13d3b0591SJens WiklanderREADME for Mbed TLS 2817466cbSJens Wiklander=================== 3817466cbSJens Wiklander 411fa71b9SJerome ForissierMbed TLS is a C library that implements cryptographic primitives, X.509 certificate manipulation and the SSL/TLS and DTLS protocols. Its small code footprint makes it suitable for embedded systems. 511fa71b9SJerome Forissier 611fa71b9SJerome ForissierMbed TLS includes a reference implementation of the [PSA Cryptography API](#psa-cryptography-api). This is currently a preview for evaluation purposes only. 711fa71b9SJerome Forissier 8817466cbSJens WiklanderConfiguration 9817466cbSJens Wiklander------------- 10817466cbSJens Wiklander 11*32b31808SJens WiklanderMbed TLS should build out of the box on most systems. Some platform specific options are available in the fully documented configuration file `include/mbedtls/mbedtls_config.h`, which is also the place where features can be selected. This file can be edited manually, or in a more programmatic way using the Python 3 script `scripts/config.py` (use `--help` for usage instructions). 12817466cbSJens Wiklander 13817466cbSJens WiklanderCompiler options can be set using conventional environment variables such as `CC` and `CFLAGS` when using the Make and CMake build system (see below). 14817466cbSJens Wiklander 1511fa71b9SJerome ForissierWe provide some non-standard configurations focused on specific use cases in the `configs/` directory. You can read more about those in `configs/README.txt` 1611fa71b9SJerome Forissier 1711fa71b9SJerome ForissierDocumentation 1811fa71b9SJerome Forissier------------- 1911fa71b9SJerome Forissier 20*32b31808SJens WiklanderThe main Mbed TLS documentation is available via [ReadTheDocs](https://mbed-tls.readthedocs.io/). 21*32b31808SJens Wiklander 22*32b31808SJens WiklanderDocumentation for the PSA Cryptography API is available [on GitHub](https://arm-software.github.io/psa-api/crypto/). 2311fa71b9SJerome Forissier 2411fa71b9SJerome ForissierTo generate a local copy of the library documentation in HTML format, tailored to your compile-time configuration: 2511fa71b9SJerome Forissier 26*32b31808SJens Wiklander1. Make sure that [Doxygen](http://www.doxygen.nl/) is installed. 2711fa71b9SJerome Forissier1. Run `make apidoc`. 2811fa71b9SJerome Forissier1. Browse `apidoc/index.html` or `apidoc/modules.html`. 2911fa71b9SJerome Forissier 307901324dSJerome ForissierFor other sources of documentation, see the [SUPPORT](SUPPORT.md) document. 317901324dSJerome Forissier 32817466cbSJens WiklanderCompiling 33817466cbSJens Wiklander--------- 34817466cbSJens Wiklander 353d3b0591SJens WiklanderThere are currently three active build systems used within Mbed TLS releases: 36817466cbSJens Wiklander 373d3b0591SJens Wiklander- GNU Make 38817466cbSJens Wiklander- CMake 39*32b31808SJens Wiklander- Microsoft Visual Studio 40817466cbSJens Wiklander 413d3b0591SJens WiklanderThe main systems used for development are CMake and GNU Make. Those systems are always complete and up-to-date. The others should reflect all changes present in the CMake and Make build system, although features may not be ported there automatically. 42817466cbSJens Wiklander 43039e02dfSJerome ForissierThe Make and CMake build systems create three libraries: libmbedcrypto, libmbedx509, and libmbedtls. Note that libmbedtls depends on libmbedx509 and libmbedcrypto, and libmbedx509 depends on libmbedcrypto. As a result, some linkers will expect flags to be in a specific order, for example the GNU linker wants `-lmbedtls -lmbedx509 -lmbedcrypto`. 44817466cbSJens Wiklander 4511fa71b9SJerome Forissier### Tool versions 4611fa71b9SJerome Forissier 4711fa71b9SJerome ForissierYou need the following tools to build the library with the provided makefiles: 4811fa71b9SJerome Forissier 49*32b31808SJens Wiklander* GNU Make 3.82 or a build tool that CMake supports. 5011fa71b9SJerome Forissier* A C99 toolchain (compiler, linker, archiver). We actively test with GCC 5.4, Clang 3.8, IAR 8 and Visual Studio 2013. More recent versions should work. Slightly older versions may work. 51*32b31808SJens Wiklander* Python 3.6 to generate the test code, and to generate sample programs in the development branch. 