ECDSA.sol 7.5 KB

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  1. // SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
  2. // OpenZeppelin Contracts (last updated v5.0.0) (utils/cryptography/ECDSA.sol)
  3. pragma solidity ^0.8.20;
  4. /**
  5. * @dev Elliptic Curve Digital Signature Algorithm (ECDSA) operations.
  6. *
  7. * These functions can be used to verify that a message was signed by the holder
  8. * of the private keys of a given address.
  9. */
  10. library ECDSA {
  11. enum RecoverError {
  12. NoError,
  13. InvalidSignature,
  14. InvalidSignatureLength,
  15. InvalidSignatureS
  16. }
  17. /**
  18. * @dev The signature derives the `address(0)`.
  19. */
  20. error ECDSAInvalidSignature();
  21. /**
  22. * @dev The signature has an invalid length.
  23. */
  24. error ECDSAInvalidSignatureLength(uint256 length);
  25. /**
  26. * @dev The signature has an S value that is in the upper half order.
  27. */
  28. error ECDSAInvalidSignatureS(bytes32 s);
  29. /**
  30. * @dev Returns the address that signed a hashed message (`hash`) with `signature` or an error. This will not
  31. * return address(0) without also returning an error description. Errors are documented using an enum (error type)
  32. * and a bytes32 providing additional information about the error.
  33. *
  34. * If no error is returned, then the address can be used for verification purposes.
  35. *
  36. * The `ecrecover` EVM precompile allows for malleable (non-unique) signatures:
  37. * this function rejects them by requiring the `s` value to be in the lower
  38. * half order, and the `v` value to be either 27 or 28.
  39. *
  40. * IMPORTANT: `hash` _must_ be the result of a hash operation for the
  41. * verification to be secure: it is possible to craft signatures that
  42. * recover to arbitrary addresses for non-hashed data. A safe way to ensure
  43. * this is by receiving a hash of the original message (which may otherwise
  44. * be too long), and then calling {MessageHashUtils-toEthSignedMessageHash} on it.
  45. *
  46. * Documentation for signature generation:
  47. * - with https://web3js.readthedocs.io/en/v1.3.4/web3-eth-accounts.html#sign[Web3.js]
  48. * - with https://docs.ethers.io/v5/api/signer/#Signer-signMessage[ethers]
  49. */
  50. function tryRecover(bytes32 hash, bytes memory signature) internal pure returns (address, RecoverError, bytes32) {
  51. if (signature.length == 65) {
  52. bytes32 r;
  53. bytes32 s;
  54. uint8 v;
  55. // ecrecover takes the signature parameters, and the only way to get them
  56. // currently is to use assembly.
  57. assembly ("memory-safe") {
  58. r := mload(add(signature, 0x20))
  59. s := mload(add(signature, 0x40))
  60. v := byte(0, mload(add(signature, 0x60)))
  61. }
  62. return tryRecover(hash, v, r, s);
  63. } else {
  64. return (address(0), RecoverError.InvalidSignatureLength, bytes32(signature.length));
  65. }
  66. }
  67. /**
  68. * @dev Returns the address that signed a hashed message (`hash`) with
  69. * `signature`. This address can then be used for verification purposes.
  70. *
  71. * The `ecrecover` EVM precompile allows for malleable (non-unique) signatures:
  72. * this function rejects them by requiring the `s` value to be in the lower
  73. * half order, and the `v` value to be either 27 or 28.
  74. *
  75. * IMPORTANT: `hash` _must_ be the result of a hash operation for the
  76. * verification to be secure: it is possible to craft signatures that
  77. * recover to arbitrary addresses for non-hashed data. A safe way to ensure
  78. * this is by receiving a hash of the original message (which may otherwise
  79. * be too long), and then calling {MessageHashUtils-toEthSignedMessageHash} on it.
  80. */
  81. function recover(bytes32 hash, bytes memory signature) internal pure returns (address) {
  82. (address recovered, RecoverError error, bytes32 errorArg) = tryRecover(hash, signature);
  83. _throwError(error, errorArg);
  84. return recovered;
  85. }
  86. /**
  87. * @dev Overload of {ECDSA-tryRecover} that receives the `r` and `vs` short-signature fields separately.
