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- Below is the original README file from the descore.shar package.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- des - fast & portable DES encryption & decryption.
- Copyright (C) 1992 Dana L. How
- This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
- it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as published by
- the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
- (at your option) any later version.
- This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
- but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
- MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
- GNU Library General Public License for more details.
- You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public License
- along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
- Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
- Author's address: how@isl.stanford.edu
- $Id: README,v 1.15 1992/05/20 00:25:32 how E $
- ==>> To compile after untarring/unsharring, just `make' <<==
- This package was designed with the following goals:
- 1. Highest possible encryption/decryption PERFORMANCE.
- 2. PORTABILITY to any byte-addressable host with a 32bit unsigned C type
- 3. Plug-compatible replacement for KERBEROS's low-level routines.
- This second release includes a number of performance enhancements for
- register-starved machines. My discussions with Richard Outerbridge,
- 71755.204@compuserve.com, sparked a number of these enhancements.
- To more rapidly understand the code in this package, inspect desSmallFips.i
- (created by typing `make') BEFORE you tackle desCode.h. The latter is set
- up in a parameterized fashion so it can easily be modified by speed-daemon
- hackers in pursuit of that last microsecond. You will find it more
- illuminating to inspect one specific implementation,
- and then move on to the common abstract skeleton with this one in mind.
- performance comparison to other available des code which i could
- compile on a SPARCStation 1 (cc -O4, gcc -O2):
- this code (byte-order independent):
- 30us per encryption (options: 64k tables, no IP/FP)
- 33us per encryption (options: 64k tables, FIPS standard bit ordering)
- 45us per encryption (options: 2k tables, no IP/FP)
- 48us per encryption (options: 2k tables, FIPS standard bit ordering)
- 275us to set a new key (uses 1k of key tables)
- this has the quickest encryption/decryption routines i've seen.
- since i was interested in fast des filters rather than crypt(3)
- and password cracking, i haven't really bothered yet to speed up
- the key setting routine. also, i have no interest in re-implementing
- all the other junk in the mit kerberos des library, so i've just
- provided my routines with little stub interfaces so they can be
- used as drop-in replacements with mit's code or any of the mit-
- compatible packages below. (note that the first two timings above
- are highly variable because of cache effects).
- kerberos des replacement from australia (version 1.95):
- 53us per encryption (uses 2k of tables)
- 96us to set a new key (uses 2.25k of key tables)
- so despite the author's inclusion of some of the performance
- improvements i had suggested to him, this package's
- encryption/decryption is still slower on the sparc and 68000.
- more specifically, 19-40% slower on the 68020 and 11-35% slower
- on the sparc, depending on the compiler;
- in full gory detail (ALT_ECB is a libdes variant):
- compiler machine desCore libdes ALT_ECB slower by
- gcc 2.1 -O2 Sun 3/110 304 uS 369.5uS 461.8uS 22%
- cc -O1 Sun 3/110 336 uS 436.6uS 399.3uS 19%
- cc -O2 Sun 3/110 360 uS 532.4uS 505.1uS 40%
- cc -O4 Sun 3/110 365 uS 532.3uS 505.3uS 38%
- gcc 2.1 -O2 Sun 4/50 48 uS 53.4uS 57.5uS 11%
- cc -O2 Sun 4/50 48 uS 64.6uS 64.7uS 35%
- cc -O4 Sun 4/50 48 uS 64.7uS 64.9uS 35%
- (my time measurements are not as accurate as his).
- the comments in my first release of desCore on version 1.92:
- 68us per encryption (uses 2k of tables)
- 96us to set a new key (uses 2.25k of key tables)
- this is a very nice package which implements the most important
- of the optimizations which i did in my encryption routines.
- it's a bit weak on common low-level optimizations which is why
- it's 39%-106% slower. because he was interested in fast crypt(3) and
- password-cracking applications, he also used the same ideas to
- speed up the key-setting routines with impressive results.
- (at some point i may do the same in my package). he also implements
- the rest of the mit des library.
- (code from eay@psych.psy.uq.oz.au via comp.sources.misc)
- fast crypt(3) package from denmark:
- the des routine here is buried inside a loop to do the
- crypt function and i didn't feel like ripping it out and measuring
- performance. his code takes 26 sparc instructions to compute one
- des iteration; above, Quick (64k) takes 21 and Small (2k) takes 37.
- he claims to use 280k of tables but the iteration calculation seems
- to use only 128k. his tables and code are machine independent.
- (code from glad@daimi.aau.dk via alt.sources or comp.sources.misc)
- swedish reimplementation of Kerberos des library
- 108us per encryption (uses 34k worth of tables)
- 134us to set a new key (uses 32k of key tables to get this speed!)
- the tables used seem to be machine-independent;
- he seems to have included a lot of special case code
- so that, e.g., `long' loads can be used instead of 4 `char' loads
- when the machine's architecture allows it.
- (code obtained from chalmers.se:pub/des)
- crack 3.3c package from england:
- as in crypt above, the des routine is buried in a loop. it's
- also very modified for crypt. his iteration code uses 16k
- of tables and appears to be slow.
