| // Copyright 2021 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. |
| // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style |
| // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. |
| |
| package bigmod |
| |
| import ( |
| "encoding/binary" |
| "errors" |
| "math/big" |
| "math/bits" |
| ) |
| |
| const ( |
| // _W is the size in bits of our limbs. |
| _W = bits.UintSize |
| // _S is the size in bytes of our limbs. |
| _S = _W / 8 |
| ) |
| |
| // choice represents a constant-time boolean. The value of choice is always |
| // either 1 or 0. We use an int instead of bool in order to make decisions in |
| // constant time by turning it into a mask. |
| type choice uint |
| |
| func not(c choice) choice { return 1 ^ c } |
| |
| const yes = choice(1) |
| const no = choice(0) |
| |
| // ctMask is all 1s if on is yes, and all 0s otherwise. |
| func ctMask(on choice) uint { return -uint(on) } |
| |
| // ctEq returns 1 if x == y, and 0 otherwise. The execution time of this |
| // function does not depend on its inputs. |
| func ctEq(x, y uint) choice { |
| // If x != y, then either x - y or y - x will generate a carry. |
| _, c1 := bits.Sub(x, y, 0) |
| _, c2 := bits.Sub(y, x, 0) |
| return not(choice(c1 | c2)) |
| } |
| |
| // ctGeq returns 1 if x >= y, and 0 otherwise. The execution time of this |
| // function does not depend on its inputs. |
| func ctGeq(x, y uint) choice { |
| // If x < y, then x - y generates a carry. |
| _, carry := bits.Sub(x, y, 0) |
| return not(choice(carry)) |
| } |
| |
| // Nat represents an arbitrary natural number |
| // |
| // Each Nat has an announced length, which is the number of limbs it has stored. |
| // Operations on this number are allowed to leak this length, but will not leak |
| // any information about the values contained in those limbs. |
| type Nat struct { |
| // limbs is little-endian in base 2^W with W = bits.UintSize. |
| limbs []uint |
| } |
| |
| // preallocTarget is the size in bits of the numbers used to implement the most |
| // common and most performant RSA key size. It's also enough to cover some of |
| // the operations of key sizes up to 4096. |
| const preallocTarget = 2048 |
| const preallocLimbs = (preallocTarget + _W - 1) / _W |
| |
| // NewNat returns a new nat with a size of zero, just like new(Nat), but with |
| // the preallocated capacity to hold a number of up to preallocTarget bits. |
| // NewNat inlines, so the allocation can live on the stack. |
| func NewNat() *Nat { |
| limbs := make([]uint, 0, preallocLimbs) |
| return &Nat{limbs} |
| } |
| |
| // expand expands x to n limbs, leaving its value unchanged. |
| func (x *Nat) expand(n int) *Nat { |
| if len(x.limbs) > n { |
| panic("bigmod: internal error: shrinking nat") |
| } |
| if cap(x.limbs) < n { |
| newLimbs := make([]uint, n) |
| copy(newLimbs, x.limbs) |
| x.limbs = newLimbs |
| return x |
| } |
| extraLimbs := x.limbs[len(x.limbs):n] |
| for i := range extraLimbs { |
| extraLimbs[i] = 0 |
| } |
| x.limbs = x.limbs[:n] |
| return x |
| } |
| |
| // reset returns a zero nat of n limbs, reusing x's storage if n <= cap(x.limbs). |
| func (x *Nat) reset(n int) *Nat { |
| if cap(x.limbs) < n { |
| x.limbs = make([]uint, n) |
| return x |
| } |
| for i := range x.limbs { |