52*32b31808SJens Wiklander* Perl to run the tests, and to generate some source files in the development branch. 53*32b31808SJens Wiklander* CMake 3.10.2 or later (if using CMake). 54*32b31808SJens Wiklander* Microsoft Visual Studio 2013 or later (if using Visual Studio). 55*32b31808SJens Wiklander* Doxygen 1.8.11 or later (if building the documentation; slightly older versions should work). 56*32b31808SJens Wiklander 57*32b31808SJens Wiklander### Generated source files in the development branch 58*32b31808SJens Wiklander 59*32b31808SJens WiklanderThe source code of Mbed TLS includes some files that are automatically generated by scripts and whose content depends only on the Mbed TLS source, not on the platform or on the library configuration. These files are not included in the development branch of Mbed TLS, but the generated files are included in official releases. This section explains how to generate the missing files in the development branch. 60*32b31808SJens Wiklander 61*32b31808SJens WiklanderThe following tools are required: 62*32b31808SJens Wiklander 63*32b31808SJens Wiklander* Perl, for some library source files and for Visual Studio build files. 64*32b31808SJens Wiklander* Python 3 and some Python packages, for some library source files, sample programs and test data. To install the necessary packages, run: 65*32b31808SJens Wiklander ``` 66*32b31808SJens Wiklander python3 -m pip install --user -r scripts/basic.requirements.txt 67*32b31808SJens Wiklander ``` 68*32b31808SJens Wiklander Depending on your Python installation, you may need to invoke `python` instead of `python3`. To install the packages system-wide, omit the `--user` option. 69*32b31808SJens Wiklander* A C compiler for the host platform, for some test data. 70*32b31808SJens Wiklander 71*32b31808SJens WiklanderIf you are cross-compiling, you must set the `CC` environment variable to a C compiler for the host platform when generating the configuration-independent files. 72*32b31808SJens Wiklander 73*32b31808SJens WiklanderAny of the following methods are available to generate the configuration-independent files: 74*32b31808SJens Wiklander 75*32b31808SJens Wiklander* If not cross-compiling, running `make` with any target, or just `make`, will automatically generate required files. 76*32b31808SJens Wiklander* On non-Windows systems, when not cross-compiling, CMake will generate the required files automatically. 77*32b31808SJens Wiklander* Run `make generated_files` to generate all the configuration-independent files. 78*32b31808SJens Wiklander* On Unix/POSIX systems, run `tests/scripts/check-generated-files.sh -u` to generate all the configuration-independent files. 79*32b31808SJens Wiklander* On Windows, run `scripts\make_generated_files.bat` to generate all the configuration-independent files. 8011fa71b9SJerome Forissier 81817466cbSJens Wiklander### Make 82817466cbSJens Wiklander 833d3b0591SJens WiklanderWe require GNU Make. To build the library and the sample programs, GNU Make and a C compiler are sufficient. Some of the more advanced build targets require some Unix/Linux tools. 84817466cbSJens Wiklander 853d3b0591SJens WiklanderWe intentionally only use a minimum of functionality in the makefiles in order to keep them as simple and independent of different toolchains as possible, to allow users to more easily move between different platforms. Users who need more features are recommended to use CMake. 