766 lines
31 KiB
Markdown
766 lines
31 KiB
Markdown
# The safegcd implementation in libsecp256k1 explained
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This document explains the modular inverse implementation in the `src/modinv*.h` files. It is based
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on the paper
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["Fast constant-time gcd computation and modular inversion"](https://gcd.cr.yp.to/papers.html#safegcd)
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by Daniel J. Bernstein and Bo-Yin Yang. The references below are for the Date: 2019.04.13 version.
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The actual implementation is in C of course, but for demonstration purposes Python3 is used here.
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Most implementation aspects and optimizations are explained, except those that depend on the specific
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number representation used in the C code.
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## 1. Computing the Greatest Common Divisor (GCD) using divsteps
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The algorithm from the paper (section 11), at a very high level, is this:
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```python
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def gcd(f, g):
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"""Compute the GCD of an odd integer f and another integer g."""
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assert f & 1 # require f to be odd
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delta = 1 # additional state variable
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while g != 0:
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assert f & 1 # f will be odd in every iteration
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if delta > 0 and g & 1:
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delta, f, g = 1 - delta, g, (g - f) // 2
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elif g & 1:
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delta, f, g = 1 + delta, f, (g + f) // 2
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else:
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delta, f, g = 1 + delta, f, (g ) // 2
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return abs(f)
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```
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It computes the greatest common divisor of an odd integer *f* and any integer *g*. Its inner loop
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keeps rewriting the variables *f* and *g* alongside a state variable *δ* that starts at *1*, until
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*g=0* is reached. At that point, *|f|* gives the GCD. Each of the transitions in the loop is called a
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"division step" (referred to as divstep in what follows).
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For example, *gcd(21, 14)* would be computed as:
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- Start with *δ=1 f=21 g=14*
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- Take the third branch: *δ=2 f=21 g=7*
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- Take the first branch: *δ=-1 f=7 g=-7*
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- Take the second branch: *δ=0 f=7 g=0*
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- The answer *|f| = 7*.
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Why it works:
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- Divsteps can be decomposed into two steps (see paragraph 8.2 in the paper):
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- (a) If *g* is odd, replace *(f,g)* with *(g,g-f)* or (f,g+f), resulting in an even *g*.
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- (b) Replace *(f,g)* with *(f,g/2)* (where *g* is guaranteed to be even).
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- Neither of those two operations change the GCD:
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- For (a), assume *gcd(f,g)=c*, then it must be the case that *f=a c* and *g=b c* for some integers *a*
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and *b*. As *(g,g-f)=(b c,(b-a)c)* and *(f,f+g)=(a c,(a+b)c)*, the result clearly still has
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common factor *c*. Reasoning in the other direction shows that no common factor can be added by
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doing so either.
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- For (b), we know that *f* is odd, so *gcd(f,g)* clearly has no factor *2*, and we can remove
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it from *g*.
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- The algorithm will eventually converge to *g=0*. This is proven in the paper (see theorem G.3).
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- It follows that eventually we find a final value *f'* for which *gcd(f,g) = gcd(f',0)*. As the
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gcd of *f'* and *0* is *|f'|* by definition, that is our answer.
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Compared to more [traditional GCD algorithms](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euclidean_algorithm), this one has the property of only ever looking at
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the low-order bits of the variables to decide the next steps, and being easy to make
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constant-time (in more low-level languages than Python). The *δ* parameter is necessary to
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guide the algorithm towards shrinking the numbers' magnitudes without explicitly needing to look
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at high order bits.
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Properties that will become important later:
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- Performing more divsteps than needed is not a problem, as *f* does not change anymore after *g=0*.
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- Only even numbers are divided by *2*. This means that when reasoning about it algebraically we
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do not need to worry about rounding.
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- At every point during the algorithm's execution the next *N* steps only depend on the bottom *N*
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bits of *f* and *g*, and on *δ*.
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## 2. From GCDs to modular inverses
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We want an algorithm to compute the inverse *a* of *x* modulo *M*, i.e. the number a such that *a x=1
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mod M*. This inverse only exists if the GCD of *x* and *M* is *1*, but that is always the case if *M* is
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prime and *0 < x < M*. In what follows, assume that the modular inverse exists.
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It turns out this inverse can be computed as a side effect of computing the GCD by keeping track
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of how the internal variables can be written as linear combinations of the inputs at every step
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(see the [extended Euclidean algorithm](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extended_Euclidean_algorithm)).
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Since the GCD is *1*, such an algorithm will compute numbers *a* and *b* such that a x + b M = 1*.
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Taking that expression *mod M* gives *a x mod M = 1*, and we see that *a* is the modular inverse of *x
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mod M*.
