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			4.5 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			91 lines
		
	
	
		
			4.5 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
Tech Note 0004
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Using Yarrow, Fortuna and SOBER-128
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Tom St Denis
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Introduction
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------------
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This tech note explains how to use three of the more useful pseudo random number generators and their 
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own little "issues".  While all of the PRNGs have the same API and are roughly used in the same 
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manner their effectiveness really depends on the user knowing how they work.
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Yarrow
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------
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Yarrow is by far the simplest of the PRNGs.  It gathers bits of entropy by hashing the pool state
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plus the additional bits storing the message digest back in the pool.  E.g.
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pool = hash(pool || newbits)
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Simply dump bits into the PRNG via yarrow_add_entropy() and call yarrow_ready() when you want to 
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put them to use.  This PRNG while simple is not entirely safe.  An attacker who learns the state
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of the pool and can control future events can control the PRNG.  This requires an active attacker but 
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isn't entire impossible.
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The pool is then used as a key for a cipher that is used in CTR mode.  
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Yarrow is mostly meant for short-term programs [e.g. like file utils].  This particular implementation
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is not meant for long-term usage.
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Fortuna
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-------
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Fortuna was designed by Niels Fergusson and Bruce Schneier [Bruce is also the guy who invented Yarrow].  It
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operates on a more defensive level than Yarrow.  Instead of 1 entropy pool it has 32 and the new entropy 
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is spread [round robin] in all of the pools. 
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That is, each call to fortuna_add_entropy() puts the bits in the next [in the sequenece] pool of entropy.  
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Effective bits are added to the pool by sending them through a hash [but not terminating the hash].  
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Here's the main catch though.  When the PRNG must be reseeded [so that you can extract bits from it] only
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certain pools are used.  More precisely the i'th pool is used every 2**i'th reseeding.  For example, pool[0]
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is always used.  pool[1] is used every second reseeding, pool[2] every fourth.
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The pools are hashed together along with the current key and the result is the new key for a cipher which
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operates in CTR mode [more about that in a sec].
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Now this may seem odd at first however there is a good reason behind it.  An attacker who learns pool[0] won't
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strictly know the other pools.  So the recovery rate of is not 0.  In fact pool[0] can be completely 
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compromised and the PRNG will still eventually recover.  The value FORTUNA_WD is the "WatchDog" counter.
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Every FORTUNA_WD calls to fortuna_read will invoke the reseed operation.  By default this is set to 10 which 
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means after 10 calls the PRNG will reseed itself.  
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The pools are combined with the running cipher key [256 bits] so that a cipher in CTR mode can produce 
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the stream.  Unlike Yarrow the cipher is re-keyed after every call to fortuna_read() [so one big call 
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would be faster than many smaller calls].  This prevents too much data being encrypted under the same
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key [and mitigates a flaw in CTR mode that the same block can't be emitted twice under the same key].
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Fortuna is really meant for a kernel-level PRNG.  The more sources [and often] you feed into it the 
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healthier it will be.  It's also meant to be used for long term purposes.  Since it can recover from
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compromises it is harder to control it.  
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SOBER-128
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------
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SOBER-128 is actually a stream cipher but like most ciphers can easily be modelled in the context of a PRNG.
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This PRNG is extremely fast [4 cycles/byte on a P4] and was designed by a well known cryptographer [Greg Rose].
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SOBER-128 doesn't really "act" like the other two PRNGs.  It's meant to be seeded once and then read as 
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required.  In such a sense it isn't a "system PRNG" but useful short term purposes.  In particular
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the sober128_read() function actually XORs against the input buffer you specify.  This allows the 
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read() function to be used as an "encrypt" function as well.  
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You can only key SOBER-128 once [by calling sober128_add_entropy()].  Once it it is keyed subsequent
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calls to add_entropy() will be considered a "re-IV" operation.  Changing the IV allows you to use same
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initial key and not produce the same output stream.  It also lets you differentiate packets.  E.g. each
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packet has it's own IV.
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All inputs to sober128_add_entropy() must have a length that is a multiple of four.
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Overall
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-------
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Since SOBER-128 is *much* faster than the other two PRNGs a good setup would be to use Fortuna as your 
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system-wide PRNG and use SOBER-128 [key'ed from Fortuna] for encrypting streams or as a PRNG for 
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simulations.
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Yarrow is still a good candidate but only for "short lived" programs.  However, since Fortuna is faster
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[by about 10 cycles/byte on a P4] I'd use Fortuna anyways...
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Tom |