secp256k1-zkp/src/bench_rangeproof.c

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Pedersen commitments, borromean ring signatures, and ZK range proofs. This commit adds three new cryptosystems to libsecp256k1: Pedersen commitments are a system for making blinded commitments to a value. Functionally they work like: commit_b,v = H(blind_b || value_v), except they are additively homorphic, e.g. C(b1, v1) - C(b2, v2) = C(b1 - b2, v1 - v2) and C(b1, v1) - C(b1, v1) = 0, etc. The commitments themselves are EC points, serialized as 33 bytes. In addition to the commit function this implementation includes utility functions for verifying that a set of commitments sums to zero, and for picking blinding factors that sum to zero. If the blinding factors are uniformly random, pedersen commitments have information theoretic privacy. Borromean ring signatures are a novel efficient ring signature construction for AND/OR admissions policies (the code here implements an AND of ORs, each of any size). This construction requires 32 bytes of signature per pubkey used plus 32 bytes of constant overhead. With these you can construct signatures like "Given pubkeys A B C D E F G, the signer knows the discrete logs satisifying (A || B) & (C || D || E) & (F || G)". ZK range proofs allow someone to prove a pedersen commitment is in a particular range (e.g. [0..2^64)) without revealing the specific value. The construction here is based on the above borromean ring signature and uses a radix-4 encoding and other optimizations to maximize efficiency. It also supports encoding proofs with a non-private base-10 exponent and minimum-value to allow trading off secrecy for size and speed (or just avoiding wasting space keeping data private that was already public due to external constraints). A proof for a 32-bit mantissa takes 2564 bytes, but 2048 bytes of this can be used to communicate a private message to a receiver who shares a secret random seed with the prover.
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/**********************************************************************
* Copyright (c) 2014, 2015 Pieter Wuille, Gregory Maxwell *
* Distributed under the MIT software license, see the accompanying *
* file COPYING or http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php.*
**********************************************************************/
#include <stdint.h>
#include "include/secp256k1_rangeproof.h"
#include "util.h"
#include "bench.h"
typedef struct {
secp256k1_context* ctx;
secp256k1_pedersen_commitment commit;
Pedersen commitments, borromean ring signatures, and ZK range proofs. This commit adds three new cryptosystems to libsecp256k1: Pedersen commitments are a system for making blinded commitments to a value. Functionally they work like: commit_b,v = H(blind_b || value_v), except they are additively homorphic, e.g. C(b1, v1) - C(b2, v2) = C(b1 - b2, v1 - v2) and C(b1, v1) - C(b1, v1) = 0, etc. The commitments themselves are EC points, serialized as 33 bytes. In addition to the commit function this implementation includes utility functions for verifying that a set of commitments sums to zero, and for picking blinding factors that sum to zero. If the blinding factors are uniformly random, pedersen commitments have information theoretic privacy. Borromean ring signatures are a novel efficient ring signature construction for AND/OR admissions policies (the code here implements an AND of ORs, each of any size). This construction requires 32 bytes of signature per pubkey used plus 32 bytes of constant overhead. With these you can construct signatures like "Given pubkeys A B C D E F G, the signer knows the discrete logs satisifying (A || B) & (C || D || E) & (F || G)". ZK range proofs allow someone to prove a pedersen commitment is in a particular range (e.g. [0..2^64)) without revealing the specific value. The construction here is based on the above borromean ring signature and uses a radix-4 encoding and other optimizations to maximize efficiency. It also supports encoding proofs with a non-private base-10 exponent and minimum-value to allow trading off secrecy for size and speed (or just avoiding wasting space keeping data private that was already public due to external constraints). A proof for a 32-bit mantissa takes 2564 bytes, but 2048 bytes of this can be used to communicate a private message to a receiver who shares a secret random seed with the prover.
