Custom fork of rust-secp256k1 with unsafe modifications for higher speed. Unsuitable for production.
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Tim Ruffing 1eb2c32df7 Manually test that panicking from C will abort the process
Panicking from C is not UB in newer rust versions and will reliably
trigger an abort (without unwinding). In older rust versions, it is
technically UB but empirically it seems to "just work" (and what should
it realistically do except crashing, which is what we intent).

Since there's potentially no unwinding, we can't test this behavior
using [should_panic]. This PR will instead check the libtest output
explicitly in our CI tests.

Fixes #228.
2021-03-24 21:54:02 +01:00
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contrib Manually test that panicking from C will abort the process 2021-03-24 21:54:02 +01:00
examples Aded an example for recoverable signatures and recovering the pubkey 2019-10-28 22:23:56 +02:00
no_std_test bump secp-sys version; drop endomorphism flag 2020-12-29 17:15:56 +00:00
secp256k1-sys Use CARGO_CFG_TARGET_ARCH instead TARGET in build.rs 2021-03-08 22:54:21 +03:00
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CHANGELOG.md rust-secp 0.20.0 2020-12-29 19:31:24 +00:00
Cargo.toml bump version to 0.20.1 2021-01-11 19:15:10 +00:00
LICENSE Remove the MIT/CC0 license in favor of just CC0 2015-03-25 18:36:30 -05:00
Makefile Initial (failing) implementation. 2014-07-06 22:41:22 -07:00
README.md rename `rust_secp_fuzz` to `fuzzing` 2021-01-11 19:14:42 +00:00

README.md

Build Status

Full documentation

rust-secp256k1

rust-secp256k1 is a wrapper around libsecp256k1, a C library by Pieter Wuille for producing ECDSA signatures using the SECG curve secp256k1. This library

  • exposes type-safe Rust bindings for all libsecp256k1 functions
  • implements key generation
  • implements deterministic nonce generation via RFC6979
  • implements many unit tests, adding to those already present in libsecp256k1
  • makes no allocations (except in unit tests) for efficiency and use in freestanding implementations

Contributing

Contributions to this library are welcome. A few guidelines:

  • Any breaking changes must have an accompanied entry in CHANGELOG.md
  • No new dependencies, please.
  • No crypto should be implemented in Rust, with the possible exception of hash functions. Cryptographic contributions should be directed upstream to libsecp256k1.
  • This library should always compile with any combination of features on Rust 1.29.

A note on Rust 1.29 support

The build dependency cc might require a more recent version of the Rust compiler. To ensure compilation with Rust 1.29.0, pin its version in your Cargo.lock with cargo update -p cc --precise 1.0.41. If you're using secp256k1 in a library, to make sure it compiles in CI, you'll need to generate a lockfile first. Example for Travis CI:

before_script:
  - if [ "$TRAVIS_RUST_VERSION" == "1.29.0" ]; then
    cargo generate-lockfile --verbose && cargo update -p cc --precise "1.0.41" --verbose;
    fi

Fuzzing

If you want to fuzz this library, or any library which depends on it, you will probably want to disable the actual cryptography, since fuzzers are unable to forge signatures and therefore won't test many interesting codepaths. To instead use a trivially-broken but fuzzer-accessible signature scheme, compile with --cfg=fuzzing in your RUSTFLAGS variable.

Note that cargo hfuzz sets this config flag automatically.