lnd.xprv/aezeed/cipherseed.go
positiveblue 5089cfc1be aezeed: fix mnemonic word validation
A user complained about getting a misleading error after a typo in the
mnemonic. The word was `hear` and it passed the check even when it is
not in the list of valid words.

The reason is that we where checking if the word is in the variable
`englishWordList` (which includes all the words) instead of checking if the
variable is in the `defaultWordList` (which is basically `englishWoldList`
split by spaces). That means that `hear` passed the check because `heart`
appears in the list.

Related issue [4733](https://github.com/lightningnetwork/lnd/issues/4733)
2020-11-02 23:25:50 +01:00

558 lines
20 KiB
Go

package aezeed
import (
"bytes"
"crypto/rand"
"encoding/binary"
"hash/crc32"
"io"
"time"
"github.com/Yawning/aez"
"github.com/kkdai/bstream"
"golang.org/x/crypto/scrypt"
)
const (
// CipherSeedVersion is the current version of the aezeed scheme as
// defined in this package. This version indicates the following
// parameters for the deciphered cipher seed: a 1 byte version, 2 bytes
// for the Bitcoin Days Genesis timestamp, and 16 bytes for entropy. It
// also governs how the cipher seed should be enciphered. In this
// version we take the deciphered seed, create a 5 byte salt, use that
// with an optional passphrase to generate a 32-byte key (via scrypt),
// then encipher with aez (using the salt and version as AD). The final
// enciphered seed is: version || ciphertext || salt.
CipherSeedVersion uint8 = 0
// DecipheredCipherSeedSize is the size of the plaintext seed resulting
// from deciphering the cipher seed. The size consists of the
// following:
//
// * 1 byte version || 2 bytes timestamp || 16 bytes of entropy.
//
// The version is used by wallets to know how to re-derive relevant
// addresses, the 2 byte timestamp a BDG (Bitcoin Days Genesis) offset,
// and finally, the 16 bytes to be used to generate the HD wallet seed.
DecipheredCipherSeedSize = 19
// EncipheredCipherSeedSize is the size of the fully encoded+enciphered
// cipher seed. We first obtain the enciphered plaintext seed by
// carrying out the enciphering as governed in the current version. We
// then take that enciphered seed (now 19+4=23 bytes due to ciphertext
// expansion, essentially a checksum) and prepend a version, then
// append the salt, and then take a checksum of everything. The
// checksum allows us to verify that the user input the correct set of
// words, then we can verify the passphrase due to the internal MAC
// equiv. The final breakdown is:
//
// * 1 byte version || 23 byte enciphered seed || 5 byte salt || 4 byte checksum
//
// With CipherSeedVersion we encipher as follows: we use
// scrypt(n=32768, r=8, p=1) to derive a 32-byte key from an optional
// user passphrase. We then encipher the plaintext seed using a value
// of tau (with aez) of 8-bytes (so essentially a 32-bit MAC). When
// enciphering, we include the version and scrypt salt as the AD. This
// gives us a total of 33 bytes. These 33 bytes fit cleanly into 24
// mnemonic words.
EncipheredCipherSeedSize = 33
// CipherTextExpansion is the number of bytes that will be added as
// redundancy for the enciphering scheme implemented by aez. This can
// be seen as the size of the equivalent MAC.
CipherTextExpansion = 4
// EntropySize is the number of bytes of entropy we'll use the generate
// the seed.
EntropySize = 16
// NummnemonicWords is the number of words that an encoded cipher seed
// will result in.
NummnemonicWords = 24
// saltSize is the size of the salt we'll generate to use with scrypt
// to generate a key for use within aez from the user's passphrase. The
// role of the salt is to make the creation of rainbow tables
// infeasible.
saltSize = 5
// adSize is the size of the encoded associated data that will be
// passed into aez when enciphering and deciphering the seed. The AD
// itself (associated data) is just the CipherSeedVersion and salt.
adSize = 6
// checkSumSize is the size of the checksum applied to the final
// encoded ciphertext.
checkSumSize = 4
// keyLen is the size of the key that we'll use for encryption with
// aez.
keyLen = 32
// bitsPerWord is the number of bits each word in the wordlist encodes.
