1
0
mirror of https://github.com/titanscouting/tra-analysis.git synced 2025-11-17 11:15:08 +00:00
Files
apps
data analysis
website
functions
node_modules
.bin
@firebase
@google-cloud
@grpc
@mrmlnc
@nodelib
@protobufjs
@types
accepts
acorn
acorn-es7-plugin
ajv
ansi-regex
arr-diff
arr-flatten
arr-union
array-filter
array-flatten
array-union
array-uniq
array-unique
arrify
ascli
asn1
assert-plus
assign-symbols
async
asynckit
atob
aws-sign2
aws4
axios
balanced-match
base
bcrypt-pbkdf
body-parser
brace-expansion
braces
buffer-equal-constant-time
buffer-from
bun
bytebuffer
bytes
cache-base
call-me-maybe
call-signature
camelcase
capture-stack-trace
caseless
class-utils
cliui
code-point-at
collection-visit
colour
combined-stream
component-emitter
compressible
concat-map
concat-stream
configstore
content-disposition
content-type
cookie
cookie-signature
copy-descriptor
core-js
core-util-is
cors
create-error-class
crypto-random-string
dashdash
debug
decamelize
decode-uri-component
deep-equal
define-properties
define-property
delayed-stream
depd
destroy
diff-match-patch
dir-glob
dom-storage
dot-prop
duplexify
eastasianwidth
ecc-jsbn
ecdsa-sig-formatter
ee-first
empower
empower-core
encodeurl
end-of-stream
ent
escape-html
espurify
estraverse
etag
expand-brackets
express
extend
extend-shallow
extglob
extsprintf
fast-deep-equal
fast-glob
fast-json-stable-stringify
faye-websocket
fill-range
finalhandler
firebase-admin
firebase-functions
follow-redirects
for-in
forever-agent
form-data
forwarded
fragment-cache
fresh
fs.realpath
functional-red-black-tree
gcp-metadata
gcs-resumable-upload
get-value
getpass
glob
glob-parent
glob-to-regexp
globby
google-auth-library
google-auto-auth
google-gax
google-p12-pem
google-proto-files
graceful-fs
grpc
gtoken
har-schema
har-validator
has-value
has-values
hash-stream-validation
http-errors
http-parser-js
http-signature
iconv-lite
ignore
imurmurhash
indexof
inflight
inherits
invert-kv
ipaddr.js
is
is-accessor-descriptor
is-buffer
is-data-descriptor
is-descriptor
is-extendable
is-extglob
is-fullwidth-code-point
is-glob
is-number
is-obj
is-plain-object
is-stream-ended
is-typedarray
is-windows
isarray
isobject
isstream
jsbn
json-schema
json-schema-traverse
json-stringify-safe
jsonwebtoken
jsprim
jwa
jws
kind-of
lcid
lodash
lodash.camelcase
lodash.clone
lodash.includes
lodash.isboolean
lodash.isinteger
lodash.isnumber
lodash.isplainobject
lodash.isstring
lodash.merge
lodash.once
log-driver
long
lru-cache
make-dir
map-cache
map-visit
media-typer
merge-descriptors
merge2
methmeth
methods
micromatch
mime
mime-db
mime-types
minimatch
mixin-deep
modelo
ms
nan
nanomatch
negotiator
node-forge
number-is-nan
oauth-sign
object-assign
object-copy
object-keys
object-visit
object.pick
on-finished
once
optjs
os-locale
parseurl
pascalcase
path-dirname
path-is-absolute
path-to-regexp
path-type
performance-now
pify
posix-character-classes
power-assert
power-assert-context-formatter
power-assert-context-reducer-ast
power-assert-context-traversal
power-assert-formatter
power-assert-renderer-assertion
power-assert-renderer-base
power-assert-renderer-comparison
power-assert-renderer-diagram
power-assert-renderer-file
power-assert-util-string-width
process-nextick-args
protobufjs
proxy-addr
pseudomap
psl
pump
pumpify
punycode
qs
range-parser
raw-body
readable-stream
regex-not
repeat-element
repeat-string
request
resolve-url
ret
retry-axios
retry-request
safe-buffer
safe-regex
safer-buffer
send
serve-static
set-value
setprototypeof
signal-exit
slash
snakeize
snapdragon
snapdragon-node
snapdragon-util
source-map
source-map-resolve
source-map-url
split-array-stream
split-string
sshpk
static-extend
statuses
stream-events
stream-shift
string-format-obj
string-width
string_decoder
stringifier
strip-ansi
stubs
through2
to-object-path
to-regex
to-regex-range
tough-cookie
traverse
tslib
tunnel-agent
tweetnacl
.npmignore
AUTHORS.md
CHANGELOG.md
LICENSE
PULL_REQUEST_TEMPLATE.md
README.md
nacl-fast.js
nacl-fast.min.js
nacl.d.ts
nacl.js
nacl.min.js
package.json
type-is
type-name
typedarray
union-value
unique-string
universal-deep-strict-equal
unpipe
unset-value
uri-js
urix
use
util-deprecate
utils-merge
uuid
vary
verror
websocket-driver
websocket-extensions
window-size
wrap-ansi
wrappy
write-file-atomic
xdg-basedir
xmlhttprequest
xtend
y18n
yallist
yargs
index.js
package-lock.json
package.json
node_modules
public
.firebaserc
.gitignore
.runtimeconfig.json
firebase-debug.log
firebase.json
firestore.indexes.json
firestore.rules
package-lock.json
.gitattributes
.gitignore
tra-analysis/website/functions/node_modules/tweetnacl
2019-01-06 13:14:45 -06:00
..
2019-01-06 13:14:45 -06:00
2019-01-06 13:14:45 -06:00
2019-01-06 13:14:45 -06:00
2019-01-06 13:14:45 -06:00
2019-01-06 13:14:45 -06:00
2019-01-06 13:14:45 -06:00
2019-01-06 13:14:45 -06:00
2019-01-06 13:14:45 -06:00
2019-01-06 13:14:45 -06:00
2019-01-06 13:14:45 -06:00
2019-01-06 13:14:45 -06:00