863d3b0591SJens Wiklander 873d3b0591SJens WiklanderIn order to build from the source code using GNU Make, just enter at the command line: 88817466cbSJens Wiklander 89817466cbSJens Wiklander make 90817466cbSJens Wiklander 91817466cbSJens WiklanderIn order to run the tests, enter: 92817466cbSJens Wiklander 93817466cbSJens Wiklander make check 94817466cbSJens Wiklander 955b25c76aSJerome ForissierThe tests need Python to be built and Perl to be run. If you don't have one of them installed, you can skip building the tests with: 96817466cbSJens Wiklander 97817466cbSJens Wiklander make no_test 98817466cbSJens Wiklander 99817466cbSJens WiklanderYou'll still be able to run a much smaller set of tests with: 100817466cbSJens Wiklander 101817466cbSJens Wiklander programs/test/selftest 102817466cbSJens Wiklander 103817466cbSJens WiklanderIn order to build for a Windows platform, you should use `WINDOWS_BUILD=1` if the target is Windows but the build environment is Unix-like (for instance when cross-compiling, or compiling from an MSYS shell), and `WINDOWS=1` if the build environment is a Windows shell (for instance using mingw32-make) (in that case some targets will not be available). 104817466cbSJens Wiklander 1053d3b0591SJens WiklanderSetting the variable `SHARED` in your environment will build shared libraries in addition to the static libraries. Setting `DEBUG` gives you a debug build. You can override `CFLAGS` and `LDFLAGS` by setting them in your environment or on the make command line; compiler warning options may be overridden separately using `WARNING_CFLAGS`. Some directory-specific options (for example, `-I` directives) are still preserved. 106817466cbSJens Wiklander 10711fa71b9SJerome ForissierPlease note that setting `CFLAGS` overrides its default value of `-O2` and setting `WARNING_CFLAGS` overrides its default value (starting with `-Wall -Wextra`), so if you just want to add some warning options to the default ones, you can do so by setting `CFLAGS=-O2 -Werror` for example. Setting `WARNING_CFLAGS` is useful when you want to get rid of its default content (for example because your compiler doesn't accept `-Wall` as an option). Directory-specific options cannot be overridden from the command line. 108817466cbSJens Wiklander 109*32b31808SJens WiklanderDepending on your platform, you might run into some issues. Please check the Makefiles in `library/`, `programs/` and `tests/` for options to manually add or remove for specific platforms. You can also check [the Mbed TLS Knowledge Base](https://mbed-tls.readthedocs.io/en/latest/kb/) for articles on your platform or issue. 1103d3b0591SJens Wiklander 111*32b31808SJens WiklanderIn case you find that you need to do something else as well, please let us know what, so we can add it to the [Mbed TLS Knowledge Base](https://mbed-tls.readthedocs.io/en/latest/kb/). 112817466cbSJens Wiklander 113817466cbSJens Wiklander### CMake 114817466cbSJens Wiklander 1153d3b0591SJens WiklanderIn order to build the source using CMake in a separate directory (recommended), just enter at the command line: 116817466cbSJens Wiklander 1173d3b0591SJens Wiklander mkdir /path/to/build_dir && cd /path/to/build_dir 1183d3b0591SJens Wiklander cmake /path/to/mbedtls_source 1197901324dSJerome Forissier cmake --build . 120817466cbSJens Wiklander 121817466cbSJens WiklanderIn order to run the tests, enter: 122817466cbSJens Wiklander 1237901324dSJerome Forissier ctest 124817466cbSJens Wiklander 1255b25c76aSJerome ForissierThe test suites need Python to be built and Perl to be executed. If you don't have one of these installed, you'll want to disable the test suites with: 126817466cbSJens Wiklander 1273d3b0591SJens Wiklander cmake -DENABLE_TESTING=Off /path/to/mbedtls_source 128817466cbSJens Wiklander 129817466cbSJens WiklanderIf you disabled the test suites, but kept the programs enabled, you can still run a much smaller set of tests with: 130817466cbSJens Wiklander 131817466cbSJens Wiklander programs/test/selftest 132817466cbSJens Wiklander 133817466cbSJens WiklanderTo configure CMake for building shared libraries, use: 134817466cbSJens Wiklander 1353d3b0591SJens Wiklander cmake -DUSE_SHARED_MBEDTLS_LIBRARY=On /path/to/mbedtls_source 136817466cbSJens Wiklander 137817466cbSJens WiklanderThere are many different build modes available within the CMake buildsystem. Most of them are available for gcc and clang, though some are compiler-specific: 138817466cbSJens Wiklander 1393d3b0591SJens Wiklander- `Release`. This generates the default code without any unnecessary information in the binary files. 