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A similar approach can be used to calculate modular inverses using the divsteps-based GCD
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algorithm shown above, if the modulus *M* is odd. To do so, compute *gcd(f=M,g=x)*, while keeping
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track of extra variables *d* and *e*, for which at every step *d = f/x (mod M)* and *e = g/x (mod M)*.
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*f/x* here means the number which multiplied with *x* gives *f mod M*. As *f* and *g* are initialized to *M*
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and *x* respectively, *d* and *e* just start off being *0* (*M/x mod M = 0/x mod M = 0*) and *1* (*x/x mod M
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= 1*).
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```python
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def div2(M, x):
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"""Helper routine to compute x/2 mod M (where M is odd)."""
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assert M & 1
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if x & 1: # If x is odd, make it even by adding M.
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x += M
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# x must be even now, so a clean division by 2 is possible.
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return x // 2
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def modinv(M, x):
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"""Compute the inverse of x mod M (given that it exists, and M is odd)."""
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assert M & 1
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delta, f, g, d, e = 1, M, x, 0, 1
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while g != 0:
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# Note that while division by two for f and g is only ever done on even inputs, this is
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# not true for d and e, so we need the div2 helper function.
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if delta > 0 and g & 1:
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delta, f, g, d, e = 1 - delta, g, (g - f) // 2, e, div2(M, e - d)
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elif g & 1:
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delta, f, g, d, e = 1 + delta, f, (g + f) // 2, d, div2(M, e + d)
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else:
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delta, f, g, d, e = 1 + delta, f, (g ) // 2, d, div2(M, e )
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# Verify that the invariants d=f/x mod M, e=g/x mod M are maintained.
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assert f % M == (d * x) % M
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assert g % M == (e * x) % M
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assert f == 1 or f == -1 # |f| is the GCD, it must be 1
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# Because of invariant d = f/x (mod M), 1/x = d/f (mod M). As |f|=1, d/f = d*f.
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return (d * f) % M
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```
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Also note that this approach to track *d* and *e* throughout the computation to determine the inverse
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is different from the paper. There (see paragraph 12.1 in the paper) a transition matrix for the
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entire computation is determined (see section 3 below) and the inverse is computed from that.
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The approach here avoids the need for 2x2 matrix multiplications of various sizes, and appears to
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be faster at the level of optimization we're able to do in C.
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## 3. Batching multiple divsteps
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Every divstep can be expressed as a matrix multiplication, applying a transition matrix *(1/2 t)*
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to both vectors *[f, g]* and *[d, e]* (see paragraph 8.1 in the paper):
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```
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t = [ u, v ]
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[ q, r ]
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[ out_f ] = (1/2 * t) * [ in_f ]
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[ out_g ] = [ in_g ]
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[ out_d ] = (1/2 * t) * [ in_d ] (mod M)
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[ out_e ] [ in_e ]
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```
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where *(u, v, q, r)* is *(0, 2, -1, 1)*, *(2, 0, 1, 1)*, or *(2, 0, 0, 1)*, depending on which branch is
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taken. As above, the resulting *f* and *g* are always integers.
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Performing multiple divsteps corresponds to a multiplication with the product of all the
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individual divsteps' transition matrices. As each transition matrix consists of integers
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divided by *2*, the product of these matrices will consist of integers divided by *2<sup>N</sup>* (see also
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theorem 9.2 in the paper). These divisions are expensive when updating *d* and *e*, so we delay
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them: we compute the integer coefficients of the combined transition matrix scaled by *2<sup>N</sup>*, and
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do one division by *2<sup>N</sup>* as a final step:
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```python
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def divsteps_n_matrix(delta, f, g):
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"""Compute delta and transition matrix t after N divsteps (multiplied by 2^N)."""
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u, v, q, r = 1, 0, 0, 1 # start with identity matrix
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for _ in range(N):
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if delta > 0 and g & 1:
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delta, f, g, u, v, q, r = 1 - delta, g, (g - f) // 2, 2*q, 2*r, q-u, r-v
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elif g & 1:
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delta, f, g, u, v, q, r = 1 + delta, f, (g + f) // 2, 2*u, 2*v, q+u, r+v
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else:
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delta, f, g, u, v, q, r = 1 + delta, f, (g ) // 2, 2*u, 2*v, q , r
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return delta, (u, v, q, r)
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```
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As the branches in the divsteps are completely determined by the bottom *N* bits of *f* and *g*, this
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function to compute the transition matrix only needs to see those bottom bits. Furthermore all
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intermediate results and outputs fit in *(N+1)*-bit numbers (unsigned for *f* and *g*; signed for *u*, *v*,
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*q*, and *r*) (see also paragraph 8.3 in the paper). This means that an implementation using 64-bit
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integers could set *N=62* and compute the full transition matrix for 62 steps at once without any
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big integer arithmetic at all. This is the reason why this algorithm is efficient: it only needs
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to update the full-size *f*, *g*, *d*, and *e* numbers once every *N* steps.
