Tim Ruffing 0db61d25c9
Merge #685: Fix issue where travis does not show the ./tests seed…
a0771d1 Explicitly disable buffering for stderr in tests (Jonas Nick)
fb424fb Make travis show the ./tests seed by removing stdout buffering and always cat tests.log after a travis run. (Jonas Nick)

Pull request description:

  …by removing stdout buffering and always cat tests.log after a travis run. Fixes #645.

  I noticed that according to the [doc](https://www.gnu.org/software/automake/manual/html_node/Parallel-Test-Harness.html) tests.log should contain stdout as well as stderr. But it doesn't because stdout isn't flushed. I removed buffering completely to avoid having to call `fflush` twice.

  Travis is instructed to always show the seed which seems helpful with `after_script` by `cat`ing `./tests.log`. In case the tests fail it looks like https://travis-ci.org/jonasnick/secp256k1/jobs/606446234.

ACKs for commit a0771d:
  real-or-random:
    ACK a0771d15e67d3fe6ac1791f81d9731f73c550e5e I looked at the diff and checked that it does not break the tests

Tree-SHA512: 3ba37c2d9169867112981bba3d56680000651ef22ef684c3703f26ed3f71bf415fb23875d30059c8247ea9520c9cfad2c9207badf1b33da8fa3b7b7235a8bf16
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libsecp256k1

Build Status

Optimized C library for EC operations on curve secp256k1.

This library is a work in progress and is being used to research best practices. Use at your own risk.

Features:

  • secp256k1 ECDSA signing/verification and key generation.
  • Adding/multiplying private/public keys.
  • Serialization/parsing of private keys, public keys, signatures.
  • Constant time, constant memory access signing and pubkey generation.
  • Derandomized DSA (via RFC6979 or with a caller provided function.)
  • Very efficient implementation.

Implementation details

  • General
    • No runtime heap allocation.
    • Extensive testing infrastructure.
    • Structured to facilitate review and analysis.
    • Intended to be portable to any system with a C89 compiler and uint64_t support.
    • No use of floating types, except in benchmarks.
    • Expose only higher level interfaces to minimize the API surface and improve application security. ("Be difficult to use insecurely.")
  • Field operations
    • Optimized implementation of arithmetic modulo the curve's field size (2^256 - 0x1000003D1).
      • Using 5 52-bit limbs (including hand-optimized assembly for x86_64, by Diederik Huys).
      • Using 10 26-bit limbs.
    • Field inverses and square roots using a sliding window over blocks of 1s (by Peter Dettman).
  • Scalar operations
    • Optimized implementation without data-dependent branches of arithmetic modulo the curve's order.
      • Using 4 64-bit limbs (relying on __int128 support in the compiler).
      • Using 8 32-bit limbs.
  • Group operations
    • Point addition formula specifically simplified for the curve equation (y^2 = x^3 + 7).
    • Use addition between points in Jacobian and affine coordinates where possible.
    • Use a unified addition/doubling formula where necessary to avoid data-dependent branches.
    • Point/x comparison without a field inversion by comparison in the Jacobian coordinate space.
  • Point multiplication for verification (aP + bG).
    • Use wNAF notation for point multiplicands.
    • Use a much larger window for multiples of G, using precomputed multiples.
    • Use Shamir's trick to do the multiplication with the public key and the generator simultaneously.
    • Optionally (off by default) use secp256k1's efficiently-computable endomorphism to split the P multiplicand into 2 half-sized ones.
  • Point multiplication for signing
    • Use a precomputed table of multiples of powers of 16 multiplied with the generator, so general multiplication becomes a series of additions.
    • Intended to be completely free of timing sidechannels for secret-key operations (on reasonable hardware/toolchains)
      • Access the table with branch-free conditional moves so memory access is uniform.
      • No data-dependent branches
    • Optional runtime blinding which attempts to frustrate differential power analysis.
    • The precomputed tables add and eventually subtract points for which no known scalar (private key) is known, preventing even an attacker with control over the private key used to control the data internally.

Build steps

libsecp256k1 is built using autotools:

$ ./autogen.sh
$ ./configure
$ make
$ make check
$ sudo make install  # optional

Exhaustive tests

$ ./exhaustive_tests

With valgrind, you might need to increase the max stack size:

$ valgrind --max-stackframe=2500000 ./exhaustive_tests
Description
Experimental fork of libsecp256k1 with support for pedersen commitments and range proofs.
Readme 12 MiB
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