Telethon/telethon/network/mtprotostate.py

280 lines
11 KiB
Python
Raw Normal View History

import os
import struct
import time
from hashlib import sha256
from collections import deque
from ..crypto import AES
from ..errors import SecurityError, InvalidBufferError
from ..extensions import BinaryReader
from ..tl.core import TLMessage
from ..tl.tlobject import TLRequest
from ..tl.functions import InvokeAfterMsgRequest
from ..tl.core.gzippacked import GzipPacked
from ..tl.types import BadServerSalt, BadMsgNotification
# N is not specified in https://core.telegram.org/mtproto/security_guidelines#checking-msg-id, but 500 is reasonable
MAX_RECENT_MSG_IDS = 500
MSG_TOO_NEW_DELTA = 30
MSG_TOO_OLD_DELTA = 300
# Something must be wrong if we ignore too many messages at the same time
MAX_CONSECUTIVE_IGNORED = 10
class _OpaqueRequest(TLRequest):
"""
Wraps a serialized request into a type that can be serialized again.
"""
def __init__(self, data: bytes):
self.data = data
def _bytes(self):
return self.data
class MTProtoState:
"""
`telethon.network.mtprotosender.MTProtoSender` needs to hold a state
in order to be able to encrypt and decrypt incoming/outgoing messages,
as well as generating the message IDs. Instances of this class hold
together all the required information.
It doesn't make sense to use `telethon.sessions.abstract.Session` for
the sender because the sender should *not* be concerned about storing
this information to disk, as one may create as many senders as they
desire to any other data center, or some CDN. Using the same session
for all these is not a good idea as each need their own authkey, and
the concept of "copying" sessions with the unnecessary entities or
updates state for these connections doesn't make sense.
2018-10-01 10:58:53 +03:00
While it would be possible to have a `MTProtoPlainState` that does no
encryption so that it was usable through the `MTProtoLayer` and thus
avoid the need for a `MTProtoPlainSender`, the `MTProtoLayer` is more
focused to efficiency and this state is also more advanced (since it
supports gzipping and invoking after other message IDs). There are too
many methods that would be needed to make it convenient to use for the
authentication process, at which point the `MTProtoPlainSender` is better.
"""
2019-01-11 17:52:30 +03:00
def __init__(self, auth_key, loggers):
self.auth_key = auth_key
2019-01-11 17:52:30 +03:00
self._log = loggers[__name__]
self.time_offset = 0
self.salt = 0
2019-05-03 14:59:17 +03:00
self.id = self._sequence = self._last_msg_id = None
self._recent_remote_ids = deque(maxlen=MAX_RECENT_MSG_IDS)
self._highest_remote_id = 0
self._ignore_count = 0
2018-10-19 14:24:52 +03:00
self.reset()
def reset(self):
"""
Resets the state.
"""
# Session IDs can be random on every connection
self.id = struct.unpack('q', os.urandom(8))[0]
self._sequence = 0
self._last_msg_id = 0
self._recent_remote_ids.clear()
self._highest_remote_id = 0
self._ignore_count = 0
def update_message_id(self, message):
"""
Updates the message ID to a new one,
used when the time offset changed.
"""
message.msg_id = self._get_new_msg_id()
@staticmethod
def _calc_key(auth_key, msg_key, client):
"""
Calculate the key based on Telegram guidelines for MTProto 2,
specifying whether it's the client or not. See
https://core.telegram.org/mtproto/description#defining-aes-key-and-initialization-vector
"""
x = 0 if client else 8
sha256a = sha256(msg_key + auth_key[x: x + 36]).digest()
sha256b = sha256(auth_key[x + 40:x + 76] + msg_key).digest()
aes_key = sha256a[:8] + sha256b[8:24] + sha256a[24:32]
aes_iv = sha256b[:8] + sha256a[8:24] + sha256b[24:32]
return aes_key, aes_iv
2018-10-01 15:02:23 +03:00
def write_data_as_message(self, buffer, data, content_related,
*, after_id=None):
"""
Writes a message containing the given data into buffer.
Returns the message id.
"""
msg_id = self._get_new_msg_id()
2018-10-01 15:02:23 +03:00
seq_no = self._get_seq_no(content_related)
if after_id is None:
2018-10-04 17:15:51 +03:00
body = GzipPacked.gzip_if_smaller(content_related, data)
else:
# The `RequestState` stores `bytes(request)`, not the request itself.
# `invokeAfterMsg` wants a `TLRequest` though, hence the wrapping.
2018-10-04 17:15:51 +03:00
body = GzipPacked.gzip_if_smaller(content_related,
bytes(InvokeAfterMsgRequest(after_id, _OpaqueRequest(data))))
buffer.write(struct.pack('<qii', msg_id, seq_no, len(body)))
buffer.write(body)
return msg_id
def encrypt_message_data(self, data):
"""
Encrypts the given message data using the current authorization key
following MTProto 2.0 guidelines core.telegram.org/mtproto/description.
