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"""
This file contains some classical ciphers and routines
implementing a linear-feedback shift register (LFSR)
and the Diffie-Hellman key exchange.
.. warning::
This module is intended for educational purposes only. Do not use the
functions in this module for real cryptographic applications. If you wish
to encrypt real data, we recommend using something like the `cryptography
<https://cryptography.io/en/latest/>`_ module.
"""
from string import whitespace, ascii_uppercase as uppercase, printable
from functools import reduce
import warnings
from itertools import cycle
from sympy.core import Symbol
from sympy.core.numbers import igcdex, mod_inverse, igcd, Rational
from sympy.core.random import _randrange, _randint
from sympy.matrices import Matrix
from sympy.ntheory import isprime, primitive_root, factorint
from sympy.ntheory import totient as _euler
from sympy.ntheory import reduced_totient as _carmichael
from sympy.ntheory.generate import nextprime
from sympy.ntheory.modular import crt
from sympy.polys.domains import FF
from sympy.polys.polytools import gcd, Poly
from sympy.utilities.misc import as_int, filldedent, translate
from sympy.utilities.iterables import uniq, multiset
class NonInvertibleCipherWarning(RuntimeWarning):
"""A warning raised if the cipher is not invertible."""
def __init__(self, msg):
self.fullMessage = msg
def __str__(self):
return '\n\t' + self.fullMessage
def warn(self, stacklevel=3):
warnings.warn(self, stacklevel=stacklevel)
def AZ(s=None):
"""Return the letters of ``s`` in uppercase. In case more than
one string is passed, each of them will be processed and a list
of upper case strings will be returned.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import AZ
>>> AZ('Hello, world!')
'HELLOWORLD'
>>> AZ('Hello, world!'.split())
['HELLO', 'WORLD']
See Also
========
check_and_join
"""
if not s:
return uppercase
t = isinstance(s, str)
if t:
s = [s]
rv = [check_and_join(i.upper().split(), uppercase, filter=True)
for i in s]
if t:
return rv[0]
return rv
bifid5 = AZ().replace('J', '')
bifid6 = AZ() + '0123456789'
bifid10 = printable
def padded_key(key, symbols):
"""Return a string of the distinct characters of ``symbols`` with
those of ``key`` appearing first. A ValueError is raised if
a) there are duplicate characters in ``symbols`` or
b) there are characters in ``key`` that are not in ``symbols``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import padded_key
>>> padded_key('PUPPY', 'OPQRSTUVWXY')
'PUYOQRSTVWX'
>>> padded_key('RSA', 'ARTIST')
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError: duplicate characters in symbols: T
"""
syms = list(uniq(symbols))
if len(syms) != len(symbols):
extra = ''.join(sorted({
i for i in symbols if symbols.count(i) > 1}))
raise ValueError('duplicate characters in symbols: %s' % extra)
extra = set(key) - set(syms)
if extra:
raise ValueError(
'characters in key but not symbols: %s' % ''.join(
sorted(extra)))
key0 = ''.join(list(uniq(key)))
# remove from syms characters in key0
return key0 + translate(''.join(syms), None, key0)
def check_and_join(phrase, symbols=None, filter=None):
"""
Joins characters of ``phrase`` and if ``symbols`` is given, raises
an error if any character in ``phrase`` is not in ``symbols``.
Parameters
==========
phrase
String or list of strings to be returned as a string.
symbols
Iterable of characters allowed in ``phrase``.
If ``symbols`` is ``None``, no checking is performed.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import check_and_join
>>> check_and_join('a phrase')
'a phrase'
>>> check_and_join('a phrase'.upper().split())
'APHRASE'
>>> check_and_join('a phrase!'.upper().split(), 'ARE', filter=True)
'ARAE'
>>> check_and_join('a phrase!'.upper().split(), 'ARE')
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError: characters in phrase but not symbols: "!HPS"
"""
rv = ''.join(''.join(phrase))
if symbols is not None:
symbols = check_and_join(symbols)
missing = ''.join(sorted(set(rv) - set(symbols)))
if missing:
if not filter:
raise ValueError(
'characters in phrase but not symbols: "%s"' % missing)
rv = translate(rv, None, missing)
return rv
def _prep(msg, key, alp, default=None):
if not alp:
if not default:
alp = AZ()
msg = AZ(msg)
key = AZ(key)
else:
alp = default
else:
alp = ''.join(alp)
key = check_and_join(key, alp, filter=True)
msg = check_and_join(msg, alp, filter=True)
return msg, key, alp
def cycle_list(k, n):
"""
Returns the elements of the list ``range(n)`` shifted to the
left by ``k`` (so the list starts with ``k`` (mod ``n``)).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import cycle_list
>>> cycle_list(3, 10)
[3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 0, 1, 2]
"""
k = k % n
return list(range(k, n)) + list(range(k))
######## shift cipher examples ############
def encipher_shift(msg, key, symbols=None):
"""
Performs shift cipher encryption on plaintext msg, and returns the
ciphertext.