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We still need functions to compute:
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```
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[ out_f ] = (1/2^N * [ u, v ]) * [ in_f ]
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[ out_g ] ( [ q, r ]) [ in_g ]
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[ out_d ] = (1/2^N * [ u, v ]) * [ in_d ] (mod M)
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[ out_e ] ( [ q, r ]) [ in_e ]
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```
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Because the divsteps transformation only ever divides even numbers by two, the result of *t [f,g]* is always even. When *t* is a composition of *N* divsteps, it follows that the resulting *f*
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and *g* will be multiple of *2<sup>N</sup>*, and division by *2<sup>N</sup>* is simply shifting them down:
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```python
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def update_fg(f, g, t):
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"""Multiply matrix t/2^N with [f, g]."""
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u, v, q, r = t
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cf, cg = u*f + v*g, q*f + r*g
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# (t / 2^N) should cleanly apply to [f,g] so the result of t*[f,g] should have N zero
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# bottom bits.
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assert cf % 2**N == 0
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assert cg % 2**N == 0
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return cf >> N, cg >> N
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```
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The same is not true for *d* and *e*, and we need an equivalent of the `div2` function for division by *2<sup>N</sup> mod M*.
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This is easy if we have precomputed *1/M mod 2<sup>N</sup>* (which always exists for odd *M*):
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```python
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def div2n(M, Mi, x):
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"""Compute x/2^N mod M, given Mi = 1/M mod 2^N."""
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assert (M * Mi) % 2**N == 1
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# Find a factor m such that m*M has the same bottom N bits as x. We want:
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# (m * M) mod 2^N = x mod 2^N
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# <=> m mod 2^N = (x / M) mod 2^N
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# <=> m mod 2^N = (x * Mi) mod 2^N
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m = (Mi * x) % 2**N
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# Subtract that multiple from x, cancelling its bottom N bits.
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x -= m * M
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# Now a clean division by 2^N is possible.
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assert x % 2**N == 0
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return (x >> N) % M
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def update_de(d, e, t, M, Mi):
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"""Multiply matrix t/2^N with [d, e], modulo M."""
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u, v, q, r = t
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cd, ce = u*d + v*e, q*d + r*e
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return div2n(M, Mi, cd), div2n(M, Mi, ce)
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```
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With all of those, we can write a version of `modinv` that performs *N* divsteps at once:
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```python3
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def modinv(M, Mi, x):
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"""Compute the modular inverse of x mod M, given Mi=1/M mod 2^N."""
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assert M & 1
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delta, f, g, d, e = 1, M, x, 0, 1
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while g != 0:
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# Compute the delta and transition matrix t for the next N divsteps (this only needs
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# (N+1)-bit signed integer arithmetic).
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delta, t = divsteps_n_matrix(delta, f % 2**N, g % 2**N)
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# Apply the transition matrix t to [f, g]:
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f, g = update_fg(f, g, t)
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# Apply the transition matrix t to [d, e]:
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d, e = update_de(d, e, t, M, Mi)
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return (d * f) % M
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```
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This means that in practice we'll always perform a multiple of *N* divsteps. This is not a problem
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because once *g=0*, further divsteps do not affect *f*, *g*, *d*, or *e* anymore (only *δ* keeps
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increasing). For variable time code such excess iterations will be mostly optimized away in later
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sections.
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## 4. Avoiding modulus operations
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So far, there are two places where we compute a remainder of big numbers modulo *M*: at the end of
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`div2n` in every `update_de`, and at the very end of `modinv` after potentially negating *d* due to the
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sign of *f*. These are relatively expensive operations when done generically.
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To deal with the modulus operation in `div2n`, we simply stop requiring *d* and *e* to be in range
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*[0,M)* all the time. Let's start by inlining `div2n` into `update_de`, and dropping the modulus
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operation at the end:
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```python
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def update_de(d, e, t, M, Mi):
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"""Multiply matrix t/2^N with [d, e] mod M, given Mi=1/M mod 2^N."""
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u, v, q, r = t
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cd, ce = u*d + v*e, q*d + r*e
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# Cancel out bottom N bits of cd and ce.
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md = -((Mi * cd) % 2**N)
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me = -((Mi * ce) % 2**N)
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cd += md * M
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ce += me * M
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# And cleanly divide by 2**N.
