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       c0 c1 c2 c3 => c0 c1 c2 c3 | ||
|  |       c0 c1 c2 c3    c1 c2 c3 c0  (cycled 1 byte) | ||
|  |       c0 c1 c2 c3    c2 c3 c0 c1  (cycled 2 bytes) | ||
|  |       c0 c1 c2 c3    c3 c0 c1 c2  (cycled 3 bytes) | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       Therefore: | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       c'0 = 2*r0,c0 + 3*r1,c1 + 1*r2,c2 + 1*r3,c3 | ||
|  |       c'0 = 1*r0,c0 + 2*r1,c1 + 3*r2,c2 + 1*r3,c3 | ||
|  |       c'0 = 1*r0,c0 + 1*r1,c1 + 2*r2,c2 + 3*r3,c3 | ||
|  |       c'0 = 3*r0,c0 + 1*r1,c1 + 1*r2,c2 + 2*r3,c3 | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       c'1 = 2*r0,c1 + 3*r1,c2 + 1*r2,c3 + 1*r3,c0 | ||
|  |       c'1 = 1*r0,c1 + 2*r1,c2 + 3*r2,c3 + 1*r3,c0 | ||
|  |       c'1 = 1*r0,c1 + 1*r1,c2 + 2*r2,c3 + 3*r3,c0 | ||
|  |       c'1 = 3*r0,c1 + 1*r1,c2 + 1*r2,c3 + 2*r3,c0 | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       ... and so forth for c'2 and c'3. The important distinction is | ||
|  |       that the columns are cycling, with c0 being used with the m0 | ||
|  |       map when calculating c0, but c1 being used with the m0 map when | ||
|  |       calculating c1 ... and so forth. | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       When performing the inverse we transform the mirror image and | ||
|  |       skip the bottom row, instead of the top one, and move upwards: | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       c3 c2 c1 c0 => c0 c3 c2 c1  (cycled 3 bytes) *same as encryption | ||
|  |       c3 c2 c1 c0    c1 c0 c3 c2  (cycled 2 bytes) | ||
|  |       c3 c2 c1 c0    c2 c1 c0 c3  (cycled 1 byte)  *same as encryption | ||
|  |       c3 c2 c1 c0    c3 c2 c1 c0 | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       If you compare the resulting matrices for ShiftRows()+MixColumns() | ||
|  |       and for InvShiftRows()+InvMixColumns() the 2nd and 4th columns are | ||
|  |       different (in encrypt mode vs. decrypt mode). So in order to use | ||
|  |       the same code to handle both encryption and decryption, we will | ||
|  |       need to do some mapping. | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       If in encryption mode we let a=c0, b=c1, c=c2, d=c3, and r<N> be | ||
|  |       a row number in the state, then the resulting matrix in encryption | ||
|  |       mode for applying the above transformations would be: | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       r1: a b c d | ||
|  |       r2: b c d a | ||
|  |       r3: c d a b | ||
|  |       r4: d a b c | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       If we did the same in decryption mode we would get: | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       r1: a d c b | ||
|  |       r2: b a d c | ||
|  |       r3: c b a d | ||
|  |       r4: d c b a | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       If instead we swap d and b (set b=c3 and d=c1), then we get: | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       r1: a b c d | ||
|  |       r2: d a b c | ||
|  |       r3: c d a b | ||
|  |       r4: b c d a | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |       Now the 1st and 3rd rows are the same as the encryption matrix. All | ||
|  |       we need to do then to make the mapping exactly the same is to swap | ||
|  |       the 2nd and 4th rows when in decryption mode. To do this without | ||
|  |       having to do it on each iteration, we swapped the 2nd and 4th rows | ||
|  |       in the decryption key schedule. We also have to do the swap above | ||
|  |       when we first pull in the input and when we set the final output. */ | ||
|  |     a2 = | ||
|  |       m0[a >>> 24] ^ | ||
|  |       m1[b >>> 16 & 255] ^ | ||
|  |       m2[c >>> 8 & 255] ^ | ||
|  |       m3[d & 255] ^ w[++i]; | ||
|  |     b2 = | ||
|  |       m0[b >>> 24] ^ | ||