1403d3b0591SJens Wiklander- `Debug`. This generates debug information and disables optimization of the code. 1413d3b0591SJens Wiklander- `Coverage`. This generates code coverage information in addition to debug information. 1423d3b0591SJens Wiklander- `ASan`. This instruments the code with AddressSanitizer to check for memory errors. (This includes LeakSanitizer, with recent version of gcc and clang.) (With recent version of clang, this mode also instruments the code with UndefinedSanitizer to check for undefined behaviour.) 1433d3b0591SJens Wiklander- `ASanDbg`. Same as ASan but slower, with debug information and better stack traces. 1443d3b0591SJens Wiklander- `MemSan`. This instruments the code with MemorySanitizer to check for uninitialised memory reads. Experimental, needs recent clang on Linux/x86\_64. 1453d3b0591SJens Wiklander- `MemSanDbg`. Same as MemSan but slower, with debug information, better stack traces and origin tracking. 1463d3b0591SJens Wiklander- `Check`. This activates the compiler warnings that depend on optimization and treats all warnings as errors. 147817466cbSJens Wiklander 148817466cbSJens WiklanderSwitching build modes in CMake is simple. For debug mode, enter at the command line: 149817466cbSJens Wiklander 1503d3b0591SJens Wiklander cmake -D CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug /path/to/mbedtls_source 151817466cbSJens Wiklander 152817466cbSJens WiklanderTo list other available CMake options, use: 153817466cbSJens Wiklander 154817466cbSJens Wiklander cmake -LH 155817466cbSJens Wiklander 1563d3b0591SJens WiklanderNote that, with CMake, you can't adjust the compiler or its flags after the 1573d3b0591SJens Wiklanderinitial invocation of cmake. This means that `CC=your_cc make` and `make 1583d3b0591SJens WiklanderCC=your_cc` will *not* work (similarly with `CFLAGS` and other variables). 1593d3b0591SJens WiklanderThese variables need to be adjusted when invoking cmake for the first time, 1603d3b0591SJens Wiklanderfor example: 1613d3b0591SJens Wiklander 1623d3b0591SJens Wiklander CC=your_cc cmake /path/to/mbedtls_source 1633d3b0591SJens Wiklander 1643d3b0591SJens WiklanderIf you already invoked cmake and want to change those settings, you need to 1653d3b0591SJens Wiklanderremove the build directory and create it again. 1663d3b0591SJens Wiklander 1673d3b0591SJens WiklanderNote that it is possible to build in-place; this will however overwrite the 1683d3b0591SJens Wiklanderprovided Makefiles (see `scripts/tmp_ignore_makefiles.sh` if you want to 1693d3b0591SJens Wiklanderprevent `git status` from showing them as modified). In order to do so, from 1703d3b0591SJens Wiklanderthe Mbed TLS source directory, use: 1713d3b0591SJens Wiklander 1723d3b0591SJens Wiklander cmake . 1733d3b0591SJens Wiklander make 1743d3b0591SJens Wiklander 1753d3b0591SJens WiklanderIf you want to change `CC` or `CFLAGS` afterwards, you will need to remove the 1763d3b0591SJens WiklanderCMake cache. This can be done with the following command using GNU find: 177817466cbSJens Wiklander 178817466cbSJens Wiklander find . -iname '*cmake*' -not -name CMakeLists.txt -exec rm -rf {} + 1793d3b0591SJens Wiklander 1803d3b0591SJens WiklanderYou can now make the desired change: 1813d3b0591SJens Wiklander 1823d3b0591SJens Wiklander CC=your_cc cmake . 1833d3b0591SJens Wiklander make 1843d3b0591SJens Wiklander 1853d3b0591SJens WiklanderRegarding variables, also note that if you set CFLAGS when invoking cmake, 1863d3b0591SJens Wiklanderyour value of CFLAGS doesn't override the content provided by cmake (depending 1873d3b0591SJens Wiklanderon the build mode as seen above), it's merely prepended to it. 188817466cbSJens Wiklander 189*32b31808SJens Wiklander#### Consuming Mbed TLS 190*32b31808SJens Wiklander 191*32b31808SJens WiklanderMbed TLS provides a package config file for consumption as a dependency in other 192*32b31808SJens WiklanderCMake projects. You can include Mbed TLS's CMake targets