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return cd >> N, ce >> N
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```
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Let's look at bounds on the ranges of these numbers. It can be shown that *|u|+|v|* and *|q|+|r|*
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never exceed *2<sup>N</sup>* (see paragraph 8.3 in the paper), and thus a multiplication with *t* will have
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outputs whose absolute values are at most *2<sup>N</sup>* times the maximum absolute input value. In case the
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inputs *d* and *e* are in *(-M,M)*, which is certainly true for the initial values *d=0* and *e=1* assuming
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*M > 1*, the multiplication results in numbers in range *(-2<sup>N</sup>M,2<sup>N</sup>M)*. Subtracting less than *2<sup>N</sup>*
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times *M* to cancel out *N* bits brings that up to *(-2<sup>N+1</sup>M,2<sup>N</sup>M)*, and
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dividing by *2<sup>N</sup>* at the end takes it to *(-2M,M)*. Another application of `update_de` would take that
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to *(-3M,2M)*, and so forth. This progressive expansion of the variables' ranges can be
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counteracted by incrementing *d* and *e* by *M* whenever they're negative:
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```python
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...
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if d < 0:
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d += M
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if e < 0:
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e += M
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cd, ce = u*d + v*e, q*d + r*e
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# Cancel out bottom N bits of cd and ce.
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...
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```
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With inputs in *(-2M,M)*, they will first be shifted into range *(-M,M)*, which means that the
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output will again be in *(-2M,M)*, and this remains the case regardless of how many `update_de`
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invocations there are. In what follows, we will try to make this more efficient.
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Note that increasing *d* by *M* is equal to incrementing *cd* by *u M* and *ce* by *q M*. Similarly,
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increasing *e* by *M* is equal to incrementing *cd* by *v M* and *ce* by *r M*. So we could instead write:
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```python
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...
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cd, ce = u*d + v*e, q*d + r*e
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# Perform the equivalent of incrementing d, e by M when they're negative.
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if d < 0:
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cd += u*M
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ce += q*M
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if e < 0:
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cd += v*M
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ce += r*M
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# Cancel out bottom N bits of cd and ce.
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md = -((Mi * cd) % 2**N)
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me = -((Mi * ce) % 2**N)
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cd += md * M
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ce += me * M
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...
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```
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Now note that we have two steps of corrections to *cd* and *ce* that add multiples of *M*: this
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increment, and the decrement that cancels out bottom bits. The second one depends on the first
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one, but they can still be efficiently combined by only computing the bottom bits of *cd* and *ce*
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at first, and using that to compute the final *md*, *me* values:
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```python
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def update_de(d, e, t, M, Mi):
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"""Multiply matrix t/2^N with [d, e], modulo M."""
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u, v, q, r = t
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md, me = 0, 0
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# Compute what multiples of M to add to cd and ce.
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if d < 0:
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md += u
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me += q
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if e < 0:
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md += v
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me += r
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# Compute bottom N bits of t*[d,e] + M*[md,me].
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cd, ce = (u*d + v*e + md*M) % 2**N, (q*d + r*e + me*M) % 2**N
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# Correct md and me such that the bottom N bits of t*[d,e] + M*[md,me] are zero.
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md -= (Mi * cd) % 2**N
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me -= (Mi * ce) % 2**N
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# Do the full computation.
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cd, ce = u*d + v*e + md*M, q*d + r*e + me*M
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# And cleanly divide by 2**N.
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return cd >> N, ce >> N
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```
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One last optimization: we can avoid the *md M* and *me M* multiplications in the bottom bits of *cd*
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and *ce* by moving them to the *md* and *me* correction:
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```python
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...
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# Compute bottom N bits of t*[d,e].
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cd, ce = (u*d + v*e) % 2**N, (q*d + r*e) % 2**N
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# Correct md and me such that the bottom N bits of t*[d,e]+M*[md,me] are zero.
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# Note that this is not the same as {md = (-Mi * cd) % 2**N} etc. That would also result in N
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# zero bottom bits, but isn't guaranteed to be a reduction of [0,2^N) compared to the
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# previous md and me values, and thus would violate our bounds analysis.
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md -= (Mi*cd + md) % 2**N
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me -= (Mi*ce + me) % 2**N
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...
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```
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The resulting function takes *d* and *e* in range *(-2M,M)* as inputs, and outputs values in the same
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range. That also means that the *d* value at the end of `modinv` will be in that range, while we want
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a result in *[0,M)*. To do that, we need a normalization function. It's easy to integrate the
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conditional negation of *d* (based on the sign of *f*) into it as well:
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```python
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def normalize(sign, v, M):
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"""Compute sign*v mod M, where v is in range (-2*M,M); output in [0,M)."""