| x.limbs[i] = 0 |
| } |
| x.limbs = x.limbs[:n] |
| return x |
| } |
| |
| // set assigns x = y, optionally resizing x to the appropriate size. |
| func (x *Nat) set(y *Nat) *Nat { |
| x.reset(len(y.limbs)) |
| copy(x.limbs, y.limbs) |
| return x |
| } |
| |
| // setBig assigns x = n, optionally resizing n to the appropriate size. |
| // |
| // The announced length of x is set based on the actual bit size of the input, |
| // ignoring leading zeroes. |
| func (x *Nat) setBig(n *big.Int) *Nat { |
| limbs := n.Bits() |
| x.reset(len(limbs)) |
| for i := range limbs { |
| x.limbs[i] = uint(limbs[i]) |
| } |
| return x |
| } |
| |
| // Bytes returns x as a zero-extended big-endian byte slice. The size of the |
| // slice will match the size of m. |
| // |
| // x must have the same size as m and it must be reduced modulo m. |
| func (x *Nat) Bytes(m *Modulus) []byte { |
| i := m.Size() |
| bytes := make([]byte, i) |
| for _, limb := range x.limbs { |
| for j := 0; j < _S; j++ { |
| i-- |
| if i < 0 { |
| if limb == 0 { |
| break |
| } |
| panic("bigmod: modulus is smaller than nat") |
| } |
| bytes[i] = byte(limb) |
| limb >>= 8 |
| } |
| } |
| return bytes |
| } |
| |
| // SetBytes assigns x = b, where b is a slice of big-endian bytes. |
| // SetBytes returns an error if b >= m. |
| // |
| // The output will be resized to the size of m and overwritten. |
| func (x *Nat) SetBytes(b []byte, m *Modulus) (*Nat, error) { |
| if err := x.setBytes(b, m); err != nil { |
| return nil, err |
| } |
| if x.cmpGeq(m.nat) == yes { |
| return nil, errors.New("input overflows the modulus") |
| } |
| return x, nil |
| } |
| |
| // SetOverflowingBytes assigns x = b, where b is a slice of big-endian bytes. |
| // SetOverflowingBytes returns an error if b has a longer bit length than m, but |
| // reduces overflowing values up to 2^⌈log2(m)⌉ - 1. |
| // |
| // The output will be resized to the size of m and overwritten. |
| func (x *Nat) SetOverflowingBytes(b []byte, m *Modulus) (*Nat, error) { |
| if err := x.setBytes(b, m); err != nil { |
| return nil, err |
| } |
| leading := _W - bitLen(x.limbs[len(x.limbs)-1]) |
| if leading < m.leading { |
| return nil, errors.New("input overflows the modulus size") |
| } |
| x.maybeSubtractModulus(no, m) |
| return x, nil |
| } |
| |
| // bigEndianUint returns the contents of buf interpreted as a |
| // big-endian encoded uint value. |
| func bigEndianUint(buf []byte) uint { |
| if _W == 64 { |
| return uint(binary.BigEndian.Uint64(buf)) |
| } |
| return uint(binary.BigEndian.Uint32(buf)) |
| } |
| |
| func (x *Nat) setBytes(b []byte, m *Modulus) error { |
| x.resetFor(m) |
| i, k := len(b), 0 |
| for k < len(x.limbs) && i >= _S { |
| x.limbs[k] = bigEndianUint(b[i-_S : i]) |
| i -= _S |
| k++ |
| } |
| for s := 0; s < _W && k < len(x.limbs) && i > 0; s += 8 { |
| x.limbs[k] |= uint(b[i-1]) << s |
| i-- |
| } |
| if i > 0 { |
| return errors.New("input overflows the modulus size") |
| } |
| return nil |
| } |
| |
| // Equal returns 1 if x == y, and 0 otherwise. |
| // |
| // Both operands must have the same announced length. |
| func (x *Nat) Equal(y *Nat) choice { |
| // Eliminate bounds checks in the loop. |
| size := len(x.limbs) |
| xLimbs := x.limbs[:size] |
| yLimbs := y.limbs[:size] |