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unsigned char proof[5134];
unsigned char blind[32];
size_t len;
Pedersen commitments, borromean ring signatures, and ZK range proofs. This commit adds three new cryptosystems to libsecp256k1: Pedersen commitments are a system for making blinded commitments to a value. Functionally they work like: commit_b,v = H(blind_b || value_v), except they are additively homorphic, e.g. C(b1, v1) - C(b2, v2) = C(b1 - b2, v1 - v2) and C(b1, v1) - C(b1, v1) = 0, etc. The commitments themselves are EC points, serialized as 33 bytes. In addition to the commit function this implementation includes utility functions for verifying that a set of commitments sums to zero, and for picking blinding factors that sum to zero. If the blinding factors are uniformly random, pedersen commitments have information theoretic privacy. Borromean ring signatures are a novel efficient ring signature construction for AND/OR admissions policies (the code here implements an AND of ORs, each of any size). This construction requires 32 bytes of signature per pubkey used plus 32 bytes of constant overhead. With these you can construct signatures like "Given pubkeys A B C D E F G, the signer knows the discrete logs satisifying (A || B) & (C || D || E) & (F || G)". ZK range proofs allow someone to prove a pedersen commitment is in a particular range (e.g. [0..2^64)) without revealing the specific value. The construction here is based on the above borromean ring signature and uses a radix-4 encoding and other optimizations to maximize efficiency. It also supports encoding proofs with a non-private base-10 exponent and minimum-value to allow trading off secrecy for size and speed (or just avoiding wasting space keeping data private that was already public due to external constraints). A proof for a 32-bit mantissa takes 2564 bytes, but 2048 bytes of this can be used to communicate a private message to a receiver who shares a secret random seed with the prover.
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int min_bits;
uint64_t v;
} bench_rangeproof_t;
static void bench_rangeproof_setup(void* arg) {
int i;
uint64_t minv;
uint64_t maxv;
bench_rangeproof_t *data = (bench_rangeproof_t*)arg;
data->v = 0;
for (i = 0; i < 32; i++) data->blind[i] = i + 1;
CHECK(secp256k1_pedersen_commit(data->ctx, &data->commit, data->blind, data->v, secp256k1_generator_h));
Pedersen commitments, borromean ring signatures, and ZK range proofs. This commit adds three new cryptosystems to libsecp256k1: Pedersen commitments are a system for making blinded commitments to a value. Functionally they work like: commit_b,v = H(blind_b || value_v), except they are additively homorphic, e.g. C(b1, v1) - C(b2, v2) = C(b1 - b2, v1 - v2) and C(b1, v1) - C(b1, v1) = 0, etc. The commitments themselves are EC points, serialized as 33 bytes. In addition to the commit function this implementation includes utility functions for verifying that a set of commitments sums to zero, and for picking blinding factors that sum to zero. If the blinding factors are uniformly random, pedersen commitments have information theoretic privacy. Borromean ring signatures are a novel efficient ring signature construction for AND/OR admissions policies (the code here implements an AND of ORs, each of any size). This construction requires 32 bytes of signature per pubkey used plus 32 bytes of constant overhead. With these you can construct signatures like "Given pubkeys A B C D E F G, the signer knows the discrete logs satisifying (A || B) & (C || D || E) & (F || G)". ZK range proofs allow someone to prove a pedersen commitment is in a particular range (e.g. [0..2^64)) without revealing the specific value. The construction here is based on the above borromean ring signature and uses a radix-4 encoding and other optimizations to maximize efficiency. It also supports encoding proofs with a non-private base-10 exponent and minimum-value to allow trading off secrecy for size and speed (or just avoiding wasting space keeping data private that was already public due to external constraints). A proof for a 32-bit mantissa takes 2564 bytes, but 2048 bytes of this can be used to communicate a private message to a receiver who shares a secret random seed with the prover.