yourself with: 193*32b31808SJens Wiklander 194*32b31808SJens Wiklander find_package(MbedTLS) 195*32b31808SJens Wiklander 196*32b31808SJens WiklanderIf prompted, set `MbedTLS_DIR` to `${YOUR_MBEDTLS_INSTALL_DIR}/cmake`. This 197*32b31808SJens Wiklandercreates the following targets: 198*32b31808SJens Wiklander 199*32b31808SJens Wiklander- `MbedTLS::mbedcrypto` (Crypto library) 200*32b31808SJens Wiklander- `MbedTLS::mbedtls` (TLS library) 201*32b31808SJens Wiklander- `MbedTLS::mbedx509` (X509 library) 202*32b31808SJens Wiklander 203*32b31808SJens WiklanderYou can then use these directly through `target_link_libraries()`: 204*32b31808SJens Wiklander 205*32b31808SJens Wiklander add_executable(xyz) 206*32b31808SJens Wiklander 207*32b31808SJens Wiklander target_link_libraries(xyz 208*32b31808SJens Wiklander PUBLIC MbedTLS::mbedtls 209*32b31808SJens Wiklander MbedTLS::mbedcrypto 210*32b31808SJens Wiklander MbedTLS::mbedx509) 211*32b31808SJens Wiklander 212*32b31808SJens WiklanderThis will link the Mbed TLS libraries to your library or application, and add 213*32b31808SJens Wiklanderits include directories to your target (transitively, in the case of `PUBLIC` or 214*32b31808SJens Wiklander`INTERFACE` link libraries). 215*32b31808SJens Wiklander 21611fa71b9SJerome Forissier#### Mbed TLS as a subproject 21711fa71b9SJerome Forissier 21811fa71b9SJerome ForissierMbed TLS supports being built as a CMake subproject. One can 21911fa71b9SJerome Forissieruse `add_subdirectory()` from a parent CMake project to include Mbed TLS as a 22011fa71b9SJerome Forissiersubproject. 22111fa71b9SJerome Forissier 222817466cbSJens Wiklander### Microsoft Visual Studio 223817466cbSJens Wiklander 224*32b31808SJens WiklanderThe build files for Microsoft Visual Studio are generated for Visual Studio 2013. 225817466cbSJens Wiklander 2265b25c76aSJerome ForissierThe solution file `mbedTLS.sln` contains all the basic projects needed to build the library and all the programs. The files in tests are not generated and compiled, as these need Python and perl environments as well. However, the selftest program in `programs/test/` is still available. 227817466cbSJens Wiklander 228*32b31808SJens WiklanderIn the development branch of Mbed TLS, the Visual Studio solution files need to be generated first as described in [“Generated source files in the development branch”](#generated-source-files-in-the-development-branch). 229*32b31808SJens Wiklander 230817466cbSJens WiklanderExample programs 231817466cbSJens Wiklander---------------- 232817466cbSJens Wiklander 23311fa71b9SJerome ForissierWe've included example programs for a lot of different features and uses in [`programs/`](programs/README.md). 23411fa71b9SJerome ForissierPlease note that the goal of these sample programs is to demonstrate specific features of the library, and the code may need to be adapted to build a real-world application. 235817466cbSJens Wiklander 236817466cbSJens WiklanderTests 237817466cbSJens Wiklander----- 238817466cbSJens Wiklander 2395b25c76aSJerome ForissierMbed TLS includes an elaborate test suite in `tests/` that initially requires Python to generate the tests files (e.g. `test\_suite\_mpi.c`). These files are generated from a `function file` (e.g. `suites/test\_suite\_mpi.function`) and a `data file` (e.g. `suites/test\_suite\_mpi.data`). The `function file` contains the test functions. The `data file` contains the test cases, specified as parameters that will be passed to the test function. 240817466cbSJens Wiklander 241817466cbSJens WiklanderFor machines with a Unix shell and OpenSSL (and optionally GnuTLS) installed, additional test scripts are available: 242817466cbSJens Wiklander 243817466cbSJens Wiklander- `tests/ssl-opt.sh` runs integration tests for various TLS options (renegotiation, resumption, etc.) and tests interoperability of these options with other implementations. 244817466cbSJens Wiklander- `tests/compat.sh` tests interoperability of every ciphersuite with other implementations. 