| |
| equal := yes |
| for i := 0; i < size; i++ { |
| equal &= ctEq(xLimbs[i], yLimbs[i]) |
| } |
| return equal |
| } |
| |
| // IsZero returns 1 if x == 0, and 0 otherwise. |
| func (x *Nat) IsZero() choice { |
| // Eliminate bounds checks in the loop. |
| size := len(x.limbs) |
| xLimbs := x.limbs[:size] |
| |
| zero := yes |
| for i := 0; i < size; i++ { |
| zero &= ctEq(xLimbs[i], 0) |
| } |
| return zero |
| } |
| |
| // cmpGeq returns 1 if x >= y, and 0 otherwise. |
| // |
| // Both operands must have the same announced length. |
| func (x *Nat) cmpGeq(y *Nat) choice { |
| // Eliminate bounds checks in the loop. |
| size := len(x.limbs) |
| xLimbs := x.limbs[:size] |
| yLimbs := y.limbs[:size] |
| |
| var c uint |
| for i := 0; i < size; i++ { |
| _, c = bits.Sub(xLimbs[i], yLimbs[i], c) |
| } |
| // If there was a carry, then subtracting y underflowed, so |
| // x is not greater than or equal to y. |
| return not(choice(c)) |
| } |
| |
| // assign sets x <- y if on == 1, and does nothing otherwise. |
| // |
| // Both operands must have the same announced length. |
| func (x *Nat) assign(on choice, y *Nat) *Nat { |
| // Eliminate bounds checks in the loop. |
| size := len(x.limbs) |
| xLimbs := x.limbs[:size] |
| yLimbs := y.limbs[:size] |
| |
| mask := ctMask(on) |
| for i := 0; i < size; i++ { |
| xLimbs[i] ^= mask & (xLimbs[i] ^ yLimbs[i]) |
| } |
| return x |
| } |
| |
| // add computes x += y and returns the carry. |
| // |
| // Both operands must have the same announced length. |
| func (x *Nat) add(y *Nat) (c uint) { |
| // Eliminate bounds checks in the loop. |
| size := len(x.limbs) |
| xLimbs := x.limbs[:size] |
| yLimbs := y.limbs[:size] |
| |
| for i := 0; i < size; i++ { |
| xLimbs[i], c = bits.Add(xLimbs[i], yLimbs[i], c) |
| } |
| return |
| } |
| |
| // sub computes x -= y. It returns the borrow of the subtraction. |
| // |
| // Both operands must have the same announced length. |
| func (x *Nat) sub(y *Nat) (c uint) { |
| // Eliminate bounds checks in the loop. |
| size := len(x.limbs) |
| xLimbs := x.limbs[:size] |
| yLimbs := y.limbs[:size] |
| |
| for i := 0; i < size; i++ { |
| xLimbs[i], c = bits.Sub(xLimbs[i], yLimbs[i], c) |
| } |
| return |
| } |
| |
| // Modulus is used for modular arithmetic, precomputing relevant constants. |
| // |
| // Moduli are assumed to be odd numbers. Moduli can also leak the exact |
| // number of bits needed to store their value, and are stored without padding. |
| // |
| // Their actual value is still kept secret. |
| type Modulus struct { |
| // The underlying natural number for this modulus. |
| // |
| // This will be stored without any padding, and shouldn't alias with any |
| // other natural number being used. |
| nat *Nat |
| leading int // number of leading zeros in the modulus |
| m0inv uint // -nat.limbs[0]⁻¹ mod _W |
| rr *Nat // R*R for montgomeryRepresentation |
| } |
| |
| // rr returns R*R with R = 2^(_W * n) and n = len(m.nat.limbs). |
| func rr(m *Modulus) *Nat { |
| rr := NewNat().ExpandFor(m) |
| // R*R is 2^(2 * _W * n). We can safely get 2^(_W * (n - 1)) by setting the |
| // most significant limb to 1. We then get to R*R by shifting left by _W |
| // n + 1 times. |
| n := len(rr.limbs) |
| rr.limbs[n-1] = 1 |