|  |       m1[c >>> 16 & 255] ^ | ||
|  |       m2[d >>> 8 & 255] ^ | ||
|  |       m3[a & 255] ^ w[++i]; | ||
|  |     c2 = | ||
|  |       m0[c >>> 24] ^ | ||
|  |       m1[d >>> 16 & 255] ^ | ||
|  |       m2[a >>> 8 & 255] ^ | ||
|  |       m3[b & 255] ^ w[++i]; | ||
|  |     d = | ||
|  |       m0[d >>> 24] ^ | ||
|  |       m1[a >>> 16 & 255] ^ | ||
|  |       m2[b >>> 8 & 255] ^ | ||
|  |       m3[c & 255] ^ w[++i]; | ||
|  |     a = a2; | ||
|  |     b = b2; | ||
|  |     c = c2; | ||
|  |   } | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |   /* | ||
|  |     Encrypt: | ||
|  |     SubBytes(state) | ||
|  |     ShiftRows(state) | ||
|  |     AddRoundKey(state, w[Nr*Nb, (Nr+1)*Nb-1]) | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |     Decrypt: | ||
|  |     InvShiftRows(state) | ||
|  |     InvSubBytes(state) | ||
|  |     AddRoundKey(state, w[0, Nb-1]) | ||
|  |    */ | ||
|  |   // Note: rows are shifted inline
 | ||
|  |   output[0] = | ||
|  |     (sub[a >>> 24] << 24) ^ | ||
|  |     (sub[b >>> 16 & 255] << 16) ^ | ||
|  |     (sub[c >>> 8 & 255] << 8) ^ | ||
|  |     (sub[d & 255]) ^ w[++i]; | ||
|  |   output[decrypt ? 3 : 1] = | ||
|  |     (sub[b >>> 24] << 24) ^ | ||
|  |     (sub[c >>> 16 & 255] << 16) ^ | ||
|  |     (sub[d >>> 8 & 255] << 8) ^ | ||
|  |     (sub[a & 255]) ^ w[++i]; | ||
|  |   output[2] = | ||
|  |     (sub[c >>> 24] << 24) ^ | ||
|  |     (sub[d >>> 16 & 255] << 16) ^ | ||
|  |     (sub[a >>> 8 & 255] << 8) ^ | ||
|  |     (sub[b & 255]) ^ w[++i]; | ||
|  |   output[decrypt ? 1 : 3] = | ||
|  |     (sub[d >>> 24] << 24) ^ | ||
|  |     (sub[a >>> 16 & 255] << 16) ^ | ||
|  |     (sub[b >>> 8 & 255] << 8) ^ | ||
|  |     (sub[c & 255]) ^ w[++i]; | ||
|  | } | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | /** | ||
|  |  * Deprecated. Instead, use: | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * forge.cipher.createCipher('AES-<mode>', key); | ||
|  |  * forge.cipher.createDecipher('AES-<mode>', key); | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * Creates a deprecated AES cipher object. This object's mode will default to | ||
|  |  * CBC (cipher-block-chaining). | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * The key and iv may be given as a string of bytes, an array of bytes, a | ||
|  |  * byte buffer, or an array of 32-bit words. | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * @param options the options to use. | ||
|  |  *          key the symmetric key to use. | ||
|  |  *          output the buffer to write to. | ||
|  |  *          decrypt true for decryption, false for encryption. | ||
|  |  *          mode the cipher mode to use (default: 'CBC'). | ||
|  |  * | ||
|  |  * @return the cipher. | ||
|  |  */ | ||
|  | function _createCipher(options) { | ||
|  |   options = options || {}; | ||
|  |   var mode = (options.mode || 'CBC').toUpperCase(); | ||
|  |   var algorithm = 'AES-' + mode; | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |   var cipher; | ||
|  |   if(options.decrypt) { | ||
|  |     cipher = forge.cipher.createDecipher(algorithm, options.key); | ||
|  |   } else { | ||
|  |     cipher = forge.cipher.createCipher(algorithm, options.key); | ||
|  |   } | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |   // backwards compatible start API
 | ||
|  |   var start = cipher.start; | ||
|  |   cipher.start = function(iv, options) { | ||
|  |     // backwards compatibility: support second arg as output buffer
 | ||
|  |     var output = null; | ||
|  |     if(options instanceof forge.util.ByteBuffer) { | ||
|  |       output = options; | ||
|  |       options = {}; | ||
|  |     } | ||
|  |     options = options || {}; | ||
|  |     options.output = output; | ||
|  |     options.iv = iv; | ||
|  |     start.call(cipher, options); | ||
|  |   }; | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  |   return cipher; | ||
|  | } |