libent
is a cross-platform wrapper around getentropy(2)
. It exports
one symbol, ent_getentropy
. If getentropy is available, then it's just
a shim around that. Otherwise, it uses getrandom(2)
(available since
kernel 3.17) on Linux, or /dev/urandom
on other *nix.
bazel build ...
bazel test ...
getentropy
is the wave of the future. It's the correct API for
generating small amounts of entropy to create cryptographic keys or seed
PRNGs. It's good and reasonable and true, it's on Linux, *BSD, and OS
X, and it only took us fifty years of UNIX to get here.
Sadly, it only just arrived, so nobody has it yet. It didn't land in Linux until glibc 2.25, which seems to only have made it into Debian 10.
Once getentropy
is everywhere you care about, you can just do a
s/ent_//g on all the call sites and discard this shim.
This project began because Urbit's entropy-generation function was bothering me. Then it got out of hand.