// Copyright 2014 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
// found in the LICENSE file.
package org.chromium.net;
import org.chromium.base.CalledByNative;
import org.chromium.base.JNINamespace;
/**
* Specifies all the dependencies from the native OpenSSL engine on an Android KeyStore.
*/
@JNINamespace("net::android")
public interface AndroidKeyStore {
/**
* Returns the public modulus of a given RSA private key as a byte
* buffer.
* This can be used by native code to convert the modulus into
* an OpenSSL BIGNUM object. Required to craft a custom native RSA
* object where RSA_size() works as expected.
*
* @param key A PrivateKey instance, must implement RSAKey.
* @return A byte buffer corresponding to the modulus. This is
* big-endian representation of a BigInteger.
*/
@CalledByNative
byte[] getRSAKeyModulus(AndroidPrivateKey key);
/**
* Returns the 'Q' parameter of a given DSA private key as a byte
* buffer.
* This can be used by native code to convert it into an OpenSSL BIGNUM
* object where DSA_size() works as expected.
*
* @param key A PrivateKey instance. Must implement DSAKey.
* @return A byte buffer corresponding to the Q parameter. This is
* a big-endian representation of a BigInteger.
*/
@CalledByNative
byte[] getDSAKeyParamQ(AndroidPrivateKey key);
/**
* Returns the 'order' parameter of a given ECDSA private key as a
* a byte buffer.
* @param key A PrivateKey instance. Must implement ECKey.
* @return A byte buffer corresponding to the 'order' parameter.
* This is a big-endian representation of a BigInteger.
*/
@CalledByNative
byte[] getECKeyOrder(AndroidPrivateKey key);
/**
* Returns the encoded data corresponding to a given PrivateKey.
* Note that this will fail for platform keys on Android 4.0.4
* and higher. It can be used on 4.0.3 and older platforms to
* route around the platform bug described below.
* @param key A PrivateKey instance
* @return encoded key as PKCS#8 byte array, can be null.
*/
@CalledByNative
byte[] getPrivateKeyEncodedBytes(AndroidPrivateKey key);
/**
* Sign a given message with a given PrivateKey object. This method
* shall only be used to implement signing in the context of SSL
* client certificate support.
*
* The message will actually be a hash, computed by OpenSSL itself,
* depending on the type of the key. The result should match exactly
* what the vanilla implementations of the following OpenSSL function
* calls do:
*
* - For a RSA private key, this should be equivalent to calling
* RSA_private_encrypt(..., RSA_PKCS1_PADDING), i.e. it must
* generate a raw RSA signature. The message must be either a
* combined, 36-byte MD5+SHA1 message digest or a DigestInfo
* value wrapping a message digest.
*
* - For a DSA and ECDSA private keys, this should be equivalent to
* calling DSA_sign(0,...) and ECDSA_sign(0,...) respectively. The
* message must be a hash and the function shall compute a direct
* DSA/ECDSA signature for it.
*
* @param key The PrivateKey handle.
* @param message The message to sign.
* @return signature as a byte buffer.
*
* Important: Due to a platform bug, this function will always fail on
* Android < 4.2 for RSA PrivateKey objects. See the
* getOpenSSLHandleForPrivateKey() below for work-around.
*/
@CalledByNative
byte[] rawSignDigestWithPrivateKey(AndroidPrivateKey key, byte[] message);
/**
* Return the type of a given PrivateKey object. This is an integer
* that maps to one of the values defined by org.chromium.net.PrivateKeyType,
* which is itself auto-generated from net/android/private_key_type_list.h
* @param key The PrivateKey handle
* @return key type, or PrivateKeyType.INVALID if unknown.
*/
@CalledByNative
int getPrivateKeyType(AndroidPrivateKey key);
/**
* Return the system EVP_PKEY handle corresponding to a given PrivateKey
* object.
*
* This shall only be used when the "NONEwithRSA" signature is not
* available, as described in rawSignDigestWithPrivateKey(). I.e.
* never use this on Android 4.2 or higher.
*
* This can only work in Android 4.0.4 and higher, for older versions
* of the platform (e.g. 4.0.3), there is no system OpenSSL EVP_PKEY,
* but the private key contents can be retrieved directly with
* the getEncoded() method.
*
* This assumes that the target device uses a vanilla AOSP
* implementation of its java.security classes, which is also
* based on OpenSSL (fortunately, no OEM has apperently changed to
* a different implementation, according to the Android team).
*
* Note that the object returned was created with the platform version
* of OpenSSL, and _not_ the one that comes with Chromium. Whether the
* object can be used safely with the Chromium OpenSSL library depends
* on differences between their actual ABI / implementation details.
*
* To better understand what's going on below, please refer to the
* following source files in the Android 4.0.4 and 4.1 source trees:
* libcore/luni/src/main/java/org/apache/harmony/xnet/provider/jsse/OpenSSLRSAPrivateKey.java
* libcore/luni/src/main/native/org_apache_harmony_xnet_provider_jsse_NativeCrypto.cpp
*
* @param key The PrivateKey handle.
* @return The EVP_PKEY handle, as a 32-bit integer (0 if not available)
*/
@CalledByNative
int getOpenSSLHandleForPrivateKey(AndroidPrivateKey key);
/**
* Called when the native OpenSSL engine no longer needs access to the underlying key.
*/
@CalledByNative
void releaseKey(AndroidPrivateKey key);
}