| for i := n - 1; i < 2*n; i++ { |
| rr.shiftIn(0, m) // x = x * 2^_W mod m |
| } |
| return rr |
| } |
| |
| // minusInverseModW computes -x⁻¹ mod _W with x odd. |
| // |
| // This operation is used to precompute a constant involved in Montgomery |
| // multiplication. |
| func minusInverseModW(x uint) uint { |
| // Every iteration of this loop doubles the least-significant bits of |
| // correct inverse in y. The first three bits are already correct (1⁻¹ = 1, |
| // 3⁻¹ = 3, 5⁻¹ = 5, and 7⁻¹ = 7 mod 8), so doubling five times is enough |
| // for 64 bits (and wastes only one iteration for 32 bits). |
| // |
| // See https://crypto.stackexchange.com/a/47496. |
| y := x |
| for i := 0; i < 5; i++ { |
| y = y * (2 - x*y) |
| } |
| return -y |
| } |
| |
| // NewModulusFromBig creates a new Modulus from a [big.Int]. |
| // |
| // The Int must be odd. The number of significant bits (and nothing else) is |
| // leaked through timing side-channels. |
| func NewModulusFromBig(n *big.Int) (*Modulus, error) { |
| if b := n.Bits(); len(b) == 0 { |
| return nil, errors.New("modulus must be >= 0") |
| } else if b[0]&1 != 1 { |
| return nil, errors.New("modulus must be odd") |
| } |
| m := &Modulus{} |
| m.nat = NewNat().setBig(n) |
| m.leading = _W - bitLen(m.nat.limbs[len(m.nat.limbs)-1]) |
| m.m0inv = minusInverseModW(m.nat.limbs[0]) |
| m.rr = rr(m) |
| return m, nil |
| } |
| |
| // bitLen is a version of bits.Len that only leaks the bit length of n, but not |
| // its value. bits.Len and bits.LeadingZeros use a lookup table for the |
| // low-order bits on some architectures. |
| func bitLen(n uint) int { |
| var len int |
| // We assume, here and elsewhere, that comparison to zero is constant time |
| // with respect to different non-zero values. |
| for n != 0 { |
| len++ |
| n >>= 1 |
| } |
| return len |
| } |
| |
| // Size returns the size of m in bytes. |
| func (m *Modulus) Size() int { |
| return (m.BitLen() + 7) / 8 |
| } |
| |
| // BitLen returns the size of m in bits. |
| func (m *Modulus) BitLen() int { |
| return len(m.nat.limbs)*_W - int(m.leading) |
| } |
| |
| // Nat returns m as a Nat. The return value must not be written to. |
| func (m *Modulus) Nat() *Nat { |
| return m.nat |
| } |
| |
| // shiftIn calculates x = x << _W + y mod m. |
| // |
| // This assumes that x is already reduced mod m. |
| func (x *Nat) shiftIn(y uint, m *Modulus) *Nat { |
| d := NewNat().resetFor(m) |
| |
| // Eliminate bounds checks in the loop. |
| size := len(m.nat.limbs) |
| xLimbs := x.limbs[:size] |
| dLimbs := d.limbs[:size] |
| mLimbs := m.nat.limbs[:size] |
| |
| // Each iteration of this loop computes x = 2x + b mod m, where b is a bit |
| // from y. Effectively, it left-shifts x and adds y one bit at a time, |
| // reducing it every time. |
| // |
| // To do the reduction, each iteration computes both 2x + b and 2x + b - m. |
| // The next iteration (and finally the return line) will use either result |
| // based on whether 2x + b overflows m. |
| needSubtraction := no |
| for i := _W - 1; i >= 0; i-- { |
| carry := (y >> i) & 1 |
| var borrow uint |
| mask := ctMask(needSubtraction) |
| for i := 0; i < size; i++ { |
| l := xLimbs[i] ^ (mask & (xLimbs[i] ^ dLimbs[i])) |
| xLimbs[i], carry = bits.Add(l, l, carry) |
