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When reading an RSA private key blob, which lacks several RSA parameters (DP, DQ, InverseQ, D), how can I calculate these missing parameters from those that are supplied? I've read that it's possible to calculate these from P and Q which are supplied, but I don't know how to calculate them.

When importing this key, I get errors when trying to use the private key claiming the data isn't there (of course P and Q are supplied though).

I need to be able to do this on multiple platforms, so I'm afraid that puts me in the camp of needing to own the actual code to calculate them.

In C#

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  • 2
    The Wikipedia article on RSA shows how each of them can be calculated.
    – Artjom B.
    Feb 6, 2016 at 17:08
  • Thanks. I was hoping for something closer to C# specific as I'm not confident in my BigInteger math skills and would rather not figure it out myself. Feb 6, 2016 at 17:27
  • 1
    Here you have an answer if you combine the answers of this question with the answers of this question.
    – Artjom B.
    Feb 6, 2016 at 18:49
  • So you have P, Q, and e, and that's it? Feb 6, 2016 at 21:22
  • I have P, Q, publicExponent, modulus. I don't have DP, DQ, InverseQ, or D. Feb 6, 2016 at 23:09

1 Answer 1

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Here is the C# code that can construct a full set of RSAParameters from P, Q, and the public key data. We assume that the parameters to this method are big-endian (as is RSAParameters).

private static RSAParameters Create(byte[] p, byte[] q, byte[] exponent, byte[] modulus)
{
    var addlParameters = GetFullPrivateParameters(
        p: new BigInteger(CopyAndReverse(p)),
        q: new BigInteger(CopyAndReverse(q)),
        e: new BigInteger(CopyAndReverse(exponent)),
        modulus: new BigInteger(CopyAndReverse(modulus)));

    return new RSAParameters
    {
        P = p,
        Q = q,
        Exponent = exponent,
        Modulus = modulus,
        D = addlParameters.D,
        DP = addlParameters.DP,
        DQ = addlParameters.DQ,
        InverseQ = addlParameters.InverseQ,
    };
}

private static RSAParameters GetFullPrivateParameters(BigInteger p, BigInteger q, BigInteger e, BigInteger modulus)
{
    var n = p * q;
    var phiOfN = n - p - q + 1; // OR: (p - 1) * (q - 1);

    var d = ModInverse(e, phiOfN);
    Assert.Equal(1, (d * e) % phiOfN);

    var dp = d % (p - 1);
    var dq = d % (q - 1);

    var qInv = ModInverse(q, p);
    //Assert.Equal(1, (qInv * q) % p);

    return new RSAParameters
    {
        D = CopyAndReverse(d.ToByteArray()),
        DP = CopyAndReverse(dp.ToByteArray()),
        DQ = CopyAndReverse(dq.ToByteArray()),
        InverseQ = CopyAndReverse(qInv.ToByteArray()),
    };
}


/// <summary>
/// Calculates the modular multiplicative inverse of <paramref name="a"/> modulo <paramref name="m"/>
/// using the extended Euclidean algorithm.
/// </summary>
/// <remarks>
/// This implementation comes from the pseudocode defining the inverse(a, n) function at
/// https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extended_Euclidean_algorithm
/// </remarks>
public static BigInteger ModInverse(BigInteger a, BigInteger n)
{
    BigInteger t = 0, nt = 1, r = n, nr = a;

    if (n < 0)
    {
        n = -n;
    }

    if (a < 0)
    {
        a = n - (-a % n);
    }

    while (nr != 0)
    {
        var quot = r / nr;

        var tmp = nt; nt = t - quot * nt; t = tmp;
        tmp = nr; nr = r - quot * nr; r = tmp;
    }

    if (r > 1) throw new ArgumentException(nameof(a) + " is not convertible.");
    if (t < 0) t = t + n;
    return t;
}

private static byte[] CopyAndReverse(byte[] data)
{
    byte[] reversed = new byte[data.Length];
    Array.Copy(data, 0, reversed, 0, data.Length);
    Array.Reverse(reversed);
    return reversed;
}
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  • This modular inverse method does not work for me. It always returns an incorrect result, and performing an assertion on it of Assert.AreEqual(1, (iq * q) % p); always fails.
    – laptou
    May 9, 2017 at 6:39

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