OSSL_HPKE_CTX_NEW(3ossl) OpenSSL OSSL_HPKE_CTX_NEW(3ossl)
NAME
OSSL_HPKE_CTX_new, OSSL_HPKE_CTX_free, OSSL_HPKE_encap,
OSSL_HPKE_decap, OSSL_HPKE_seal, OSSL_HPKE_open, OSSL_HPKE_export,
OSSL_HPKE_suite_check, OSSL_HPKE_str2suite, OSSL_HPKE_keygen,
OSSL_HPKE_get_grease_value, OSSL_HPKE_get_ciphertext_size,
OSSL_HPKE_get_public_encap_size, OSSL_HPKE_get_recommended_ikmelen,
OSSL_HPKE_CTX_set1_psk, OSSL_HPKE_CTX_set1_ikme,
OSSL_HPKE_CTX_set1_authpriv, OSSL_HPKE_CTX_set1_authpub,
OSSL_HPKE_CTX_get_seq, OSSL_HPKE_CTX_set_seq - Hybrid Public Key
Encryption (HPKE) functions
SYNOPSIS
#include <openssl/hpke.h>
typedef struct {
uint16_t kem_id;
uint16_t kdf_id;
uint16_t aead_id;
} OSSL_HPKE_SUITE;
OSSL_HPKE_CTX *OSSL_HPKE_CTX_new(int mode, OSSL_HPKE_SUITE suite, int role,
OSSL_LIB_CTX *libctx, const char *propq);
void OSSL_HPKE_CTX_free(OSSL_HPKE_CTX *ctx);
int OSSL_HPKE_encap(OSSL_HPKE_CTX *ctx,
unsigned char *enc, size_t *enclen,
const unsigned char *pub, size_t publen,
const unsigned char *info, size_t infolen);
int OSSL_HPKE_seal(OSSL_HPKE_CTX *ctx,
unsigned char *ct, size_t *ctlen,
const unsigned char *aad, size_t aadlen,
const unsigned char *pt, size_t ptlen);
int OSSL_HPKE_keygen(OSSL_HPKE_SUITE suite,
unsigned char *pub, size_t *publen, EVP_PKEY **priv,
const unsigned char *ikm, size_t ikmlen,
OSSL_LIB_CTX *libctx, const char *propq);
int OSSL_HPKE_decap(OSSL_HPKE_CTX *ctx,
const unsigned char *enc, size_t enclen,
EVP_PKEY *recippriv,
const unsigned char *info, size_t infolen);
int OSSL_HPKE_open(OSSL_HPKE_CTX *ctx,
unsigned char *pt, size_t *ptlen,
const unsigned char *aad, size_t aadlen,
const unsigned char *ct, size_t ctlen);
int OSSL_HPKE_export(OSSL_HPKE_CTX *ctx,
unsigned char *secret, size_t secretlen,
const unsigned char *label, size_t labellen);
int OSSL_HPKE_CTX_set1_authpriv(OSSL_HPKE_CTX *ctx, EVP_PKEY *priv);
int OSSL_HPKE_CTX_set1_authpub(OSSL_HPKE_CTX *ctx,
unsigned char *pub, size_t publen);
int OSSL_HPKE_CTX_set1_psk(OSSL_HPKE_CTX *ctx,
const char *pskid,
const unsigned char *psk, size_t psklen);
int OSSL_HPKE_CTX_get_seq(OSSL_HPKE_CTX *ctx, uint64_t *seq);
int OSSL_HPKE_CTX_set_seq(OSSL_HPKE_CTX *ctx, uint64_t seq);
int OSSL_HPKE_CTX_set1_ikme(OSSL_HPKE_CTX *ctx,
const unsigned char *ikme, size_t ikmelen);
int OSSL_HPKE_suite_check(OSSL_HPKE_SUITE suite);
int OSSL_HPKE_get_grease_value(const OSSL_HPKE_SUITE *suite_in,
OSSL_HPKE_SUITE *suite,
unsigned char *enc, size_t *enclen,
unsigned char *ct, size_t ctlen,
OSSL_LIB_CTX *libctx, const char *propq);
int OSSL_HPKE_str2suite(const char *str, OSSL_HPKE_SUITE *suite);
size_t OSSL_HPKE_get_ciphertext_size(OSSL_HPKE_SUITE suite, size_t clearlen);
size_t OSSL_HPKE_get_public_encap_size(OSSL_HPKE_SUITE suite);
size_t OSSL_HPKE_get_recommended_ikmelen(OSSL_HPKE_SUITE suite);
DESCRIPTION
These functions provide an API for using the form of Hybrid Public Key
Encryption (HPKE) defined in RFC9180. Understanding the HPKE
specification is likely required before using these APIs. HPKE is used
by various other IETF specifications, including the TLS Encrypted
Client Hello (ECH) specification and others.
