Scott Baker | ed4efab | 2020-01-13 19:12:25 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | // Package asn1tools provides tools for managing ASN1 marshaled data. |
| 2 | package asn1tools |
| 3 | |
| 4 | import ( |
| 5 | "github.com/jcmturner/gofork/encoding/asn1" |
| 6 | ) |
| 7 | |
| 8 | // MarshalLengthBytes returns the ASN1 encoded bytes for the length 'l' |
| 9 | // |
| 10 | // There are two forms: short (for lengths between 0 and 127), and long definite (for lengths between 0 and 2^1008 -1). |
| 11 | // |
| 12 | // Short form: One octet. Bit 8 has value "0" and bits 7-1 give the length. |
| 13 | // |
| 14 | // Long form: Two to 127 octets. Bit 8 of first octet has value "1" and bits 7-1 give the number of additional length octets. Second and following octets give the length, base 256, most significant digit first. |
| 15 | func MarshalLengthBytes(l int) []byte { |
| 16 | if l <= 127 { |
| 17 | return []byte{byte(l)} |
| 18 | } |
| 19 | var b []byte |
| 20 | p := 1 |
| 21 | for i := 1; i < 127; { |
| 22 | b = append([]byte{byte((l % (p * 256)) / p)}, b...) |
| 23 | p = p * 256 |
| 24 | l = l - l%p |
| 25 | if l <= 0 { |
| 26 | break |
| 27 | } |
| 28 | } |
| 29 | return append([]byte{byte(128 + len(b))}, b...) |
| 30 | } |
| 31 | |
| 32 | // GetLengthFromASN returns the length of a slice of ASN1 encoded bytes from the ASN1 length header it contains. |
| 33 | func GetLengthFromASN(b []byte) int { |
| 34 | if int(b[1]) <= 127 { |
| 35 | return int(b[1]) |
| 36 | } |
| 37 | // The bytes that indicate the length |
| 38 | lb := b[2 : 2+int(b[1])-128] |
| 39 | base := 1 |
| 40 | l := 0 |
| 41 | for i := len(lb) - 1; i >= 0; i-- { |
| 42 | l += int(lb[i]) * base |
| 43 | base = base * 256 |
| 44 | } |
| 45 | return l |
| 46 | } |
| 47 | |
| 48 | // GetNumberBytesInLengthHeader returns the number of bytes in the ASn1 header that indicate the length. |
| 49 | func GetNumberBytesInLengthHeader(b []byte) int { |
| 50 | if int(b[1]) <= 127 { |
| 51 | return 1 |
| 52 | } |
| 53 | // The bytes that indicate the length |
| 54 | return 1 + int(b[1]) - 128 |
| 55 | } |
| 56 | |
| 57 | // AddASNAppTag adds an ASN1 encoding application tag value to the raw bytes provided. |
| 58 | func AddASNAppTag(b []byte, tag int) []byte { |
| 59 | r := asn1.RawValue{ |
| 60 | Class: asn1.ClassApplication, |
| 61 | IsCompound: true, |
| 62 | Tag: tag, |
| 63 | Bytes: b, |
| 64 | } |
| 65 | ab, _ := asn1.Marshal(r) |
| 66 | return ab |
| 67 | } |
| 68 | |
| 69 | /* |
| 70 | // The Marshal method of golang's asn1 package does not enable you to define wrapping the output in an application tag. |
| 71 | // This method adds that wrapping tag. |
| 72 | func AddASNAppTag(b []byte, tag int) []byte { |
| 73 | // The ASN1 wrapping consists of 2 bytes: |
| 74 | // 1st byte -> Identifier Octet - Application Tag |
| 75 | // 2nd byte -> The length (this will be the size indicated in the input bytes + 2 for the additional bytes we add here. |
| 76 | // Application Tag: |
| 77 | //| Bit: | 8 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | |
| 78 | //| Value: | 0 | 1 | 1 | From the RFC spec 4120 | |
| 79 | //| Explanation | Defined by the ASN1 encoding rules for an application tag | A value of 1 indicates a constructed type | The ASN Application tag value | |
| 80 | // Therefore the value of the byte is an integer = ( Application tag value + 96 ) |
| 81 | //b = append(MarshalLengthBytes(int(b[1])+2), b...) |
| 82 | b = append(MarshalLengthBytes(len(b)), b...) |
| 83 | b = append([]byte{byte(96 + tag)}, b...) |
| 84 | return b |
| 85 | } |
| 86 | */ |