245817466cbSJens Wiklander- `tests/scripts/test-ref-configs.pl` test builds in various reduced configurations. 246*32b31808SJens Wiklander- `tests/scripts/depends.py` test builds in configurations with a single curve, key exchange, hash, cipher, or pkalg on. 247*32b31808SJens Wiklander- `tests/scripts/all.sh` runs a combination of the above tests, plus some more, with various build options (such as ASan, full `mbedtls_config.h`, etc). 248*32b31808SJens Wiklander 249*32b31808SJens WiklanderInstead of manually installing the required versions of all tools required for testing, it is possible to use the Docker images from our CI systems, as explained in [our testing infrastructure repository](https://github.com/Mbed-TLS/mbedtls-test/blob/master/README.md#quick-start). 250817466cbSJens Wiklander 2513d3b0591SJens WiklanderPorting Mbed TLS 252817466cbSJens Wiklander---------------- 253817466cbSJens Wiklander 2543d3b0591SJens WiklanderMbed TLS can be ported to many different architectures, OS's and platforms. Before starting a port, you may find the following Knowledge Base articles useful: 255817466cbSJens Wiklander 256*32b31808SJens Wiklander- [Porting Mbed TLS to a new environment or OS](https://mbed-tls.readthedocs.io/en/latest/kb/how-to/how-do-i-port-mbed-tls-to-a-new-environment-OS/) 257*32b31808SJens Wiklander- [What external dependencies does Mbed TLS rely on?](https://mbed-tls.readthedocs.io/en/latest/kb/development/what-external-dependencies-does-mbedtls-rely-on/) 258*32b31808SJens Wiklander- [How do I configure Mbed TLS](https://mbed-tls.readthedocs.io/en/latest/kb/compiling-and-building/how-do-i-configure-mbedtls/) 259817466cbSJens Wiklander 260039e02dfSJerome ForissierMbed TLS is mostly written in portable C99; however, it has a few platform requirements that go beyond the standard, but are met by most modern architectures: 261039e02dfSJerome Forissier 262039e02dfSJerome Forissier- Bytes must be 8 bits. 263039e02dfSJerome Forissier- All-bits-zero must be a valid representation of a null pointer. 264039e02dfSJerome Forissier- Signed integers must be represented using two's complement. 265039e02dfSJerome Forissier- `int` and `size_t` must be at least 32 bits wide. 266039e02dfSJerome Forissier- The types `uint8_t`, `uint16_t`, `uint32_t` and their signed equivalents must be available. 267*32b31808SJens Wiklander- Mixed-endian platforms are not supported. 268*32b31808SJens Wiklander- SIZE_MAX must be at least as big as INT_MAX and UINT_MAX. 269039e02dfSJerome Forissier 27011fa71b9SJerome ForissierPSA cryptography API 27111fa71b9SJerome Forissier-------------------- 27211fa71b9SJerome Forissier 273*32b31808SJens Wiklander### PSA API 27411fa71b9SJerome Forissier 27511fa71b9SJerome ForissierArm's [Platform Security Architecture (PSA)](https://developer.arm.com/architectures/security-architectures/platform-security-architecture) is a holistic set of threat models, security analyses, hardware and firmware architecture specifications, and an open source firmware reference implementation. PSA provides a recipe, based on industry best practice, that allows security to be consistently designed in, at both a hardware and firmware level. 27611fa71b9SJerome Forissier 277*32b31808SJens WiklanderThe [PSA cryptography API](https://arm-software.github.io/psa-api/crypto/) provides access to a set of cryptographic primitives. It has a dual purpose. First, it can be used in a PSA-compliant platform to build services, such as secure boot, secure storage and secure communication. Second, it can also be used independently of other PSA components on any platform. 27811fa71b9SJerome Forissier 27911fa71b9SJerome ForissierThe design goals of the PSA cryptography API include: 28011fa71b9SJerome Forissier 28111fa71b9SJerome Forissier* The API distinguishes caller memory from internal memory, which allows the library to be implemented in an isolated space for additional security. Library calls can be implemented as direct function calls if isolation is not desired, and as remote procedure calls if isolation is desired. 