olm/python/README.md
Damir Jelić e3d6673371 python: Import improved python bindings.
This commit imports the python bindings from:
    https://github.com/poljar/python-olm

The bindings are imported at commit c44b145818520d69eaaa350fb95afcb846125e0f

Minor modifications were made while importing:
    - Removed travis config
    - Removed Arch Linux PKGBUILD
    - Removed the html docs, they can be rebuild by running make html in
      the docs folder
    - Slightly modified the README

The new bindings feature some improvements over the old ones:
    - Python 2 and 3 support
    - Automatic memory management
    - Automatic memory clearing before it is freed
    - Type signatures via the python typing module
    - Full test coverage
    - Properties are utilized where it makes sense (e.g. account.id)

Signed-off-by: Damir Jelić <poljar@termina.org.uk>
2018-07-18 17:44:32 -04:00

4.8 KiB

python-olm

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Python bindings for Olm.

The specification of the Olm cryptographic ratchet which is used for peer to peer sessions of this library can be found here.

The specification of the Megolm cryptographic ratchet which is used for group sessions of this library can be found here.

An example of the implementation of the Olm and Megolm cryptographic protocol can be found in the Matrix protocol for which the implementation guide can be found here.

The full API reference can be found here.

Accounts

Accounts create and hold the central identity of the Olm protocol, they consist of a fingerprint and identity key pair. They also produce one time keys that are used to start peer to peer encrypted communication channels.

Account Creation

A new account is created with the Account class, it creates a new Olm key pair. The public parts of the key pair are available using the identity_keys property of the class.

>>> alice = Account()
>>> alice.identity_keys
{'curve25519': '2PytGagXercwHjzQETLcMa3JOsaU2qkPIESaqoi59zE',
 'ed25519': 'HHpOuFYdHwoa54GxSttz9YmaTmbuVU3js92UTUjYJgM'}

One Time keys

One time keys need to be generated before people can start an encrypted peer to peer channel to an account.

>>> alice.generate_one_time_keys(1)
>>> alice.one_time_keys
{'curve25519': {'AAAAAQ': 'KiHoW6CIy905UC4V1Frmwr3VW8bTWkBL4uWtWFFllxM'}}

After the one time keys are published they should be marked as such so they aren't reused.

>>> alice.mark_keys_as_published()
>>> alice.one_time_keys
{'curve25519': {}}

Pickling

Accounts should be stored for later reuse, storing an account is done with the pickle method while the restoring step is done with the from_pickle class method.

>>> pickle = alice.pickle()
>>> restored = Account.from_pickle(pickle)

Sessions

Sessions are used to create an encrypted peer to peer communication channel between two accounts.

Session Creation

>>> alice = Account()
>>> bob = Account()
>>> bob.generate_one_time_keys(1)
>>> id_key = bob.identity_keys["curve25519"]
>>> one_time = list(bob.one_time_keys["curve25519"].values())[0]
>>> alice_session = OutboundSession(alice, id_key, one_time)

Encryption

After an outbound session is created an encrypted message can be exchanged:

>>> message = alice_session.encrypt("It's a secret to everybody")
>>> message.ciphertext
'AwogkL7RoakT9gnjcZMra+y39WXKRmnxBPEaEp6OSueIA0cSIJxGpBoP8YZ+CGweXQ10LujbXMgK88
xG/JZMQJ5ulK9ZGiC8TYrezNYr3qyIBLlecXr/9wnegvJaSFDmWDVOcf4XfyI/AwogqIZfAklRXGC5b
ZJcZxVxQGgJ8Dz4OQII8k0Dp8msUXwQACIQvagY1dO55Qvnk5PZ2GF+wdKnvj6Zxl2g'
>>> message.message_type
0

After the message is transfered, bob can create an InboundSession to decrypt the message.

>>> bob_session = InboundSession(bob, message)
>>> bob_session.decrypt(message)
"It's a secret to everybody"

Pickling

Sessions like accounts can be stored for later use the API is the same as for accounts.

>>> pickle = session.pickle()
>>> restored = Session.from_pickle(pickle)

Group Sessions

Group Sessions are used to create a one-to-many encrypted communication channel. The group session key needs to be shared with all participants that should be able to decrypt the group messages. Another thing to notice is that, since the group session key is ratcheted every time a message is encrypted, the session key should be shared before any messages are encrypted.

Group Session Creation

Group sessions aren't bound to an account like peer-to-peer sessions so their creation is straightforward.

>>> alice_group = OutboundGroupSession()
>>> bob_inbound_group = InboundGroupSession(alice_group.session_key)

Group Encryption

Group encryption is pretty simple. The important part is to share the session key with all participants over a secure channel (e.g. peer-to-peer Olm sessions).

>>> message = alice_group.encrypt("It's a secret to everybody")
>>> bob_inbound_group.decrypt(message)
("It's a secret to everybody", 0)

Pickling

Pickling works the same way as for peer-to-peer Olm sessions.

>>> pickle = session.pickle()
>>> restored = InboundGroupSession.from_pickle(pickle)