2,340 research outputs found
Efficient Implementation on Low-Cost SoC-FPGAs of TLSv1.2 Protocol with ECC_AES Support for Secure IoT Coordinators
Security management for IoT applications is a critical research field, especially when taking into account the performance variation over the very different IoT devices. In this paper, we present high-performance client/server coordinators on low-cost SoC-FPGA devices for secure IoT data collection. Security is ensured by using the Transport Layer Security (TLS) protocol based on the TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA256 cipher suite. The hardware architecture of the proposed coordinators is based on SW/HW co-design, implementing within the hardware accelerator core Elliptic Curve Scalar Multiplication (ECSM), which is the core operation of Elliptic Curve Cryptosystems (ECC). Meanwhile, the control of the overall TLS scheme is performed in software by an ARM Cortex-A9 microprocessor. In fact, the implementation of the ECC accelerator core around an ARM microprocessor allows not only the improvement of ECSM execution but also the performance enhancement of the overall cryptosystem. The integration of the ARM processor enables to exploit the possibility of embedded Linux features for high system flexibility. As a result, the proposed ECC accelerator requires limited area, with only 3395 LUTs on the Zynq device used to perform high-speed, 233-bit ECSMs in 413 µs, with a 50 MHz clock. Moreover, the generation of a 384-bit TLS handshake secret key between client and server coordinators requires 67.5 ms on a low cost Zynq 7Z007S device
Fast, uniform, and compact scalar multiplication for elliptic curves and genus 2 Jacobians with applications to signature schemes
We give a general framework for uniform, constant-time one-and
two-dimensional scalar multiplication algorithms for elliptic curves and
Jacobians of genus 2 curves that operate by projecting to the x-line or Kummer
surface, where we can exploit faster and more uniform pseudomultiplication,
before recovering the proper "signed" output back on the curve or Jacobian.
This extends the work of L{\'o}pez and Dahab, Okeya and Sakurai, and Brier and
Joye to genus 2, and also to two-dimensional scalar multiplication. Our results
show that many existing fast pseudomultiplication implementations (hitherto
limited to applications in Diffie--Hellman key exchange) can be wrapped with
simple and efficient pre-and post-computations to yield competitive full scalar
multiplication algorithms, ready for use in more general discrete
logarithm-based cryptosystems, including signature schemes. This is especially
interesting for genus 2, where Kummer surfaces can outperform comparable
elliptic curve systems. As an example, we construct an instance of the Schnorr
signature scheme driven by Kummer surface arithmetic
Efficient algorithms for pairing-based cryptosystems
We describe fast new algorithms to implement recent cryptosystems based on the Tate pairing. In particular, our techniques improve pairing evaluation speed by a factor of about 55 compared to previously known methods in characteristic 3, and attain performance comparable
to that of RSA in larger characteristics.We also propose faster algorithms for scalar multiplication in characteristic 3 and square root extraction
over Fpm, the latter technique being also useful in contexts other than that of pairing-based cryptography
Stopping time signatures for some algorithms in cryptography
We consider the normalized distribution of the overall running times of some
cryptographic algorithms, and what information they reveal about the
algorithms. Recent work of Deift, Menon, Olver, Pfrang, and Trogdon has shown
that certain numerical algorithms applied to large random matrices exhibit a
characteristic distribution of running times, which depends only on the
algorithm but are independent of the choice of probability distributions for
the matrices. Different algorithms often exhibit different running time
distributions, and so the histograms for these running time distributions
provide a time-signature for the algorithms, making it possible, in many cases,
to distinguish one algorithm from another. In this paper we extend this
analysis to cryptographic algorithms, and present examples of such algorithms
with time-signatures that are indistinguishable, and others with
time-signatures that are clearly distinct.Comment: 20 page
Group law computations on Jacobians of hyperelliptic curves
We derive an explicit method of computing the composition step in Cantor’s algorithm for group operations on Jacobians of hyperelliptic curves. Our technique is inspired by the geometric description of the group law and applies to hyperelliptic curves of arbitrary genus. While Cantor’s general composition involves arithmetic in the polynomial ring F_q[x], the algorithm we propose solves a linear system over the base field which can be written down directly from the Mumford coordinates of the group elements. We apply this method to give more efficient formulas for group operations in both affine and projective coordinates for cryptographic systems based on Jacobians of genus 2 hyperelliptic curves in general form
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