I have an SHA1 hash and I need to sign it. The CryptSignHash() method requires a HCRYPTHASH handle for signing. I create it and as I have the actual hash value already then set it:
CryptCreateHash(cryptoProvider, CALG_SHA1, 0, 0, &hash);
CryptSetHashParam(hash, HP_HASHVAL, hashBytes, 0);
The hashBytes is an array of 20 bytes.
However the problem is that the signature produced from this HCRYPTHASH handle is incorrect. I traced the problem down to the fact that CAPI actually doesn't use all 20 bytes from my hashBytes array. For some reason it thinks that SHA1 is only 4 bytes.
To verify this I wrote this small program:
HCRYPTPROV cryptoProvider;
CryptAcquireContext(&cryptoProvider, NULL, NULL, PROV_RSA_FULL, 0);
HCRYPTHASH hash;
HCRYPTKEY keyForHash;
CryptCreateHash(cryptoProvider, CALG_SHA1, keyForHash, 0, &hash);
DWORD hashLength;
CryptGetHashParam(hash, HP_HASHSIZE, NULL, &hashLength, 0);
printf("hashLength: %d\n", hashLength);
And this prints out hashLength: 4 !
Can anyone explain what I am doing wrong or why Microsoft CAPI thinks that SHA1 is 4 bytes (32 bits) instead of 20 bytes (160 bits).