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author | Stephan Mueller <smueller@chronox.de> | 2016-10-21 05:54:22 +0300 |
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committer | Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net> | 2016-12-14 02:37:54 +0300 |
commit | 3b72c814a8e8cd638e1ba0da4dfce501e9dff5af (patch) | |
tree | a79b261dd9f10bd3525ed97d1bb54058fc6d9a1e /Documentation/crypto/intro.rst | |
parent | 868c97a846a73e937d835b09b8c885a69df50ec8 (diff) | |
download | linux-3b72c814a8e8cd638e1ba0da4dfce501e9dff5af.tar.xz |
crypto: doc - convert crypto API documentation to Sphinx
With the conversion of the kernel crypto API DocBook to Sphinx, the
monolithic document is broken up into individual documents. The
documentation is unchanged with the exception of a slight reordering to
keep the individual document parts self-contained.
Signed-off-by: Stephan Mueller <smueller@chronox.de>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/crypto/intro.rst')
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/crypto/intro.rst | 74 |
1 files changed, 74 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/crypto/intro.rst b/Documentation/crypto/intro.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..9aa89ebbfba9 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/crypto/intro.rst @@ -0,0 +1,74 @@ +Kernel Crypto API Interface Specification +========================================= + +Introduction +------------ + +The kernel crypto API offers a rich set of cryptographic ciphers as well +as other data transformation mechanisms and methods to invoke these. +This document contains a description of the API and provides example +code. + +To understand and properly use the kernel crypto API a brief explanation +of its structure is given. Based on the architecture, the API can be +separated into different components. Following the architecture +specification, hints to developers of ciphers are provided. Pointers to +the API function call documentation are given at the end. + +The kernel crypto API refers to all algorithms as "transformations". +Therefore, a cipher handle variable usually has the name "tfm". Besides +cryptographic operations, the kernel crypto API also knows compression +transformations and handles them the same way as ciphers. + +The kernel crypto API serves the following entity types: + +- consumers requesting cryptographic services + +- data transformation implementations (typically ciphers) that can be + called by consumers using the kernel crypto API + +This specification is intended for consumers of the kernel crypto API as +well as for developers implementing ciphers. This API specification, +however, does not discuss all API calls available to data transformation +implementations (i.e. implementations of ciphers and other +transformations (such as CRC or even compression algorithms) that can +register with the kernel crypto API). + +Note: The terms "transformation" and cipher algorithm are used +interchangeably. + +Terminology +----------- + +The transformation implementation is an actual code or interface to +hardware which implements a certain transformation with precisely +defined behavior. + +The transformation object (TFM) is an instance of a transformation +implementation. There can be multiple transformation objects associated +with a single transformation implementation. Each of those +transformation objects is held by a crypto API consumer or another +transformation. Transformation object is allocated when a crypto API +consumer requests a transformation implementation. The consumer is then +provided with a structure, which contains a transformation object (TFM). + +The structure that contains transformation objects may also be referred +to as a "cipher handle". Such a cipher handle is always subject to the +following phases that are reflected in the API calls applicable to such +a cipher handle: + +1. Initialization of a cipher handle. + +2. Execution of all intended cipher operations applicable for the handle + where the cipher handle must be furnished to every API call. + +3. Destruction of a cipher handle. + +When using the initialization API calls, a cipher handle is created and +returned to the consumer. Therefore, please refer to all initialization +API calls that refer to the data structure type a consumer is expected +to receive and subsequently to use. The initialization API calls have +all the same naming conventions of crypto_alloc\*. + +The transformation context is private data associated with the +transformation object. |