rfc:easy_userland_csprng

PHP RFC: Easy User-land CSPRNG

Version: 0.5

Date: 2015-02-20

Author: Sammy Kaye Powers me@sammyk.me & Leigh leigh@php.net

Status: Implemented (in PHP 7.0)

First Published at: http://wiki.php.net/rfc/easy_userland_csprng

Introduction

This RFC proposes adding a user-land API for an easy to use and reliable CSPRNG in PHP.

The Problem

By default PHP does not provide an easy mechanism for accessing cryptographically strong random numbers in user-land. Users have a few options like openssl_random_pseudo_bytes() , mcrypt_create_iv() or directly opening /dev/*random devices to obtain high quality pseudo-random bytes, but unfortunately system support for these functions and extensions varies between platforms and each come with their own set of problems mcrypt_create_iv() function has no dependency on Thefunction has no dependency on MCrypt lib yet it requires the MCrypt extension to be installed before it can be used. Users are forced to include an entire library for no reason.

openssl_random_pseudo_bytes() is provided by the $crypto_strong the meaning of which may just confuse users. is provided by the OpenSSL lib . This function comes with athe meaning of which may just confuse users.

Falling back to /dev/urandom is OS -specific. In addition users may attempt to generate their own streams of random bytes relying on rand() or mt_rand() , and this is something we absolutely want to avoid.

Proposal

There should be a user-land API to easily return an arbitrary length of cryptographically secure pseudo-random bytes directly and work on any supported platform. The initial proposal is to add two user-land functions that return the bytes as binary and integer. Arbitrary length strings of random bytes are important for salts, keys and initialisation vectors. Integers based on CS random are important for applications where unbiased results are critical (i.e. shuffling a Poker deck). Signatures: random_bytes(int length); random_int(int min, int max); Examples: $randomStr = random_bytes ( $length = 16 ) ; $randomInt = random_int ( $min = 0 , $max = 127 ) ; The sources of random used are as follows: On windows CryptGenRandom is used exclusively

arc4random_buf() is used if it is available (generally BSD specific)

/dev/arandom is used where available

/dev/urandom is used where none of the above is available

An error is thrown in the event that a sufficient source of randomness is unavailable.

Backward Incompatible Changes

Any user-land code that defines a random_bytes() or random_int() function would generate a fatal error, however it is likely that these functions provide the same or similar functionality as desired.

Proposed PHP Version(s)

PHP 7

RFC Impact

To SAPIs

This RFC should not impact the SAPI's.

To Existing Extensions

No existing extensions are affected.

To Opcache

Opcache is unaffected.

New Constants

There would be no new constants.

php.ini Defaults

There would be no new php.ini defaults.

Open Issues

Nothing yet

Unaffected PHP Functionality

This change does not affect any of the existing rand() or mt_rand() functionality.

Future Scope

The concepts from the RFC could be used to: Deprecate mcrypt_create_iv()

Improve session_id randomness generation

Detect LibreSSL-portable for arc4random() on Linux

Patches and Tests

The current patch can be found here: https://github.com/php/php-src/pull/1119

Proposed Voting Choices

The voting choices are yes (in favor for accepting this RFC for PHP 7) or no (against it).

Vote

Changelog

0.5: Updated the function header for random_int() to reflect all args as required. - SammyK

0.4: Added BC info. Updated patch link to point to PR. - SammyK

-PHP_INT_MAX to ~PHP_INT_MAX (thanks 0.3: Changedto(thanks @trevorsuarez ) - SammyK

0.2: Condensed the problem domain into something more focused. Added function sigs. - Leigh.

0.1: Mmmm drafty - Leigh

0.0: Initial draft - need Leigh's input - SammyK

Acknowledgements