py-kms/py2-kms/kmsRequestV4.py
2018-11-14 23:09:19 +01:00

126 lines
3.8 KiB
Python

#!/usr/bin/env python
import binascii
import time
import logging
from kmsBase import kmsBase
from structure import Structure
from aes import AES
from formatText import shell_message, justify
# v4 AES Key
key = bytearray([0x05, 0x3D, 0x83, 0x07, 0xF9, 0xE5, 0xF0, 0x88, 0xEB, 0x5E, 0xA6, 0x68, 0x6C, 0xF0, 0x37, 0xC7, 0xE4, 0xEF, 0xD2, 0xD6])
# Xor Buffer
def xorBuffer(source, offset, destination, size):
for i in range(0, size):
destination[i] ^= source[i + offset]
class kmsRequestV4(kmsBase):
class RequestV4(Structure):
commonHdr = ()
structure = (
('bodyLength1', '<I'),
('bodyLength2', '<I'),
('request', ':', kmsBase.kmsRequestStruct),
('hash', '16s'),
('padding', ':'),
)
class ResponseV4(Structure):
commonHdr = ()
structure = (
('bodyLength1', '<I'),
('unknown', '!I=0x00000200'),
('bodyLength2', '<I'),
('response', ':', kmsBase.kmsResponseStruct),
('hash', '16s'),
('padding', ':'),
)
def executeRequestLogic(self):
requestData = self.RequestV4(self.data)
response = self.serverLogic(requestData['request'])
hash = self.generateHash(bytearray(str(response)))
responseData = self.generateResponse(response, hash)
time.sleep(1) # request sent back too quick for Windows 2008 R2, slow it down.
return responseData
def generateHash(self, message):
"""
The KMS v4 hash is a variant of CMAC-AES-128. There are two key differences:
* The 'AES' used is modified in particular ways:
* The basic algorithm is Rjindael with a conceptual 160bit key and 128bit blocks.
This isn't part of the AES standard, but it works the way you'd expect.
Accordingly, the algorithm uses 11 rounds and a 192 byte expanded key.
* The trailing block is not XORed with a generated subkey, as defined in CMAC.
This is probably because the subkey generation algorithm is only defined for
situations where block and key size are the same.
"""
aes = AES()
messageSize = len(message)
lastBlock = bytearray(16)
hashBuffer = bytearray(16)
# MessageSize / Blocksize
j = messageSize >> 4
# Remainding bytes
k = messageSize & 0xf
# Hash
for i in range(0, j):
xorBuffer(message, i << 4, hashBuffer, 16)
hashBuffer = bytearray(aes.encrypt(hashBuffer, key, len(key)))
# Bit Padding
ii = 0
for i in range(j << 4, k + (j << 4)):
lastBlock[ii] = message[i]
ii += 1
lastBlock[k] = 0x80
xorBuffer(lastBlock, 0, hashBuffer, 16)
hashBuffer = bytearray(aes.encrypt(hashBuffer, key, len(key)))
return str(hashBuffer)
def generateResponse(self, responseBuffer, hash):
response = self.ResponseV4()
bodyLength = len(responseBuffer) + len(hash)
response['bodyLength1'] = bodyLength
response['bodyLength2'] = bodyLength
response['response'] = responseBuffer
response['hash'] = hash
response['padding'] = bytearray(self.getPadding(bodyLength))
## Debug stuff.
shell_message(nshell = 16)
logging.debug("KMS V4 Response: \n%s\n" % justify(response.dump(print_to_stdout = False)))
logging.debug("KMS V4 Response Bytes: \n%s\n" % justify(binascii.b2a_hex(str(response))))
return str(response)
def generateRequest(self, requestBase):
hash = str(self.generateHash(bytearray(str(requestBase))))
request = self.RequestV4()
bodyLength = len(requestBase) + len(hash)
request['bodyLength1'] = bodyLength
request['bodyLength2'] = bodyLength
request['request'] = requestBase
request['hash'] = hash
request['padding'] = bytearray(self.getPadding(bodyLength))
## Debug stuff.
shell_message(nshell = 10)
logging.debug("Request V4 Data: \n%s\n" % justify(request.dump(print_to_stdout = False)))
logging.debug("Request V4: \n%s\n" % justify(binascii.b2a_hex(str(request))))
return request