TweetNaCl.js

Port of TweetNaCl / NaCl to JavaScript for modern browsers and Node.js. Public domain.

Build Status

Demo: https://tweetnacl.js.org

⚠️ The library is stable and API is frozen, however it has not been independently reviewed. If you can help reviewing it, please contact me.

Documentation

Overview

The primary goal of this project is to produce a translation of TweetNaCl to JavaScript which is as close as possible to the original C implementation, plus a thin layer of idiomatic high-level API on top of it.

There are two versions, you can use either of them:

  • nacl.js is the port of TweetNaCl with minimum differences from the original + high-level API.

  • nacl-fast.js is like nacl.js, but with some functions replaced with faster versions.

Installation

You can install TweetNaCl.js via a package manager:

Bower:

$ bower install tweetnacl

NPM:

$ npm install tweetnacl

or download source code.

Usage

All API functions accept and return bytes as Uint8Arrays. If you need to encode or decode strings, use functions from https://github.com/dchest/tweetnacl-util-js or one of the more robust codec packages.

In Node.js v4 and later Buffer objects are backed by Uint8Arrays, so you can freely pass them to TweetNaCl.js functions as arguments. The returned objects are still Uint8Arrays, so if you need Buffers, you'll have to convert them manually; make sure to convert using copying: new Buffer(array), instead of sharing: new Buffer(array.buffer), because some functions return subarrays of their buffers.

Public-key authenticated encryption (box)

Implements curve25519-xsalsa20-poly1305.

nacl.box.keyPair()

Generates a new random key pair for box and returns it as an object with publicKey and secretKey members:

{
   publicKey: ...,  // Uint8Array with 32-byte public key
   secretKey: ...   // Uint8Array with 32-byte secret key
}

nacl.box.keyPair.fromSecretKey(secretKey)

Returns a key pair for box with public key corresponding to the given secret key.

nacl.box(message, nonce, theirPublicKey, mySecretKey)

Encrypt and authenticates message using peer's public key, our secret key, and the given nonce, which must be unique for each distinct message for a key pair.