Parameters
==========
key : int
The secret key.
msg : str
Plaintext of upper-case letters.
Returns
=======
str
Ciphertext of upper-case letters.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import encipher_shift, decipher_shift
>>> msg = "GONAVYBEATARMY"
>>> ct = encipher_shift(msg, 1); ct
'HPOBWZCFBUBSNZ'
To decipher the shifted text, change the sign of the key:
>>> encipher_shift(ct, -1)
'GONAVYBEATARMY'
There is also a convenience function that does this with the
original key:
>>> decipher_shift(ct, 1)
'GONAVYBEATARMY'
Notes
=====
ALGORITHM:
STEPS:
0. Number the letters of the alphabet from 0, ..., N
1. Compute from the string ``msg`` a list ``L1`` of
corresponding integers.
2. Compute from the list ``L1`` a new list ``L2``, given by
adding ``(k mod 26)`` to each element in ``L1``.
3. Compute from the list ``L2`` a string ``ct`` of
corresponding letters.
The shift cipher is also called the Caesar cipher, after
Julius Caesar, who, according to Suetonius, used it with a
shift of three to protect messages of military significance.
Caesar's nephew Augustus reportedly used a similar cipher, but
with a right shift of 1.
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caesar_cipher
.. [2] https://mathworld.wolfram.com/CaesarsMethod.html
See Also
========
decipher_shift
"""
msg, _, A = _prep(msg, '', symbols)
shift = len(A) - key % len(A)
key = A[shift:] + A[:shift]
return translate(msg, key, A)
def decipher_shift(msg, key, symbols=None):
"""
Return the text by shifting the characters of ``msg`` to the
left by the amount given by ``key``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import encipher_shift, decipher_shift
>>> msg = "GONAVYBEATARMY"
>>> ct = encipher_shift(msg, 1); ct
'HPOBWZCFBUBSNZ'
To decipher the shifted text, change the sign of the key:
>>> encipher_shift(ct, -1)
'GONAVYBEATARMY'
Or use this function with the original key:
>>> decipher_shift(ct, 1)
'GONAVYBEATARMY'
"""
return encipher_shift(msg, -key, symbols)
def encipher_rot13(msg, symbols=None):
"""
Performs the ROT13 encryption on a given plaintext ``msg``.
Explanation
===========
ROT13 is a substitution cipher which substitutes each letter
in the plaintext message for the letter furthest away from it
in the English alphabet.
Equivalently, it is just a Caeser (shift) cipher with a shift
key of 13 (midway point of the alphabet).
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ROT13
See Also
========
decipher_rot13
encipher_shift
"""
return encipher_shift(msg, 13, symbols)
def decipher_rot13(msg, symbols=None):
"""
Performs the ROT13 decryption on a given plaintext ``msg``.
Explanation
============
``decipher_rot13`` is equivalent to ``encipher_rot13`` as both
``decipher_shift`` with a key of 13 and ``encipher_shift`` key with a
key of 13 will return the same results. Nonetheless,
``decipher_rot13`` has nonetheless been explicitly defined here for
consistency.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import encipher_rot13, decipher_rot13
>>> msg = 'GONAVYBEATARMY'
>>> ciphertext = encipher_rot13(msg);ciphertext
'TBANILORNGNEZL'
>>> decipher_rot13(ciphertext)
'GONAVYBEATARMY'
>>> encipher_rot13(msg) == decipher_rot13(msg)
True
>>> msg == decipher_rot13(ciphertext)
True
"""
return decipher_shift(msg, 13, symbols)
######## affine cipher examples ############
def encipher_affine(msg, key, symbols=None, _inverse=False):
r"""
Performs the affine cipher encryption on plaintext ``msg``, and
returns the ciphertext.
Explanation
===========
Encryption is based on the map `x \rightarrow ax+b` (mod `N`)
where ``N`` is the number of characters in the alphabet.
Decryption is based on the map `x \rightarrow cx+d` (mod `N`),
where `c = a^{-1}` (mod `N`) and `d = -a^{-1}b` (mod `N`).
In particular, for the map to be invertible, we need
`\mathrm{gcd}(a, N) = 1` and an error will be raised if this is
not true.