- (code obtained from aem@aber.ac.uk via alt.sources or comp.sources.misc)
- ``highly optimized'' and tweaked Kerberos/Athena code (byte-order dependent):
- 165us per encryption (uses 6k worth of tables)
- 478us to set a new key (uses <1k of key tables)
- so despite the comments in this code, it was possible to get
- faster code AND smaller tables, as well as making the tables
- machine-independent.
- (code obtained from prep.ai.mit.edu)
- UC Berkeley code (depends on machine-endedness):
- 226us per encryption
- 10848us to set a new key
- table sizes are unclear, but they don't look very small
- (code obtained from wuarchive.wustl.edu)
- motivation and history
- a while ago i wanted some des routines and the routines documented on sun's
- man pages either didn't exist or dumped core. i had heard of kerberos,
- and knew that it used des, so i figured i'd use its routines. but once
- i got it and looked at the code, it really set off a lot of pet peeves -
- it was too convoluted, the code had been written without taking
- advantage of the regular structure of operations such as IP, E, and FP
- (i.e. the author didn't sit down and think before coding),
- it was excessively slow, the author had attempted to clarify the code
- by adding MORE statements to make the data movement more `consistent'
- instead of simplifying his implementation and cutting down on all data
- movement (in particular, his use of L1, R1, L2, R2), and it was full of
- idiotic `tweaks' for particular machines which failed to deliver significant
- speedups but which did obfuscate everything. so i took the test data
- from his verification program and rewrote everything else.
- a while later i ran across the great crypt(3) package mentioned above.
- the fact that this guy was computing 2 sboxes per table lookup rather
- than one (and using a MUCH larger table in the process) emboldened me to
- do the same - it was a trivial change from which i had been scared away
- by the larger table size. in his case he didn't realize you don't need to keep
- the working data in TWO forms, one for easy use of half the sboxes in
- indexing, the other for easy use of the other half; instead you can keep
- it in the form for the first half and use a simple rotate to get the other
- half. this means i have (almost) half the data manipulation and half
- the table size. in fairness though he might be encoding something particular
- to crypt(3) in his tables - i didn't check.
- i'm glad that i implemented it the way i did, because this C version is
- portable (the ifdef's are performance enhancements) and it is faster
- than versions hand-written in assembly for the sparc!
- porting notes
- one thing i did not want to do was write an enormous mess
- which depended on endedness and other machine quirks,
- and which necessarily produced different code and different lookup tables
- for different machines. see the kerberos code for an example
- of what i didn't want to do; all their endedness-specific `optimizations'
- obfuscate the code and in the end were slower than a simpler machine
- independent approach. however, there are always some portability
- considerations of some kind, and i have included some options
- for varying numbers of register variables.
- perhaps some will still regard the result as a mess!
- 1) i assume everything is byte addressable, although i don't actually
- depend on the byte order, and that bytes are 8 bits.
- i assume word pointers can be freely cast to and from char pointers.
- note that 99% of C programs make these assumptions.
- i always use unsigned char's if the high bit could be set.
- 2) the typedef `word' means a 32 bit unsigned integral type.
- if `unsigned long' is not 32 bits, change the typedef in desCore.h.
- i assume sizeof(word) == 4 EVERYWHERE.
- the (worst-case) cost of my NOT doing endedness-specific optimizations
- in the data loading and storing code surrounding the key iterations
- is less than 12%. also, there is the added benefit that
- the input and output work areas do not need to be word-aligned.
- OPTIONAL performance optimizations
- 1) you should define one of `i386,' `vax,' `mc68000,' or `sparc,'
- whichever one is closest to the capabilities of your machine.
- see the start of desCode.h to see exactly what this selection implies.
- note that if you select the wrong one, the des code will still work;
- these are just performance tweaks.
- 2) for those with functional `asm' keywords: you should change the
- ROR and ROL macros to use machine rotate instructions if you have them.
- this will save 2 instructions and a temporary per use,
- or about 32 to 40 instructions per en/decryption.
- note that gcc is smart enough to translate the ROL/R macros into
- machine rotates!
- these optimizations are all rather persnickety, yet with them you should
- be able to get performance equal to assembly-coding, except that:
- 1) with the lack of a bit rotate operator in C, rotates have to be synthesized
- from shifts. so access to `asm' will speed things up if your machine
- has rotates, as explained above in (3) (not necessary if you use gcc).
- 2) if your machine has less than 12 32-bit registers i doubt your compiler will
- generate good code.
- `i386' tries to configure the code for a 386 by only declaring 3 registers
- (it appears that gcc can use ebx, esi and edi to hold register variables).
- however, if you like assembly coding, the 386 does have 7 32-bit registers,
- and if you use ALL of them, use `scaled by 8' address modes with displacement
- and other tricks, you can get reasonable routines for DesQuickCore... with
- about 250 instructions apiece. For DesSmall... it will help to rearrange
- des_keymap, i.e., now the sbox # is the high part of the index and
- the 6 bits of data is the low part; it helps to exchange these.
- since i have no way to conveniently test it i have not provided my
- shoehorned 386 version. note that with this release of desCore, gcc is able
- to put everything in registers(!), and generate about 370 instructions apiece
- for the DesQuickCore... routines!
