The blockchain that provides the digital content namespace for the LBRY protocol
7873633b57
50cc6ab Merge pull request #178 941e221 Add tests for handling of the nonce function in signing. 10c81ff Merge pull request #177 7688e34 Add magnitude limits to secp256k1_fe_verify to ensure that it's own tests function correctly. 4ee4f7a Merge pull request #176 70ae0d2 Use secp256k1_fe_equal_var in secp256k1_fe_sqrt_var. 7767b4d Merge pull request #175 9ab9335 Add a reference consistency test to ge_tests. 60571c6 Rework group tests d26e26f Avoid constructing an invalid signature with probability 1:2^256. b450c34 Merge pull request #163 d57cae9 Merge pull request #154 49ee0db Add _normalizes_to_zero_var variant eed599d Add _fe_normalizes_to_zero method d7174ed Weak normalization for secp256k1_fe_equal 0295f0a weak normalization bbd5ba7 Use rfc6979 as default nonce generation function b37fbc2 Implement SHA256 / HMAC-SHA256 / RFC6979. c6e7f4e [API BREAK] Use a nonce-generation function instead of a nonce cf0c48b Merge pull request #169 603c33b Make signing fail if a too small buffer is passed. 6d16606 Merge pull request #168 7277fd7 Remove GMP field implementation e99c4c4 Merge pull request #123 13278f6 Add explanation about how inversion can be avoided ce7eb6f Optimize verification: avoid field inverse a098f78 Merge pull request #160 38acd01 Merge pull request #165 6a59012 Make git ignore bench_recover when configured with benchmark enabled 1ba4a60 Configure options reorganization 3c0f246 Merge pull request #157 808dd9b Merge pull request #156 8dc75e9 Merge pull request #158 28ade27 build: nuke bashisms 5190079 build: use subdir-objects for automake 8336040 build: disable benchmark by default git-subtree-dir: src/secp256k1 git-subtree-split: 50cc6ab0625efda6dddf1dc86c1e2671f069b0d8 |
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src | ||
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libsecp256k1.pc.in | ||
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README.md | ||
TODO |
libsecp256k1
Optimized C library for EC operations on curve secp256k1.
This library is experimental, so use at your own risk.
Features:
- Low-level field and group operations on secp256k1.
- ECDSA signing/verification and key generation.
- Adding/multiplying private/public keys.
- Serialization/parsing of private keys, public keys, signatures.
- Very efficient implementation.
Implementation details
- General
- Avoid dynamic memory usage almost everywhere.
- 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.
- Using GMP.
- 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 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 use secp256k1's efficiently-computable endomorphism to split the multiplicands into 4 half-sized ones first.
- 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.
- Slice the precomputed table in memory per byte, so memory access to the table becomes uniform.
- No data-dependent branches
- 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
$ sudo make install # optional