liboqs-go: Go bindings for liboqs
About
The Open Quantum Safe (OQS) project has the goal of developing and
prototyping quantum-resistant cryptography.
liboqs-go offers a Go wrapper for the
Open Quantum Safe
liboqs C library, which is a C
library for quantum-resistant cryptographic algorithms.
liboqs-go is a Go package, hence in the following it is assumed that you have
access to a Go compliant environment. liboqs-go has been extensively tested on
Linux, macOS and Windows platforms. Continuous integration is provided via
GitHub actions.
The project contains the following files and directories:
oqs/oqs.go
: main package file for the wrapper
.config/liboqs-go.pc
: pkg-config
configuration file needed by cgo
.config-static/liboqs-go.pc
: pkg-config
configuration file needed by
cgo
when linking statically against liboqs
examples
: usage examples, including a client/server KEM over TCP/IP
oqstests
: unit tests
Pre-requisites
-
liboqs
-
git
-
CMake
-
C compiler, e.g., gcc
, clang
, MSYS2 etc.
-
Go 1.21 or later
-
pkg-config
(use sudo apt-get install pkg-config
to install on
Ubuntu/Debian-based Linux platforms or install it
via a third-party compiler such as MSYS2 on
Windows)
-
If using Windows, you need a C compiler supported by cgo
added to your
PATH
environment variable; currently, the best supported ones are provided
by MSYS2
and tdm-gcc
;
Cygwin is not yet supported
by cgo
; we recommend using MSYS2 since it also contains pkg-config
as a
package; to install gcc
and pkg-config
under MSYS2, please execute in a
MSYS2 terminal window
pacman -S mingw64/mingw-w64-x86_64-gcc mingw64/mingw-w64-x86_64-pkg-config
,
then add the corresponding installation location (e.g,
C:\msys64\mingw64\bin
) to your PATH
environment variable by executing
set PATH=%PATH%;C:\msys64\mingw64\bin
.
Very important: make sure that
the PATH
entry to the gcc
and pkg-config
provided by MSYS2
comes
before any other (if any) gcc
and pkg-config
executables you may have
installed (e.g. such as the ones provided
by Cygwin). To verify, type into a Command Prompt
gcc --version
, and you should get an output such as
gcc (Rev3, Built by MSYS2 project) 9.1.0
Functional restrictions
Please note that on some platforms not all algorithms are supported:
- macOS/Darwin: The Rainbow and Classic-McEliece algorithm families as well as
HQC-256 do not work.
- Windows: The Rainbow and Classic-McEliece algorithm families do not work.
Installation
In the rest of this document, we assume you execute commands from inside the
$HOME
directory on UNIX-like systems, or from inside the %USERPROFILE%
on
Windows.
Execute in a Terminal/Console/Administrator Command Prompt
git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/open-quantum-safe/liboqs
cmake -S liboqs -B liboqs/build -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON
cmake --build liboqs/build --parallel 8
cmake --build liboqs/build --target install
The last line may require prefixing it by sudo
on UNIX-like systems.
Change --parallel 8
to match the number of available cores on your system.
On UNIX-like platforms, you may need to set
the LD_LIBRARY_PATH
(DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH
on macOS) environment variable to
point to the path to liboqs' library directory, e.g.,
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$LD_LIBRARY_PATH:/usr/local/lib
On Windows platforms, you must ensure that the liboqs shared
library oqs.dll
is visible system-wide, and that the following environment
variable are being set. Use the "Edit the system environment variables" Control
Panel tool or execute in a Command Prompt, e.g.,
set PATH=%PATH%;C:\Program Files (x86)\liboqs\bin
You can change liboqs' installation directory by configuring the build to use
an alternative path, e.g., C:\liboqs
, by replacing the first CMake line above
by
cmake -S liboqs -B liboqs/build -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX="C:\liboqs" -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON
Execute in a Terminal/Console/Administrator Command Prompt
git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/open-quantum-safe/liboqs-go
Next, you must modify the following lines in
$HOME/liboqs-go/.config/liboqs-go.pc
LIBOQS_INCLUDE_DIR=/usr/local/include
LIBOQS_LIB_DIR=/usr/local/lib
so they correspond to your liboqs include/lib installation directories. On
Windows, using forward slashes /
and not
back-slashes, e.g.,
LIBOQS_INCLUDE_DIR=C:/Program Files (x86)/liboqs/bin
LIBOQS_LIB_DIR=C:/Program Files (x86)/liboqs/lib
Finally, you must add/append the $HOME/liboqs-go/.config
directory to the
PKG_CONFIG_PATH
environment variable, i.e., on UNIX-like systems execute in a
terminal
export PKG_CONFIG_PATH=$PKG_CONFIG_PATH:$HOME/liboqs-go/.config
or, on Windows platforms, use the "Edit the system environment variables"
Control Panel tool or execute in a Command Prompt
set PKG_CONFIG_PATH=%PKG_CONFIG_PATH%;$HOME/liboqs-go/.config
Replace .config
with .config-static
when setting the PKG_CONFIG_PATH
environment variable above. This assumes that you previously compiled and
installed the static version of liboqs, i.e., you did not pass
-DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON
to CMake when configuring liboqs above.