28211fa71b9SJerome Forissier* The structure of internal data is hidden to the application, which allows substituting alternative implementations at build time or run time, for example, in order to take advantage of hardware accelerators. 2837901324dSJerome Forissier* All access to the keys happens through key identifiers, which allows support for external cryptoprocessors that is transparent to applications. 28411fa71b9SJerome Forissier* The interface to algorithms is generic, favoring algorithm agility. 28511fa71b9SJerome Forissier* The interface is designed to be easy to use and hard to accidentally misuse. 28611fa71b9SJerome Forissier 28711fa71b9SJerome ForissierArm welcomes feedback on the design of the API. If you think something could be improved, please open an issue on our Github repository. Alternatively, if you prefer to provide your feedback privately, please email us at [`mbed-crypto@arm.com`](mailto:mbed-crypto@arm.com). All feedback received by email is treated confidentially. 28811fa71b9SJerome Forissier 28911fa71b9SJerome Forissier### PSA implementation in Mbed TLS 29011fa71b9SJerome Forissier 29111fa71b9SJerome ForissierMbed TLS includes a reference implementation of the PSA Cryptography API. 292*32b31808SJens WiklanderHowever, it does not aim to implement the whole specification; in particular it does not implement all the algorithms. 29311fa71b9SJerome Forissier 294*32b31808SJens WiklanderThe X.509 and TLS code can use PSA cryptography for most operations. To enable this support, activate the compilation option `MBEDTLS_USE_PSA_CRYPTO` in `mbedtls_config.h`. Note that TLS 1.3 uses PSA cryptography for most operations regardless of this option. See `docs/use-psa-crypto.md` for details. 29511fa71b9SJerome Forissier 29611fa71b9SJerome Forissier### Upcoming features 29711fa71b9SJerome Forissier 29811fa71b9SJerome ForissierFuture releases of this library will include: 29911fa71b9SJerome Forissier 30011fa71b9SJerome Forissier* A driver programming interface, which makes it possible to use hardware accelerators instead of the default software implementation for chosen algorithms. 30111fa71b9SJerome Forissier* Support for external keys to be stored and manipulated exclusively in a separate cryptoprocessor. 30211fa71b9SJerome Forissier* A configuration mechanism to compile only the algorithms you need for your application. 30311fa71b9SJerome Forissier* A wider set of cryptographic algorithms. 30411fa71b9SJerome Forissier 30511fa71b9SJerome ForissierLicense 30611fa71b9SJerome Forissier------- 30711fa71b9SJerome Forissier 30811fa71b9SJerome ForissierUnless specifically indicated otherwise in a file, Mbed TLS files are provided under the [Apache-2.0](https://spdx.org/licenses/Apache-2.0.html) license. See the [LICENSE](LICENSE) file for the full text of this license. Contributors must accept that their contributions are made under both the Apache-2.0 AND [GPL-2.0-or-later](https://spdx.org/licenses/GPL-2.0-or-later.html) licenses. This enables LTS (Long Term Support) branches of the software to be provided under either the Apache-2.0 OR GPL-2.0-or-later licenses. 30911fa71b9SJerome Forissier 310817466cbSJens WiklanderContributing 311817466cbSJens Wiklander------------ 312817466cbSJens Wiklander 31311fa71b9SJerome ForissierWe gratefully accept bug reports and contributions from the community. Please see the [contributing guidelines](CONTRIBUTING.md) for details on how to do this. 314039e02dfSJerome Forissier 315039e02dfSJerome ForissierContact 316039e02dfSJerome Forissier------- 317039e02dfSJerome Forissier 318039e02dfSJerome Forissier* To report a security vulnerability in Mbed TLS, please email <mbed-tls-security@lists.trustedfirmware.org>. For more information, see [`SECURITY.md`](SECURITY.md). 319039e02dfSJerome Forissier* To report a bug or request a feature in Mbed TLS, please [file an issue on GitHub](https://github.com/Mbed-TLS/mbedtls/issues/new/choose). 320039e02dfSJerome Forissier* Please see [`SUPPORT.md`](SUPPORT.md) for other channels for discussion and support about Mbed TLS. 321