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tests | ||
Makefile | ||
README | ||
README.FP | ||
ec2.h | ||
ec2_163.c | ||
ec2_193.c | ||
ec2_233.c | ||
ec2_aff.c | ||
ec2_mont.c | ||
ec2_proj.c | ||
ec_naf.c | ||
ecl-curve.h | ||
ecl-exp.h | ||
ecl-priv.h | ||
ecl.c | ||
ecl.h | ||
ecl_curve.c | ||
ecl_gf.c | ||
ecl_mult.c | ||
ecp.h | ||
ecp_192.c | ||
ecp_224.c | ||
ecp_256.c | ||
ecp_384.c | ||
ecp_521.c | ||
ecp_aff.c | ||
ecp_fp.c | ||
ecp_fp.h | ||
ecp_fp160.c | ||
ecp_fp192.c | ||
ecp_fp224.c | ||
ecp_fpinc.c | ||
ecp_jac.c | ||
ecp_jm.c | ||
ecp_mont.c |
README
***** BEGIN LICENSE BLOCK ***** Version: MPL 1.1/GPL 2.0/LGPL 2.1 The contents of this file are subject to the Mozilla Public License Version 1.1 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at http://www.mozilla.org/MPL/ Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations under the License. The Original Code is the elliptic curve math library. The Initial Developer of the Original Code is Sun Microsystems, Inc. Portions created by Sun Microsystems, Inc. are Copyright (C) 2003 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Contributor(s): Stephen Fung <fungstep@hotmail.com> and Douglas Stebila <douglas@stebila.ca>, Sun Microsystems Laboratories Alternatively, the contents of this file may be used under the terms of either the GNU General Public License Version 2 or later (the "GPL"), or the GNU Lesser General Public License Version 2.1 or later (the "LGPL"), in which case the provisions of the GPL or the LGPL are applicable instead of those above. If you wish to allow use of your version of this file only under the terms of either the GPL or the LGPL, and not to allow others to use your version of this file under the terms of the MPL, indicate your decision by deleting the provisions above and replace them with the notice and other provisions required by the GPL or the LGPL. If you do not delete the provisions above, a recipient may use your version of this file under the terms of any one of the MPL, the GPL or the LGPL. ***** END LICENSE BLOCK ***** The ECL exposes routines for constructing and converting curve parameters for internal use. HEADER FILES ============ ecl-exp.h - Exports data structures and curve names. For use by code that does not have access to mp_ints. ecl-curve.h - Provides hex encodings (in the form of ECCurveParams structs) of standardizes elliptic curve domain parameters and mappings from ECCurveName to ECCurveParams. For use by code that does not have access to mp_ints. ecl.h - Interface to constructors for curve parameters and group object, and point multiplication operations. Used by higher level algorithms (like ECDH and ECDSA) to actually perform elliptic curve cryptography. ecl-priv.h - Data structures and functions for internal use within the library. ec2.h - Internal header file that contains all functions for point arithmetic over binary polynomial fields. ecp.h - Internal header file that contains all functions for point arithmetic over prime fields. DATA STRUCTURES AND TYPES ========================= ECCurveName (from ecl-exp.h) - Opaque name for standardized elliptic curve domain parameters. ECCurveParams (from ecl-exp.h) - Provides hexadecimal encoding of elliptic curve domain parameters. Can be generated by a user and passed to ECGroup_fromHex or can be generated from a name by EC_GetNamedCurveParams. ecl-curve.h contains ECCurveParams structs for the standardized curves defined by ECCurveName. ECGroup (from ecl.h and ecl-priv.h) - Opaque data structure that represents a group of elliptic curve points for a particular set of elliptic curve domain parameters. Contains all domain parameters (curve a and b, field, base point) as well as pointers to the functions that should be used for point arithmetic and the underlying field GFMethod. Generated by either ECGroup_fromHex or ECGroup_fromName. GFMethod (from ecl-priv.h) - Represents a field underlying a set of elliptic curve domain parameters. Contains the irreducible that defines the field (either the prime or the binary polynomial) as well as pointers to the functions that should be used for field arithmetic. ARITHMETIC FUNCTIONS ==================== Higher-level algorithms (like ECDH and ECDSA) should call ECPoint_mul or ECPoints_mul (from ecl.h) to do point arithmetic. These functions will choose which underlying algorithms to use, based on the ECGroup structure. Point Multiplication -------------------- ecl_mult.c provides the ECPoints_mul and ECPoint_mul wrappers. It also provides two implementations for the pts_mul operation - ec_pts_mul_basic (which computes kP, lQ, and then adds kP + lQ) and ec_pts_mul_simul_w2 (which does a simultaneous point multiplication using a table with window size 2*2). ec_naf.c provides an implementation of an algorithm to calculate a non-adjacent form of a scalar, minimizing the number of point additions that need to be done in a point multiplication. Point Arithmetic over Prime Fields ---------------------------------- ecp_aff.c provides point arithmetic using affine coordinates. ecp_jac.c provides point arithmetic using Jacobian projective coordinates and mixed Jacobian-affine coordinates. (Jacobian projective coordinates represent a point (x, y) as (X, Y, Z), where x=X/Z^2, y=Y/Z^3). ecp_jm.c provides point arithmetic using Modified Jacobian coordinates and mixed Modified_Jacobian-affine coordinates. (Modified Jacobian coordinates represent a point (x, y) as (X, Y, Z, a*Z^4), where x=X/Z^2, y=Y/Z^3, and a is the linear coefficient in the curve defining equation). ecp_192.c and ecp_224.c provide optimized field arithmetic. Point Arithmetic over Binary Polynomial Fields ---------------------------------------------- ec2_aff.c provides point arithmetic using affine coordinates. ec2_proj.c provides point arithmetic using projective coordinates. (Projective coordinates represent a point (x, y) as (X, Y, Z), where x=X/Z, y=Y/Z^2). ec2_mont.c provides point multiplication using Montgomery projective coordinates. ec2_163.c, ec2_193.c, and ec2_233.c provide optimized field arithmetic. Field Arithmetic ---------------- ecl_gf.c provides constructors for field objects (GFMethod) with the functions GFMethod_cons*. It also provides wrappers around the basic field operations. Prime Field Arithmetic ---------------------- The mpi library provides the basic prime field arithmetic. ecp_mont.c provides wrappers around the Montgomery multiplication functions from the mpi library and adds encoding and decoding functions. It also provides the function to construct a GFMethod object using Montgomery multiplication. ecp_192.c and ecp_224.c provide optimized modular reduction for the fields defined by nistp192 and nistp224 primes. ecl_gf.c provides wrappers around the basic field operations. Binary Polynomial Field Arithmetic ---------------------------------- ../mpi/mp_gf2m.c provides basic binary polynomial field arithmetic, including addition, multiplication, squaring, mod, and division, as well as conversion ob polynomial representations between bitstring and int[]. ec2_163.c, ec2_193.c, and ec2_233.c provide optimized field mod, mul, and sqr operations. ecl_gf.c provides wrappers around the basic field operations. Field Encoding -------------- By default, field elements are encoded in their basic form. It is possible to use an alternative encoding, however. For example, it is possible to Montgomery representation of prime field elements and take advantage of the fast modular multiplication that Montgomery representation provides. The process of converting from basic form to Montgomery representation is called field encoding, and the opposite process would be field decoding. All internal point operations assume that the operands are field encoded as appropriate. By rewiring the underlying field arithmetic to perform operations on these encoded values, the same overlying point arithmetic operations can be used regardless of field representation. ALGORITHM WIRING ================ The EC library allows point and field arithmetic algorithms to be substituted ("wired-in") on a fine-grained basis. This allows for generic algorithms and algorithms that are optimized for a particular curve, field, or architecture, to coexist and to be automatically selected at runtime. Wiring Mechanism ---------------- The ECGroup and GFMethod structure contain pointers to the point and field arithmetic functions, respectively, that are to be used in operations. The selection of algorithms to use is handled in the function ecgroup_fromNameAndHex in ecl.c. Default Wiring -------------- Curves over prime fields by default use montgomery field arithmetic, point multiplication using 5-bit window non-adjacent-form with Modified Jacobian coordinates, and 2*2-bit simultaneous point multiplication using Jacobian coordinates. (Wiring in function ECGroup_consGFp_mont in ecl.c.) Curves over prime fields that have optimized modular reduction (i.e., secp160r1, nistp192, and nistp224) do not use Montgomery field arithmetic. Instead, they use basic field arithmetic with their optimized reduction (as in ecp_192.c and ecp_224.c). They use the same point multiplication and simultaneous point multiplication algorithms as other curves over prime fields. Curves over binary polynomial fields by default use generic field arithmetic with montgomery point multiplication and basic kP + lQ computation (multiply, multiply, and add). (Wiring in function ECGroup_cons_GF2m in ecl.c.) Curves over binary polynomial fields that have optimized field arithmetic (i.e., any 163-, 193, or 233-bit field) use their optimized field arithmetic. They use the same point multiplication and simultaneous point multiplication algorithms as other curves over binary fields. Example ------- We provide an example for plugging in an optimized implementation for the Koblitz curve nistk163. Suppose the file ec2_k163.c contains the optimized implementation. In particular it contains a point multiplication function: mp_err ec_GF2m_nistk163_pt_mul(const mp_int *n, const mp_int *px, const mp_int *py, mp_int *rx, mp_int *ry, const ECGroup *group); Since only a pt_mul function is provided, the generic pt_add function will be used. There are two options for handling the optimized field arithmetic used by the ..._pt_mul function. Say the optimized field arithmetic includes the following functions: mp_err ec_GF2m_nistk163_add(const mp_int *a, const mp_int *b, mp_int *r, const GFMethod *meth); mp_err ec_GF2m_nistk163_mul(const mp_int *a, const mp_int *b, mp_int *r, const GFMethod *meth); mp_err ec_GF2m_nistk163_sqr(const mp_int *a, const mp_int *b, mp_int *r, const GFMethod *meth); mp_err ec_GF2m_nistk163_div(const mp_int *a, const mp_int *b, mp_int *r, const GFMethod *meth); First, the optimized field arithmetic could simply be called directly by the ..._pt_mul function. This would be accomplished by changing the ecgroup_fromNameAndHex function in ecl.c to include the following statements: if (name == ECCurve_NIST_K163) { group = ECGroup_consGF2m(&irr, NULL, &curvea, &curveb, &genx, &geny, &order, params->cofactor); if (group == NULL) { res = MP_UNDEF; goto CLEANUP; } MP_CHECKOK( ec_group_set_nistk163(group) ); } and including in ec2_k163.c the following function: mp_err ec_group_set_nistk163(ECGroup *group) { group->point_mul = &ec_GF2m_nistk163_pt_mul; return MP_OKAY; } As a result, ec_GF2m_pt_add and similar functions would use the basic binary polynomial field arithmetic ec_GF2m_add, ec_GF2m_mul, ec_GF2m_sqr, and ec_GF2m_div. Alternatively, the optimized field arithmetic could be wired into the group's GFMethod. This would be accomplished by putting the following function in ec2_k163.c: mp_err ec_group_set_nistk163(ECGroup *group) { group->meth->field_add = &ec_GF2m_nistk163_add; group->meth->field_mul = &ec_GF2m_nistk163_mul; group->meth->field_sqr = &ec_GF2m_nistk163_sqr; group->meth->field_div = &ec_GF2m_nistk163_div; group->point_mul = &ec_GF2m_nistk163_pt_mul; return MP_OKAY; } For an example of functions that use special field encodings, take a look at ecp_mont.c. TESTING ======= The ecl/tests directory contains a collection of standalone tests that verify the correctness of the elliptic curve library. Both ecp_test and ec2_test take the following arguments: --print Print out results of each point arithmetic test. --time Benchmark point operations and print results. The set of curves over which ecp_test and ec2_test run is coded into the program, but can be changed by editing the source files. BUILDING ======== The ecl can be built as a standalone library, separate from NSS, dependent only on the mpi library. To build the library: > cd ../mpi > make libs > cd ../ecl > make libs > make tests # to build test files > make test # to run automated tests