Note that .config-static/liboqs-go.pc
links statically against OpenSSL as
well. In case you don't have OpenSSL installed, remove the -lcrypto
from the
last line of .config-static/liboqs-go.pc
, and make sure you compiled liboqs
without OpenSSL, i.e., pass the -DOQS_USE_OPENSSL=OFF
CMake flag when
configuring liboqs, otherwise you will get linker errors.
Important: Ensure that you run go clean -cache
before building or
running, so pkg-config
refreshes its cache.
The macOS/OS X linker does not allow choosing static vs dynamic linking when
both static and dynamic versions of a library are installed. In this case, the
dynamic version will always be chosen by the linker. Hence, to link statically
agains liboqs on macOS/OS X, make sure you have not installed the dynamic
version of liboqs anywhere on your system, and use the .config
(not
.config-static
) when setting the PKG_CONFIG_PATH
environment variable.
Important: Ensure that you run go clean -cache
before building or
running.
Run the examples
From inside the liboqs-go
directory, execute
go run examples/kem/kem.go
go run examples/sig/sig.go
go run examples/rand/rand.go
Build executables
Replace go run
by go build
, e.g., go build examples/kem/kem.go
.
Note go binaries produced on macOS arm64 are not code-signed properly. See
https://github.com/golang/go/issues/63997.
To fix, run
codesign -f -s - path/to/executable
Run the unit tests
From inside the liboqs-go
directory, execute
cd liboqs-go
go test -v ./oqstests
On Windows, you may need to replace forward-slashes /
by back-slashes \
.
Usage in standalone applications
liboqs-go can be imported into Go programs with
import (
"github.com/open-quantum-safe/liboqs-go/oqs"
)
The examples in the
examples
directory are self-explanatory and provide more details about the wrapper's
API.
Documentation
The liboqs-go
wrapper is fully documented using the Go standard documentation
conventions. For example, to read the full documentation about the
oqs.Signature.Verify
method, execute from inside the liboqs-go
directory
go doc liboqs-go/oqs.Signature.Verify
For the RNG-related function, execute e.g.
go doc liboqs-go/oqs/rand.RandomBytes
For automatically-generated documentation in HTML format,
click here.
For the RNG-related documentation, click
here.
Docker
A self-explanatory minimalistic Docker file is provided in
Dockerfile
.
Build the image by executing
docker build -t oqs-go .
Run, e.g., the key encapsulation example by executing
docker run -it oqs-go sh -c "cd liboqs-go && go run examples/kem/kem.go"
Or, run the unit tests with
docker run -it oqs-go sh -c "cd liboqs-go && go test -v ./oqstests"
In case you want to use the Docker container as a development environment,
mount your current project in the Docker container with
docker run --rm -it --workdir=/app -v ${PWD}:/app oqs-go /bin/bash
Limitations and security
liboqs is designed for prototyping and evaluating quantum-resistant
cryptography. Security of proposed quantum-resistant algorithms may rapidly
change as research advances, and may ultimately be completely insecure against
either classical or quantum computers.
We believe that the NIST Post-Quantum Cryptography standardization project is
currently the best avenue to identifying potentially quantum-resistant
algorithms. liboqs does not intend to "pick winners", and we strongly recommend
that applications and protocols rely on the outcomes of the NIST
standardization project when deploying post-quantum cryptography.
We acknowledge that some parties may want to begin deploying post-quantum
cryptography prior to the conclusion of the NIST standardization project. We
strongly recommend that any attempts to do make use of so-called
hybrid cryptography, in which post-quantum public-key algorithms are used
alongside traditional public key algorithms (like RSA or elliptic curves) so
that the solution is at least no less secure than existing traditional
cryptography.
Just like liboqs, liboqs-go is provided "as is", without warranty of any kind.
See LICENSE
for the full disclaimer.
License
liboqs-go is licensed under the MIT License;
see LICENSE
for details.
Team
The Open Quantum Safe project is led by
Douglas Stebila and
Michele Mosca at the University of
Waterloo.
liboqs-go was developed by Vlad Gheorghiu at
softwareQ Inc. and at the University of Waterloo.
Support
Financial support for the development of Open Quantum Safe has been provided by
Amazon Web Services and the Canadian Centre for Cyber Security.
We'd like to make a special acknowledgement to the companies who have dedicated
programmer time to contribute source code to OQS, including Amazon Web
Services, evolutionQ, softwareQ, and Microsoft Research.
Research projects which developed specific components of OQS have been
supported by various research grants, including funding from the Natural
Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC); see the source
papers for funding acknowledgments.