Crates.io | odoh-rs |
lib.rs | odoh-rs |
version | 1.0.3 |
source | src |
created_at | 2020-10-26 17:47:47.78518 |
updated_at | 2024-06-25 19:00:00.804762 |
description | Rust implementation of the Oblivious DNS over HTTPS (ODoH) protocol version 1 |
homepage | |
repository | https://github.com/cloudflare/odoh-rs/ |
max_upload_size | |
id | 305691 |
size | 99,720 |
odoh-rs is a library that implements RFC 9230 Oblivious DNS over HTTPS protocol in Rust.
It can be used to implement an ODoH client or server (target).
odoh-client-rs uses odoh-rs
to implement its functionality, and is a good source of API usage examples, along with the tests in odoh-rs
, in particular test_vectors_for_odoh.
This library is interoperable with odoh-go.
odoh-rs
uses hpke as the underlying HPKE implementation. It supports the default Oblivious DoH ciphersuite
(KEM: X25519HkdfSha256, KDF: HkdfSha256, AEAD: AesGcm128)
.
It does not provide full crypto agility.
This example outlines the steps necessary for a successful ODoH query.
// Use a seed to initialize a RNG. *Note* you should rely on some
// random source.
let mut rng = StdRng::from_seed([0; 32]);
// Generate a key pair on server side.
let key_pair = ObliviousDoHKeyPair::new(&mut rng);
// Create client configs from the key pair. It can be distributed
// to the clients.
let public_key = key_pair.public().clone();
let client_configs: ObliviousDoHConfigs = vec![ObliviousDoHConfig::from(public_key)].into();
let client_configs_bytes = compose(&client_configs).unwrap().freeze();
// ... distributing client_configs_bytes ...
// Parse and extract first supported config from client configs on client side.
let client_configs: ObliviousDoHConfigs = parse(&mut client_configs_bytes.clone()).unwrap();
let client_config = client_configs.into_iter().next().unwrap();
let config_contents = client_config.into();
// This is a example client request. This library doesn't validate
// DNS message.
let query = ObliviousDoHMessagePlaintext::new(b"What's the IP of one.one.one.one?", 0);
// Encrypt the above request. The client_secret returned will be
// used later to decrypt server's response.
let (query_enc, cli_secret) = encrypt_query(&query, &config_contents, &mut rng).unwrap();
// ... sending query_enc to the server ...
// Server decrypt request.
let (query_dec, srv_secret) = decrypt_query(&query_enc, &key_pair).unwrap();
assert_eq!(query, query_dec);
// Server could now resolve the decrypted query, and compose a response.
let response = ObliviousDoHMessagePlaintext::new(b"The IP is 1.1.1.1", 0);
// server encrypt response
let nonce = ResponseNonce::default();
let response_enc = encrypt_response(&query_dec, &response, srv_secret, nonce).unwrap();
// ... sending response_enc back to the client ...
// client descrypt response
let response_dec = decrypt_response(&query, &response_enc, cli_secret).unwrap();
assert_eq!(response, response_dec);