  88. *
  89. * See https://eips.ethereum.org/EIPS/eip-2098[ERC-2098 short signatures]
  90. */
  91. function tryRecover(bytes32 hash, bytes32 r, bytes32 vs) internal pure returns (address, RecoverError, bytes32) {
  92. unchecked {
  93. bytes32 s = vs & bytes32(0x7fffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffff);
  94. // We do not check for an overflow here since the shift operation results in 0 or 1.
  95. uint8 v = uint8((uint256(vs) >> 255) + 27);
  96. return tryRecover(hash, v, r, s);
  97. }
  98. }
  99. /**
  100. * @dev Overload of {ECDSA-recover} that receives the `r and `vs` short-signature fields separately.
  101. */
  102. function recover(bytes32 hash, bytes32 r, bytes32 vs) internal pure returns (address) {
  103. (address recovered, RecoverError error, bytes32 errorArg) = tryRecover(hash, r, vs);
  104. _throwError(error, errorArg);
  105. return recovered;
  106. }
  107. /**
  108. * @dev Overload of {ECDSA-tryRecover} that receives the `v`,
  109. * `r` and `s` signature fields separately.
  110. */
  111. function tryRecover(
  112. bytes32 hash,
  113. uint8 v,
  114. bytes32 r,
  115. bytes32 s
  116. ) internal pure returns (address, RecoverError, bytes32) {
  117. // EIP-2 still allows signature malleability for ecrecover(). Remove this possibility and make the signature
  118. // unique. Appendix F in the Ethereum Yellow paper (https://ethereum.github.io/yellowpaper/paper.pdf), defines
  119. // the valid range for s in (301): 0 < s < secp256k1n ÷ 2 + 1, and for v in (302): v ∈ {27, 28}. Most
  120. // signatures from current libraries generate a unique signature with an s-value in the lower half order.
  121. //
  122. // If your library generates malleable signatures, such as s-values in the upper range, calculate a new s-value
  123. // with 0xFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFEBAAEDCE6AF48A03BBFD25E8CD0364141 - s1 and flip v from 27 to 28 or
  124. // vice versa. If your library also generates signatures with 0/1 for v instead 27/28, add 27 to v to accept
  125. // these malleable signatures as well.
  126. if (uint256(s) > 0x7FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF5D576E7357A4501DDFE92F46681B20A0) {
  127. return (address(0), RecoverError.InvalidSignatureS, s);
  128. }
  129. // If the signature is valid (and not malleable), return the signer address
  130. address signer = ecrecover(hash, v, r, s);
  131. if (signer == address(0)) {
  132. return (address(0), RecoverError.InvalidSignature, bytes32(0));
  133. }
  134. return (signer, RecoverError.NoError, bytes32(0));
  135. }
  136. /**
  137. * @dev Overload of {ECDSA-recover} that receives the `v`,
  138. * `r` and `s` signature fields separately.
  139. */
  140. function recover(bytes32 hash, uint8 v, bytes32 r, bytes32 s) internal pure returns (address) {
  141. (address recovered, RecoverError error, bytes32 errorArg) = tryRecover(hash, v, r, s);
  142. _throwError(error, errorArg);
  143. return recovered;
  144. }
  145. /**
  146. * @dev Optionally reverts with the corresponding custom error according to the `error` argument provided.
  147. */
  148. function _throwError(RecoverError error, bytes32 errorArg) private pure {
  149. if (error == RecoverError.NoError) {
  150. return; // no error: do nothing
  151. } else if (error == RecoverError.InvalidSignature) {
  152. revert ECDSAInvalidSignature();
  153. } else if (error == RecoverError.InvalidSignatureLength) {
  154. revert ECDSAInvalidSignatureLength(uint256(errorArg));
  155. } else if (error == RecoverError.InvalidSignatureS) {
  156. revert ECDSAInvalidSignatureS(errorArg);
  157. }
  158. }
  159. }