Returns an encrypted and authenticated message, which is nacl.box.overheadLength longer than the original message.

nacl.box.open(box, nonce, theirPublicKey, mySecretKey)

Authenticates and decrypts the given box with peer's public key, our secret key, and the given nonce.

Returns the original message, or false if authentication fails.

nacl.box.before(theirPublicKey, mySecretKey)

Returns a precomputed shared key which can be used in nacl.box.after and nacl.box.open.after.

nacl.box.after(message, nonce, sharedKey)

Same as nacl.box, but uses a shared key precomputed with nacl.box.before.

nacl.box.open.after(box, nonce, sharedKey)

Same as nacl.box.open, but uses a shared key precomputed with nacl.box.before.

nacl.box.publicKeyLength = 32

Length of public key in bytes.

nacl.box.secretKeyLength = 32

Length of secret key in bytes.

nacl.box.sharedKeyLength = 32

Length of precomputed shared key in bytes.

nacl.box.nonceLength = 24

Length of nonce in bytes.

nacl.box.overheadLength = 16

Length of overhead added to box compared to original message.

Secret-key authenticated encryption (secretbox)

Implements xsalsa20-poly1305.

nacl.secretbox(message, nonce, key)

Encrypt and authenticates message using the key and the nonce. The nonce must be unique for each distinct message for this key.

Returns an encrypted and authenticated message, which is nacl.secretbox.overheadLength longer than the original message.

nacl.secretbox.open(box, nonce, key)

Authenticates and decrypts the given secret box using the key and the nonce.

Returns the original message, or false if authentication fails.

nacl.secretbox.keyLength = 32

Length of key in bytes.

nacl.secretbox.nonceLength = 24

Length of nonce in bytes.

nacl.secretbox.overheadLength = 16

Length of overhead added to secret box compared to original message.

Scalar multiplication

Implements curve25519.

nacl.scalarMult(n, p)

Multiplies an integer n by a group element p and returns the resulting group element.

nacl.scalarMult.base(n)

Multiplies an integer n by a standard group element and returns the resulting group element.

nacl.scalarMult.scalarLength = 32

Length of scalar in bytes.

nacl.scalarMult.groupElementLength = 32

Length of group element in bytes.

Signatures

Implements ed25519.

nacl.sign.keyPair()

Generates new random key pair for signing and returns it as an object with publicKey and secretKey members:

{
   publicKey: ...,  // Uint8Array with 32-byte public key
   secretKey: ...   // Uint8Array with 64-byte secret key
}

nacl.sign.keyPair.fromSecretKey(secretKey)

Returns a signing key pair with public key corresponding to the given 64-byte secret key. The secret key must have been generated by nacl.sign.keyPair or nacl.sign.keyPair.fromSeed.

nacl.sign.keyPair.fromSeed(seed)

Returns a new signing key pair generated deterministically from a 32-byte seed. The seed must contain enough entropy to be secure. This method is not recommended for general use: instead, use nacl.sign.keyPair to generate a new key pair from a random seed.

nacl.sign(message, secretKey)

Signs the message using the secret key and returns a signed message.

nacl.sign.open(signedMessage, publicKey)

Verifies the signed message and returns the message without signature.

Returns null if verification failed.

nacl.sign.detached(message, secretKey)

Signs the message using the secret key and returns a signature.

nacl.sign.detached.verify(message, signature, publicKey)

Verifies the signature for the message and returns true if verification succeeded or false if it failed.

nacl.sign.publicKeyLength = 32

Length of signing public key in bytes.

nacl.sign.secretKeyLength = 64

Length of signing secret key in bytes.

nacl.sign.seedLength = 32

Length of seed for nacl.sign.keyPair.fromSeed in bytes.

nacl.sign.signatureLength = 64

Length of signature in bytes.

Hashing

Implements SHA-512.

nacl.hash(message)

Returns SHA-512 hash of the message.

nacl.hash.hashLength = 64

Length of hash in bytes.

Random bytes generation

nacl.randomBytes(length)

Returns a Uint8Array of the given length containing random bytes of cryptographic quality.

