Start of changeGenerate Key Record (QC3GENKR, Qc3GenKeyRecord)


  Required Parameter Group:

1 Qualified key store file name Input Char(20)
2 Record label Input Char(32)
3 Key type Input Binary(4)
4 Key size Input Binary(4)
5 Public key exponent Input Binary(4)
6 Disallowed function Input Binary(4)
7 Cryptographic service provider Input Char(1)
8 Cryptographic device name Input Char(10)
9 Error code I/O Char(*)

 Service Program Name: QC3KRGEN

 Default Public Authority: *USE

 Threadsafe: Yes

The Generate Key Record (OPM, QC3GENKR; ILE, Qc3GenKeyRecord) API generates a random key or key pair and stores it in a key store file.

For more information about cryptographic services key store, refer to Cryptographic Services Key Storee.


Authorities and Locks

Required file authority
*OBJOPR, *READ, *ADD

Required device description authority
*USE


Required Parameter Group

Qualified key store file name
INPUT; CHAR(20)

The key store file where the key will be stored. The first 10 characters contain the file name. The second 10 characters contain the name of the library where the key store file is located.

Record label
INPUT; CHAR(32)

The label for the key record. The label will be converted from the job CCSID, or if 65535, the job default CCSID (DFTCCSID) job attribute to CCSID 1200 (Unicode UTF-16).

Key type
INPUT; BINARY(4)

The type of key.
Following are the valid values.

1 MD5
An MD5 key is used for HMAC (hash message authentication code) operations. The minimum length for an MD5 HMAC key is 16 bytes. A key longer than 16 bytes does not significantly increase the function strength unless the randomness of the key is considered weak. A key longer than 64 bytes will be hashed before it is used.
2 SHA-1
An SHA-1 key is used for HMAC (hash message authentication code) operations. The minimum length for an SHA-1 HMAC key is 20 bytes. A key longer than 20 bytes does not significantly increase the function strength unless the randomness of the key is considered weak. A key longer than 64 bytes will be hashed before it is used.
3 SHA-256
An SHA-256 key is used for HMAC (hash message authentication code) operations. The minimum length for an SHA-256 HMAC key is 32 bytes. A key longer than 32 bytes does not significantly increase the function strength unless the randomness of the key is considered weak. A key longer than 64 bytes will be hashed before it is used.
4 SHA-384
An SHA-384 key is used for HMAC (hash message authentication code) operations. The minimum length for an SHA-384 HMAC key is 48 bytes. A key longer than 48 bytes does not significantly increase the function strength unless the randomness of the key is considered weak. A key longer than 128 bytes will be hashed before it is used.
5 SHA-512
An SHA-512 key is used for HMAC (hash message authentication code) operations. The minimum length for an SHA-512 HMAC key is 64 bytes. A key longer than 64 bytes does not significantly increase the function strength unless the randomness of the key is considered weak. A key longer than 128 bytes will be hashed before it is used.
20 DES
Only 7 bits of each byte are used as the actual key. The rightmost bit of each byte will be set to odd parity because some cryptographic service providers require that a DES key have odd parity in every byte.
The key size parameter must specify 8.
21 Triple DES
Only 7 bits of each byte are used as the actual key. The rightmost bit of each byte will be set to odd parity because some cryptographic service providers require that a DES key have odd parity in every byte.
The key size can be 8, 16, or 24. Triple DES operates on an encryption block by doing a DES encrypt, followed by a DES decrypt, and then another DES encrypt. Therefore, it actually uses three 8-byte DES keys. If the key is 24 bytes in length, the first 8 bytes are used for key 1, the second 8 bytes for key 2, and the third 8 bytes for key 3. If the key is 16 bytes in length, the first 8 bytes are used for key 1 and key 3, and the second 8 bytes for key 2. If the key is only 8 bytes in length, it will be used for all 3 keys (essentially making the operation equivalent to a single DES operation).
22 AES
The key size can be 16, 24, or 32.
23 RC2
The key size can be 1 - 128.
30 RC4-compatible
The key size can be 1 - 256. Because of the nature of the RC4-compatible operation, using the same key for more than one message will severely compromise security.
50 RSA
The key size specifies the modulus length in bits and must be an even number in the range 512 - 2048. Both the RSA public and private key parts are stored in the key record.
Key size
INPUT; BINARY(4)

The length of key to generate. For RSA keys this length is specified in bits. For all other keys it is specified in bytes.
Refer to the key type parameter for restrictions.

Public key exponent
INPUT; BINARY(4)

This parameter is valid when key type parameter specifies 50 (RSA). Otherwise, this parameter must be set to 0. To maximize performance, the public key exponent is limited to the following two values.

3 Or hex   00 00 00 03.
65,537 Or hex   00 01 00 01.

Disallowed function
INPUT; BINARY(4)

This parameter specifies the functions that cannot be used with this key record. The values listed below can be added together to disallow multiple functions. For example, to disallow everything but MACing, set the value to 11.

0 No functions are disallowed.
1 Encryption is disallowed.
2 Decryption is disallowed.
4 MACing is disallowed.
8 Signing is disallowed.

Cryptographic service provider
INPUT; CHAR(1)

The cryptographic service provider (CSP) that will perform the key generate operation.

0 Any CSP.
The system will choose an appropriate CSP to perform the key generate operation.
1 Software CSP.
The system will perform the key generate operation using software.
2 Hardware CSP.
The system will perform the key generate operation using cryptographic hardware. If the requested key type can not be generated in hardware, an error is returned. A specific cryptographic device can be specified using the cryptographic device name parameter. If the cryptographic device is not specified, the system will choose an appropriate one.

Cryptographic device name
INPUT; CHAR(10)

The name of a cryptographic device description.
This parameter is valid when the cryptographic service provider parameter specifies 2 (hardware CSP). Otherwise, this parameter must be blanks or the pointer to this parameter set to NULL.

Error code
I/O; CHAR(*)

The structure in which to return error information. For the format of the structure, see Error Code Parameter.


Error Messages

Message ID Error Message Text
CPF24B4 E Severe error while addressing parameter list.
CPF3C1E E Required parameter &1 omitted.
CPF3CF1 E Error code parameter not valid.
CPF3CF2 E Error(s) occurred during running of &1 API.
CPF9872 E Program or service program &1 in library &2 ended. Reason code &3.
CPF9D9E E Record label already exists.
CPF9D9F E Not authorized to key store file.
CPF9DA0 E Error occured opening key store file.
CPF9DA5 E Key store file not found.
CPF9DA6 E The key store file is not available.
CPF9DA7 E File is corrupt or not a valid key store file.
CPF9DAC E Disallowed function value not valid.
CPF9DB3 E Qualified key store file name not valid.
CPF9DB6 E Record label not valid.
CPF9DB7 E Error occured writing to key store.
CPF9DB8 E Error occured retrieving key record from key store.
CPF9DDA E Unexpected return code &1.
CPF9DE7 E Key type not valid.
CPF9DEA E Key size not valid.
CPF9DEB E Public key exponent not valid.
CPF9DEC E Cryptographic service provider not valid.
CPF9DF0 E Operation, algorithm, or mode not available on the requested CSP (cryptographic service provider).
CPF9DF8 E Cryptographic device name not valid.
CPF9DF9 E Cryptographic device not found.
CPF9DFD E Not authorized to device.
CPF9DFE E Cryptographic device not available.

End of change

API introduced: V5R4
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