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assert sign == 1 or sign == -1
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# v in (-2*M,M)
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if v < 0:
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v += M
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# v in (-M,M). Now multiply v with sign (which can only be 1 or -1).
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if sign == -1:
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v = -v
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# v in (-M,M)
|
|
if v < 0:
|
|
v += M
|
|
# v in [0,M)
|
|
return v
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
And calling it in `modinv` is simply:
|
|
|
|
```python
|
|
...
|
|
return normalize(f, d, M)
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
|
|
## 5. Constant-time operation
|
|
|
|
The primary selling point of the algorithm is fast constant-time operation. What code flow still
|
|
depends on the input data so far?
|
|
|
|
- the number of iterations of the while *g ≠ 0* loop in `modinv`
|
|
- the branches inside `divsteps_n_matrix`
|
|
- the sign checks in `update_de`
|
|
- the sign checks in `normalize`
|
|
|
|
To make the while loop in `modinv` constant time it can be replaced with a constant number of
|
|
iterations. The paper proves (Theorem 11.2) that *741* divsteps are sufficient for any *256*-bit
|
|
inputs, and [safegcd-bounds](https://github.com/sipa/safegcd-bounds) shows that the slightly better bound *724* is
|
|
sufficient even. Given that every loop iteration performs *N* divsteps, it will run a total of
|
|
*⌈724/N⌉* times.
|
|
|
|
To deal with the branches in `divsteps_n_matrix` we will replace them with constant-time bitwise
|
|
operations (and hope the C compiler isn't smart enough to turn them back into branches; see
|
|
`valgrind_ctime_test.c` for automated tests that this isn't the case). To do so, observe that a
|
|
divstep can be written instead as (compare to the inner loop of `gcd` in section 1).
|
|
|
|
```python
|
|
x = -f if delta > 0 else f # set x equal to (input) -f or f
|
|
if g & 1:
|
|
g += x # set g to (input) g-f or g+f
|
|
if delta > 0:
|
|
delta = -delta
|
|
f += g # set f to (input) g (note that g was set to g-f before)
|
|
delta += 1
|
|
g >>= 1
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
To convert the above to bitwise operations, we rely on a trick to negate conditionally: per the
|
|
definition of negative numbers in two's complement, (*-v == ~v + 1*) holds for every number *v*. As
|
|
*-1* in two's complement is all *1* bits, bitflipping can be expressed as xor with *-1*. It follows
|
|
that *-v == (v ^ -1) - (-1)*. Thus, if we have a variable *c* that takes on values *0* or *-1*, then
|
|
*(v ^ c) - c* is *v* if *c=0* and *-v* if *c=-1*.
|
|
|
|
Using this we can write:
|
|
|
|
```python
|
|
x = -f if delta > 0 else f
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
in constant-time form as:
|
|
|
|
```python
|
|
c1 = (-delta) >> 63
|
|
# Conditionally negate f based on c1:
|
|
x = (f ^ c1) - c1
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
To use that trick, we need a helper mask variable *c1* that resolves the condition *δ>0* to *-1*
|
|
(if true) or *0* (if false). We compute *c1* using right shifting, which is equivalent to dividing by
|
|
the specified power of *2* and rounding down (in Python, and also in C under the assumption of a typical two's complement system; see
|
|
`assumptions.h` for tests that this is the case). Right shifting by *63* thus maps all
|
|
numbers in range *[-2<sup>63</sup>,0)* to *-1*, and numbers in range *[0,2<sup>63</sup>)* to *0*.
|
|
|
|
Using the facts that *x&0=0* and *x&(-1)=x* (on two's complement systems again), we can write:
|
|
|
|
```python
|
|
if g & 1:
|
|
g += x
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
as:
|
|
|
|
```python
|
|
# Compute c2=0 if g is even and c2=-1 if g is odd.
|
|
c2 = -(g & 1)
|
|
# This masks out x if g is even, and leaves x be if g is odd.
|
|
g += x & c2
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Using the conditional negation trick again we can write:
|
|
|
|
```python
|
|
if g & 1:
|
|
if delta > 0:
|
|
delta = -delta
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
as:
|
|
|
|
```python
|
|
# Compute c3=-1 if g is odd and delta>0, and 0 otherwise.
|
|
c3 = c1 & c2
|
|
# Conditionally negate delta based on c3:
|
|
delta = (delta ^ c3) - c3
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Finally:
|
|
|
|
```python
|
|
if g & 1:
|
|
if delta > 0:
|
|
f += g
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
becomes:
|
|
|
|
```python
|
|
f += g & c3
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
It turns out that this can be implemented more efficiently by applying the substitution
|
|
*η=-δ*. In this representation, negating *δ* corresponds to negating *η*, and incrementing
|
|
*δ* corresponds to decrementing *η*. This allows us to remove the negation in the *c1*
|
|
computation:
|
|
|
|
```python
|
|
# Compute a mask c1 for eta < 0, and compute the conditional negation x of f:
|
|
c1 = eta >> 63
|
|
x = (f ^ c1) - c1
|
|
# Compute a mask c2 for odd g, and conditionally add x to g:
|
|
c2 = -(g & 1)
|
|
g += x & c2
|
|
# Compute a mask c for (eta < 0) and odd (input) g, and use it to conditionally negate eta,
|
|
# and add g to f:
|
|
c3 = c1 & c2
|
|
eta = (eta ^ c3) - c3
|
|
f += g & c3
|
|
# Incrementing delta corresponds to decrementing eta.
|
|
eta -= 1
|
|
g >>= 1
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
A variant of divsteps with better worst-case performance can be used instead: starting *δ* at
|
|
*1/2* instead of *1*. This reduces the worst case number of iterations to *590* for *256*-bit inputs
|
|
(which can be shown using convex hull analysis). In this case, the substitution *ζ=-(δ+1/2)*
|
|
is used instead to keep the variable integral. Incrementing *δ* by *1* still translates to
|
|
decrementing *ζ* by *1*, but negating *δ* now corresponds to going from *ζ* to *-(ζ+1)*, or
|
|
*~ζ*. Doing that conditionally based on *c3* is simply:
|
|
|
|
```python
|
|
...
|
|
c3 = c1 & c2
|
|
zeta ^= c3
|
|
...
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
By replacing the loop in `divsteps_n_matrix` with a variant of the divstep code above (extended to
|
|
also apply all *f* operations to *u*, *v* and all *g* operations to *q*, *r*), a constant-time version of
|
|
`divsteps_n_matrix` is obtained. The full code will be in section 7.
|
|
|
|
These bit fiddling tricks can also be used to make the conditional negations and additions in
|
|
`update_de` and `normalize` constant-time.
|
|
|
|
|
|
## 6. Variable-time optimizations
|
|
|
|
In section 5, we modified the `divsteps_n_matrix` function (and a few others) to be constant time.
|
|
Constant time operations are only necessary when computing modular inverses of secret data. In
|
|
other cases, it slows down calculations unnecessarily. In this section, we will construct a
|
|
faster non-constant time `divsteps_n_matrix` function.
|
|
|
|
To do so, first consider yet another way of writing the inner loop of divstep operations in
|
|
`gcd` from section 1. This decomposition is also explained in the paper in section 8.2. We use
|
|
the original version with initial *δ=1* and *η=-δ* here.
|
|
|
|
```python
|
|
for _ in range(N):
|
|
if g & 1 and eta < 0:
|
|
eta, f, g = -eta, g, -f
|
|
if g & 1:
|
|
g += f
|
|
eta -= 1
|
|
g >>= 1
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Whenever *g* is even, the loop only shifts *g* down and decreases *η*. When *g* ends in multiple zero
|
|
bits, these iterations can be consolidated into one step. This requires counting the bottom zero
|
|
bits efficiently, which is possible on most platforms; it is abstracted here as the function
|
|
`count_trailing_zeros`.
|
|
|
|
```python
|
|
def count_trailing_zeros(v):
|
|
"""For a non-zero value v, find z such that v=(d<<z) for some odd d."""
|
|
return (v & -v).bit_length() - 1
|
|
|
|
i = N # divsteps left to do
|
|
while True:
|
|
# Get rid of all bottom zeros at once. In the first iteration, g may be odd and the following
|
|
# lines have no effect (until "if eta < 0").
|
|
zeros = min(i, count_trailing_zeros(g))
|
|
eta -= zeros
|
|
g >>= zeros
|
|
i -= zeros
|
|
if i == 0:
|
|
break
|
|
# We know g is odd now
|
|
if eta < 0:
|
|
eta, f, g = -eta, g, -f
|
|
g += f
|
|
# g is even now, and the eta decrement and g shift will happen in the next loop.
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
We can now remove multiple bottom *0* bits from *g* at once, but still need a full iteration whenever
|
|
there is a bottom *1* bit. In what follows, we will get rid of multiple *1* bits simultaneously as
|
|
well.
