// Because I don't want two files, we're going to fork ourselves. // Node.js's crypto functions are synchronous, strangely, unlike the rest of Node // here's an asynchronous implementation. if (!process.send) { // This is the parent var guid = 1; var callbacks = {}; var callbackData = {}; var child = require('child_process').fork('verifier.js'); exports.verify = function(data, signature, callback) { var localGuid = guid++; callbacks[localGuid] = callback; callbackData[localGuid] = data; child.send({data: data, sig: signature, guid: localGuid}); } child.on('message', function(response) { if (callbacks[response.guid]) { callbacks[response.guid](response.success, callbackData[response.guid]); delete callbacks[response.guid]; delete callbackData[response.guid]; } }); } else { // This is the child var config = require('./config/config.js'); var crypto = require('crypto'); var keyalgo = config.loginserverkeyalgo; var pkey = config.loginserverpublickey; process.on('message', function(message) { var verifier = crypto.createVerify(keyalgo); verifier.update(message.data); var success = verifier.verify(pkey, message.sig, 'hex'); process.send({ success: success, guid: message.guid }); }); }