49
Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC

Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani2015

Page 2: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

2

Module Outlines

Finite Field Arithmetic GF(p) Arithmetic GF(2m) Arithmetic

Polynomial basis Normal basis

Addition/subtraction Squaring Multiplication Inversion

Summary

Page 3: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

3

Finite Field Arithmetic

In abstract algebra, a finite field is a field that contains only finitely many elements.

Finite fields are important in number theory, algebraic geometry, Galois theory, coding theory, and cryptography.

Page 4: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

4

Finite Field Arithmetic (contd.)

Page 5: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

5

Finite Field Arithmetic (contd.)

Page 6: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

6

Finite Field Arithmetic (contd.)

Page 7: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

7

Finite Field Arithmetic (contd.)

Page 8: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

8

Finite Field Arithmetic (contd.)

Page 9: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

9

GF(2m) Arithmetic

The finite GF(2m) field has particular importance in cryptography since it leads to particularly efficient hardware implementations.

Elements of the field are represented in terms of a basis.

Most implementations use either a Polynomial Basis or a Normal Basis.

Normal basis is more suitable for hardware implementations than polynomial basis since operations are mainly comprised of rotation, shifting and exclusive-OR operations which can be efficiently implemented in hardware.

Page 10: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

10

Polynomial Basis

Page 11: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

11

Polynomial Basis

Page 12: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

12

Normal Basis

Page 13: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

13

Normal Basis (contd.)

Page 14: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

14

Normal Basis (contd.)

Page 15: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

15

Optimal Normal Basis

An optimal normal basis (ONB) is one with the minimum number of terms, or equivalently, the minimum possible number of nonzero λij

This value is 2m-1, and since it allows multiplication with minimum complexity, such a basis would normally lead to more efficient hardware implementations.

Page 16: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

16

Optimal Normal Basis (Contd.)

Note: Type 1 is circled.

Page 17: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

Optimal Normal Basis Types

Now CN=2n-1

Type I:

Rule 2 means: for every i in the range [0, n-1], (2k mod n+1) must result in a unique integer in the range [1, n].

Page 18: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

Cont.

Type II:

Rule 2a means that every 2k mod 2n+1, in the range [1 to 2n]. Therefore 2 is called the generator for all the possible locations

in the 2n+1 field Rule 2b means that even if 2k does not generate every

element in the range [1, 2n], however, half of points in the field of form by rule 2a can be hit. It is because SQR(2k) can be taken.

The points generated by rule 2b are in the form of perfect squares.

Page 19: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

ONB Type I & II (n ≤ 230)

Page 20: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

20

Survey Paper (2006)

Page 21: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

21

NB Multiplication

Multiplication is more complicated than addition and squaring operations in finite field arithmetic.

An efficient multiplier is highly needed and is the key for efficient finite field computations.

Finite filed multipliers using normal basis can be classified into two main categories: 𝜆-matrix based multipliers Conversion based multipliers

Page 22: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

22

𝜆-matrix based multipliers

Massey and Omura Multiplier Hasan et. al. Multiplier Gao and Sobelman Multiplier Reyhani-Masoleh and Hasan Multiplier

Page 23: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

23

Example: Type I

Page 24: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

24

Example: Type II

Page 25: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

25

Massey and Omura Multiplier

Page 26: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

26

Hasan et. al. Multiplier

Page 27: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

27

Gao and Sobelman Multiplier

Page 28: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

28

Reyhani-Masoleh and Hasan Multiplier

Page 29: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

29

Comparisons

Page 30: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

30

Conversion based multipliers Sunar and Koc Multiplier Wu et. al. Multiplier

Page 31: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

31

Sunar and Koc Multiplier

Page 32: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

32

Wu et. al. Multiplier

Page 33: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

33

Comparisons

Page 34: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

34

Normal Basis Inversion

Inversion algorithms:

Standard algorithms

Exponent Decomposing algorithms

Exponent Grouping inversion algorithms

Page 35: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

35

Standard Algorithms

Page 36: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

36

Exponent Decomposing Algorithms

Page 37: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

37

Exponent Decomposing Algorithms (contd.)

Page 38: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

38

Exponent Decomposing Algorithms (contd.)

Page 39: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

39

Exponent Grouping inversion Algorithms

Page 40: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

40

Exponent Grouping inversion Algorithms (contd.)

Page 41: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

41

Exponent Grouping inversion Algorithms (contd.)

Page 42: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

42

Comparisons

Page 43: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

43

Pipelining Paper (2009)

Page 44: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

44

Pipelining Paper (2009)

Page 45: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

45

UQU Pipelining Paper (2010)

Page 46: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

46

Systolic Arrays Paper (2011)

Page 47: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

47

IEEE VLSI Systolic Arrays Paper (2014)

Page 48: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

48

Summary

Efficient computations in finite fields and their architectures are important in many applications, including coding theory, computer algebra systems, and public-key cryptosystems (e.g., elliptic curve cryptosystems (ECC).

The most commonly used basis are polynomial basis and normal basis.

Normal basis is more suitable for hardware implementations than polynomial basis since operations in normal basis representation are mainly comprised of rotation, shifting and exclusive-ORing which can be efficiently implemented in hardware.

Page 49: Advanced Information Security 4 FIELD ARITHMETIC Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani 2015

THANKS & GOOD LUCK NEXT IS: 5 ECC CRYPTOGRAPHY

Dr. Turki F. Al-Somani2015