HPKE is a standardised, highly flexible construct for encrypting "to" a
public key that supports combinations of a key encapsulation method
(KEM), a key derivation function (KDF) and an authenticated encryption
with additional data (AEAD) algorithm, with optional sender
authentication.
The sender and a receiver here will generally be using some application
or protocol making use of HPKE. For example, with ECH, the sender will
be a browser and the receiver will be a web server.
Data Structures
OSSL_HPKE_SUITE is a structure that holds identifiers for the
algorithms used for KEM, KDF and AEAD operations.
OSSL_HPKE_CTX is a context that maintains internal state as HPKE
operations are carried out. Separate OSSL_HPKE_CTX objects must be used
for the sender and receiver. Attempting to use a single context for
both will result in errors.
OSSL_HPKE_SUITE Identifiers
The identifiers used by OSSL_HPKE_SUITE are:
The KEM identifier kem_id is one of the following:
0x10 OSSL_HPKE_KEM_ID_P256
0x11 OSSL_HPKE_KEM_ID_P384
0x12 OSSL_HPKE_KEM_ID_P521
0x20 OSSL_HPKE_KEM_ID_X25519
0x21 OSSL_HPKE_KEM_ID_X448
The KDF identifier kdf_id is one of the following:
0x01 OSSL_HPKE_KDF_ID_HKDF_SHA256
0x02 OSSL_HPKE_KDF_ID_HKDF_SHA384
0x03 OSSL_HPKE_KDF_ID_HKDF_SHA512
The AEAD identifier aead_id is one of the following:
0x01 OSSL_HPKE_AEAD_ID_AES_GCM_128
0x02 OSSL_HPKE_AEAD_ID_AES_GCM_256
0x03 OSSL_HPKE_AEAD_ID_CHACHA_POLY1305
0xFFFF OSSL_HPKE_AEAD_ID_EXPORTONLY
The last identifier above indicates that AEAD operations are not
needed. OSSL_HPKE_export() can be used, but OSSL_HPKE_open() and
OSSL_HPKE_seal() will return an error if called with a context
using that AEAD identifier.
HPKE Modes
HPKE supports the following variants of Authentication using a mode
Identifier:
OSSL_HPKE_MODE_BASE, 0x00
Authentication is not used.
OSSL_HPKE_MODE_PSK, 0x01
Authenticates possession of a pre-shared key (PSK).
OSSL_HPKE_MODE_AUTH, 0x02
Authenticates possession of a KEM-based sender private key.
OSSL_HPKE_MODE_PSKAUTH, 0x03
A combination of OSSL_HPKE_MODE_PSK and OSSL_HPKE_MODE_AUTH. Both
the PSK and the senders authentication public/private must be
supplied before the encapsulation/decapsulation operation will
work.
For further information related to authentication see "Pre-Shared Key
HPKE modes" and "Sender-authenticated HPKE Modes".
HPKE Roles
HPKE contexts have a role - either sender or receiver. This is used to
control which functions can be called and so that senders do not reuse
a key and nonce with different plaintexts.
OSSL_HPKE_CTX_free(), OSSL_HPKE_export(), OSSL_HPKE_CTX_set1_psk(), and
OSSL_HPKE_CTX_get_seq() can be called regardless of role.
OSSL_HPKE_ROLE_SENDER, 0
An OSSL_HPKE_CTX with this role can be used with OSSL_HPKE_encap(),
OSSL_HPKE_seal(), OSSL_HPKE_CTX_set1_ikme() and
OSSL_HPKE_CTX_set1_authpriv().
