cpython/Lib/hmac.py
Christian Heimes 04926aeb2f Issue 18240: The HMAC module is no longer restricted to bytes and accepts
any bytes-like object, e.g. memoryview. Original patch by Jonas Borgström.
2013-07-01 13:08:42 +02:00

130 lines
4.3 KiB
Python

"""HMAC (Keyed-Hashing for Message Authentication) Python module.
Implements the HMAC algorithm as described by RFC 2104.
"""
import warnings as _warnings
from _operator import _compare_digest as compare_digest
trans_5C = bytes((x ^ 0x5C) for x in range(256))
trans_36 = bytes((x ^ 0x36) for x in range(256))
# The size of the digests returned by HMAC depends on the underlying
# hashing module used. Use digest_size from the instance of HMAC instead.
digest_size = None
class HMAC:
"""RFC 2104 HMAC class. Also complies with RFC 4231.
This supports the API for Cryptographic Hash Functions (PEP 247).
"""
blocksize = 64 # 512-bit HMAC; can be changed in subclasses.
def __init__(self, key, msg = None, digestmod = None):
"""Create a new HMAC object.
key: key for the keyed hash object.
msg: Initial input for the hash, if provided.
digestmod: A module supporting PEP 247. *OR*
A hashlib constructor returning a new hash object.
Defaults to hashlib.md5.
Note: key and msg must be a bytes or bytearray objects.
"""
if not isinstance(key, (bytes, bytearray)):
raise TypeError("key: expected bytes or bytearray, but got %r" % type(key).__name__)
if digestmod is None:
import hashlib
digestmod = hashlib.md5
if callable(digestmod):
self.digest_cons = digestmod
else:
self.digest_cons = lambda d=b'': digestmod.new(d)
self.outer = self.digest_cons()
self.inner = self.digest_cons()
self.digest_size = self.inner.digest_size
if hasattr(self.inner, 'block_size'):
blocksize = self.inner.block_size
if blocksize < 16:
_warnings.warn('block_size of %d seems too small; using our '
'default of %d.' % (blocksize, self.blocksize),
RuntimeWarning, 2)
blocksize = self.blocksize
else:
_warnings.warn('No block_size attribute on given digest object; '
'Assuming %d.' % (self.blocksize),
RuntimeWarning, 2)
blocksize = self.blocksize
if len(key) > blocksize:
key = self.digest_cons(key).digest()
key = key + bytes(blocksize - len(key))
self.outer.update(key.translate(trans_5C))
self.inner.update(key.translate(trans_36))
if msg is not None:
self.update(msg)
def update(self, msg):
"""Update this hashing object with the string msg.
"""
self.inner.update(msg)
def copy(self):
"""Return a separate copy of this hashing object.
An update to this copy won't affect the original object.
"""
# Call __new__ directly to avoid the expensive __init__.
other = self.__class__.__new__(self.__class__)
other.digest_cons = self.digest_cons
other.digest_size = self.digest_size
other.inner = self.inner.copy()
other.outer = self.outer.copy()
return other
def _current(self):
"""Return a hash object for the current state.
To be used only internally with digest() and hexdigest().
"""
h = self.outer.copy()
h.update(self.inner.digest())
return h
def digest(self):
"""Return the hash value of this hashing object.
This returns a string containing 8-bit data. The object is
not altered in any way by this function; you can continue
updating the object after calling this function.
"""
h = self._current()
return h.digest()
def hexdigest(self):
"""Like digest(), but returns a string of hexadecimal digits instead.
"""
h = self._current()
return h.hexdigest()
def new(key, msg = None, digestmod = None):
"""Create a new hashing object and return it.
key: The starting key for the hash.
msg: if available, will immediately be hashed into the object's starting
state.
You can now feed arbitrary strings into the object using its update()
method, and can ask for the hash value at any time by calling its digest()
method.
"""
return HMAC(key, msg, digestmod)