// We encode our mnemonic using 24 words, so 264 bits (33 bytes).
bitsPerWord = 11
// saltOffset is the index within an enciphered cipherseed that marks
// the start of the salt.
saltOffset = EncipheredCipherSeedSize - checkSumSize - saltSize
// checkSumSize is the index within an enciphered cipher seed that
// marks the start of the checksum.
checkSumOffset = EncipheredCipherSeedSize - checkSumSize
)
var (
// Below at the default scrypt parameters that are tied to
// CipherSeedVersion zero.
scryptN = 32768
scryptR = 8
scryptP = 1
// crcTable is a table that presents the polynomial we'll use for
// computing our checksum.
crcTable = crc32.MakeTable(crc32.Castagnoli)
// defaultPassphras is the default passphrase that will be used for
// encryption in the case that the user chooses not to specify their
// own passphrase.
defaultPassphrase = []byte("aezeed")
)
var (
// BitcoinGenesisDate is the timestamp of Bitcoin's genesis block.
// We'll use this value in order to create a compact birthday for the
// seed. The birthday will be interested as the number of days since
// the genesis date. We refer to this time period as ABE (after Bitcoin
// era).
BitcoinGenesisDate = time.Unix(1231006505, 0)
)
// CipherSeed is a fully decoded instance of the aezeed scheme. At a high
// level, the encoded cipherseed is the enciphering of: a version byte, a set
// of bytes for a timestamp, the entropy which will be used to directly
// construct the HD seed, and finally a checksum over the rest. This scheme was
// created as the widely used schemes in the space lack two critical traits: a
// version byte, and a birthday timestamp. The version allows us to modify the
// details of the scheme in the future, and the birthday gives wallets a limit
// of how far back in the chain they'll need to start scanning. We also add an
// external version to the enciphering plaintext seed. With this addition,
// seeds are able to be "upgraded" (to diff params, or entirely diff crypt),
// while maintaining the semantics of the plaintext seed.
//
// The core of the scheme is the usage of aez to carefully control the size of
// the final encrypted seed. With the current parameters, this scheme can be
// encoded using a 24 word mnemonic. We use 4 bytes of ciphertext expansion
// when enciphering the raw seed, giving us the equivalent of 40-bit MAC (as we
// check for a particular seed version). Using the external 4 byte checksum,
// we're able to ensure that the user input the correct set of words. Finally,
// the password in the scheme is optional. If not specified, "aezeed" will be
// used as the password. Otherwise, the addition of the password means that
// users can encrypt the raw "plaintext" seed under distinct passwords to
// produce unique mnemonic phrases.
type CipherSeed struct {
// InternalVersion is the version of the plaintext cipherseed. This is
// to be used by wallets to determine if the seed version is compatible
// with the derivation schemes they know.
InternalVersion uint8
// Birthday is the time that the seed was created. This is expressed as
// the number of days since the timestamp in the Bitcoin genesis block.
// We use days as seconds gives us wasted granularity. The oldest seed
// that we can encode using this format is through the date 2188.
Birthday uint16
// Entropy is a set of bytes generated via a CSPRNG. This is the value
// that should be used to directly generate the HD root, as defined
// within BIP0032.
Entropy [EntropySize]byte
// salt is the salt that was used to generate the key from the user's
// specified passphrase.
salt [saltSize]byte
}
// New generates a new CipherSeed instance from an optional source of entropy.
// If the entropy isn't provided, then a set of random bytes will be used in
// place. The final argument should be the time at which the seed was created.
func New(internalVersion uint8, entropy *[EntropySize]byte,
now time.Time) (*CipherSeed, error) {
// TODO(roasbeef): pass randomness source? to make fully determinsitc?
