commit | 604d4cc30fd544343fbee0a13b77a093b42c7150 | [log] [tgz] |
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author | Thai Duong <thaidn@google.com> | Fri Sep 08 15:10:33 2017 -0700 |
committer | Thai Duong <thaidn@google.com> | Fri Sep 08 16:47:56 2017 -0700 |
tree | 2bb15dd312d1c2ffd863f3f4db90329701e0f37c | |
parent | 5ff6455570c2428801ac46a1ec47306374dee4c7 [diff] |
Fix style issues after sync. Change-Id: Ibaee1b6d8481795f45f9243aa10e70bface2d006 ORIGINAL_AUTHOR=Thai Duong <thaidn@google.com> GitOrigin-RevId: e7fdc72bf55044b291859986100b1929368a3983
Tink is a cryptographic library. The design goals are:
Easy Tink provides APIs that are simple and easy to use correctly. Most cryptographic operations such as data encryption, digital signatures, etc. can be done with only a few lines of code.
Security Tink reduces common cryptographic pitfalls with user-centered design, careful implementation and code reviews, and extensive testing.
Misuse-proof Tink assumes that the attacker has complete freedom in calling methods of a high level interface; under this assumption the security is not compromised. For example, if the underlying encryption mode requires nonces and is insecure if nonces are reused then the interface do not allow to pass nonces.
Extensibility Tink makes it easy to support new algorithms, new ciphertext formats, or new key management systems, etc.
Agility Tink provides built-in cryptographic agility. It supports key rotation, deprecation of obsolete schemes and adaptation of new ones. Once a cryptographic primitive is found broken, you can switch to a new primitive by rotating keys without changing or recompiling code.
Interoperability Tink produces and consumes ciphertexts that are compatible with existing cryptographic libraries. Tink supports encrypting or storing keys in Amazon KMS, Google Cloud KMS, Android Keystore, and it's easy to support other key management systems.
Versatility No part of Tink is hard to replace or remove. All components are recombinant, and can be selected and assembled in various combinations. For example, if you need only digital signature, you can exclude symmetric key encryption components.
Readability Tink shows cryptographic properties (i.e., whether safe against chosen-ciphertext attacks) right in the interfaces, allowing security auditors and automated tools quickly discovering incorrect usages. Tink provides standalone static types for potential dangerous operations (e.g., loading cleartext keys from disk), allowing discovering, restricting, monitoring and logging their usages.
Tink is written by a group of cryptographers and security engineers at Google, but it is not an official Google product. In particular, it is not meant as a replacement or successor of Keyczar.
Current Status Tink for Java is field tested and ready for production -- it is used in several Google products such as AdMob, Android Pay, and Google Android Search App. Tink for C++, Obj-C and Go are in active development.
TIP The easiest way to get started with Tink is to install Bazel, then build, run and study the helloworld
example.
Tink performs cryptographic tasks via so-called primitives, each of which is defined via a corresponding interface that specifies the functionality of the primitive. For example, symmetric key encryption is offered via an AEAD-primitive (Authenticated Encryption with Associated Data), that supports two operations:
encrypt(plaintext, associated_data)
, which encrypts the given plaintext
(using associated_data
as additional AEAD-input) and returns the resulting ciphertextdecrypt(ciphertext, associated_data)
, which decrypts the given ciphertext
(using associated_data
as additional AEAD-input) and returns the resulting plaintextBefore implementations of primitives can be used, it must be registered at runtime with Tink, so that Tink “knows” the desired implementations. Here's how you can register all implementations of all primitives in Tink for Java 1.0.0:
import com.google.crypto.tink.Config; import com.google.crypto.tink.config.TinkConfig; Config.register(TinkConfig.TINK_1_0_0);
After primitives have been registered, the basic use of Tink proceeds in three steps:
Keyset
in Tink terms).Here is how these steps would look like when encrypting or decrypting with an AEAD primitive in Java:
import com.google.crypto.tink.Aead; import com.google.crypto.tink.KeysetHandle; import com.google.crypto.tink.aead.AeadFactory; import com.google.crypto.tink.aead.AeadKeyTemplates; // 1. Generate the key material. KeysetHandle keysetHandle = KeysetHandle.generateNew( AeadKeyTemplates.AES128_GCM); // 2. Get the primitive. Aead aead = AeadFactory.getPrimitive(keysetHandle); // 3. Use the primitive. byte[] ciphertext = aead.encrypt(plaintext, aad);
See the Java HOWTO for how to obtain and use other primitives.
Do not use APIs including fields and methods marked with the @Alpha
annotation. They can be modified in any way, or even removed, at any time. They are in the package, but not for official, production release, but only for testing.
If you want to contribute, please read CONTRIBUTING and send us pull requests. You can also report bugs or request new tests.
If you'd like to talk to our developers or get notified about major new tests, you may want to subscribe to our mailing list. To join, simply send an empty email to tink-users+subscribe@googlegroups.com.
Tink is maintained by: