* GOST R 34.10-2001 (RFC 5832) public key signature function
* GOST R 34.10-2012 (RFC 7091) public key signature function
* various 34.10 curve parameters included
+* Coordinates conversion from twisted Edwards to Weierstrass form and
+ vice versa
* VKO GOST R 34.10-2001 key agreement function (RFC 4357)
* VKO GOST R 34.10-2012 key agreement function (RFC 7836)
* 28147-89 and CryptoPro key wrapping (RFC 4357)
-* 28147-89 CryptoPro key meshing for CFB mode (RFC 4357)
+* 28147-89 CryptoPro key meshing for CFB and CBC modes (RFC 4357)
* RFC 4491 (using GOST algorithms with X.509) compatibility helpers
* GOST R 34.12-2015 128-bit block cipher Кузнечик (Kuznechik) (RFC 7801)
* GOST R 34.12-2015 64-bit block cipher Магма (Magma)
Example 34.10-2012 keypair generation, signing and verifying:
- >>> from pygost.gost3410 import CURVE_PARAMS
- >>> from pygost.gost3410 import GOST3410Curve
- >>> curve = GOST3410Curve(*CURVE_PARAMS["GostR3410_2012_TC26_ParamSetA"])
+ >>> from pygost.gost3410 import CURVES
+ >>> curve = CURVES["id-tc26-gost-3410-12-512-paramSetA"]
>>> from os import urandom
>>> prv_raw = urandom(32)
>>> from pygost.gost3410 import prv_unmarshal
True
Other examples can be found in docstrings and unittests.
+Example self-signed X.509 certificate creation can be found in
+pygost/asn1schemas/cert-selfsigned-example.py.
PyGOST is free software: see the file COPYING for copying conditions.