- coding notes
- the en/decryption routines each use 6 necessary register variables,
- with 4 being actively used at once during the inner iterations.
- if you don't have 4 register variables get a new machine.
- up to 8 more registers are used to hold constants in some configurations.
- i assume that the use of a constant is more expensive than using a register:
- a) additionally, i have tried to put the larger constants in registers.
- registering priority was by the following:
- anything more than 12 bits (bad for RISC and CISC)
- greater than 127 in value (can't use movq or byte immediate on CISC)
- 9-127 (may not be able to use CISC shift immediate or add/sub quick),
- 1-8 were never registered, being the cheapest constants.
- b) the compiler may be too stupid to realize table and table+256 should
- be assigned to different constant registers and instead repetitively
- do the arithmetic, so i assign these to explicit `m' register variables
- when possible and helpful.
- i assume that indexing is cheaper or equivalent to auto increment/decrement,
- where the index is 7 bits unsigned or smaller.
- this assumption is reversed for 68k and vax.
- i assume that addresses can be cheaply formed from two registers,
- or from a register and a small constant.
- for the 68000, the `two registers and small offset' form is used sparingly.
- all index scaling is done explicitly - no hidden shifts by log2(sizeof).
- the code is written so that even a dumb compiler
- should never need more than one hidden temporary,
- increasing the chance that everything will fit in the registers.
- KEEP THIS MORE SUBTLE POINT IN MIND IF YOU REWRITE ANYTHING.
- (actually, there are some code fragments now which do require two temps,
- but fixing it would either break the structure of the macros or
- require declaring another temporary).
- special efficient data format
- bits are manipulated in this arrangement most of the time (S7 S5 S3 S1):
- 003130292827xxxx242322212019xxxx161514131211xxxx080706050403xxxx
- (the x bits are still there, i'm just emphasizing where the S boxes are).
- bits are rotated left 4 when computing S6 S4 S2 S0:
- 282726252423xxxx201918171615xxxx121110090807xxxx040302010031xxxx
- the rightmost two bits are usually cleared so the lower byte can be used
- as an index into an sbox mapping table. the next two x'd bits are set
- to various values to access different parts of the tables.
- how to use the routines
- datatypes:
- pointer to 8 byte area of type DesData
- used to hold keys and input/output blocks to des.
- pointer to 128 byte area of type DesKeys
- used to hold full 768-bit key.
- must be long-aligned.
- DesQuickInit()
- call this before using any other routine with `Quick' in its name.
- it generates the special 64k table these routines need.
- DesQuickDone()
- frees this table
- DesMethod(m, k)
- m points to a 128byte block, k points to an 8 byte des key
- which must have odd parity (or -1 is returned) and which must
- not be a (semi-)weak key (or -2 is returned).
- normally DesMethod() returns 0.
- m is filled in from k so that when one of the routines below
- is called with m, the routine will act like standard des
- en/decryption with the key k. if you use DesMethod,
- you supply a standard 56bit key; however, if you fill in
- m yourself, you will get a 768bit key - but then it won't
- be standard. it's 768bits not 1024 because the least significant
- two bits of each byte are not used. note that these two bits
- will be set to magic constants which speed up the encryption/decryption
- on some machines. and yes, each byte controls
- a specific sbox during a specific iteration.
- you really shouldn't use the 768bit format directly; i should
- provide a routine that converts 128 6-bit bytes (specified in
- S-box mapping order or something) into the right format for you.
- this would entail some byte concatenation and rotation.
- Des{Small|Quick}{Fips|Core}{Encrypt|Decrypt}(d, m, s)
- performs des on the 8 bytes at s into the 8 bytes at d. (d,s: char *).
- uses m as a 768bit key as explained above.
- the Encrypt|Decrypt choice is obvious.
- Fips|Core determines whether a completely standard FIPS initial
- and final permutation is done; if not, then the data is loaded
- and stored in a nonstandard bit order (FIPS w/o IP/FP).
- Fips slows down Quick by 10%, Small by 9%.
- Small|Quick determines whether you use the normal routine
- or the crazy quick one which gobbles up 64k more of memory.
- Small is 50% slower then Quick, but Quick needs 32 times as much
- memory. Quick is included for programs that do nothing but DES,
- e.g., encryption filters, etc.
- Getting it to compile on your machine
- there are no machine-dependencies in the code (see porting),
- except perhaps the `now()' macro in desTest.c.
- ALL generated tables are machine independent.
- you should edit the Makefile with the appropriate optimization flags
- for your compiler (MAX optimization).
- Speeding up kerberos (and/or its des library)
- note that i have included a kerberos-compatible interface in desUtil.c
- through the functions des_key_sched() and des_ecb_encrypt().
- to use these with kerberos or kerberos-compatible code put desCore.a
- ahead of the kerberos-compatible library on your linker's command line.
- you should not need to #include desCore.h; just include the header
- file provided with the kerberos library.
- Other uses
- the macros in desCode.h would be very useful for putting inline des
- functions in more complicated encryption routines.
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