Implementation note

TweetNaCl.js uses the following methods to generate random bytes, depending on the platform it runs on:

  • window.crypto.getRandomValues (WebCrypto standard)
  • window.msCrypto.getRandomValues (Internet Explorer 11)
  • crypto.randomBytes (Node.js)

If the platform doesn't provide a suitable PRNG, the following functions, which require random numbers, will throw exception:

  • nacl.randomBytes
  • nacl.box.keyPair
  • nacl.sign.keyPair

Other functions are deterministic and will continue working.

If a platform you are targeting doesn't implement secure random number generator, but you somehow have a cryptographically-strong source of entropy (not Math.random!), and you know what you are doing, you can plug it into TweetNaCl.js like this:

nacl.setPRNG(function(x, n) {
  // ... copy n random bytes into x ...
});

Note that nacl.setPRNG completely replaces internal random byte generator with the one provided.

Constant-time comparison

nacl.verify(x, y)

Compares x and y in constant time and returns true if their lengths are non-zero and equal, and their contents are equal.

Returns false if either of the arguments has zero length, or arguments have different lengths, or their contents differ.

System requirements

TweetNaCl.js supports modern browsers that have a cryptographically secure pseudorandom number generator and typed arrays, including the latest versions of:

  • Chrome
  • Firefox
  • Safari (Mac, iOS)
  • Internet Explorer 11

Other systems:

  • Node.js

Development and testing

Install NPM modules needed for development:

$ npm install

To build minified versions:

$ npm run build

Tests use minified version, so make sure to rebuild it every time you change nacl.js or nacl-fast.js.

Testing

To run tests in Node.js:

$ npm run test-node

By default all tests described here work on nacl.min.js. To test other versions, set environment variable NACL_SRC to the file name you want to test. For example, the following command will test fast minified version:

$ NACL_SRC=nacl-fast.min.js npm run test-node

To run full suite of tests in Node.js, including comparing outputs of JavaScript port to outputs of the original C version:

$ npm run test-node-all

To prepare tests for browsers:

$ npm run build-test-browser

and then open test/browser/test.html (or test/browser/test-fast.html) to run them.

To run headless browser tests with tape-run (powered by Electron):

$ npm run test-browser

(If you get Error: spawn ENOENT, install xvfb: sudo apt-get install xvfb.)

To run tests in both Node and Electron:

$ npm test

Benchmarking

To run benchmarks in Node.js:

$ npm run bench
$ NACL_SRC=nacl-fast.min.js npm run bench

To run benchmarks in a browser, open test/benchmark/bench.html (or test/benchmark/bench-fast.html).

Benchmarks

For reference, here are benchmarks from MacBook Pro (Retina, 13-inch, Mid 2014) laptop with 2.6 GHz Intel Core i5 CPU (Intel) in Chrome 53/OS X and Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 smartphone with 1.8 GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon 650 64-bit CPU (ARM) in Chrome 52/Android:

nacl.js Intel nacl-fast.js Intel nacl.js ARM nacl-fast.js ARM
salsa20 1.3 MB/s 128 MB/s 0.4 MB/s 43 MB/s
poly1305 13 MB/s 171 MB/s 4 MB/s 52 MB/s
hash 4 MB/s 34 MB/s 0.9 MB/s 12 MB/s
secretbox 1K 1113 op/s 57583 op/s 334 op/s 14227 op/s
box 1K 145 op/s 718 op/s 37 op/s 368 op/s
scalarMult 171 op/s 733 op/s 56 op/s 380 op/s
sign 77 op/s 200 op/s 20 op/s 61 op/s
sign.open 39 op/s 102 op/s 11 op/s 31 op/s

(You can run benchmarks on your devices by clicking on the links at the bottom of the home page).

In short, with nacl-fast.js and 1024-byte messages you can expect to encrypt and authenticate more than 57000 messages per second on a typical laptop or more than 14000 messages per second on a $170 smartphone, sign about 200 and verify 100 messages per second on a laptop or 60 and 30 messages per second on a smartphone, per CPU core (with Web Workers you can do these operations in parallel), which is good enough for most applications.

Contributors

See AUTHORS.md file.

Third-party libraries based on TweetNaCl.js

Who uses it

Some notable users of TweetNaCl.js: