rust-secp256k1
is a wrapper around libsecp256k1, a C
library implementing various cryptographic functions using the SECG curve
secp256k1.
This library:
- exposes type-safe Rust bindings for all
libsecp256k1
functions - implements key generation
- implements deterministic nonce generation via RFC6979
- implements many unit tests, adding to those already present in
libsecp256k1
- makes no allocations (except in unit tests) for efficiency and use in freestanding implementations
Contributions to this library are welcome. A few guidelines:
- Any breaking changes must have an accompanied entry in CHANGELOG.md
- No new dependencies, please.
- No crypto should be implemented in Rust, with the possible exception of hash functions. Cryptographic contributions should be directed upstream to libsecp256k1.
- This library should always compile with any combination of features on Rust 1.56.1.
To assist devs in catching errors before running CI we provide some githooks. If you do not already have locally configured githooks you can use the ones in this repository by running, in the root directory of the repository:
git config --local core.hooksPath githooks/
Alternatively add symlinks in your .git/hooks
directory to any of the githooks we provide.
We use a custom Rust compiler configuration conditional to guard the bench mark code. To run the
bench marks use: RUSTFLAGS='--cfg=bench' cargo +nightly bench --features=recovery
.
This crate's secret types (SecretKey
, Keypair
, SharedSecret
, Scalar
, and DisplaySecret
)
have a method called non_secure_erase
that attempts to overwrite the contained secret. This
method is provided to assist other libraries in building secure secret erasure. However, this
library makes no guarantees about the security of using non_secure_erase
. In particular,
the compiler doesn't have any concept of secrets and in most cases can arbitrarily move or copy
values anywhere it pleases. For more information, consult the zeroize
documentation.
If you want to fuzz this library, or any library which depends on it, you will
probably want to disable the actual cryptography, since fuzzers are unable to
forge signatures and therefore won't test many interesting codepaths. To instead
use a trivially-broken but fuzzer-accessible signature scheme, compile with
--cfg=secp256k1_fuzz
in your RUSTFLAGS
variable.
Note that cargo hfuzz
does not set this config flag automatically. In 0.27.0
and earlier versions, we used the --cfg=fuzzing
which honggfuzz does set, but we
changed this because there was no way to override it.