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crypto.h
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crypto.h
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/***************************************************************************
* crypto.h -- crypto functions like LM, NTLM etc reside here *
* *
***********************IMPORTANT NMAP LICENSE TERMS************************
* *
* The Nmap Security Scanner is (C) 1996-2019 Insecure.Com LLC ("The Nmap *
* Project"). Nmap is also a registered trademark of the Nmap Project. *
* This program is free software; you may redistribute and/or modify it *
* under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the *
* Free Software Foundation; Version 2 ("GPL"), BUT ONLY WITH ALL OF THE *
* CLARIFICATIONS AND EXCEPTIONS DESCRIBED HEREIN. This guarantees your *
* right to use, modify, and redistribute this software under certain *
* conditions. If you wish to embed Nmap technology into proprietary *
* software, we sell alternative licenses (contact [email protected]). *
* Dozens of software vendors already license Nmap technology such as *
* host discovery, port scanning, OS detection, version detection, and *
* the Nmap Scripting Engine. *
* *
* Note that the GPL places important restrictions on "derivative works", *
* yet it does not provide a detailed definition of that term. To avoid *
* misunderstandings, we interpret that term as broadly as copyright law *
* allows. For example, we consider an application to constitute a *
* derivative work for the purpose of this license if it does any of the *
* following with any software or content covered by this license *
* ("Covered Software"): *
* *
* o Integrates source code from Covered Software. *
* *
* o Reads or includes copyrighted data files, such as Nmap's nmap-os-db *
* or nmap-service-probes. *
* *
* o Is designed specifically to execute Covered Software and parse the *
* results (as opposed to typical shell or execution-menu apps, which will *
* execute anything you tell them to). *
* *
* o Includes Covered Software in a proprietary executable installer. The *
* installers produced by InstallShield are an example of this. Including *
* Nmap with other software in compressed or archival form does not *
* trigger this provision, provided appropriate open source decompression *
* or de-archiving software is widely available for no charge. For the *
* purposes of this license, an installer is considered to include Covered *
* Software even if it actually retrieves a copy of Covered Software from *
* another source during runtime (such as by downloading it from the *
* Internet). *
* *
* o Links (statically or dynamically) to a library which does any of the *
* above. *
* *
* o Executes a helper program, module, or script to do any of the above. *
* *
* This list is not exclusive, but is meant to clarify our interpretation *
* of derived works with some common examples. Other people may interpret *
* the plain GPL differently, so we consider this a special exception to *
* the GPL that we apply to Covered Software. Works which meet any of *
* these conditions must conform to all of the terms of this license, *
* particularly including the GPL Section 3 requirements of providing *
* source code and allowing free redistribution of the work as a whole. *
* *
* As another special exception to the GPL terms, the Nmap Project grants *
* permission to link the code of this program with any version of the *
* OpenSSL library which is distributed under a license identical to that *
* listed in the included docs/licenses/OpenSSL.txt file, and distribute *
* linked combinations including the two. *
* *
* The Nmap Project has permission to redistribute Npcap, a packet *
* capturing driver and library for the Microsoft Windows platform. *
* Npcap is a separate work with it's own license rather than this Nmap *
* license. Since the Npcap license does not permit redistribution *
* without special permission, our Nmap Windows binary packages which *
* contain Npcap may not be redistributed without special permission. *
* *
* Any redistribution of Covered Software, including any derived works, *
* must obey and carry forward all of the terms of this license, including *
* obeying all GPL rules and restrictions. For example, source code of *
* the whole work must be provided and free redistribution must be *
* allowed. All GPL references to "this License", are to be treated as *
* including the terms and conditions of this license text as well. *
* *
* Because this license imposes special exceptions to the GPL, Covered *
* Work may not be combined (even as part of a larger work) with plain GPL *
* software. The terms, conditions, and exceptions of this license must *
* be included as well. This license is incompatible with some other open *
* source licenses as well. In some cases we can relicense portions of *
* Nmap or grant special permissions to use it in other open source *
* software. Please contact [email protected] with any such requests. *
* Similarly, we don't incorporate incompatible open source software into *
* Covered Software without special permission from the copyright holders. *
* *
* If you have any questions about the licensing restrictions on using *
* Nmap in other works, we are happy to help. As mentioned above, we also *
* offer an alternative license to integrate Nmap into proprietary *
* applications and appliances. These contracts have been sold to dozens *
* of software vendors, and generally include a perpetual license as well *
* as providing support and updates. They also fund the continued *
* development of Nmap. Please email [email protected] for further *
* information. *
* *
* If you have received a written license agreement or contract for *
* Covered Software stating terms other than these, you may choose to use *
* and redistribute Covered Software under those terms instead of these. *
* *
* Source is provided to this software because we believe users have a *
* right to know exactly what a program is going to do before they run it. *
* This also allows you to audit the software for security holes. *
* *
* Source code also allows you to port Nmap to new platforms, fix bugs, *
* and add new features. You are highly encouraged to send your changes *
* to the [email protected] mailing list for possible incorporation into the *
* main distribution. By sending these changes to Fyodor or one of the *
* Insecure.Org development mailing lists, or checking them into the Nmap *
* source code repository, it is understood (unless you specify *
* otherwise) that you are offering the Nmap Project the unlimited, *
* non-exclusive right to reuse, modify, and relicense the code. Nmap *
* will always be available Open Source, but this is important because *
* the inability to relicense code has caused devastating problems for *
* other Free Software projects (such as KDE and NASM). We also *
* occasionally relicense the code to third parties as discussed above. *
* If you wish to specify special license conditions of your *
* contributions, just say so when you send them. *
* *
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but *
* WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of *
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the Nmap *
* license file for more details (it's in a COPYING file included with *
* Nmap, and also available from https://svn.nmap.org/nmap/COPYING) *
* *
***************************************************************************/
#ifndef CRYPTO_H
#define CRYPTO_H
#ifdef WIN32
#include "winfix.h"
#endif
/* Generate the Lanman v1 hash (LMv1). The generated hash is incredibly easy to
* reverse, because the input is padded or truncated to 14 characters, then
* split into two 7-character strings. Each of these strings are used as a key
* to encrypt the string, "KGS!@#$%" in DES. Because the keys are no longer
* than 7-characters long, it's pretty trivial to bruteforce them.
