AWS-LC is a general-purpose cryptographic library maintained by the AWS Cryptography team for AWS and their customers. It іs based on code from the Google BoringSSL project and the OpenSSL project.
AWS-LC contains portable C implementations of algorithms needed for TLS and common applications. For performance critical algorithms, optimized assembly versions are included for x86 and ARM.
AWS-LC’s libcrypto is a C library and needs a C compiler. AWS-LC's libssl is a C++ library and needs a C++ compiler.
Fork AWS-LC on GitHub and run the following commands to build AWS-LC with optimizations and debug info, run all tests, and install it:
sudo yum install cmake3 ninja-build clang perl golang
git clone https://github.com/${YOUR_GITHUB_ACCOUNT_NAME}/aws-lc.git
mkdir aws-lc-build && cd aws-lc-build
cmake3 -GNinja \
-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RelWithDebInfo \
-DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=../aws-lc-install \
../aws-lc
ninja-build run_tests && ninja-build install
cd ../aws-lc-install/
ls *
See Building.md for more information about required dependencies and build options. If you’re interested in getting involved open an issue to discuss your plan. Contributing.md has info for how to specifically make the change and get it reviewed by AWS-LC maintainers. If you just want to use AWS-LC see our existing documentation in the public header files, if you’re moving your application from OpenSSL see Porting_to_AWS-LC.md for more information.
AWS-LC's goal is to maintain a secure libcrypto that is compatible with software and applications used at AWS. AWS-LC also serves as the new home for the AWS Cryptography team to publish open source contributions and enhancements that are submitted to other libcrypto projects.
AWS-LC is compatible with the majority of OpenSSL’s APIs to make it easy to use with existing applications. We’re open to discussing adding missing functionality and understanding your use case in an issue.
A portable C implementation of all algorithms is included and optimized assembly implementations of select algorithms is included for some x86 and Arm CPUs. We use AWS Graviton processors to test ARMv8 optimizations and Intel CPUs to test x86 and x86-64 optimizations.
The Intel Software Development Emulator is used to run tests on many different x86 processors.
If you use another CPU and would like to make sure we test it or discuss adding an assembly optimized algorithm implementation, please open an issue to discuss adding it to our CI.
AWS-LC correctness is tested on a variety of platforms (i.e., OS/CPU combinations).
The following is an overview of the platforms we actively support or are
known to be of interest to our community.
If you use a platform not listed below and would like to request it be added to our CI, please open an issue for discussion. Regardless of our support level for a particular platform, we will gladly consider contributions that improve or extend our support.
The following platforms are actively tested in our CI pipeline. A few of these platforms are tested across multiple compilers or compiler versions. For each pull request, the proposed change is validated to confirm that it successfully builds and tests pass for these platform. A more complete description of our test setup can be found in the CI README.
OS | CPU |
---|---|
Linux | x86 |
Linux | x86-64 |
Linux | aarch64 |
Windows | x86-64 |
macOS | x86-64 |
macOS | aarch64 |
Android | aarch64 |
Linux | ppc |
Linux | ppc64 |
Linux | ppc64le |
The platforms listed below are of interest to us or to our community. However, problems reported against them might not be prioritized for immediate action by our team. We welcome contributions that improve the experience for consumers on these platforms.
OS | CPU |
---|---|
Android | arm32 |
iOS | aarch64 |
Linux | arm32 |
Linux | loongarch64 |
Linux | risc-v64 |
Linux | s390x |
Windows | aarch64 |
OpenBSD | x86-64 |
FreeBSD | x86-64 |
Every change is tested with our CI that includes positive and negative unit tests, fuzz tests, Sanitizers (Address, Memory, Control flow integrity, Thread, and Undefined behavior), Valgrind, and Formal Verification.
Portions of AWS-LC have been formally verified in AWS-LC Formal Verification, the checks are run in AWS-LC’s CI on every change. The algorithms that have been verified on certain platforms with caveats include:
- SHA-2
- HMAC
- AES-KWP
- ECDH & ECDSA with curve P-384
- HKDF
We use GitHub Issues for managing feature requests, bug reports, or questions about AWS-LC API usage.
If you think you might have found a security impacting issue, please instead follow our Security Notification Process.
If you discover a potential security issue in AWS-LC, we ask that you notify AWS Security via our vulnerability reporting page. Please do not create a public GitHub issue.
If you package or distribute AWS-LC, or use AWS-LC as part of a large multi-user service, you may be eligible for pre-notification of future AWS-LC releases. Please contact [email protected].