edhoc v1.2.3
EDHOC for Node.js
A TypeScript Node.js library implemented as a native addon, built on top of the C library libedhoc
. It provides an efficient and lightweight way to use the Ephemeral Diffie-Hellman Over COSE (EDHOC) protocol, as specified in RFC 9528.
Overview
EDHOC is designed for lightweight communication and is particularly suitable for protocols like CoAP and OSCORE, but can work independently of the application and transport layers, ensuring minimal overhead while maintaining strong security guarantees. The library provides a default software implementation for X.509 credentials, with support for additional formats such as C509, CWT, and CCS coming soon. It also includes a software-based cryptographic implementation utilizing @noble/curves
. Additionally, it exposes credential and cryptographic API interfaces to allow for custom implementations, such as PKCS#11-based solutions.
Features
- Full implementation of the EDHOC protocol (RFC 9528)
- TypeScript support for type safety and better developer experience
- Based on
libedhoc
, a proven C implementation
Installation
Install the package via npm:
npm install edhoc
Usage Examples
Basic Handshake
The simplest EDHOC handshake using pre-shared keys (Method 0):
import { EDHOC, EdhocMethod, EdhocSuite } from 'node-edhoc';
// ...
const initiator = new EDHOC(10, [ EdhocMethod.Method0 ], [ EdhocSuite.Suite0 ], credentialsManager, cryptoManager);
const responder = new EDHOC(20, [ EdhocMethod.Method0 ], [ EdhocSuite.Suite0 ], credentialsManager, cryptoManager);
// Message 1: Initiator → Responder
const message1 = await initiator.composeMessage1();
await responder.processMessage1(message1);
// Message 2: Responder → Initiator
const message2 = await responder.composeMessage2();
await initiator.processMessage2(message2);
// Message 3: Initiator → Responder
const message3 = await initiator.composeMessage3();
await responder.processMessage3(message3);
// ...
Using External Authorization Data (EAD)
You can include additional authorization data in EDHOC messages:
// initiator.js
const ead_1 = [{
label: 1000,
value: Buffer.from('External Data')
}];
const message1 = await initiator.composeMessage1(ead_1);
// responder.js
const receivedEAD = await responder.processMessage1(message1);
Certificate-Based Authentication
Using X.509 certificates for authentication:
import {
EDHOC,
X509CertificateCredentialManager,
DefaultEdhocCryptoManager
} from 'node-edhoc';
// Setup credential managers
const initiatorCreds = new X509CertificateCredentialManager(
[initiatorCert],
initiatorKeyID
);
initiatorCreds.addTrustedCA(trustedCA);
// Setup crypto managers
const initiatorCrypto = new DefaultEdhocCryptoManager();
// Initialize EDHOC with certificate-based auth
const initiator = new EDHOC(
10,
[ EdhocMethod.Method0 ],
[ EdhocSuite.Suite2 ],
initiatorCreds,
initiatorCrypto
);
Exporting OSCORE Context
After a successful handshake, you can export the OSCORE security context:
const initiatorContext = await initiator.exportOSCORE();
const responderContext = await responder.exportOSCORE();
console.log('Master Secret:', initiatorContext.masterSecret);
console.log('Master Salt:', initiatorContext.masterSalt);
console.log('Sender ID:', initiatorContext.senderId);
console.log('Recipient ID:', initiatorContext.recipientId);
Key Update
Perform a key update for an existing OSCORE context:
const keyUpdateContext = Buffer.from('new-entropy-data');
// Update keys for both parties
await initiator.keyUpdate(keyUpdateContext);
await responder.keyUpdate(keyUpdateContext);
// Export new OSCORE context
const newContext = await initiator.exportOSCORE();
Custom Key Export
Export application-specific keys:
// Export a 32-byte key with label 40001
const key = await initiator.exportKey(40001, 32);
For more detailed examples and API documentation, please refer to our API Documentation.
Documentation
For detailed documentation, refer to:
- EDHOC Specification (RFC 9528)
- API Documentation (TODO: Link to generated API docs if available)
Contributing
Contributions are welcome! To contribute:
- Fork the repository and create a new branch.
- Implement your feature or bugfix.
- Write tests if applicable.
- Open a pull request.
Please ensure your code follows the existing style and structure of the project.
License
This project is licensed under the MIT License.
Related Projects
- libedhoc - A C implementation of the Ephemeral Diffie-Hellman Over COSE
Acknowledgments
This implementation is based on the EDHOC specification as defined in RFC 9528. Special thanks to the developers of libedhoc
for their foundational work on EDHOC in C.