// If a set of entropy wasn't provided, then we'll read a set of bytes
// from the CSPRNG of our operating platform.
var seed [EntropySize]byte
if entropy == nil {
if _, err := rand.Read(seed[:]); err != nil {
return nil, err
}
} else {
// Otherwise, we'll copy the set of bytes.
copy(seed[:], entropy[:])
}
// To compute our "birthday", we'll first use the current time, then
// subtract that from the Bitcoin Genesis Date. We'll then convert that
// value to days.
birthday := uint16(now.Sub(BitcoinGenesisDate) / (time.Hour * 24))
c := &CipherSeed{
InternalVersion: internalVersion,
Birthday: birthday,
Entropy: seed,
}
// Next, we'll read a random salt that will be used with scrypt to
// eventually derive our key.
if _, err := rand.Read(c.salt[:]); err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return c, nil
}
// encode attempts to encode the target cipherSeed into the passed io.Writer
// instance.
func (c *CipherSeed) encode(w io.Writer) error {
err := binary.Write(w, binary.BigEndian, c.InternalVersion)
if err != nil {
return err
}
if err := binary.Write(w, binary.BigEndian, c.Birthday); err != nil {
return err
}
if _, err := w.Write(c.Entropy[:]); err != nil {
return err
}
return nil
}
// decode attempts to decode an encoded cipher seed instance into the target
// CipherSeed struct.
func (c *CipherSeed) decode(r io.Reader) error {
err := binary.Read(r, binary.BigEndian, &c.InternalVersion)
if err != nil {
return err
}
if err := binary.Read(r, binary.BigEndian, &c.Birthday); err != nil {
return err
}
if _, err := io.ReadFull(r, c.Entropy[:]); err != nil {
return err
}
return nil
}
// encodeAD returns the fully encoded associated data for use when performing
// our current enciphering operation. The AD is: version || salt.
func encodeAD(version uint8, salt [saltSize]byte) [adSize]byte {
var ad [adSize]byte
ad[0] = byte(version)
copy(ad[1:], salt[:])
return ad
}
// extractAD extracts an associated data from a fully encoded and enciphered
// cipher seed. This is to be used when attempting to decrypt an enciphered
// cipher seed.
func extractAD(encipheredSeed [EncipheredCipherSeedSize]byte) [adSize]byte {
var ad [adSize]byte
ad[0] = encipheredSeed[0]
copy(ad[1:], encipheredSeed[saltOffset:checkSumOffset])
return ad
}
// encipher takes a fully populated cipherseed instance, and enciphers the
// encoded seed, then appends a randomly generated seed used to stretch the
// passphrase out into an appropriate key, then computes a checksum over the
// preceding.
func (c *CipherSeed) encipher(pass []byte) ([EncipheredCipherSeedSize]byte, error) {
var cipherSeedBytes [EncipheredCipherSeedSize]byte
// If the passphrase wasn't provided, then we'll use the string
// "aezeed" in place.
passphrase := pass
if len(passphrase) == 0 {
passphrase = defaultPassphrase
}
// With our salt pre-generated, we'll now run the password through a
// KDF to obtain the key we'll use for encryption.
key, err := scrypt.Key(
passphrase, c.salt[:], scryptN, scryptR, scryptP, keyLen,
)
if err != nil {
return cipherSeedBytes, err
}
// Next, we'll encode the serialized plaintext cipherseed into a buffer
// that we'll use for encryption.
var seedBytes bytes.Buffer
if err := c.encode(&seedBytes); err != nil {
return cipherSeedBytes, err
}
// With our plaintext seed encoded, we'll now construct the AD that
// will be passed to the encryption operation. This ensures to
// authenticate both the salt and the external version.
ad := encodeAD(CipherSeedVersion, c.salt)
// With all items assembled, we'll now encipher the plaintext seed
// with our AD, key, and MAC size.
cipherSeed := seedBytes.Bytes()
cipherText := aez.Encrypt(
key, nil, [][]byte{ad[:]}, CipherTextExpansion, cipherSeed, nil,
)
// Finally, we'll pack the {version || ciphertext || salt || checksum}
// seed into a byte slice for encoding as a mnemonic.
cipherSeedBytes[0] = byte(CipherSeedVersion)
copy(cipherSeedBytes[1:saltOffset], cipherText)
copy(cipherSeedBytes[saltOffset:], c.salt[:])
// With the seed mostly assembled, we'll now compute a checksum all the
// contents.
checkSum := crc32.Checksum(cipherSeedBytes[:checkSumOffset], crcTable)
// With our checksum computed, we can finish encoding the full cipher
// seed.