|
|
|
|
Observe that as long as *η ≥ 0*, the loop does not modify *f*. Instead, it cancels out bottom
|
|
bits of *g* and shifts them out, and decreases *η* and *i* accordingly - interrupting only when *η*
|
|
becomes negative, or when *i* reaches *0*. Combined, this is equivalent to adding a multiple of *f* to
|
|
*g* to cancel out multiple bottom bits, and then shifting them out.
|
|
|
|
It is easy to find what that multiple is: we want a number *w* such that *g+w f* has a few bottom
|
|
zero bits. If that number of bits is *L*, we want *g+w f mod 2<sup>L</sup> = 0*, or *w = -g/f mod 2<sup>L</sup>*. Since *f*
|
|
is odd, such a *w* exists for any *L*. *L* cannot be more than *i* steps (as we'd finish the loop before
|
|
doing more) or more than *η+1* steps (as we'd run `eta, f, g = -eta, g, f` at that point), but
|
|
apart from that, we're only limited by the complexity of computing *w*.
|
|
|
|
This code demonstrates how to cancel up to 4 bits per step:
|
|
|
|
```python
|
|
NEGINV16 = [15, 5, 3, 9, 7, 13, 11, 1] # NEGINV16[n//2] = (-n)^-1 mod 16, for odd n
|
|
i = N
|
|
while True:
|
|
zeros = min(i, count_trailing_zeros(g))
|
|
eta -= zeros
|
|
g >>= zeros
|
|
i -= zeros
|
|
if i == 0:
|
|
break
|
|
# We know g is odd now
|
|
if eta < 0:
|
|
eta, f, g = -eta, g, f
|
|
# Compute limit on number of bits to cancel
|
|
limit = min(min(eta + 1, i), 4)
|
|
# Compute w = -g/f mod 2**limit, using the table value for -1/f mod 2**4. Note that f is
|
|
# always odd, so its inverse modulo a power of two always exists.
|
|
w = (g * NEGINV16[(f & 15) // 2]) % (2**limit)
|
|
# As w = -g/f mod (2**limit), g+w*f mod 2**limit = 0 mod 2**limit.
|
|
g += w * f
|
|
assert g % (2**limit) == 0
|
|
# The next iteration will now shift out at least limit bottom zero bits from g.
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
By using a bigger table more bits can be cancelled at once. The table can also be implemented
|
|
as a formula. Several formulas are known for computing modular inverses modulo powers of two;
|
|
some can be found in Hacker's Delight second edition by Henry S. Warren, Jr. pages 245-247.
|
|
Here we need the negated modular inverse, which is a simple transformation of those:
|
|
|
|
- Instead of a 3-bit table:
|
|
- *-f* or *f ^ 6*
|
|
- Instead of a 4-bit table:
|
|
- *1 - f(f + 1)*
|
|
- *-(f + (((f + 1) & 4) << 1))*
|
|
- For larger tables the following technique can be used: if *w=-1/f mod 2<sup>L</sup>*, then *w(w f+2)* is
|
|
*-1/f mod 2<sup>2L</sup>*. This allows extending the previous formulas (or tables). In particular we
|
|
have this 6-bit function (based on the 3-bit function above):
|
|
- *f(f<sup>2</sup> - 2)*
|
|
|
|
This loop, again extended to also handle *u*, *v*, *q*, and *r* alongside *f* and *g*, placed in
|
|
`divsteps_n_matrix`, gives a significantly faster, but non-constant time version.
|
|
|
|
|
|
## 7. Final Python version
|
|
|
|
All together we need the following functions:
|
|
|
|
- A way to compute the transition matrix in constant time, using the `divsteps_n_matrix` function
|
|
from section 2, but with its loop replaced by a variant of the constant-time divstep from
|
|
section 5, extended to handle *u*, *v*, *q*, *r*:
|
|
|
|
```python
|
|
def divsteps_n_matrix(zeta, f, g):
|
|
"""Compute zeta and transition matrix t after N divsteps (multiplied by 2^N)."""
|
|
u, v, q, r = 1, 0, 0, 1 # start with identity matrix
|
|
for _ in range(N):
|
|
c1 = zeta >> 63
|
|
# Compute x, y, z as conditionally-negated versions of f, u, v.
|
|
x, y, z = (f ^ c1) - c1, (u ^ c1) - c1, (v ^ c1) - c1
|
|
c2 = -(g & 1)
|
|
# Conditionally add x, y, z to g, q, r.
|
|
g, q, r = g + (x & c2), q + (y & c2), r + (z & c2)