| dLimbs[i], borrow = bits.Sub(xLimbs[i], mLimbs[i], borrow) |
| } |
| // Like in maybeSubtractModulus, we need the subtraction if either it |
| // didn't underflow (meaning 2x + b > m) or if computing 2x + b |
| // overflowed (meaning 2x + b > 2^_W*n > m). |
| needSubtraction = not(choice(borrow)) | choice(carry) |
| } |
| return x.assign(needSubtraction, d) |
| } |
| |
| // Mod calculates out = x mod m. |
| // |
| // This works regardless how large the value of x is. |
| // |
| // The output will be resized to the size of m and overwritten. |
| func (out *Nat) Mod(x *Nat, m *Modulus) *Nat { |
| out.resetFor(m) |
| // Working our way from the most significant to the least significant limb, |
| // we can insert each limb at the least significant position, shifting all |
| // previous limbs left by _W. This way each limb will get shifted by the |
| // correct number of bits. We can insert at least N - 1 limbs without |
| // overflowing m. After that, we need to reduce every time we shift. |
| i := len(x.limbs) - 1 |
| // For the first N - 1 limbs we can skip the actual shifting and position |
| // them at the shifted position, which starts at min(N - 2, i). |
| start := len(m.nat.limbs) - 2 |
| if i < start { |
| start = i |
| } |
| for j := start; j >= 0; j-- { |
| out.limbs[j] = x.limbs[i] |
| i-- |
| } |
| // We shift in the remaining limbs, reducing modulo m each time. |
| for i >= 0 { |
| out.shiftIn(x.limbs[i], m) |
| i-- |
| } |
| return out |
| } |
| |
| // ExpandFor ensures x has the right size to work with operations modulo m. |
| // |
| // The announced size of x must be smaller than or equal to that of m. |
| func (x *Nat) ExpandFor(m *Modulus) *Nat { |
| return x.expand(len(m.nat.limbs)) |
| } |
| |
| // resetFor ensures out has the right size to work with operations modulo m. |
| // |
| // out is zeroed and may start at any size. |
| func (out *Nat) resetFor(m *Modulus) *Nat { |
| return out.reset(len(m.nat.limbs)) |
| } |
| |
| // maybeSubtractModulus computes x -= m if and only if x >= m or if "always" is yes. |
| // |
| // It can be used to reduce modulo m a value up to 2m - 1, which is a common |
| // range for results computed by higher level operations. |
| // |
| // always is usually a carry that indicates that the operation that produced x |
| // overflowed its size, meaning abstractly x > 2^_W*n > m even if x < m. |
| // |
| // x and m operands must have the same announced length. |
| func (x *Nat) maybeSubtractModulus(always choice, m *Modulus) { |
| t := NewNat().set(x) |
| underflow := t.sub(m.nat) |
| // We keep the result if x - m didn't underflow (meaning x >= m) |
| // or if always was set. |
| keep := not(choice(underflow)) | choice(always) |
| x.assign(keep, t) |
| } |
| |
| // Sub computes x = x - y mod m. |
| // |
| // The length of both operands must be the same as the modulus. Both operands |
| // must already be reduced modulo m. |
| func (x *Nat) Sub(y *Nat, m *Modulus) *Nat { |
| underflow := x.sub(y) |
| // If the subtraction underflowed, add m. |
| t := NewNat().set(x) |
| t.add(m.nat) |
| x.assign(choice(underflow), t) |
| return x |
| } |
| |
| // Add computes x = x + y mod m. |
| // |
| // The length of both operands must be the same as the modulus. Both operands |
