Example #1
0
// Elligator 1 reverse-map from point to uniform representative.
// Returns nil if point has no uniform representative.
// See section 3.3 of the Elligator paper.
func (el *el1param) HideEncode(P point, rand cipher.Stream) []byte {
	ec := el.ec
	x, y := P.getXY()
	var a, b, etar, etarp1, X, z, u, t, t1 nist.Int

	// condition 1: a = y+1 is nonzero
	a.Add(y, &ec.one)
	if a.V.Sign() == 0 {
		return nil // y+1 = 0, no representative
	}

	// etar = r(y-1)/2(y+1)
	t1.Add(y, &ec.one).Add(&t1, &t1) // 2(y+1)
	etar.Sub(y, &ec.one).Mul(&etar, &el.r).Div(&etar, &t1)

	// condition 2: b = (1 + eta r)^2 - 1 is a square
	etarp1.Add(&ec.one, &etar) // etarp1 = (1 + eta r)
	b.Mul(&etarp1, &etarp1).Sub(&b, &ec.one)
	if math.Jacobi(&b.V, b.M) < 0 {
		return nil // b not a square, no representative
	}

	// condition 3: if etar = -2 then x=2s(c-1)Chi(c)/r
	if etar.Equal(&el.m2) && !x.Equal(&el.c3x) {
		return nil
	}

	// X = -(1+eta r)+((1+eta r)^2-1)^((q+1)/4)
	X.Exp(&b, &el.pp1d4).Sub(&X, &etarp1)

	// z = Chi((c-1)sX(1+X)x(X^2+1/c^2))
	z.Mul(&el.cm1s, &X).Mul(&z, t.Add(&ec.one, &X)).Mul(&z, x)
	z.Mul(&z, t.Mul(&X, &X).Add(&t, &el.invc2))
	chi(&z, &z)

	// u = zX
	u.Mul(&z, &X)

	// t = (1-u)/(1+u)
	t.Div(a.Sub(&ec.one, &u), b.Add(&ec.one, &u))

	// Map representative to a byte-string by padding the upper byte.
	// This assumes that the prime c.P is close enough to a power of 2
	// that the adversary will never notice the "missing" values;
	// this is true for the class of curves Elligator1 was designed for.
	rep, _ := t.MarshalBinary()
	padmask := el.padmask()
	if padmask != 0 {
		var pad [1]byte
		rand.XORKeyStream(pad[:], pad[:])
		rep[0] |= pad[0] & padmask
	}
	return rep
}
Example #2
0
// Elligator 2 reverse-map from point to uniform representative.
// Returns nil if point has no uniform representative.
// See section 5.3 of the Elligator paper.
func (el *el2param) HideEncode(P point, rand cipher.Stream) []byte {
	edx, edy := P.getXY()
	var x, y, r, xpA, t1 nist.Int

	// convert Edwards to Montgomery coordinates
	el.ed2mont(&x, &y, edx, edy)

	// condition 1: x != -A
	if x.Equal(&el.negA) {
		return nil // x = -A, no representative
	}

	// condition 2: if y=0, then x=0
	if y.V.Sign() == 0 && x.V.Sign() != 0 {
		return nil // y=0 but x!=0, no representative
	}

	// condition 3: -ux(x+A) is a square
	xpA.Add(&x, &el.A)
	t1.Mul(&el.u, &x).Mul(&t1, &xpA).Neg(&t1)
	if math.Jacobi(&t1.V, t1.M) < 0 {
		return nil // not a square, no representative
	}

	if y.V.Cmp(&el.pm1d2) <= 0 { // y in image of sqrt function
		r.Mul(&xpA, &el.u).Div(&x, &r)
	} else { // y not in image of sqrt function
		r.Mul(&el.u, &x).Div(&xpA, &r)
	}
	r.Neg(&r)
	el.sqrt(&r, &r)

	// Sanity check on result
	if r.V.Cmp(&el.pm1d2) > 0 {
		panic("el2: r too big")
	}

	// Map representative to a byte-string by padding the upper byte.
	// This assumes that the prime c.P is close enough to a power of 2
	// that the adversary will never notice the "missing" values;
	// this is true for the class of curves Elligator1 was designed for.
	rep, _ := r.MarshalBinary()
	padmask := el.padmask()
	if padmask != 0 {
		var pad [1]byte
		rand.XORKeyStream(pad[:], pad[:])
		rep[0] |= pad[0] & padmask
	}
	return rep
}
Example #3
0
// Elligator 2 forward-map from representative to Edwards curve point.
// Currently a straightforward, unoptimized implementation.
// See section 5.2 of the Elligator paper.
func (el *el2param) HideDecode(P point, rep []byte) {
	ec := el.ec
	var r, v, x, y, t1, edx, edy nist.Int

	l := ec.PointLen()
	if len(rep) != l {
		panic("el2Map: wrong representative length")
	}

	// Take the appropriate number of bits from the representative.
	buf := make([]byte, l)
	copy(buf, rep)
	buf[0] &^= el.padmask() // mask off the padding bits
	r.InitBytes(buf, &ec.P)

	// v = -A/(1+ur^2)
	v.Mul(&r, &r).Mul(&el.u, &v).Add(&ec.one, &v).Div(&el.negA, &v)

	// e = Chi(v^3+Av^2+Bv), where B=1 because of ed2mont equivalence
	t1.Add(&v, &el.A).Mul(&t1, &v).Add(&t1, &ec.one).Mul(&t1, &v)
	e := math.Jacobi(&t1.V, t1.M)

	// x = ev-(1-e)A/2
	if e == 1 {
		x.Set(&v)
	} else {
		x.Add(&v, &el.A).Neg(&x)
	}

	// y = -e sqrt(x^3+Ax^2+Bx), where B=1
	y.Add(&x, &el.A).Mul(&y, &x).Add(&y, &ec.one).Mul(&y, &x)
	el.sqrt(&y, &y)
	if e == 1 {
		y.Neg(&y) // -e factor
	}

	// Convert Montgomery to Edwards coordinates
	el.mont2ed(&edx, &edy, &x, &y)

	// Sanity-check
	if !ec.onCurve(&edx, &edy) {
		panic("elligator2 produced invalid point")
	}

	P.initXY(&edx.V, &edy.V, ec.self)
}
Example #4
0
func chi(r, v *nist.Int) {
	r.Init64(int64(math.Jacobi(&v.V, v.M)), v.M)
}
Example #5
0
File: int.go Project: Liamsi/crypto
// Set to the Jacobi symbol of (a/M), which indicates whether a is
// zero (0), a positive square in M (1), or a non-square in M (-1).
func (i *Int) Jacobi(as abstract.Secret) abstract.Secret {
	ai := as.(*Int)
	i.M = ai.M
	i.V.SetInt64(int64(math.Jacobi(&ai.V, i.M)))
	return i
}