(PHP 7 >= 7.1.2, PHP 8)
hash_hkdf — Generate a HKDF key derivation of a supplied key input
$algo
,$key
,$length
= 0,$info
= "",$salt
= ""
algo
Name of selected hashing algorithm (i.e. "sha256", "sha512", "haval160,4", etc..) See hash_algos() for a list of supported algorithms.
Note:
Non-cryptographic hash functions are not allowed.
key
Input keying material (raw binary). Cannot be empty.
length
Desired output length in bytes. Cannot be greater than 255 times the chosen hash function size.
If length
is 0
, the output length
will default to the chosen hash function size.
info
Application/context-specific info string.
salt
Salt to use during derivation.
While optional, adding random salt significantly improves the strength of HKDF.
Returns a string containing a raw binary representation of the derived key
(also known as output keying material - OKM); or false
on failure.
An E_WARNING
will be raised if key
is empty, algo
is unknown/non-cryptographic,
length
is less than 0
or too large
(greater than 255 times the size of the hash function).
Example #1 hash_hkdf() example
<?php
// Generate a random key, and salt to strengthen it during derivation.
$inputKey = random_bytes(32);
$salt = random_bytes(16);
// Derive a pair of separate keys, using the same input created above.
$encryptionKey = hash_hkdf('sha256', $inputKey, 32, 'aes-256-encryption', $salt);
$authenticationKey = hash_hkdf('sha256', $inputKey, 32, 'sha-256-authentication', $salt);
var_dump($encryptionKey !== $authenticationKey); // bool(true)
?>
The above example produces a pair of separate keys, suitable for creation of an encrypt-then-HMAC construct, using AES-256 and SHA-256 for encryption and authentication respectively.