We analyze the exact exponential decay rate of the expected amount of
information leaked to the wiretapper in Wyner's wiretap channel setting using
wiretap channel codes constructed from both i.i.d. and constant-composition
random codes. Our analysis for those sampled from i.i.d. random coding ensemble
shows that the previously-known achievable secrecy exponent using this ensemble
is indeed the exact exponent for an average code in the ensemble. Furthermore,
our analysis on wiretap channel codes constructed from the ensemble of
constant-composition random codes leads to an exponent which, in addition to
being the exact exponent for an average code, is larger than the achievable
secrecy exponent that has been established so far in the literature for this
ensemble (which in turn was known to be smaller than that achievable by wiretap
channel codes sampled from i.i.d. random coding ensemble). We show examples
where the exact secrecy exponent for the wiretap channel codes constructed from
random constant-composition codes is larger than that of those constructed from
i.i.d. random codes and examples where the exact secrecy exponent for the
wiretap channel codes constructed from i.i.d. random codes is larger than that
of those constructed from constant-composition random codes. We, hence,
conclude that, unlike the error correction problem, there is no general
ordering between the two random coding ensembles in terms of their secrecy
exponent.Comment: 23 pages, 5 figures, submitted to IEEE Transactions on Information
Theor