PyBitmessage-2021-04-27/rsa/transform.py
2012-11-19 14:45:05 -05:00

221 lines
6.7 KiB
Python

# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
#
# Copyright 2011 Sybren A. Stüvel <sybren@stuvel.eu>
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
'''Data transformation functions.
From bytes to a number, number to bytes, etc.
'''
from __future__ import absolute_import
try:
# We'll use psyco if available on 32-bit architectures to speed up code.
# Using psyco (if available) cuts down the execution time on Python 2.5
# at least by half.
import psyco
psyco.full()
except ImportError:
pass
import binascii
from struct import pack
from rsa import common
from rsa._compat import is_integer, b, byte, get_word_alignment, ZERO_BYTE, EMPTY_BYTE
def bytes2int(raw_bytes):
r'''Converts a list of bytes or an 8-bit string to an integer.
When using unicode strings, encode it to some encoding like UTF8 first.
>>> (((128 * 256) + 64) * 256) + 15
8405007
>>> bytes2int('\x80@\x0f')
8405007
'''
return int(binascii.hexlify(raw_bytes), 16)
def _int2bytes(number, block_size=None):
r'''Converts a number to a string of bytes.
Usage::
>>> _int2bytes(123456789)
'\x07[\xcd\x15'
>>> bytes2int(_int2bytes(123456789))
123456789
>>> _int2bytes(123456789, 6)
'\x00\x00\x07[\xcd\x15'
>>> bytes2int(_int2bytes(123456789, 128))
123456789
>>> _int2bytes(123456789, 3)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
OverflowError: Needed 4 bytes for number, but block size is 3
@param number: the number to convert
@param block_size: the number of bytes to output. If the number encoded to
bytes is less than this, the block will be zero-padded. When not given,
the returned block is not padded.
@throws OverflowError when block_size is given and the number takes up more
bytes than fit into the block.
'''
# Type checking
if not is_integer(number):
raise TypeError("You must pass an integer for 'number', not %s" %
number.__class__)
if number < 0:
raise ValueError('Negative numbers cannot be used: %i' % number)
# Do some bounds checking
if number == 0:
needed_bytes = 1
raw_bytes = [ZERO_BYTE]
else:
needed_bytes = common.byte_size(number)
raw_bytes = []
# You cannot compare None > 0 in Python 3x. It will fail with a TypeError.
if block_size and block_size > 0:
if needed_bytes > block_size:
raise OverflowError('Needed %i bytes for number, but block size '
'is %i' % (needed_bytes, block_size))
# Convert the number to bytes.
while number > 0:
raw_bytes.insert(0, byte(number & 0xFF))
number >>= 8
# Pad with zeroes to fill the block
if block_size and block_size > 0:
padding = (block_size - needed_bytes) * ZERO_BYTE
else:
padding = EMPTY_BYTE
return padding + EMPTY_BYTE.join(raw_bytes)
def bytes_leading(raw_bytes, needle=ZERO_BYTE):
'''
Finds the number of prefixed byte occurrences in the haystack.
Useful when you want to deal with padding.
:param raw_bytes:
Raw bytes.
:param needle:
The byte to count. Default \000.
:returns:
The number of leading needle bytes.
'''
leading = 0
# Indexing keeps compatibility between Python 2.x and Python 3.x
_byte = needle[0]
for x in raw_bytes:
if x == _byte:
leading += 1
else:
break
return leading
def int2bytes(number, fill_size=None, chunk_size=None, overflow=False):
'''
Convert an unsigned integer to bytes (base-256 representation)::
Does not preserve leading zeros if you don't specify a chunk size or
fill size.
.. NOTE:
You must not specify both fill_size and chunk_size. Only one
of them is allowed.
:param number:
Integer value
:param fill_size:
If the optional fill size is given the length of the resulting
byte string is expected to be the fill size and will be padded
with prefix zero bytes to satisfy that length.
:param chunk_size:
If optional chunk size is given and greater than zero, pad the front of
the byte string with binary zeros so that the length is a multiple of
``chunk_size``.
:param overflow:
``False`` (default). If this is ``True``, no ``OverflowError``
will be raised when the fill_size is shorter than the length
of the generated byte sequence. Instead the byte sequence will
be returned as is.
:returns:
Raw bytes (base-256 representation).
:raises:
``OverflowError`` when fill_size is given and the number takes up more
bytes than fit into the block. This requires the ``overflow``
argument to this function to be set to ``False`` otherwise, no
error will be raised.
'''
if number < 0:
raise ValueError("Number must be an unsigned integer: %d" % number)
if fill_size and chunk_size:
raise ValueError("You can either fill or pad chunks, but not both")
# Ensure these are integers.
number & 1
raw_bytes = b('')
# Pack the integer one machine word at a time into bytes.
num = number
word_bits, _, max_uint, pack_type = get_word_alignment(num)
pack_format = ">%s" % pack_type
while num > 0:
raw_bytes = pack(pack_format, num & max_uint) + raw_bytes
num >>= word_bits
# Obtain the index of the first non-zero byte.
zero_leading = bytes_leading(raw_bytes)
if number == 0:
raw_bytes = ZERO_BYTE
# De-padding.
raw_bytes = raw_bytes[zero_leading:]
length = len(raw_bytes)
if fill_size and fill_size > 0:
if not overflow and length > fill_size:
raise OverflowError(
"Need %d bytes for number, but fill size is %d" %
(length, fill_size)
)
raw_bytes = raw_bytes.rjust(fill_size, ZERO_BYTE)
elif chunk_size and chunk_size > 0:
remainder = length % chunk_size
if remainder:
padding_size = chunk_size - remainder
raw_bytes = raw_bytes.rjust(length + padding_size, ZERO_BYTE)
return raw_bytes
if __name__ == '__main__':
import doctest
doctest.testmod()