"""
data = struct.pack('<qq', self.salt, self.id) + data
padding = os.urandom(-(len(data) + 12) % 16 + 12)
# Being substr(what, offset, length); x = 0 for client
# "msg_key_large = SHA256(substr(auth_key, 88+x, 32) + pt + padding)"
msg_key_large = sha256(
self.auth_key.key[88:88 + 32] + data + padding).digest()
# "msg_key = substr (msg_key_large, 8, 16)"
msg_key = msg_key_large[8:24]
aes_key, aes_iv = self._calc_key(self.auth_key.key, msg_key, True)
key_id = struct.pack('<Q', self.auth_key.key_id)
return (key_id + msg_key +
AES.encrypt_ige(data + padding, aes_key, aes_iv))
def decrypt_message_data(self, body):
"""
Inverse of `encrypt_message_data` for incoming server messages.
"""
now = time.time() + self.time_offset # get the time as early as possible, even if other checks make it go unused
if len(body) < 8:
raise InvalidBufferError(body)
2018-10-02 09:55:46 +03:00
# TODO Check salt, session_id and sequence_number
key_id = struct.unpack('<Q', body[:8])[0]
if key_id != self.auth_key.key_id:
raise SecurityError('Server replied with an invalid auth key')
msg_key = body[8:24]
aes_key, aes_iv = self._calc_key(self.auth_key.key, msg_key, False)
body = AES.decrypt_ige(body[24:], aes_key, aes_iv)
# https://core.telegram.org/mtproto/security_guidelines
# Sections "checking sha256 hash" and "message length"
our_key = sha256(self.auth_key.key[96:96 + 32] + body)
if msg_key != our_key.digest()[8:24]:
raise SecurityError(
"Received msg_key doesn't match with expected one")
reader = BinaryReader(body)
reader.read_long() # remote_salt
if reader.read_long() != self.id:
2023-04-06 15:32:45 +03:00
raise SecurityError('Server replied with a wrong session ID (see FAQ for details)')
remote_msg_id = reader.read_long()
if remote_msg_id % 2 != 1:
raise SecurityError('Server sent an even msg_id')
# Only perform the (somewhat expensive) check of duplicate if we did receive a lower ID
if remote_msg_id <= self._highest_remote_id and remote_msg_id in self._recent_remote_ids:
self._log.warning('Server resent the older message %d, ignoring', remote_msg_id)
self._count_ignored()
return None
remote_sequence = reader.read_int()
reader.read_int() # msg_len for the inner object, padding ignored
2018-06-25 13:54:33 +03:00
# We could read msg_len bytes and use those in a new reader to read
# the next TLObject without including the padding, but since the
# reader isn't used for anything else after this, it's unnecessary.
obj = reader.tgread_object()
# "Certain client-to-server service messages containing data sent by the client to the
# server (for example, msg_id of a recent client query) may, nonetheless, be processed
# on the client even if the time appears to be "incorrect". This is especially true of
# messages to change server_salt and notifications about invalid time on the client."
#
# This means we skip the time check for certain types of messages.
if obj.CONSTRUCTOR_ID not in (BadServerSalt.CONSTRUCTOR_ID, BadMsgNotification.CONSTRUCTOR_ID):
remote_msg_time = remote_msg_id >> 32
time_delta = now - remote_msg_time
if time_delta > MSG_TOO_OLD_DELTA:
2023-04-06 13:38:25 +03:00
self._log.warning('Server sent a very old message with ID %d, ignoring (see FAQ for details)', remote_msg_id)
self._count_ignored()
return None
if -time_delta > MSG_TOO_NEW_DELTA:
2023-04-06 13:38:25 +03:00
self._log.warning('Server sent a very new message with ID %d, ignoring (see FAQ for details)', remote_msg_id)
self._count_ignored()
return None
self._recent_remote_ids.append(remote_msg_id)
self._highest_remote_id = remote_msg_id
self._ignore_count = 0
return TLMessage(remote_msg_id, remote_sequence, obj)
def _count_ignored(self):
# It's possible that ignoring a message "bricks" the connection,
# but this should not happen unless there's something else wrong.
self._ignore_count += 1
if self._ignore_count >= MAX_CONSECUTIVE_IGNORED:
raise SecurityError('Too many messages had to be ignored consecutively')
def _get_new_msg_id(self):
"""
Generates a new unique message ID based on the current
time (in ms) since epoch, applying a known time offset.
"""
now = time.time() + self.time_offset
nanoseconds = int((now - int(now)) * 1e+9)
new_msg_id = (int(now) << 32) | (nanoseconds << 2)
if self._last_msg_id >= new_msg_id:
new_msg_id = self._last_msg_id + 4
self._last_msg_id = new_msg_id
return new_msg_id
def update_time_offset(self, correct_msg_id):
"""
Updates the time offset to the correct
one given a known valid message ID.
"""
2018-07-25 13:33:12 +03:00
bad = self._get_new_msg_id()
old = self.time_offset
now = int(time.time())
correct = correct_msg_id >> 32
self.time_offset = correct - now
2018-07-25 13:33:12 +03:00
if self.time_offset != old:
self._last_msg_id = 0
2019-01-11 17:52:30 +03:00
self._log.debug(
2018-07-25 13:33:12 +03:00
'Updated time offset (old offset %d, bad %d, good %d, new %d)',
old, bad, correct_msg_id, self.time_offset
)
return self.time_offset
def _get_seq_no(self, content_related):
"""
Generates the next sequence number depending on whether
it should be for a content-related query or not.
"""
if content_related:
result = self._sequence * 2 + 1
self._sequence += 1
return result
else:
return self._sequence * 2