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trezor-firmware/trezorlib/_ed25519.py
matejcik ba365b5486 cosi: replace slow djb implementation of ed25519 with an optimized one
from https://github.com/pyca/ed25519

This makes the calculations several orders of magnitude faster, which
allows us to run the CoSi test in Travis. It also doesn't stop firmware
update for several seconds while we validate the CoSi signatures.

It's still essentially the same insecure implementation, fallible to all
the same timing attacks, and it shouldn't be used for anything except
validating public signatures of public data. But now it also takes about
as much time as it should on modern hardware.
2018-10-12 12:58:44 +02:00

300 lines
7.4 KiB
Python

# ed25519.py - Optimized version of the reference implementation of Ed25519
# downloaded from https://github.com/pyca/ed25519
#
# Written in 2011? by Daniel J. Bernstein <djb@cr.yp.to>
# 2013 by Donald Stufft <donald@stufft.io>
# 2013 by Alex Gaynor <alex.gaynor@gmail.com>
# 2013 by Greg Price <price@mit.edu>
#
# To the extent possible under law, the author(s) have dedicated all copyright
# and related and neighboring rights to this software to the public domain
# worldwide. This software is distributed without any warranty.
#
# You should have received a copy of the CC0 Public Domain Dedication along
# with this software. If not, see
# <http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/>.
"""
NB: This code is not safe for use with secret keys or secret data.
The only safe use of this code is for verifying signatures on public messages.
Functions for computing the public key of a secret key and for signing
a message are included, namely publickey_unsafe and signature_unsafe,
for testing purposes only.
The root of the problem is that Python's long-integer arithmetic is
not designed for use in cryptography. Specifically, it may take more
or less time to execute an operation depending on the values of the
inputs, and its memory access patterns may also depend on the inputs.
This opens it to timing and cache side-channel attacks which can
disclose data to an attacker. We rely on Python's long-integer
arithmetic, so we cannot handle secrets without risking their disclosure.
"""
import hashlib
from typing import NewType, Tuple
Point = NewType("Point", Tuple[int, int, int, int])
__version__ = "1.0.dev1"
b = 256
q = 2 ** 255 - 19
l = 2 ** 252 + 27742317777372353535851937790883648493
COORD_MASK = ~(1 + 2 + 4 + (1 << b - 1))
COORD_HIGH_BIT = 1 << b - 2
def H(m: bytes) -> bytes:
return hashlib.sha512(m).digest()
def pow2(x: int, p: int) -> int:
"""== pow(x, 2**p, q)"""
while p > 0:
x = x * x % q
p -= 1
return x
def inv(z: int) -> int:
"""$= z^{-1} mod q$, for z != 0"""
# Adapted from curve25519_athlon.c in djb's Curve25519.
z2 = z * z % q # 2
z9 = pow2(z2, 2) * z % q # 9
z11 = z9 * z2 % q # 11
z2_5_0 = (z11 * z11) % q * z9 % q # 31 == 2^5 - 2^0
z2_10_0 = pow2(z2_5_0, 5) * z2_5_0 % q # 2^10 - 2^0
z2_20_0 = pow2(z2_10_0, 10) * z2_10_0 % q # ...
z2_40_0 = pow2(z2_20_0, 20) * z2_20_0 % q
z2_50_0 = pow2(z2_40_0, 10) * z2_10_0 % q
z2_100_0 = pow2(z2_50_0, 50) * z2_50_0 % q
z2_200_0 = pow2(z2_100_0, 100) * z2_100_0 % q
z2_250_0 = pow2(z2_200_0, 50) * z2_50_0 % q # 2^250 - 2^0
return pow2(z2_250_0, 5) * z11 % q # 2^255 - 2^5 + 11 = q - 2
d = -121665 * inv(121666) % q
I = pow(2, (q - 1) // 4, q)
def xrecover(y: int) -> int:
xx = (y * y - 1) * inv(d * y * y + 1)
x = pow(xx, (q + 3) // 8, q)
if (x * x - xx) % q != 0:
x = (x * I) % q
if x % 2 != 0:
x = q - x
return x
By = 4 * inv(5)
Bx = xrecover(By)
B = Point((Bx % q, By % q, 1, (Bx * By) % q))
ident = Point((0, 1, 1, 0))
def edwards_add(P: Point, Q: Point) -> Point:
