Difference between revisions of "Signing"

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(References)
(Solutions)
Line 20: Line 20:
 
| IETF name || NIST name|| Cat||  Description  
 
| IETF name || NIST name|| Cat||  Description  
 
|-
 
|-
| secp256r1||Health||  
+
| secp256r1|| || || random curve 256 bit SEC
 
|-
 
|-
| secp256k1||. ||Health||  
+
| secp256k1|| || || Koblitz curve 256 bit SEC
 
|-
 
|-
| sect283r1|| US|| Commerce||
+
| sect283r1|| || ||Weierstrass curve 283-bit
 
|-
 
|-
 
| brainpoolP256r1||Health||  
 
| brainpoolP256r1||Health||  

Revision as of 12:17, 28 July 2022

Full Title or Meme

A signature on a digital document is designed to show that the document has not be altered and the identity of the key used to make the signature.

Solutions

Curves Supported by OpenSSL can be discovered by keying (there will typically be many more that shown here)

openssl ecparam -list_curves

"secp256r1" - For 256-Bit ECC Keys

"secp256k1" - For 256-Bit ECC Keys

"sect283r1" - For 256-Bit ECC Keys

"brainpoolP256r1"“ - For 256-Bit ECC Keys

"brainpoolP256t1"“ - For 256-Bit ECC Keys

IETF name NIST name Cat Description
secp256r1 random curve 256 bit SEC
secp256k1 Koblitz curve 256 bit SEC
sect283r1 Weierstrass curve 283-bit
brainpoolP256r1 Health
brainpoolP256t1 US Crypto Devices

References