| // must already be reduced modulo m. |
| func (x *Nat) Add(y *Nat, m *Modulus) *Nat { |
| overflow := x.add(y) |
| x.maybeSubtractModulus(choice(overflow), m) |
| return x |
| } |
| |
| // montgomeryRepresentation calculates x = x * R mod m, with R = 2^(_W * n) and |
| // n = len(m.nat.limbs). |
| // |
| // Faster Montgomery multiplication replaces standard modular multiplication for |
| // numbers in this representation. |
| // |
| // This assumes that x is already reduced mod m. |
| func (x *Nat) montgomeryRepresentation(m *Modulus) *Nat { |
| // A Montgomery multiplication (which computes a * b / R) by R * R works out |
| // to a multiplication by R, which takes the value out of the Montgomery domain. |
| return x.montgomeryMul(x, m.rr, m) |
| } |
| |
| // montgomeryReduction calculates x = x / R mod m, with R = 2^(_W * n) and |
| // n = len(m.nat.limbs). |
| // |
| // This assumes that x is already reduced mod m. |
| func (x *Nat) montgomeryReduction(m *Modulus) *Nat { |
| // By Montgomery multiplying with 1 not in Montgomery representation, we |
| // convert out back from Montgomery representation, because it works out to |
| // dividing by R. |
| one := NewNat().ExpandFor(m) |
| one.limbs[0] = 1 |
| return x.montgomeryMul(x, one, m) |
| } |
| |
| // montgomeryMul calculates x = a * b / R mod m, with R = 2^(_W * n) and |
| // n = len(m.nat.limbs), also known as a Montgomery multiplication. |
| // |
| // All inputs should be the same length and already reduced modulo m. |
| // x will be resized to the size of m and overwritten. |
| func (x *Nat) montgomeryMul(a *Nat, b *Nat, m *Modulus) *Nat { |
| n := len(m.nat.limbs) |
| mLimbs := m.nat.limbs[:n] |
| aLimbs := a.limbs[:n] |
| bLimbs := b.limbs[:n] |
| |
| switch n { |
| default: |
| // Attempt to use a stack-allocated backing array. |
| T := make([]uint, 0, preallocLimbs*2) |
| if cap(T) < n*2 { |
| T = make([]uint, 0, n*2) |
| } |
| T = T[:n*2] |
| |
| // This loop implements Word-by-Word Montgomery Multiplication, as |
| // described in Algorithm 4 (Fig. 3) of "Efficient Software |
| // Implementations of Modular Exponentiation" by Shay Gueron |
| // [https://eprint.iacr.org/2011/239.pdf]. |
| var c uint |
| for i := 0; i < n; i++ { |
| _ = T[n+i] // bounds check elimination hint |
| |
| // Step 1 (T = a × b) is computed as a large pen-and-paper column |
| // multiplication of two numbers with n base-2^_W digits. If we just |
| // wanted to produce 2n-wide T, we would do |
| // |
| // for i := 0; i < n; i++ { |
| // d := bLimbs[i] |
| // T[n+i] = addMulVVW(T[i:n+i], aLimbs, d) |
| // } |
| // |
| // where d is a digit of the multiplier, T[i:n+i] is the shifted |
| // position of the product of that digit, and T[n+i] is the final carry. |
| // Note that T[i] isn't modified after processing the i-th digit. |
| // |
| // Instead of running two loops, one for Step 1 and one for Steps 2–6, |
| // the result of Step 1 is computed during the next loop. This is |
| // possible because each iteration only uses T[i] in Step 2 and then |
| // discards it in Step 6. |
| d := bLimbs[i] |
| c1 := addMulVVW(T[i:n+i], aLimbs, d) |
| |
| // Step 6 is replaced by shifting the virtual window we operate |
| // over: T of the algorithm is T[i:] for us. That means that T1 in |