*/
void lm_create_hash(const char *password, uint8_t result[16]);
/* Create the Lanman response to send back to the server. To do this, the
* Lanman password is padded to 21 characters and split into three
* 7-character strings. Each of those strings is used as a key to encrypt
* the server challenge. The three encrypted strings are concatenated and
* returned.
*/
void lm_create_response(const uint8_t lanman[16], const uint8_t challenge[8],
uint8_t result[24]);
/* Generate the NTLMv1 hash. This hash is quite a bit better than LMv1, and is
* far easier to generate. Basically, it's the MD4 of the Unicode password.
*/
void ntlm_create_hash(const char *password, uint8_t result[16]);
/* Create the NTLM response to send back to the server. This is actually done
* the exact same way as the Lanman hash, so we call the Lanman function.
*/
void ntlm_create_response(const uint8_t ntlm[16], const uint8_t challenge[8],
uint8_t result[24]);
/* Create the LMv2 response, which can be sent back to the server. This is
* identical to the NTLMv2 function, except that it uses an 8-byte client
* challenge. The reason for LMv2 is a long and twisted story. Well,
* not really. The reason is basically that the v1 hashes are always 24-bytes,
* and some servers expect 24 bytes, but the NTLMv2 hash is more than 24 bytes.
* So, the only way to keep pass-through compatibility was to have a v2-hash
* that was guaranteed to be 24 bytes. So LMv1 was born: it has a 16-byte hash
* followed by the 8-byte client challenge, for a total of 24 bytes.
*/
void lmv2_create_response(const uint8_t ntlm[16], const char *username,
const char *domain, const uint8_t challenge[8], uint8_t *result,
uint8_t *result_size);
/* Create the NTLMv2 hash, which is based on the NTLMv1 hash (for easy
* upgrading), the username, and the domain. Essentially, the NTLM hash
* is used as a HMAC-MD5 key, which is used to hash the unicode domain
* concatenated with the unicode username.
*/
void ntlmv2_create_hash(const uint8_t ntlm[16], const char *username,
const char *domain, uint8_t hash[16]);
/* Create the NTLMv2 response, which can be sent back to the server. This is
* done by using the HMAC-MD5 algorithm with the NTLMv2 hash as a key, and
* the server challenge concatenated with the client challenge for the data.
* The resulting hash is concatenated with the client challenge and returned.
*/
void ntlmv2_create_response(const uint8_t ntlm[16], const char *username,
const char *domain, const uint8_t challenge[8], uint8_t *result,
uint8_t *result_size);
/*
* Uses the RSA algorithm to encrypt the input into the output.
*/
void rsa_encrypt(uint8_t *input, uint8_t *output, int length,
uint8_t *mod_bin, uint32_t mod_size, uint8_t *exp_bin);
/*
* Uses MD5 and SHA1 hash functions, using 3 salts to compute a message
* digest (saved into 'output')
*/
void hash48(uint8_t *output, uint8_t *input, uint8_t salt, uint8_t *sha_salt1,
uint8_t *sha_salt2);
/*
* MD5 crypt 'input' into 'output' by using 2 salts
*/
void hash16(uint8_t *output, uint8_t *input, uint8_t *md5_salt1,
uint8_t *md5_salt2);
/*
* This is D3DES (V5.09) by Richard Outerbridge with the double and
* triple-length support removed for use in VNC.
*
* These changes are:
* Copyright (C) 1999 AT&T Laboratories Cambridge. All Rights Reserved.
*
* This software is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
*/
/* d3des.h -
*
* Headers and defines for d3des.c
* Graven Imagery, 1992.
*
* Copyright (c) 1988,1989,1990,1991,1992 by Richard Outerbridge
* (GEnie : OUTER; CIS : [71755,204])
*/
#define EN0 0 /* MODE == encrypt */
#define DE1 1 /* MODE == decrypt */
extern void deskey(unsigned char *, int);
/* hexkey[8] MODE
* Sets the internal key register according to the hexadecimal
* key contained in the 8 bytes of hexkey, according to the DES,
* for encryption or decryption according to MODE.
*/
extern void usekey(unsigned long *);
/* cookedkey[32]
* Loads the internal key register with the data in cookedkey.
*/
extern void cpkey(unsigned long *);
/* cookedkey[32]
* Copies the contents of the internal key register into the storage
* located at &cookedkey[0].
*/
extern void des(unsigned char *, unsigned char *);
/* from[8] to[8]
* Encrypts/Decrypts (according to the key currently loaded in the
* internal key register) one block of eight bytes at address 'from'
* into the block at address 'to'. They can be the same.
*/
/* d3des.h V5.09 rwo 9208.04 15:06 Graven Imagery
********************************************************************/
#endif