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data->len = 5134;
CHECK(secp256k1_rangeproof_sign(data->ctx, data->proof, &data->len, 0, &data->commit, data->blind, (const unsigned char*)&data->commit, 0, data->min_bits, data->v, NULL, 0, secp256k1_generator_h));
CHECK(secp256k1_rangeproof_verify(data->ctx, &minv, &maxv, &data->commit, data->proof, data->len, secp256k1_generator_h));
Pedersen commitments, borromean ring signatures, and ZK range proofs. This commit adds three new cryptosystems to libsecp256k1: Pedersen commitments are a system for making blinded commitments to a value. Functionally they work like: commit_b,v = H(blind_b || value_v), except they are additively homorphic, e.g. C(b1, v1) - C(b2, v2) = C(b1 - b2, v1 - v2) and C(b1, v1) - C(b1, v1) = 0, etc. The commitments themselves are EC points, serialized as 33 bytes. In addition to the commit function this implementation includes utility functions for verifying that a set of commitments sums to zero, and for picking blinding factors that sum to zero. If the blinding factors are uniformly random, pedersen commitments have information theoretic privacy. Borromean ring signatures are a novel efficient ring signature construction for AND/OR admissions policies (the code here implements an AND of ORs, each of any size). This construction requires 32 bytes of signature per pubkey used plus 32 bytes of constant overhead. With these you can construct signatures like "Given pubkeys A B C D E F G, the signer knows the discrete logs satisifying (A || B) & (C || D || E) & (F || G)". ZK range proofs allow someone to prove a pedersen commitment is in a particular range (e.g. [0..2^64)) without revealing the specific value. The construction here is based on the above borromean ring signature and uses a radix-4 encoding and other optimizations to maximize efficiency. It also supports encoding proofs with a non-private base-10 exponent and minimum-value to allow trading off secrecy for size and speed (or just avoiding wasting space keeping data private that was already public due to external constraints). A proof for a 32-bit mantissa takes 2564 bytes, but 2048 bytes of this can be used to communicate a private message to a receiver who shares a secret random seed with the prover.
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}
static void bench_rangeproof(void* arg) {
int i;
bench_rangeproof_t *data = (bench_rangeproof_t*)arg;
for (i = 0; i < 1000; i++) {
int j;
uint64_t minv;
uint64_t maxv;
j = secp256k1_rangeproof_verify(data->ctx, &minv, &maxv, &data->commit, data->proof, data->len, secp256k1_generator_h);
Pedersen commitments, borromean ring signatures, and ZK range proofs. This commit adds three new cryptosystems to libsecp256k1: Pedersen commitments are a system for making blinded commitments to a value. Functionally they work like: commit_b,v = H(blind_b || value_v), except they are additively homorphic, e.g. C(b1, v1) - C(b2, v2) = C(b1 - b2, v1 - v2) and C(b1, v1) - C(b1, v1) = 0, etc. The commitments themselves are EC points, serialized as 33 bytes. In addition to the commit function this implementation includes utility functions for verifying that a set of commitments sums to zero, and for picking blinding factors that sum to zero. If the blinding factors are uniformly random, pedersen commitments have information theoretic privacy. Borromean ring signatures are a novel efficient ring signature construction for AND/OR admissions policies (the code here implements an AND of ORs, each of any size). This construction requires 32 bytes of signature per pubkey used plus 32 bytes of constant overhead. With these you can construct signatures like "Given pubkeys A B C D E F G, the signer knows the discrete logs satisifying (A || B) & (C || D || E) & (F || G)". ZK range proofs allow someone to prove a pedersen commitment is in a particular range (e.g. [0..2^64)) without revealing the specific value. The construction here is based on the above borromean ring signature and uses a radix-4 encoding and other optimizations to maximize efficiency. It also supports encoding proofs with a non-private base-10 exponent and minimum-value to allow trading off secrecy for size and speed (or just avoiding wasting space keeping data private that was already public due to external constraints). A proof for a 32-bit mantissa takes 2564 bytes, but 2048 bytes of this can be used to communicate a private message to a receiver who shares a secret random seed with the prover.
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for (j = 0; j < 4; j++) {
data->proof[j + 2 + 32 *((data->min_bits + 1) >> 1) - 4] = (i >> 8)&255;
}
}
}
int main(void) {
bench_rangeproof_t data;
data.ctx = secp256k1_context_create(SECP256K1_CONTEXT_SIGN | SECP256K1_CONTEXT_VERIFY);
data.min_bits = 32;
run_benchmark("rangeproof_verify_bit", bench_rangeproof, bench_rangeproof_setup, NULL, &data, 10, 1000 * data.min_bits);
secp256k1_context_destroy(data.ctx);
return 0;
}