[email protected] (Niels Möller) writes:
> If someone wants to work on it, please post to the list. I might look
> into it myself, but as you have noticed, I have rather limited hacking
> time.
I've given it a try, see branch ocb-mode. Based on RFC 7253. Passes
tests, but not particularly optimized. Some comments and questions:
1. Most of the operations use only the enrypt function of the underlying
block cipher. Except ocb decrypt, which needs *both* the decrypt
function and the encrypt function. For ciphers that use different key
setup for encrypt and decrypt, e.g., AES, that means that to decrypt
OCB one needs to initialize two separate aes128_ctx. To call the
somewhat unwieldy
void
ocb_decrypt (struct ocb_ctx *ctx, const struct ocb_key *key,
const void *encrypt_ctx, nettle_cipher_func *encrypt,
const void *decrypt_ctx, nettle_cipher_func *decrypt,
size_t length, uint8_t *dst, const uint8_t *src);
2. It's not obvious how to best manage the different L_i values. Can be
computed upfront, on demand, or cached in some way. Current code
computes only L_*, L_$ and L_0 up front (part of ocb_set_key), and
the others recomputed each time they're needed.
3. The processing of the authenticated data doesn't depend on the nonce
in any way. That means that if one processes several messages with
the same key and associated data, the associated data can be
processed once, with the same sum reused for all messages.
Is that something that is useful in practice, and which nettle
interfaces should support?
4. The way the nonce is used seems designed to allow cheap incrementing
of the nonce. The nonce is used to determine
Offset_0 = Stretch[1+bottom..128+bottom]
where "bottom" is the least significant 6 bits of the nonce, acting as
a shift, and "Stretch" is independent of those nonce bits, so
unchanged on all but one out of 64 nonce increments.
Should nettle support some kind of auto-incrementing nonce that takes
advantage of this? Nettle does something similar for UMAC (not sure
if there are others).
As I said, current code is not particularly optimized, but OCB has
potential to be quite fast. The per-block processing for authentication
of the message (not associated data) is just an XOR. And
encryption/decryption can be done several blocks in parallel, like CTR
mode. If we do, e.g., 4 or 8 blocks at a time, there will be a fairly
regular structure of the needed Offset_i values, possibly making them
cheaper to setup, but I haven't yet looked into those details.
Regards,
/Niels
--
Niels Möller. PGP-encrypted email is preferred. Keyid 368C6677.
Internet email is subject to wholesale government surveillance.
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