| // Step 2 (T mod 2^_W) is simply T[i]. k0 in Step 3 is our m0inv. |
| Y := T[i] * m.m0inv |
| |
| // Step 4 and 5 add Y × m to T, which as mentioned above is stored |
| // at T[i:]. The two carries (from a × d and Y × m) are added up in |
| // the next word T[n+i], and the carry bit from that addition is |
| // brought forward to the next iteration. |
| c2 := addMulVVW(T[i:n+i], mLimbs, Y) |
| T[n+i], c = bits.Add(c1, c2, c) |
| } |
| |
| // Finally for Step 7 we copy the final T window into x, and subtract m |
| // if necessary (which as explained in maybeSubtractModulus can be the |
| // case both if x >= m, or if x overflowed). |
| // |
| // The paper suggests in Section 4 that we can do an "Almost Montgomery |
| // Multiplication" by subtracting only in the overflow case, but the |
| // cost is very similar since the constant time subtraction tells us if |
| // x >= m as a side effect, and taking care of the broken invariant is |
| // highly undesirable (see https://go.dev/issue/13907). |
| copy(x.reset(n).limbs, T[n:]) |
| x.maybeSubtractModulus(choice(c), m) |
| |
| // The following specialized cases follow the exact same algorithm, but |
| // optimized for the sizes most used in RSA. addMulVVW is implemented in |
| // assembly with loop unrolling depending on the architecture and bounds |
| // checks are removed by the compiler thanks to the constant size. |
| case 1024 / _W: |
| const n = 1024 / _W // compiler hint |
| T := make([]uint, n*2) |
| var c uint |
| for i := 0; i < n; i++ { |
| d := bLimbs[i] |
| c1 := addMulVVW1024(&T[i], &aLimbs[0], d) |
| Y := T[i] * m.m0inv |
| c2 := addMulVVW1024(&T[i], &mLimbs[0], Y) |
| T[n+i], c = bits.Add(c1, c2, c) |
| } |
| copy(x.reset(n).limbs, T[n:]) |
| x.maybeSubtractModulus(choice(c), m) |
| |
| case 1536 / _W: |
| const n = 1536 / _W // compiler hint |
| T := make([]uint, n*2) |
| var c uint |
| for i := 0; i < n; i++ { |
| d := bLimbs[i] |
| c1 := addMulVVW1536(&T[i], &aLimbs[0], d) |
| Y := T[i] * m.m0inv |
| c2 := addMulVVW1536(&T[i], &mLimbs[0], Y) |
| T[n+i], c = bits.Add(c1, c2, c) |
| } |
| copy(x.reset(n).limbs, T[n:]) |
| x.maybeSubtractModulus(choice(c), m) |
| |
| case 2048 / _W: |
| const n = 2048 / _W // compiler hint |
| T := make([]uint, n*2) |
| var c uint |
| for i := 0; i < n; i++ { |
| d := bLimbs[i] |
| c1 := addMulVVW2048(&T[i], &aLimbs[0], d) |
| Y := T[i] * m.m0inv |
| c2 := addMulVVW2048(&T[i], &mLimbs[0], Y) |
| T[n+i], c = bits.Add(c1, c2, c) |
| } |
| copy(x.reset(n).limbs, T[n:]) |
| x.maybeSubtractModulus(choice(c), m) |
| } |
| |
| return x |
| } |
| |
| // addMulVVW multiplies the multi-word value x by the single-word value y, |
| // adding the result to the multi-word value z and returning the final carry. |
| // It can be thought of as one row of a pen-and-paper column multiplication. |
| func addMulVVW(z, x []uint, y uint) (carry uint) { |
| _ = x[len(z)-1] // bounds check elimination hint |
| for i := range z { |
| hi, lo := bits.Mul(x[i], y) |
| lo, c := bits.Add(lo, z[i], 0) |
| // We use bits.Add with zero to get an add-with-carry instruction that |
| // absorbs the carry from the previous bits.Add. |
| hi, _ = bits.Add(hi, 0, c) |
| lo, c = bits.Add(lo, carry, 0) |
| hi, _ = bits.Add(hi, 0, c) |
| carry = hi |
| z[i] = lo |
