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- Secure RTP (SRTP) Reference Implementation
- David A. McGrew
- Cisco Systems, Inc.
- mcgrew@cisco.com
- This package provides an implementation of the Secure Real-time
- Transport Protocol (SRTP), the Universal Security Transform (UST), and
- a supporting cryptographic kernel. These mechanisms are documented in
- the Internet Drafts in the doc/ subdirectory. The SRTP API is
- documented in include/srtp.h, and the library is in libsrtp.a (after
- compilation). An overview and reference manual is available in
- doc/libsrtp.pdf. The PDF documentation is more up to date than this
- file.
- Installation:
- ./configure [ options ] # GNU autoconf script
- make # or gmake if needed; use GNU make
- The configure script accepts the following options:
- --help provides a usage summary
- --disable-debug compile without the runtime debugging system
- --enable-syslog use syslog for error reporting
- --disable-stdout use stdout for error reporting
- --enable-console use /dev/console for error reporting
- --enable-openssl use OpenSSL crypto primitives
- --gdoi use GDOI key management (disabled at present)
- By default, debugging is enabled and stdout is used for debugging.
- You can use the above configure options to have the debugging output
- sent to syslog or the system console. Alternatively, you can define
- ERR_REPORTING_FILE in include/conf.h to be any other file that can be
- opened by libSRTP, and debug messages will be sent to it.
- This package has been tested on Mac OS X (powerpc-apple-darwin1.4),
- Cygwin (i686-pc-cygwin), and Sparc (sparc-sun-solaris2.6). Previous
- versions have been tested on Linux and OpenBSD on both x86 and sparc
- platforms.
- A quick tour of this package:
- Makefile targets: all, clean, ...
- README this file
- CHANGES change log
- VERSION version number of this package
- LICENSE legal details (it's a BSD-like license)
- crypto/ciphers/ ciphers (null, aes_icm, ...)
- crypto/math/ crypto math routines
- crypto/hash/ crypto hashing (hmac, tmmhv2, ...)
- crypto/replay/ replay protection
- doc/ documentation: rfcs, apis, and suchlike
- include/ include files for all code in distribution
- srtp/ secure real-time transport protocol implementation
- tables/ apps for generating tables (useful in porting)
- test/ test drivers
- Applications
- Several test drivers and a simple and portable srtp application
- are included in the test/ subdirectory.
- test driver function tested
- -------------------------------------------------------------
- kernel_driver crypto kernel (ciphers, auth funcs, rng)
- srtp_driver srtp in-memory tests (does not use the network)
- rdbx_driver rdbx (extended replay database)
- roc_driver extended sequence number functions
- replay_driver replay database (n.b. not used in libsrtp)
- cipher_driver ciphers
- auth_driver hash functions
- The app rtpw is a simple rtp application which reads words from
- /usr/dict/words and then sends them out one at a time using [s]rtp.
- Manual srtp keying uses the -k option; automated key management
- using gdoi will be added later.
- usage: rtpw [-d <debug>]* [-k <key> [-a][-e <key size>][-g]] [-s | -r] dest_ip dest_port
- or rtpw -l
- Either the -s (sender) or -r (receiver) option must be chosen.
- The values dest_ip, dest_port are the ip address and udp port to
- which the dictionary will be sent, respectively.
- options:
- -s (s)rtp sender - causes app to send words
- -r (s)rtp receive - causes app to receive words
- -k <key> use srtp master key <key>, where the
- key is a hexadecimal value (without the
- leading "0x")
- -e <keysize> encrypt/decrypt (for data confidentiality)
- (requires use of -k option as well)
- (use 128, 192, or 256 for keysize)
- -g use AES-GCM mode (must be used with -e)
- -a message authentication
- (requires use of -k option as well)
- -l list debug modules
- -d <debug> turn on debugging for module <debug>
- -i specify input/output file
- (instead of using dictionary file)
- In order to get random 30-byte values for use as key/salt pairs , you
- can use the following bash function to format the output of
- /dev/random (where that device is available).
- function randhex() {
- cat /dev/random | od --read-bytes=32 --width=32 -x | awk '{ print $2 $3 $4 $5 $6 $7 $8 $9 $10 $11 $12 $13 $14 $15 $16 }'
- }
- An example of an SRTP session using two rtpw programs follows:
- set k=c1eec3717da76195bb878578790af71c4ee9f859e197a414a78d5abc7451
- [sh1]$ test/rtpw -s -k $k -e 128 -a 0.0.0.0 9999
- Security services: confidentiality message authentication
- set master key/salt to C1EEC3717DA76195BB878578790AF71C/4EE9F859E197A414A78D5ABC7451
- setting SSRC to 2078917053
- sending word: A
- sending word: a
- sending word: aa
- sending word: aal
- ...
- [sh2]$ test/rtpw -r -k $k -e 128 -a 0.0.0.0 9999
- security services: confidentiality message authentication
- set master key/salt to C1EEC3717DA76195BB878578790AF71C/4EE9F859E197A414A78D5ABC7451
- 19 octets received from SSRC 2078917053 word: A
- 19 octets received from SSRC 2078917053 word: a
- 20 octets received from SSRC 2078917053 word: aa
- 21 octets received from SSRC 2078917053 word: aal
- ...
- Implementation Notes
- * The srtp_protect() function assumes that the buffer holding the
- rtp packet has enough storage allocated that the authentication
- tag can be written to the end of that packet. If this assumption
- is not valid, memory corruption will ensue.
- * Automated tests for the crypto functions are provided through
- the cipher_type_self_test() and auth_type_self_test() functions.
- These functions should be used to test each port of this code
- to a new platform.
- * Replay protection is contained in the crypto engine, and
- tests for it are provided.
- * This implementation provides calls to initialize, protect, and
- unprotect RTP packets, and makes as few as possible assumptions
- about how these functions will be called. For example, the
- caller is not expected to provide packets in order (though if
- they're called more than 65k out of sequence, synchronization
- will be lost).
-
- * The sequence number in the rtp packet is used as the low 16 bits
- of the sender's local packet index. Note that RTP will start its
- sequence number in a random place, and the SRTP layer just jumps
- forward to that number at its first invocation. An earlier
- version of this library used initial sequence numbers that are
- less than 32,768; this trick is no longer required as the
- rdbx_estimate_index(...) function has been made smarter.
- * The replay window is 128 bits in length, and is hard-coded to this
- value for now.
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