OSSL_HPKE_ROLE_RECEIVER, 1
An OSSL_HPKE_CTX with this role can be used with OSSL_HPKE_decap(),
OSSL_HPKE_open(), OSSL_HPKE_CTX_set1_authpub() and
OSSL_HPKE_CTX_set_seq().
Calling a function with an incorrect role set on OSSL_HPKE_CTX will
result in an error.
Parameter Size Limits
In order to improve interoperability, RFC9180, section 7.2.1 suggests a
RECOMMENDED maximum size of 64 octets for various input parameters. In
this implementation we apply a limit of 66 octets for the ikmlen,
psklen, and labellen parameters, and for the length of the string pskid
for HPKE functions below. The constant OSSL_HPKE_MAX_PARMLEN is defined
as the limit of this value. (We chose 66 octets so that we can
validate all the test vectors present in RFC9180, Appendix A.)
In accordance with RFC9180, section 9.5, we define a constant
OSSL_HPKE_MIN_PSKLEN with a value of 32 for the minimum length of a
pre-shared key, passed in psklen.
While RFC9180 also RECOMMENDS a 64 octet limit for the infolen
parameter, that is not sufficient for TLS Encrypted ClientHello (ECH)
processing, so we enforce a limit of OSSL_HPKE_MAX_INFOLEN with a value
of 1024 as the limit for the infolen parameter.
Context Construct/Free
OSSL_HPKE_CTX_new(3) creates a OSSL_HPKE_CTX context object used for
subsequent HPKE operations, given a mode (See "HPKE Modes"), suite (see
"OSSL_HPKE_SUITE Identifiers") and a role (see "HPKE Roles"). The
libctx and propq are used when fetching algorithms from providers and
may be set to NULL.
OSSL_HPKE_CTX_free() frees the ctx OSSL_HPKE_CTX that was created
previously by a call to OSSL_HPKE_CTX_new(3). If the argument to
OSSL_HPKE_CTX_free() is NULL, nothing is done.
Sender APIs
A sender's goal is to use HPKE to encrypt using a public key, via use
of a KEM, then a KDF and finally an AEAD. The first step is to
encapsulate (using OSSL_HPKE_encap()) the sender's public value using
the recipient's public key, (pub) and to internally derive secrets.
This produces the encapsulated public value (enc) to be sent to the
recipient in whatever protocol is using HPKE. Having done the
encapsulation step, the sender can then make one or more calls to
OSSL_HPKE_seal() to encrypt plaintexts using the secret stored within
ctx.
OSSL_HPKE_encap() uses the HPKE context ctx, the recipient public value
pub of size publen, and an optional info parameter of size infolen, to
produce the encapsulated public value enc. On input enclen should
contain the maximum size of the enc buffer, and returns the output
size. An error will occur if the input enclen is smaller than the value
returned from OSSL_HPKE_get_public_encap_size(). info may be used to
bind other protocol or application artefacts such as identifiers.
Generally, the encapsulated public value enc corresponds to a single-
use ephemeral private value created as part of the encapsulation
process. Only a single call to OSSL_HPKE_encap() is allowed for a given
OSSL_HPKE_CTX.
OSSL_HPKE_seal() takes the OSSL_HPKE_CTX context ctx, the plaintext
buffer pt of size ptlen and optional additional authenticated data
buffer aad of size aadlen, and returns the ciphertext ct of size ctlen.
On input ctlen should contain the maximum size of the ct buffer, and
returns the output size. An error will occur if the input ctlen is
smaller than the value returned from OSSL_HPKE_get_public_encap_size().
OSSL_HPKE_encap() must be called before the OSSL_HPKE_seal().
OSSL_HPKE_seal() may be called multiple times, with an internal "nonce"
being incremented by one after each call.
Recipient APIs
Recipients using HPKE require a typically less ephemeral private value
so that the public value can be distributed to potential senders via
whatever protocol is using HPKE. For this reason, recipients will
generally first generate a key pair and will need to manage their
private key value using standard mechanisms outside the scope of this
API. Private keys use normal EVP_PKEY(3) pointers so normal private key
management mechanisms can be used for the relevant values.
