Metadata-Version: 2.4 Name: starkbank-ecdsa Version: 2.2.0 Summary: A lightweight and fast pure python ECDSA library Home-page: https://github.com/starkbank/ecdsa-python.git Author: Stark Bank Author-email: developers@starkbank.com License: MIT License Keywords: ecdsa,elliptic curve,elliptic,curve,stark bank,starkbank,cryptograph,secp256k1,prime256v1 Description-Content-Type: text/markdown License-File: LICENSE Dynamic: author Dynamic: author-email Dynamic: description Dynamic: description-content-type Dynamic: home-page Dynamic: keywords Dynamic: license Dynamic: license-file Dynamic: summary ## A lightweight and fast pure Python ECDSA ### Overview We tried other Python libraries such as [python-ecdsa], [fast-ecdsa] and other less famous ones, but we didn't find anything that suited our needs. The first one was pure Python, but it was too slow. The second one mixed Python and C and it was really fast, but we were unable to use it in our current infrastructure, which required pure Python code. For this reason, we decided to create something simple, compatible with OpenSSL and fast using elegant math such as Jacobian Coordinates to speed up the ECDSA. Starkbank-ECDSA is fully compatible with Python2 and Python3. ### Installation To install StarkBank`s ECDSA-Python, run: ```sh pip install starkbank-ecdsa ``` ### Curves We currently support `secp256k1`, but you can add more curves to the project. You just need to use the curve.add() function. ### Speed We ran a test on a MAC Pro i7 2017. The libraries were run 100 times and the averages displayed bellow were obtained: | Library | sign | verify | | ------------------ |:-------------:| -------:| | [python-ecdsa] | 121.3ms | 65.1ms | | [fast-ecdsa] | 0.1ms | 0.2ms | | starkbank-ecdsa | 4.1ms | 7.8ms | Our pure Python code cannot compete with C based libraries, but it's `6x faster` to verify and `23x faster` to sign than other pure Python libraries. ### Sample Code How to sign a json message for [Stark Bank]: ```python from json import dumps from ellipticcurve.ecdsa import Ecdsa from ellipticcurve.privateKey import PrivateKey # Generate privateKey from PEM string privateKey = PrivateKey.fromPem(""" -----BEGIN EC PARAMETERS----- BgUrgQQACg== -----END EC PARAMETERS----- -----BEGIN EC PRIVATE KEY----- MHQCAQEEIODvZuS34wFbt0X53+P5EnSj6tMjfVK01dD1dgDH02RzoAcGBSuBBAAK oUQDQgAE/nvHu/SQQaos9TUljQsUuKI15Zr5SabPrbwtbfT/408rkVVzq8vAisbB RmpeRREXj5aog/Mq8RrdYy75W9q/Ig== -----END EC PRIVATE KEY----- """) # Create message from json message = dumps({ "transfers": [ { "amount": 100000000, "taxId": "594.739.480-42", "name": "Daenerys Targaryen Stormborn", "bankCode": "341", "branchCode": "2201", "accountNumber": "76543-8", "tags": ["daenerys", "targaryen", "transfer-1-external-id"] } ] }) signature = Ecdsa.sign(message, privateKey) # Generate Signature in base64. This result can be sent to Stark Bank in the request header as the Digital-Signature parameter. print(signature.toBase64()) # To double check if the message matches the signature, do this: publicKey = privateKey.publicKey() print(Ecdsa.verify(message, signature, publicKey)) ``` Simple use: ```python from ellipticcurve.ecdsa import Ecdsa from ellipticcurve.privateKey import PrivateKey # Generate new Keys privateKey = PrivateKey() publicKey = privateKey.publicKey() message = "My test message" # Generate Signature signature = Ecdsa.sign(message, privateKey) # To verify if the signature is valid print(Ecdsa.verify(message, signature, publicKey)) ``` How to add more curves: ```python from ellipticcurve import curve, PrivateKey, PublicKey newCurve = curve.CurveFp( name="frp256v1", A=0xf1fd178c0b3ad58f10126de8ce42435b3961adbcabc8ca6de8fcf353d86e9c00, B=0xee353fca5428a9300d4aba754a44c00fdfec0c9ae4b1a1803075ed967b7bb73f, P=0xf1fd178c0b3ad58f10126de8ce42435b3961adbcabc8ca6de8fcf353d86e9c03, N=0xf1fd178c0b3ad58f10126de8ce42435b53dc67e140d2bf941ffdd459c6d655e1, Gx=0xb6b3d4c356c139eb31183d4749d423958c27d2dcaf98b70164c97a2dd98f5cff, Gy=0x6142e0f7c8b204911f9271f0f3ecef8c2701c307e8e4c9e183115a1554062cfb, oid=[1, 2, 250, 1, 223, 101, 256, 1] ) curve.add(newCurve) publicKeyPem = """-----BEGIN PUBLIC KEY----- MFswFQYHKoZIzj0CAQYKKoF6AYFfZYIAAQNCAATeEFFYiQL+HmDYTf+QDmvQmWGD dRJPqLj11do8okvkSxq2lwB6Ct4aITMlCyg3f1msafc/ROSN/Vgj69bDhZK6 -----END PUBLIC KEY-----""" publicKey = PublicKey.fromPem(publicKeyPem) print(publicKey.toPem()) ``` How to generate compressed public key: ```python from ellipticcurve import PrivateKey, PublicKey privateKey = PrivateKey() publicKey = privateKey.publicKey() compressedPublicKey = publicKey.toCompressed() print(compressedPublicKey) ``` How to recover a compressed public key: ```python from ellipticcurve import PrivateKey, PublicKey compressedPublicKey = "0252972572d465d016d4c501887b8df303eee3ed602c056b1eb09260dfa0da0ab2" publicKey = PublicKey.fromCompressed(compressedPublicKey) print(publicKey.toPem()) ``` ### OpenSSL This library is compatible with OpenSSL, so you can use it to generate keys: ``` openssl ecparam -name secp256k1 -genkey -out privateKey.pem openssl ec -in privateKey.pem -pubout -out publicKey.pem ``` Create a message.txt file and sign it: ``` openssl dgst -sha256 -sign privateKey.pem -out signatureDer.txt message.txt ``` To verify, do this: ```python from ellipticcurve.ecdsa import Ecdsa from ellipticcurve.signature import Signature from ellipticcurve.publicKey import PublicKey from ellipticcurve.utils.file import File publicKeyPem = File.read("publicKey.pem") signatureDer = File.read("signatureDer.txt", "rb") message = File.read("message.txt") publicKey = PublicKey.fromPem(publicKeyPem) signature = Signature.fromDer(signatureDer) print(Ecdsa.verify(message, signature, publicKey)) ``` You can also verify it on terminal: ``` openssl dgst -sha256 -verify publicKey.pem -signature signatureDer.txt message.txt ``` NOTE: If you want to create a Digital Signature to use with [Stark Bank], you need to convert the binary signature to base64. ``` openssl base64 -in signatureDer.txt -out signatureBase64.txt ``` You can do the same with this library: ```python from ellipticcurve.signature import Signature from ellipticcurve.utils.file import File signatureDer = File.read("signatureDer.txt", "rb") signature = Signature.fromDer(signatureDer) print(signature.toBase64()) ``` ### Run unit tests ``` python3 -m unittest discover python2 -m unittest discover ``` [python-ecdsa]: https://github.com/warner/python-ecdsa [fast-ecdsa]: https://github.com/AntonKueltz/fastecdsa [Stark Bank]: https://starkbank.com