var checkSumBytes [4]byte
binary.BigEndian.PutUint32(checkSumBytes[:], checkSum)
copy(cipherSeedBytes[checkSumOffset:], checkSumBytes[:])
return cipherSeedBytes, nil
}
// cipherTextToMnemonic converts the aez ciphertext appended with the salt to a
// 24-word mnemonic pass phrase.
func cipherTextToMnemonic(cipherText [EncipheredCipherSeedSize]byte) (Mnemonic, error) {
var words [NummnemonicWords]string
// First, we'll convert the ciphertext itself into a bitstream for easy
// manipulation.
cipherBits := bstream.NewBStreamReader(cipherText[:])
// With our bitstream obtained, we'll read 11 bits at a time, then use
// that to index into our word list to obtain the next word.
for i := 0; i < NummnemonicWords; i++ {
index, err := cipherBits.ReadBits(bitsPerWord)
if err != nil {
return Mnemonic{}, err
}
words[i] = defaultWordList[index]
}
return words, nil
}
// ToMnemonic maps the final enciphered cipher seed to a human readable 24-word
// mnemonic phrase. The password is optional, as if it isn't specified aezeed
// will be used in its place.
func (c *CipherSeed) ToMnemonic(pass []byte) (Mnemonic, error) {
// First, we'll convert the valid seed triple into an aez cipher text
// with our KDF salt appended to it.
cipherText, err := c.encipher(pass)
if err != nil {
return Mnemonic{}, err
}
// Now that we have our cipher text, we'll convert it into a mnemonic
// phrase.
return cipherTextToMnemonic(cipherText)
}
// Encipher maps the cipher seed to an aez ciphertext using an optional
// passphrase.
func (c *CipherSeed) Encipher(pass []byte) ([EncipheredCipherSeedSize]byte, error) {
return c.encipher(pass)
}
// BirthdayTime returns the cipher seed's internal birthday format as a native
// golang Time struct.
func (c *CipherSeed) BirthdayTime() time.Time {
offset := time.Duration(c.Birthday) * 24 * time.Hour
return BitcoinGenesisDate.Add(offset)
}
// Mnemonic is a 24-word passphrase as of CipherSeedVersion zero. This
// passphrase encodes an encrypted seed triple (version, birthday, entropy).
// Additionally, we also encode the salt used with scrypt to derive the key
// that the cipher text is encrypted with, and the version which tells us how
// to decipher the seed.
type Mnemonic [NummnemonicWords]string
// mnemonicToCipherText converts a 24-word mnemonic phrase into a 33 byte
// cipher text.
//
// NOTE: This assumes that all words have already been checked to be amongst
// our word list.
func mnemonicToCipherText(mnemonic *Mnemonic) [EncipheredCipherSeedSize]byte {
var cipherText [EncipheredCipherSeedSize]byte
// We'll now perform the reverse mapping to that of
// cipherTextToMnemonic: we'll get the index of the word, then write
// out that index to the bit stream.
cipherBits := bstream.NewBStreamWriter(EncipheredCipherSeedSize)
for _, word := range mnemonic {
// Using the reverse word map, we'll locate the index of this
// word within the word list.
index := uint64(reverseWordMap[word])
// With the index located, we'll now write this out to the
// bitstream, appending to what's already there.
cipherBits.WriteBits(index, bitsPerWord)
}
copy(cipherText[:], cipherBits.Bytes())
return cipherText
}
// ToCipherSeed attempts to map the mnemonic to the original cipher text byte
// slice. Then we'll attempt to decrypt the ciphertext using aez with the
// passed passphrase, using the last 5 bytes of the ciphertext as a salt for
// the KDF.
func (m *Mnemonic) ToCipherSeed(pass []byte) (*CipherSeed, error) {
// First, we'll attempt to decipher the mnemonic by mapping back into
// our byte slice and applying our deciphering scheme.
plainSeed, err := m.Decipher(pass)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
// If decryption was successful, then we'll decode into a fresh
// CipherSeed struct.
var c CipherSeed
if err := c.decode(bytes.NewReader(plainSeed[:])); err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return &c, nil
}
// decipherCipherSeed attempts to decipher the passed cipher seed ciphertext
// using the passed passphrase. This function is the opposite of
// the encipher method.
