Verify
kms_verify | R Documentation |
Verifies a digital signature that was generated by the Sign operation¶
Description¶
Verifies a digital signature that was generated by the sign
operation.
Verification confirms that an authorized user signed the message with
the specified KMS key and signing algorithm, and the message hasn't
changed since it was signed. If the signature is verified, the value of
the SignatureValid
field in the response is True
. If the signature
verification fails, the verify
operation fails with an
KMSInvalidSignatureException
exception.
A digital signature is generated by using the private key in an asymmetric KMS key. The signature is verified by using the public key in the same asymmetric KMS key. For information about asymmetric KMS keys, see Asymmetric KMS keys in the Key Management Service Developer Guide.
To use the verify
operation, specify the same asymmetric KMS key,
message, and signing algorithm that were used to produce the signature.
The message type does not need to be the same as the one used for
signing, but it must indicate whether the value of the Message
parameter should be hashed as part of the verification process.
You can also verify the digital signature by using the public key of the
KMS key outside of KMS. Use the get_public_key
operation to download
the public key in the asymmetric KMS key and then use the public key to
verify the signature outside of KMS. The advantage of using the verify
operation is that it is performed within KMS. As a result, it's easy to
call, the operation is performed within the FIPS boundary, it is logged
in CloudTrail, and you can use key policy and IAM policy to determine
who is authorized to use the KMS key to verify signatures.
To verify a signature outside of KMS with an SM2 public key (China
Regions only), you must specify the distinguishing ID. By default, KMS
uses 1234567812345678
as the distinguishing ID. For more information,
see Offline verification with SM2 key
pairs.
The KMS key that you use for this operation must be in a compatible key state. For details, see Key states of KMS keys in the Key Management Service Developer Guide.
Cross-account use: Yes. To perform this operation with a KMS key in
a different Amazon Web Services account, specify the key ARN or alias
ARN in the value of the KeyId
parameter.
Required permissions: kms:Verify (key policy)
Related operations: sign
Eventual consistency: The KMS API follows an eventual consistency model. For more information, see KMS eventual consistency.
Usage¶
kms_verify(KeyId, Message, MessageType, Signature, SigningAlgorithm,
GrantTokens, DryRun)
Arguments¶
KeyId |
[required] Identifies the asymmetric KMS key that will be used to verify the signature. This must be the same KMS key that was used to generate the signature. If you specify a different KMS key, the signature verification fails. To specify a KMS key, use its key ID, key ARN, alias name, or alias
ARN. When using an alias name, prefix it with For example:
To get the key ID and key ARN for a KMS key, use
|
Message |
[required] Specifies the message that was signed. You can submit
a raw message of up to 4096 bytes, or a hash digest of the message. If
you submit a digest, use the If the message specified here is different from the message that was signed, the signature verification fails. A message and its hash digest are considered to be the same message. |
MessageType |
Tells KMS whether the value of the When the value of Use the When the value of You can submit a message digest and omit the The hashing algorithm in that
|
Signature |
[required] The signature that the |
SigningAlgorithm |
[required] The signing algorithm that was used to sign the message. If you submit a different algorithm, the signature verification fails. |
GrantTokens |
A list of grant tokens. Use a grant token when your permission to call this operation comes from a new grant that has not yet achieved eventual consistency. For more information, see Grant token and Using a grant token in the Key Management Service Developer Guide. |
DryRun |
Checks if your request will succeed. To learn more about how to use this parameter, see Testing your KMS API calls in the Key Management Service Developer Guide. |
Value¶
A list with the following syntax:
list(
KeyId = "string",
SignatureValid = TRUE|FALSE,
SigningAlgorithm = "RSASSA_PSS_SHA_256"|"RSASSA_PSS_SHA_384"|"RSASSA_PSS_SHA_512"|"RSASSA_PKCS1_V1_5_SHA_256"|"RSASSA_PKCS1_V1_5_SHA_384"|"RSASSA_PKCS1_V1_5_SHA_512"|"ECDSA_SHA_256"|"ECDSA_SHA_384"|"ECDSA_SHA_512"|"SM2DSA"
)
Request syntax¶
svc$verify(
KeyId = "string",
Message = raw,
MessageType = "RAW"|"DIGEST",
Signature = raw,
SigningAlgorithm = "RSASSA_PSS_SHA_256"|"RSASSA_PSS_SHA_384"|"RSASSA_PSS_SHA_512"|"RSASSA_PKCS1_V1_5_SHA_256"|"RSASSA_PKCS1_V1_5_SHA_384"|"RSASSA_PKCS1_V1_5_SHA_512"|"ECDSA_SHA_256"|"ECDSA_SHA_384"|"ECDSA_SHA_512"|"SM2DSA",
GrantTokens = list(
"string"
),
DryRun = TRUE|FALSE
)
Examples¶
## Not run:
# This operation uses the public key in an elliptic curve (ECC) asymmetric
# key to verify a digital signature within AWS KMS.
svc$verify(
KeyId = "alias/ECC_signing_key",
Message = "<message to be verified>",
MessageType = "RAW",
Signature = "<binary data>",
SigningAlgorithm = "ECDSA_SHA_384"
)
## End(Not run)