In order to enable encapsulation, the recipient needs to make it's
public value available to the sender. There is no generic HPKE format
defined for that - the relevant formatting is intended to be defined by
the application/protocols that makes use of HPKE. ECH for example
defines an ECHConfig data structure that combines the public value with
other ECH data items. Normal library functions must therefore be used
to extract the public value in the required format based on the
EVP_PKEY(3) for the private value.
OSSL_HPKE_keygen() provides a way for recipients to generate a key pair
based on the HPKE suite to be used. It returns a EVP_PKEY(3) pointer
for the private value priv and a encoded public key pub of size publen.
On input publen should contain the maximum size of the pub buffer, and
returns the output size. An error will occur if the input publen is too
small. The libctx and propq are used when fetching algorithms from
providers and may be set to NULL. The HPKE specification also defines
a deterministic key generation scheme where the private value is
derived from initial keying material (IKM), so OSSL_HPKE_keygen() also
has an option to use that scheme, using the ikm parameter of size
ikmlen. If either ikm is NULL or ikmlen is zero, then a randomly
generated key for the relevant suite will be produced. If required
ikmlen should be greater than or equal to
OSSL_HPKE_get_recommended_ikmelen().
OSSL_HPKE_decap() takes as input the sender's encapsulated public value
produced by OSSL_HPKE_encap() (enc) and the recipient's EVP_PKEY(3)
pointer (prov), and then re-generates the internal secret derived by
the sender. As before, an optional info parameter allows binding that
derived secret to other application/protocol artefacts. Only a single
call to OSSL_HPKE_decap() is allowed for a given OSSL_HPKE_CTX.
OSSL_HPKE_open() is used by the recipient to decrypt the ciphertext ct
of size ctlen using the ctx and additional authenticated data aad of
size aadlen, to produce the plaintext pt of size ptlen. On input ptlen
should contain the maximum size of the pt buffer, and returns the
output size. A pt buffer that is the same size as the ct buffer will
suffice - generally the plaintext output will be a little smaller than
the ciphertext input. An error will occur if the input ptlen is too
small. OSSL_HPKE_open() may be called multiple times, but as with
OSSL_HPKE_seal() there is an internally incrementing nonce value so
ciphertexts need to be presented in the same order as used by the
OSSL_HPKE_seal(). See "Re-sequencing" if you need to process multiple
ciphertexts in a different order.
Exporting Secrets
HPKE defines a way to produce exported secrets for use by the
application.
OSSL_HPKE_export() takes as input the OSSL_HPKE_CTX, and an application
supplied label label of size labellen, to produce a secret secret of
size secretlen. The sender must first call OSSL_HPKE_encap(), and the
receiver must call OSSL_HPKE_decap() in order to derive the same shared
secret.
Multiple calls to OSSL_HPKE_export() with the same inputs will produce
the same secret. OSSL_HPKE_AEAD_ID_EXPORTONLY may be used as the
OSSL_HPKE_CTX_new(3) if the
user needs to produce a shared secret, but does not wish to perform
HPKE encryption.
Sender-authenticated HPKE Modes
HPKE defines modes that support KEM-based sender-authentication
OSSL_HPKE_MODE_AUTH and OSSL_HPKE_MODE_PSKAUTH. This works by binding
the sender's authentication private/public values into the
encapsulation and decapsulation operations. The key used for such modes
must also use the same KEM as used for the overall exchange.
OSSL_HPKE_keygen() can be used to generate the private value required.
OSSL_HPKE_CTX_set1_authpriv() can be used by the sender to set the
senders private priv EVP_PKEY key into the OSSL_HPKE_CTX ctx before
calling OSSL_HPKE_encap().
OSSL_HPKE_CTX_set1_authpub() can be used by the receiver to set the
senders encoded pub key pub of size publen into the OSSL_HPKE_CTX ctx
before calling OSSL_HPKE_decap().
Pre-Shared Key HPKE modes
HPKE also defines a symmetric equivalent to the authentication
described above using a pre-shared key (PSK) and a PSK identifier. PSKs
can be used with the OSSL_HPKE_MODE_PSK and OSSL_HPKE_MODE_PSKAUTH
modes.