func decipherCipherSeed(cipherSeedBytes [EncipheredCipherSeedSize]byte,
pass []byte) ([DecipheredCipherSeedSize]byte, error) {
var plainSeed [DecipheredCipherSeedSize]byte
// Before we do anything, we'll ensure that the version is one that we
// understand. Otherwise, we won't be able to decrypt, or even parse
// the cipher seed.
if uint8(cipherSeedBytes[0]) != CipherSeedVersion {
return plainSeed, ErrIncorrectVersion
}
// Next, we'll slice off the salt from the pass cipher seed, then
// snip off the end of the cipher seed, ignoring the version, and
// finally the checksum.
salt := cipherSeedBytes[saltOffset : saltOffset+saltSize]
cipherSeed := cipherSeedBytes[1:saltOffset]
checksum := cipherSeedBytes[checkSumOffset:]
// Before we perform any crypto operations, we'll re-create and verify
// the checksum to ensure that the user input the proper set of words.
freshChecksum := crc32.Checksum(cipherSeedBytes[:checkSumOffset], crcTable)
if freshChecksum != binary.BigEndian.Uint32(checksum) {
return plainSeed, ErrIncorrectMnemonic
}
// With the salt separated from the cipher text, we'll now obtain the
// key used for encryption.
key, err := scrypt.Key(pass, salt, scryptN, scryptR, scryptP, keyLen)
if err != nil {
return plainSeed, err
}
// We'll also extract the AD that will be required to properly pass the
// MAC check.
ad := extractAD(cipherSeedBytes)
// With the key, we'll attempt to decrypt the plaintext. If the
// ciphertext was altered, or the passphrase is incorrect, then we'll
// error out.
plainSeedBytes, ok := aez.Decrypt(
key, nil, [][]byte{ad[:]}, CipherTextExpansion, cipherSeed, nil,
)
if !ok {
return plainSeed, ErrInvalidPass
}
copy(plainSeed[:], plainSeedBytes)
return plainSeed, nil
}
// Decipher attempts to decipher the encoded mnemonic by first mapping to the
// original chipertext, then applying our deciphering scheme. ErrInvalidPass
// will be returned if the passphrase is incorrect.
func (m *Mnemonic) Decipher(pass []byte) ([DecipheredCipherSeedSize]byte, error) {
// Before we attempt to map the mnemonic back to the original
// ciphertext, we'll ensure that all the word are actually a part of
// the current default word list.
wordDict := make(map[string]struct{}, len(defaultWordList))
for _, word := range defaultWordList {
wordDict[word] = struct{}{}
}
for i, word := range m {
if _, ok := wordDict[word]; !ok {
emptySeed := [DecipheredCipherSeedSize]byte{}
return emptySeed, ErrUnknownMnenomicWord{
Word: word,
Index: uint8(i),
}
}
}
// If the passphrase wasn't provided, then we'll use the string
// "aezeed" in place.
passphrase := pass
if len(passphrase) == 0 {
passphrase = defaultPassphrase
}
// Next, we'll map the mnemonic phrase back into the original cipher
// text.
cipherText := mnemonicToCipherText(m)
// Finally, we'll attempt to decipher the enciphered seed. The result
// will be the raw seed minus the ciphertext expansion, external
// version, and salt.
return decipherCipherSeed(cipherText, passphrase)
}
// ChangePass takes an existing mnemonic, and passphrase for said mnemonic and
// re-enciphers the plaintext cipher seed into a brand new mnemonic. This can
// be used to allow users to re-encrypt the same seed with multiple pass
// phrases, or just change the passphrase on an existing seed.
func (m *Mnemonic) ChangePass(oldPass, newPass []byte) (Mnemonic, error) {
var newmnemonic Mnemonic
// First, we'll try to decrypt the current mnemonic using the existing
// passphrase. If this fails, then we can't proceed any further.
cipherSeed, err := m.ToCipherSeed(oldPass)
if err != nil {
return newmnemonic, err
}
// If the deciperhing was successful, then we'll now re-encipher using
// the new user provided passphrase.
return cipherSeed.ToMnemonic(newPass)
}