# This is formula sequence 'addition-add-2008-hwcd-3' from
# http://www.hyperelliptic.org/EFD/g1p/auto-twisted-extended-1.html
(x1, y1, z1, t1) = P
(x2, y2, z2, t2) = Q
a = (y1 - x1) * (y2 - x2) % q
b = (y1 + x1) * (y2 + x2) % q
c = t1 * 2 * d * t2 % q
dd = z1 * 2 * z2 % q
e = b - a
f = dd - c
g = dd + c
h = b + a
x3 = e * f
y3 = g * h
t3 = e * h
z3 = f * g
return Point((x3 % q, y3 % q, z3 % q, t3 % q))
def edwards_double(P: Point) -> Point:
# This is formula sequence 'dbl-2008-hwcd' from
# http://www.hyperelliptic.org/EFD/g1p/auto-twisted-extended-1.html
(x1, y1, z1, _) = P
a = x1 * x1 % q
b = y1 * y1 % q
c = 2 * z1 * z1 % q
# dd = -a
e = ((x1 + y1) * (x1 + y1) - a - b) % q
g = -a + b # dd + b
f = g - c
h = -a - b # dd - b
x3 = e * f
y3 = g * h
t3 = e * h
z3 = f * g
return Point((x3 % q, y3 % q, z3 % q, t3 % q))
def scalarmult(P: Point, e: int) -> Point:
if e == 0:
return ident
Q = scalarmult(P, e // 2)
Q = edwards_double(Q)
if e & 1:
Q = edwards_add(Q, P)
return Q
# Bpow[i] == scalarmult(B, 2**i)
Bpow = [] # type: List[Point]
def make_Bpow() -> None:
P = B
for _ in range(253):
Bpow.append(P)
P = edwards_double(P)
make_Bpow()
def scalarmult_B(e: int) -> Point:
"""
Implements scalarmult(B, e) more efficiently.
"""
# scalarmult(B, l) is the identity
e = e % l
P = ident
for i in range(253):
if e & 1:
P = edwards_add(P, Bpow[i])
e = e // 2
assert e == 0, e
return P
def encodeint(y: int) -> bytes:
return y.to_bytes(b // 8, "little")
def encodepoint(P: Point) -> bytes:
(x, y, z, _) = P
zi = inv(z)
x = (x * zi) % q
y = (y * zi) % q
xbit = (x & 1) << (b - 1)
y_result = y & ~xbit # clear x bit
y_result |= xbit # set corret x bit value
return encodeint(y_result)
def decodeint(s: bytes) -> int:
return int.from_bytes(s, "little")
def decodepoint(s: bytes) -> Point:
y = decodeint(s) & ~(1 << b - 1) # y without the highest bit
x = xrecover(y)
if x & 1 != bit(s, b - 1):
x = q - x
P = Point((x, y, 1, (x * y) % q))
if not isoncurve(P):
raise ValueError("decoding point that is not on curve")
return P
def decodecoord(s: bytes) -> int:
a = decodeint(s[: b // 8])
# clear mask bits
a &= COORD_MASK
# set high bit
a |= COORD_HIGH_BIT
return a
def bit(h: bytes, i: int) -> int:
return (h[i // 8] >> (i % 8)) & 1
def publickey_unsafe(sk: bytes) -> bytes:
"""
Not safe to use with secret keys or secret data.
See module docstring. This function should be used for testing only.
"""
h = H(sk)
a = decodecoord(h)
A = scalarmult_B(a)
return encodepoint(A)
def Hint(m: bytes) -> int:
return decodeint(H(m))
def signature_unsafe(m: bytes, sk: bytes, pk: bytes) -> bytes:
"""
Not safe to use with secret keys or secret data.
See module docstring. This function should be used for testing only.
"""
h = H(sk)
a = decodecoord(h)
r = Hint(h[b // 8 : b // 4] + m)
R = scalarmult_B(r)
S = (r + Hint(encodepoint(R) + pk + m) * a) % l
return encodepoint(R) + encodeint(S)
def isoncurve(P: Point) -> bool:
(x, y, z, t) = P
return (
z % q != 0
and x * y % q == z * t % q
and (y * y - x * x - z * z - d * t * t) % q == 0
)
class SignatureMismatch(Exception):
pass
def checkvalid(s: bytes, m: bytes, pk: bytes) -> None:
"""
Not safe to use when any argument is secret.
See module docstring. This function should be used only for
verifying public signatures of public messages.
"""
if len(s) != b // 4:
raise ValueError("signature length is wrong")
if len(pk) != b // 8:
raise ValueError("public-key length is wrong")
R = decodepoint(s[: b // 8])
A = decodepoint(pk)
S = decodeint(s[b // 8 : b // 4])
h = Hint(encodepoint(R) + pk + m)
(x1, y1, z1, _) = P = scalarmult_B(S)
(x2, y2, z2, _) = Q = edwards_add(R, scalarmult(A, h))
if (
not isoncurve(P)
or not isoncurve(Q)
or (x1 * z2 - x2 * z1) % q != 0
or (y1 * z2 - y2 * z1) % q != 0
):
raise SignatureMismatch("signature does not pass verification")