OSSL_HPKE_CTX_set1_psk() sets the PSK identifier pskid string, and PSK
buffer psk of size psklen into the ctx. If required this must be called
before OSSL_HPKE_encap() or OSSL_HPKE_decap(). As per RFC9180, if
required, both psk and pskid must be set to non-NULL values. As PSKs
are symmetric the same calls must happen on both sender and receiver
sides.
Deterministic key generation for senders
Normally the senders ephemeral private key is generated randomly inside
OSSL_HPKE_encap() and remains secret. OSSL_HPKE_CTX_set1_ikme() allows
the user to override this behaviour by setting a deterministic input
key material ikm of size ikmlen into the OSSL_HPKE_CTX ctx. If
required OSSL_HPKE_CTX_set1_ikme() can optionally be called before
OSSL_HPKE_encap(). ikmlen should be greater than or equal to
OSSL_HPKE_get_recommended_ikmelen().
It is generally undesirable to use OSSL_HPKE_CTX_set1_ikme(), since it
exposes the relevant secret to the application rather then preserving
it within the library, and is more likely to result in use of
predictable values or values that leak.
Re-sequencing
Some protocols may have to deal with packet loss while still being able
to decrypt arriving packets later. We provide a way to set the
increment used for the nonce to the next subsequent call to
OSSL_HPKE_open() (but not to OSSL_HPKE_seal() as explained below). The
OSSL_HPKE_CTX_set_seq() API can be used for such purposes with the seq
parameter value resetting the internal nonce increment to be used for
the next call.
A baseline nonce value is established based on the encapsulation or
decapsulation operation and is then incremented by 1 for each call to
seal or open. (In other words, the first seq increment defaults to
zero.)
If a caller needs to determine how many calls to seal or open have been
made the OSSL_HPKE_CTX_get_seq() API can be used to retrieve the
increment (in the seq output) that will be used in the next call to
seal or open. That would return 0 before the first call a sender made
to OSSL_HPKE_seal() and 1 after that first call.
Note that reuse of the same nonce and key with different plaintexts
would be very dangerous and could lead to loss of confidentiality and
integrity. We therefore only support application control over seq for
decryption (i.e. OSSL_HPKE_open()) operations.
For compatibility with other implementations these seq increments are
represented as uint64_t.
Protocol Convenience Functions
Additional convenience APIs allow the caller to access internal details
of local HPKE support and/or algorithms, such as parameter lengths.
OSSL_HPKE_suite_check() checks if a specific OSSL_HPKE_SUITE suite is
supported locally.
To assist with memory allocation, OSSL_HPKE_get_ciphertext_size()
provides a way for the caller to know by how much ciphertext will be
longer than a plaintext of length clearlen. (AEAD algorithms add a
data integrity tag, so there is a small amount of ciphertext
expansion.)
OSSL_HPKE_get_public_encap_size() provides a way for senders to know
how big the encapsulated public value will be for a given HPKE suite.
OSSL_HPKE_get_recommended_ikmelen() returns the recommended Input Key
Material size (in bytes) for a given suite. This is needed in cases
where the same public value needs to be regenerated by a sender before
calling OSSL_HPKE_seal(). ikmlen should be at least this size.
OSSL_HPKE_get_grease_value() produces values of the appropriate length
for a given suite_in value (or a random value if suite_in is NULL) so
that a protocol using HPKE can send so-called GREASE (see RFC8701)
values that are harder to distinguish from a real use of HPKE. The
buffer sizes should be supplied on input. The output enc value will
have an appropriate length for suite_out and a random value, and the ct
output will be a random value. The relevant sizes for buffers can be
found using OSSL_HPKE_get_ciphertext_size() and
OSSL_HPKE_get_public_encap_size().
OSSL_HPKE_str2suite() maps input str strings to an OSSL_HPKE_SUITE
object. The input str should be a comma-separated string with a KEM,
KDF and AEAD name in that order, for example
"x25519,hkdf-sha256,aes128gcm". This can be used by command line tools
that accept string form names for HPKE codepoints. Valid (case-
insensitive) names are: "p-256", "p-384", "p-521", "x25519" and "x448"
for KEM, "hkdf-sha256", "hkdf-sha384" and "hkdf-sha512" for KDF, and
"aes-gcm-128", "aes-gcm-256", "chacha20-poly1305" and "exporter" for
AEAD. String variants of the numbers listed in "OSSL_HPKE_SUITE
Identifiers" can also be used.
