67f232b5d8
2ed54da18a Merge #755: Recovery signing: add to constant time test, and eliminate non ct operators
28609507e7 Add tests for the cmov implementations
73596a85a2 Add ecdsa_sign_recoverable to the ctime tests
2876af4f8d Split ecdsa_sign logic into a new function and use it from ecdsa_sign and recovery
5e1c885efb Merge #754: Fix uninit values passed into cmov
f79a7adcf5 Add valgrind uninit check to cmovs output
05d315affe Merge #752: autoconf: Use ":" instead of "dnl" as a noop
a39c2b09de Fixed UB(arithmetics on uninit values) in cmovs
3a6fd7f636 Merge #750: Add macOS to the CI
5e8747ae2a autoconf: Use ":" instead of "dnl" as a noop
71757da5cc Explictly pass SECP256K1_BENCH_ITERS to the benchmarks in travis.sh
99bd661d71 Replace travis_wait with a loop printing "\a" to stdout every minute
bc818b160c Bump travis Ubuntu from xenial(16.04) to bionic(18.04)
0c5ff9066e Add macOS support to travis
b6807d91d8 Move travis script into a standalone sh file
f39f99be0e Merge #701: Make ec_ arithmetic more consistent and add documentation
39198a03ea Merge #732: Retry if r is zero during signing
59a8de8f64 Merge #742: Fix typo in ecmult_const_impl.h
4e284655d9 Fix typo in ecmult_const_impl.h
f862b4ca13 Merge #740: Make recovery/main_impl.h non-executable
ffef45c98a Make recovery/main_impl.h non-executable
2361b3719a Merge #735: build: fix OpenSSL EC detection on macOS
3b7d26b23c build: add SECP_TEST_INCLUDES to bench_verify CPPFLAGS
84b5fc5bc3 build: fix OpenSSL EC detection on macOS
37ed51a7ea Make ecdsa_sig_sign constant-time again after reverting
|
||
---|---|---|
build-aux/m4 | ||
contrib | ||
include | ||
obj | ||
sage | ||
src | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
autogen.sh | ||
configure.ac | ||
COPYING | ||
libsecp256k1.pc.in | ||
Makefile.am | ||
README.md | ||
SECURITY.md | ||
TODO |
libsecp256k1
Optimized C library for ECDSA signatures and secret/public key operations on curve secp256k1.
This library is intended to be the highest quality publicly available library for cryptography on the secp256k1 curve. However, the primary focus of its development has been for usage in the Bitcoin system and usage unlike Bitcoin's may be less well tested, verified, or suffer from a less well thought out interface. Correct usage requires some care and consideration that the library is fit for your application's purpose.
Features:
- secp256k1 ECDSA signing/verification and key generation.
- Additive and multiplicative tweaking of secret/public keys.
- Serialization/parsing of secret keys, public keys, signatures.
- Constant time, constant memory access signing and public key generation.
- Derandomized ECDSA (via RFC6979 or with a caller provided function.)
- Very efficient implementation.
- Suitable for embedded systems.
- Optional module for public key recovery.
- Optional module for ECDH key exchange (experimental).
Experimental features have not received enough scrutiny to satisfy the standard of quality of this library but are made available for testing and review by the community. The APIs of these features should not be considered stable.
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.
- 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 (including hand-optimized assembly for 32-bit ARM, by Wladimir J. van der Laan).
- Field inverses and square roots using a sliding window over blocks of 1s (by Peter Dettman).
- Optimized implementation of arithmetic modulo the curve's field size (2^256 - 0x1000003D1).
- 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.
- Optimized implementation without data-dependent branches of arithmetic modulo the curve's order.
- 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 (secret key) is known, preventing even an attacker with control over the secret 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
Test coverage
This library aims to have full coverage of the reachable lines and branches.
To create a test coverage report, configure with --enable-coverage
(use of GCC is necessary):
$ ./configure --enable-coverage
Run the tests:
$ make check
To create a report, gcovr
is recommended, as it includes branch coverage reporting:
$ gcovr --exclude 'src/bench*' --print-summary
To create a HTML report with coloured and annotated source code:
$ gcovr --exclude 'src/bench*' --html --html-details -o coverage.html
Reporting a vulnerability
See SECURITY.md