* U2F implementation prototype * U2F data encryption and store, user confirmation request * remove debug prints * fix notification bug in chrome * split u2f_alloc into u2f_init and u2f_alloc * typo fix, furi-hal-trng -> furi-hal-random * rand/srand redefinition * SubGhz: a little bit of Dante. * u2f_data naming fix Co-authored-by: Aleksandr Kutuzov <alleteam@gmail.com>
2.5 KiB
micro-ecc
A small and fast ECDH and ECDSA implementation for 8-bit, 32-bit, and 64-bit processors.
The static version of micro-ecc (ie, where the curve was selected at compile-time) can be found in the "static" branch.
Features
- Resistant to known side-channel attacks.
- Written in C, with optional GCC inline assembly for AVR, ARM and Thumb platforms.
- Supports 8, 32, and 64-bit architectures.
- Small code size.
- No dynamic memory allocation.
- Support for 5 standard curves: secp160r1, secp192r1, secp224r1, secp256r1, and secp256k1.
- BSD 2-clause license.
Usage Notes
Point Representation
Compressed points are represented in the standard format as defined in http://www.secg.org/sec1-v2.pdf; uncompressed points are represented in standard format, but without the 0x04
prefix. All functions except uECC_decompress()
only accept uncompressed points; use uECC_compress()
and uECC_decompress()
to convert between compressed and uncompressed point representations.
Private keys are represented in the standard format.
Using the Code
I recommend just copying (or symlink) the uECC files into your project. Then just #include "uECC.h"
to use the micro-ecc functions.
For use with Arduino, you can use the Library Manager to download micro-ecc (Sketch=>Include Library=>Manage Libraries). You can then use uECC just like any other Arduino library (uECC should show up in the Sketch=>Import Library submenu).
See uECC.h for documentation for each function.
Compilation Notes
- Should compile with any C/C++ compiler that supports stdint.h (this includes Visual Studio 2013).
- If you want to change the defaults for any of the uECC compile-time options (such as
uECC_OPTIMIZATION_LEVEL
), you must change them in your Makefile or similar so that uECC.c is compiled with the desired values (ie, compile uECC.c with-DuECC_OPTIMIZATION_LEVEL=3
or whatever). - When compiling for a Thumb-1 platform, you must use the
-fomit-frame-pointer
GCC option (this is enabled by default when compiling with-O1
or higher). - When compiling for an ARM/Thumb-2 platform with
uECC_OPTIMIZATION_LEVEL
>= 3, you must use the-fomit-frame-pointer
GCC option (this is enabled by default when compiling with-O1
or higher). - When compiling for AVR, you must have optimizations enabled (compile with
-O1
or higher). - When building for Windows, you will need to link in the
advapi32.lib
system library.