RETURN VALUES
OSSL_HPKE_CTX_new(3) returns an OSSL_HPKE_CTX pointer or NULL on error.
OSSL_HPKE_get_ciphertext_size(), OSSL_HPKE_get_public_encap_size(),
OSSL_HPKE_get_recommended_ikmelen() all return a size_t with the
relevant value or zero on error.
All other functions return 1 for success or zero for error.
EXAMPLES
This example demonstrates a minimal round-trip using HPKE.
#include <stddef.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <openssl/hpke.h>
#include <openssl/evp.h>
/*
* this is big enough for this example, real code would need different
* handling
*/
#define LBUFSIZE 48
/* Do a round-trip, generating a key, encrypting and decrypting */
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
int ok = 0;
int hpke_mode = OSSL_HPKE_MODE_BASE;
OSSL_HPKE_SUITE hpke_suite = OSSL_HPKE_SUITE_DEFAULT;
OSSL_HPKE_CTX *sctx = NULL, *rctx = NULL;
EVP_PKEY *priv = NULL;
unsigned char pub[LBUFSIZE];
size_t publen = sizeof(pub);
unsigned char enc[LBUFSIZE];
size_t enclen = sizeof(enc);
unsigned char ct[LBUFSIZE];
size_t ctlen = sizeof(ct);
unsigned char clear[LBUFSIZE];
size_t clearlen = sizeof(clear);
const unsigned char *pt = "a message not in a bottle";
size_t ptlen = strlen((char *)pt);
const unsigned char *info = "Some info";
size_t infolen = strlen((char *)info);
unsigned char aad[] = { 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 };
size_t aadlen = sizeof(aad);
/*
* Generate receiver's key pair.
* The receiver gives this public key to the sender.
*/
if (OSSL_HPKE_keygen(hpke_suite, pub, &publen, &priv,
NULL, 0, NULL, NULL) != 1)
goto err;
/* sender's actions - encrypt data using the receivers public key */
if ((sctx = OSSL_HPKE_CTX_new(hpke_mode, hpke_suite,
OSSL_HPKE_ROLE_SENDER,
NULL, NULL)) == NULL)
goto err;
if (OSSL_HPKE_encap(sctx, enc, &enclen, pub, publen, info, infolen) != 1)
goto err;
if (OSSL_HPKE_seal(sctx, ct, &ctlen, aad, aadlen, pt, ptlen) != 1)
goto err;
/* receiver's actions - decrypt data using the receivers private key */
if ((rctx = OSSL_HPKE_CTX_new(hpke_mode, hpke_suite,
OSSL_HPKE_ROLE_RECEIVER,
NULL, NULL)) == NULL)
goto err;
if (OSSL_HPKE_decap(rctx, enc, enclen, priv, info, infolen) != 1)
goto err;
if (OSSL_HPKE_open(rctx, clear, &clearlen, aad, aadlen, ct, ctlen) != 1)
goto err;
ok = 1;
err:
/* clean up */
printf(ok ? "All Good!\n" : "Error!\n");
OSSL_HPKE_CTX_free(rctx);
OSSL_HPKE_CTX_free(sctx);
EVP_PKEY_free(priv);
return 0;
}
WARNINGS
Note that the OSSL_HPKE_CTX_set_seq() API could be dangerous - if used
with GCM that could lead to nonce-reuse, which is a known danger. So
avoid that entirely, or be very very careful when using that API.
Use of an IKM value for deterministic key generation (via
OSSL_HPKE_CTX_set1_ikme() or OSSL_HPKE_keygen()) creates the potential
for leaking keys (or IKM values). Only use that if really needed and if
you understand how keys or IKM values could be abused.
SEE ALSO
The RFC9180 specification: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/rfc9180/
HISTORY
This functionality described here was added in OpenSSL 3.2.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2022-2025 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License"). You may not use
this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy
in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at
<https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>.
3.4.1 2025-02-12 OSSL_HPKE_CTX_NEW(3ossl)
openssl 3.4.1 - Generated Thu Feb 20 15:09:05 CST 2025
