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- =pod
- =encoding utf8
- =head1 NAME
- passphrase-encoding
- - How diverse parts of OpenSSL treat pass phrases character encoding
- =head1 DESCRIPTION
- In a modern world with all sorts of character encodings, the treatment of pass
- phrases has become increasingly complex.
- This manual page attempts to give an overview over how this problem is
- currently addressed in different parts of the OpenSSL library.
- =head2 The general case
- The OpenSSL library doesn't treat pass phrases in any special way as a general
- rule, and trusts the application or user to choose a suitable character set
- and stick to that throughout the lifetime of affected objects.
- This means that for an object that was encrypted using a pass phrase encoded in
- ISO-8859-1, that object needs to be decrypted using a pass phrase encoded in
- ISO-8859-1.
- Using the wrong encoding is expected to cause a decryption failure.
- =head2 PKCS#12
- PKCS#12 is a bit different regarding pass phrase encoding.
- The standard stipulates that the pass phrase shall be encoded as an ASN.1
- BMPString, which consists of the code points of the basic multilingual plane,
- encoded in big endian (UCS-2 BE).
- OpenSSL tries to adapt to this requirements in one of the following manners:
- =over 4
- =item 1.
- Treats the received pass phrase as UTF-8 encoded and tries to re-encode it to
- UTF-16 (which is the same as UCS-2 for characters U+0000 to U+D7FF and U+E000
- to U+FFFF, but becomes an expansion for any other character), or failing that,
- proceeds with step 2.
- =item 2.
- Assumes that the pass phrase is encoded in ASCII or ISO-8859-1 and
- opportunistically prepends each byte with a zero byte to obtain the UCS-2
- encoding of the characters, which it stores as a BMPString.
- Note that since there is no check of your locale, this may produce UCS-2 /
- UTF-16 characters that do not correspond to the original pass phrase characters
- for other character sets, such as any ISO-8859-X encoding other than
- ISO-8859-1 (or for Windows, CP 1252 with exception for the extra "graphical"
- characters in the 0x80-0x9F range).
- =back
- OpenSSL versions older than 1.1.0 do variant 2 only, and that is the reason why
- OpenSSL still does this, to be able to read files produced with older versions.
- It should be noted that this approach isn't entirely fault free.
- A pass phrase encoded in ISO-8859-2 could very well have a sequence such as
- 0xC3 0xAF (which is the two characters "LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH BREVE"
- and "LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Z WITH DOT ABOVE" in ISO-8859-2 encoding), but would
- be misinterpreted as the perfectly valid UTF-8 encoded code point U+00EF (LATIN
- SMALL LETTER I WITH DIARESIS) I<if the pass phrase doesn't contain anything that
- would be invalid UTF-8>.
- A pass phrase that contains this kind of byte sequence will give a different
- outcome in OpenSSL 1.1.0 and newer than in OpenSSL older than 1.1.0.
- 0x00 0xC3 0x00 0xAF # OpenSSL older than 1.1.0
- 0x00 0xEF # OpenSSL 1.1.0 and newer
- On the same accord, anything encoded in UTF-8 that was given to OpenSSL older
- than 1.1.0 was misinterpreted as ISO-8859-1 sequences.
- =head2 OSSL_STORE
- L<ossl_store(7)> acts as a general interface to access all kinds of objects,
- potentially protected with a pass phrase, a PIN or something else.
- This API stipulates that pass phrases should be UTF-8 encoded, and that any
- other pass phrase encoding may give undefined results.
- This API relies on the application to ensure UTF-8 encoding, and doesn't check
- that this is the case, so what it gets, it will also pass to the underlying
- loader.
- =head1 RECOMMENDATIONS
- This section assumes that you know what pass phrase was used for encryption,
- but that it may have been encoded in a different character encoding than the
- one used by your current input method.
- For example, the pass phrase may have been used at a time when your default
- encoding was ISO-8859-1 (i.e. "naïve" resulting in the byte sequence 0x6E 0x61
- 0xEF 0x76 0x65), and you're now in an environment where your default encoding
- is UTF-8 (i.e. "naïve" resulting in the byte sequence 0x6E 0x61 0xC3 0xAF 0x76
- 0x65).
- Whenever it's mentioned that you should use a certain character encoding, it
- should be understood that you either change the input method to use the
- mentioned encoding when you type in your pass phrase, or use some suitable tool
- to convert your pass phrase from your default encoding to the target encoding.
- Also note that the sub-sections below discuss human readable pass phrases.
- This is particularly relevant for PKCS#12 objects, where human readable pass
- phrases are assumed.
- For other objects, it's as legitimate to use any byte sequence (such as a
- sequence of bytes from `/dev/urandom` that's been saved away), which makes any
- character encoding discussion irrelevant; in such cases, simply use the same
- byte sequence as it is.
- =head2 Creating new objects
- For creating new pass phrase protected objects, make sure the pass phrase is
- encoded using UTF-8.
- This is default on most modern Unixes, but may involve an effort on other
- platforms.
- Specifically for Windows, setting the environment variable
- C<OPENSSL_WIN32_UTF8> will have anything entered on [Windows] console prompt
- converted to UTF-8 (command line and separately prompted pass phrases alike).
- =head2 Opening existing objects
- For opening pass phrase protected objects where you know what character
- encoding was used for the encryption pass phrase, make sure to use the same
- encoding again.
- For opening pass phrase protected objects where the character encoding that was
- used is unknown, or where the producing application is unknown, try one of the
- following:
- =over 4
- =item 1.
- Try the pass phrase that you have as it is in the character encoding of your
- environment.
- It's possible that its byte sequence is exactly right.
- =item 2.
- Convert the pass phrase to UTF-8 and try with the result.
- Specifically with PKCS#12, this should open up any object that was created
- according to the specification.
- =item 3.
- Do a naïve (i.e. purely mathematical) ISO-8859-1 to UTF-8 conversion and try
- with the result.
- This differs from the previous attempt because ISO-8859-1 maps directly to
- U+0000 to U+00FF, which other non-UTF-8 character sets do not.
- This also takes care of the case when a UTF-8 encoded string was used with
- OpenSSL older than 1.1.0.
- (for example, C<ï>, which is 0xC3 0xAF when encoded in UTF-8, would become 0xC3
- 0x83 0xC2 0xAF when re-encoded in the naïve manner.
- The conversion to BMPString would then yield 0x00 0xC3 0x00 0xA4 0x00 0x00, the
- erroneous/non-compliant encoding used by OpenSSL older than 1.1.0)
- =back
- =head1 SEE ALSO
- L<evp(7)>,
- L<ossl_store(7)>,
- L<EVP_BytesToKey(3)>, L<EVP_DecryptInit(3)>,
- L<PEM_do_header(3)>,
- L<PKCS12_parse(3)>, L<PKCS12_newpass(3)>,
- L<d2i_PKCS8PrivateKey_bio(3)>
- =head1 COPYRIGHT
- Copyright 2018 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
- Licensed under the OpenSSL license (the "License"). You may not use
- this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy
- in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at
- L<https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>.
- =cut
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