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Direktori : /home2/selectio/public_html/a1tex.in/vendor/phpseclib/phpseclib/phpseclib/Crypt/ |
Current File : /home2/selectio/public_html/a1tex.in/vendor/phpseclib/phpseclib/phpseclib/Crypt/Random.php |
<?php /** * Random Number Generator * * PHP version 5 * * Here's a short example of how to use this library: * <code> * <?php * include 'vendor/autoload.php'; * * echo bin2hex(\phpseclib3\Crypt\Random::string(8)); * ?> * </code> * * @author Jim Wigginton <terrafrost@php.net> * @copyright 2007 Jim Wigginton * @license http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.html MIT License * @link http://phpseclib.sourceforge.net */ namespace phpseclib3\Crypt; /** * Pure-PHP Random Number Generator * * @author Jim Wigginton <terrafrost@php.net> */ abstract class Random { /** * Generate a random string. * * Although microoptimizations are generally discouraged as they impair readability this function is ripe with * microoptimizations because this function has the potential of being called a huge number of times. * eg. for RSA key generation. * * @param int $length * @throws \RuntimeException if a symmetric cipher is needed but not loaded * @return string */ public static function string($length) { if (!$length) { return ''; } try { return random_bytes($length); } catch (\Exception $e) { // random_compat will throw an Exception, which in PHP 5 does not implement Throwable } catch (\Throwable $e) { // If a sufficient source of randomness is unavailable, random_bytes() will throw an // object that implements the Throwable interface (Exception, TypeError, Error). // We don't actually need to do anything here. The string() method should just continue // as normal. Note, however, that if we don't have a sufficient source of randomness for // random_bytes(), most of the other calls here will fail too, so we'll end up using // the PHP implementation. } // at this point we have no choice but to use a pure-PHP CSPRNG // cascade entropy across multiple PHP instances by fixing the session and collecting all // environmental variables, including the previous session data and the current session // data. // // mt_rand seeds itself by looking at the PID and the time, both of which are (relatively) // easy to guess at. linux uses mouse clicks, keyboard timings, etc, as entropy sources, but // PHP isn't low level to be able to use those as sources and on a web server there's not likely // going to be a ton of keyboard or mouse action. web servers do have one thing that we can use // however, a ton of people visiting the website. obviously you don't want to base your seeding // solely on parameters a potential attacker sends but (1) not everything in $_SERVER is controlled // by the user and (2) this isn't just looking at the data sent by the current user - it's based // on the data sent by all users. one user requests the page and a hash of their info is saved. // another user visits the page and the serialization of their data is utilized along with the // server environment stuff and a hash of the previous http request data (which itself utilizes // a hash of the session data before that). certainly an attacker should be assumed to have // full control over his own http requests. he, however, is not going to have control over // everyone's http requests. static $crypto = false, $v; if ($crypto === false) { // save old session data $old_session_id = session_id(); $old_use_cookies = ini_get('session.use_cookies'); $old_session_cache_limiter = session_cache_limiter(); $_OLD_SESSION = isset($_SESSION) ? $_SESSION : false; if ($old_session_id != '') { session_write_close(); } session_id(1); ini_set('session.use_cookies', 0); session_cache_limiter(''); session_start(); $v = (isset($_SERVER) ? self::safe_serialize($_SERVER) : '') . (isset($_POST) ? self::safe_serialize($_POST) : '') . (isset($_GET) ? self::safe_serialize($_GET) : '') . (isset($_COOKIE) ? self::safe_serialize($_COOKIE) : '') . // as of PHP 8.1 $GLOBALS can't be accessed by reference, which eliminates // the need for phpseclib_safe_serialize. see https://wiki.php.net/rfc/restrict_globals_usage // for more info (version_compare(PHP_VERSION, '8.1.0', '>=') ? serialize($GLOBALS) : self::safe_serialize($GLOBALS)) . self::safe_serialize($_SESSION) . self::safe_serialize($_OLD_SESSION); $v = $seed = $_SESSION['seed'] = sha1($v, true); if (!isset($_SESSION['count'])) { $_SESSION['count'] = 0; } $_SESSION['count']++; session_write_close(); // restore old session data if ($old_session_id != '') { session_id($old_session_id); session_start(); ini_set('session.use_cookies', $old_use_cookies); session_cache_limiter($old_session_cache_limiter); } else { if ($_OLD_SESSION !== false) { $_SESSION = $_OLD_SESSION; unset($_OLD_SESSION); } else { unset($_SESSION); } } // in SSH2 a shared secret and an exchange hash are generated through the key exchange process. // the IV client to server is the hash of that "nonce" with the letter A and for the encryption key it's the letter C. // if the hash doesn't produce enough a key or an IV that's long enough concat successive hashes of the // original hash and the current hash. we'll be emulating that. for more info see the following URL: // // http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4253#section-7.2 // // see the is_string($crypto) part for an example of how to expand the keys $key = sha1($seed . 'A', true); $iv = sha1($seed . 'C', true); // ciphers are used as per the nist.gov link below. also, see this link: // // http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cryptographically_secure_pseudorandom_number_generator#Designs_based_on_cryptographic_primitives switch (true) { case class_exists('\phpseclib3\Crypt\AES'): $crypto = new AES('ctr'); break; case class_exists('\phpseclib3\Crypt\Twofish'): $crypto = new Twofish('ctr'); break; case class_exists('\phpseclib3\Crypt\Blowfish'): $crypto = new Blowfish('ctr'); break; case class_exists('\phpseclib3\Crypt\TripleDES'): $crypto = new TripleDES('ctr'); break; case class_exists('\phpseclib3\Crypt\DES'): $crypto = new DES('ctr'); break; case class_exists('\phpseclib3\Crypt\RC4'): $crypto = new RC4(); break; default: throw new \RuntimeException(__CLASS__ . ' requires at least one symmetric cipher be loaded'); } $crypto->setKey(substr($key, 0, $crypto->getKeyLength() >> 3)); $crypto->setIV(substr($iv, 0, $crypto->getBlockLength() >> 3)); $crypto->enableContinuousBuffer(); } //return $crypto->encrypt(str_repeat("\0", $length)); // the following is based off of ANSI X9.31: // // http://csrc.nist.gov/groups/STM/cavp/documents/rng/931rngext.pdf // // OpenSSL uses that same standard for it's random numbers: // // http://www.opensource.apple.com/source/OpenSSL/OpenSSL-38/openssl/fips-1.0/rand/fips_rand.c // (do a search for "ANS X9.31 A.2.4") $result = ''; while (strlen($result) < $length) { $i = $crypto->encrypt(microtime()); // strlen(microtime()) == 21 $r = $crypto->encrypt($i ^ $v); // strlen($v) == 20 $v = $crypto->encrypt($r ^ $i); // strlen($r) == 20 $result .= $r; } return substr($result, 0, $length); } /** * Safely serialize variables * * If a class has a private __sleep() it'll emit a warning * @return mixed * @param mixed $arr */ private static function safe_serialize(&$arr) { if (is_object($arr)) { return ''; } if (!is_array($arr)) { return serialize($arr); } // prevent circular array recursion if (isset($arr['__phpseclib_marker'])) { return ''; } $safearr = []; $arr['__phpseclib_marker'] = true; foreach (array_keys($arr) as $key) { // do not recurse on the '__phpseclib_marker' key itself, for smaller memory usage if ($key !== '__phpseclib_marker') { $safearr[$key] = self::safe_serialize($arr[$key]); } } unset($arr['__phpseclib_marker']); return serialize($safearr); } }