| } |
| return carry |
| } |
| |
| // Mul calculates x = x * y mod m. |
| // |
| // The length of both operands must be the same as the modulus. Both operands |
| // must already be reduced modulo m. |
| func (x *Nat) Mul(y *Nat, m *Modulus) *Nat { |
| // A Montgomery multiplication by a value out of the Montgomery domain |
| // takes the result out of Montgomery representation. |
| xR := NewNat().set(x).montgomeryRepresentation(m) // xR = x * R mod m |
| return x.montgomeryMul(xR, y, m) // x = xR * y / R mod m |
| } |
| |
| // Exp calculates out = x^e mod m. |
| // |
| // The exponent e is represented in big-endian order. The output will be resized |
| // to the size of m and overwritten. x must already be reduced modulo m. |
| func (out *Nat) Exp(x *Nat, e []byte, m *Modulus) *Nat { |
| // We use a 4 bit window. For our RSA workload, 4 bit windows are faster |
| // than 2 bit windows, but use an extra 12 nats worth of scratch space. |
| // Using bit sizes that don't divide 8 are more complex to implement, but |
| // are likely to be more efficient if necessary. |
| |
| table := [(1 << 4) - 1]*Nat{ // table[i] = x ^ (i+1) |
| // newNat calls are unrolled so they are allocated on the stack. |
| NewNat(), NewNat(), NewNat(), NewNat(), NewNat(), |
| NewNat(), NewNat(), NewNat(), NewNat(), NewNat(), |
| NewNat(), NewNat(), NewNat(), NewNat(), NewNat(), |
| } |
| table[0].set(x).montgomeryRepresentation(m) |
| for i := 1; i < len(table); i++ { |
| table[i].montgomeryMul(table[i-1], table[0], m) |
| } |
| |
| out.resetFor(m) |
| out.limbs[0] = 1 |
| out.montgomeryRepresentation(m) |
| tmp := NewNat().ExpandFor(m) |
| for _, b := range e { |
| for _, j := range []int{4, 0} { |
| // Square four times. Optimization note: this can be implemented |
| // more efficiently than with generic Montgomery multiplication. |
| out.montgomeryMul(out, out, m) |
| out.montgomeryMul(out, out, m) |
| out.montgomeryMul(out, out, m) |
| out.montgomeryMul(out, out, m) |
| |
| // Select x^k in constant time from the table. |
| k := uint((b >> j) & 0b1111) |
| for i := range table { |
| tmp.assign(ctEq(k, uint(i+1)), table[i]) |
| } |
| |
| // Multiply by x^k, discarding the result if k = 0. |
| tmp.montgomeryMul(out, tmp, m) |
| out.assign(not(ctEq(k, 0)), tmp) |
| } |
| } |
| |
| return out.montgomeryReduction(m) |
| } |
| |
| // ExpShort calculates out = x^e mod m. |
| // |
| // The output will be resized to the size of m and overwritten. x must already |
| // be reduced modulo m. This leaks the exact bit size of the exponent. |
| func (out *Nat) ExpShort(x *Nat, e uint, m *Modulus) *Nat { |
| xR := NewNat().set(x).montgomeryRepresentation(m) |
| |
| out.resetFor(m) |
| out.limbs[0] = 1 |
| out.montgomeryRepresentation(m) |
| |
| // For short exponents, precomputing a table and using a window like in Exp |
| // doesn't pay off. Instead, we do a simple constant-time conditional |
| // square-and-multiply chain, skipping the initial run of zeroes. |
| tmp := NewNat().ExpandFor(m) |
| for i := bits.UintSize - bitLen(e); i < bits.UintSize; i++ { |
| out.montgomeryMul(out, out, m) |
| k := (e >> (bits.UintSize - i - 1)) & 1 |
| tmp.montgomeryMul(out, xR, m) |
| out.assign(ctEq(k, 1), tmp) |
| } |
| return out.montgomeryReduction(m) |
| } |