|
|
c1 &= c2 # reusing c1 here for the earlier c3 variable
|
|
zeta = (zeta ^ c1) - 1 # inlining the unconditional zeta decrement here
|
|
# Conditionally add g, q, r to f, u, v.
|
|
f, u, v = f + (g & c1), u + (q & c1), v + (r & c1)
|
|
# When shifting g down, don't shift q, r, as we construct a transition matrix multiplied
|
|
# by 2^N. Instead, shift f's coefficients u and v up.
|
|
g, u, v = g >> 1, u << 1, v << 1
|
|
return zeta, (u, v, q, r)
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
- The functions to update *f* and *g*, and *d* and *e*, from section 2 and section 4, with the constant-time
|
|
changes to `update_de` from section 5:
|
|
|
|
```python
|
|
def update_fg(f, g, t):
|
|
"""Multiply matrix t/2^N with [f, g]."""
|
|
u, v, q, r = t
|
|
cf, cg = u*f + v*g, q*f + r*g
|
|
return cf >> N, cg >> N
|
|
|
|
def update_de(d, e, t, M, Mi):
|
|
"""Multiply matrix t/2^N with [d, e], modulo M."""
|
|
u, v, q, r = t
|
|
d_sign, e_sign = d >> 257, e >> 257
|
|
md, me = (u & d_sign) + (v & e_sign), (q & d_sign) + (r & e_sign)
|
|
cd, ce = (u*d + v*e) % 2**N, (q*d + r*e) % 2**N
|
|
md -= (Mi*cd + md) % 2**N
|
|
me -= (Mi*ce + me) % 2**N
|
|
cd, ce = u*d + v*e + M*md, q*d + r*e + M*me
|
|
return cd >> N, ce >> N
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
- The `normalize` function from section 4, made constant time as well:
|
|
|
|
```python
|
|
def normalize(sign, v, M):
|
|
"""Compute sign*v mod M, where v in (-2*M,M); output in [0,M)."""
|
|
v_sign = v >> 257
|
|
# Conditionally add M to v.
|
|
v += M & v_sign
|
|
c = (sign - 1) >> 1
|
|
# Conditionally negate v.
|
|
v = (v ^ c) - c
|
|
v_sign = v >> 257
|
|
# Conditionally add M to v again.
|
|
v += M & v_sign
|
|
return v
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
- And finally the `modinv` function too, adapted to use *ζ* instead of *δ*, and using the fixed
|
|
iteration count from section 5:
|
|
|
|
```python
|
|
def modinv(M, Mi, x):
|
|
"""Compute the modular inverse of x mod M, given Mi=1/M mod 2^N."""
|
|
zeta, f, g, d, e = -1, M, x, 0, 1
|
|
for _ in range((590 + N - 1) // N):
|
|
zeta, t = divsteps_n_matrix(zeta, f % 2**N, g % 2**N)
|
|
f, g = update_fg(f, g, t)
|
|
d, e = update_de(d, e, t, M, Mi)
|
|
return normalize(f, d, M)
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
- To get a variable time version, replace the `divsteps_n_matrix` function with one that uses the
|
|
divsteps loop from section 5, and a `modinv` version that calls it without the fixed iteration
|
|
count:
|
|
|
|
```python
|
|
NEGINV16 = [15, 5, 3, 9, 7, 13, 11, 1] # NEGINV16[n//2] = (-n)^-1 mod 16, for odd n
|
|
def divsteps_n_matrix_var(eta, f, g):
|
|
"""Compute eta and transition matrix t after N divsteps (multiplied by 2^N)."""
|
|
u, v, q, r = 1, 0, 0, 1
|
|
i = N
|
|
while True:
|
|
zeros = min(i, count_trailing_zeros(g))
|
|
eta, i = eta - zeros, i - zeros
|
|
g, u, v = g >> zeros, u << zeros, v << zeros
|
|
if i == 0:
|
|
break
|
|
if eta < 0:
|
|
eta, f, u, v, g, q, r = -eta, g, q, r, -f, -u, -v
|
|
limit = min(min(eta + 1, i), 4)
|
|
w = (g * NEGINV16[(f & 15) // 2]) % (2**limit)
|
|
g, q, r = g + w*f, q + w*u, r + w*v
|
|
return eta, (u, v, q, r)
|
|
|
|
def modinv_var(M, Mi, x):
|
|
"""Compute the modular inverse of x mod M, given Mi = 1/M mod 2^N."""
|
|
eta, f, g, d, e = -1, M, x, 0, 1
|
|
while g != 0:
|
|
eta, t = divsteps_n_matrix_var(eta, f % 2**N, g % 2**N)
|
|
f, g = update_fg(f, g, t)
|
|
d, e = update_de(d, e, t, M, Mi)
|
|
return normalize(f, d, Mi)
|
|
```
|