Parameters
==========
msg : str
Characters that appear in ``symbols``.
a, b : int, int
A pair integers, with ``gcd(a, N) = 1`` (the secret key).
symbols
String of characters (default = uppercase letters).
When no symbols are given, ``msg`` is converted to upper case
letters and all other characters are ignored.
Returns
=======
ct
String of characters (the ciphertext message)
Notes
=====
ALGORITHM:
STEPS:
0. Number the letters of the alphabet from 0, ..., N
1. Compute from the string ``msg`` a list ``L1`` of
corresponding integers.
2. Compute from the list ``L1`` a new list ``L2``, given by
replacing ``x`` by ``a*x + b (mod N)``, for each element
``x`` in ``L1``.
3. Compute from the list ``L2`` a string ``ct`` of
corresponding letters.
This is a straightforward generalization of the shift cipher with
the added complexity of requiring 2 characters to be deciphered in
order to recover the key.
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Affine_cipher
See Also
========
decipher_affine
"""
msg, _, A = _prep(msg, '', symbols)
N = len(A)
a, b = key
assert gcd(a, N) == 1
if _inverse:
c = mod_inverse(a, N)
d = -b*c
a, b = c, d
B = ''.join([A[(a*i + b) % N] for i in range(N)])
return translate(msg, A, B)
def decipher_affine(msg, key, symbols=None):
r"""
Return the deciphered text that was made from the mapping,
`x \rightarrow ax+b` (mod `N`), where ``N`` is the
number of characters in the alphabet. Deciphering is done by
reciphering with a new key: `x \rightarrow cx+d` (mod `N`),
where `c = a^{-1}` (mod `N`) and `d = -a^{-1}b` (mod `N`).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import encipher_affine, decipher_affine
>>> msg = "GO NAVY BEAT ARMY"
>>> key = (3, 1)
>>> encipher_affine(msg, key)
'TROBMVENBGBALV'
>>> decipher_affine(_, key)
'GONAVYBEATARMY'
See Also
========
encipher_affine
"""
return encipher_affine(msg, key, symbols, _inverse=True)
def encipher_atbash(msg, symbols=None):
r"""
Enciphers a given ``msg`` into its Atbash ciphertext and returns it.
Explanation
===========
Atbash is a substitution cipher originally used to encrypt the Hebrew
alphabet. Atbash works on the principle of mapping each alphabet to its
reverse / counterpart (i.e. a would map to z, b to y etc.)
Atbash is functionally equivalent to the affine cipher with ``a = 25``
and ``b = 25``
See Also
========
decipher_atbash
"""
return encipher_affine(msg, (25, 25), symbols)
def decipher_atbash(msg, symbols=None):
r"""
Deciphers a given ``msg`` using Atbash cipher and returns it.
Explanation
===========
``decipher_atbash`` is functionally equivalent to ``encipher_atbash``.
However, it has still been added as a separate function to maintain
consistency.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import encipher_atbash, decipher_atbash
>>> msg = 'GONAVYBEATARMY'
>>> encipher_atbash(msg)
'TLMZEBYVZGZINB'
>>> decipher_atbash(msg)
'TLMZEBYVZGZINB'
>>> encipher_atbash(msg) == decipher_atbash(msg)
True
>>> msg == encipher_atbash(encipher_atbash(msg))
True
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atbash
See Also
========
encipher_atbash
"""
return decipher_affine(msg, (25, 25), symbols)
#################### substitution cipher ###########################
def encipher_substitution(msg, old, new=None):
r"""
Returns the ciphertext obtained by replacing each character that
appears in ``old`` with the corresponding character in ``new``.
If ``old`` is a mapping, then new is ignored and the replacements
defined by ``old`` are used.
Explanation
===========
This is a more general than the affine cipher in that the key can
only be recovered by determining the mapping for each symbol.
Though in practice, once a few symbols are recognized the mappings
for other characters can be quickly guessed.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import encipher_substitution, AZ
>>> old = 'OEYAG'
>>> new = '034^6'
>>> msg = AZ("go navy! beat army!")
>>> ct = encipher_substitution(msg, old, new); ct
'60N^V4B3^T^RM4'
To decrypt a substitution, reverse the last two arguments:
>>> encipher_substitution(ct, new, old)
'GONAVYBEATARMY'
In the special case where ``old`` and ``new`` are a permutation of
order 2 (representing a transposition of characters) their order
is immaterial:
>>> old = 'NAVY'
>>> new = 'ANYV'
>>> encipher = lambda x: encipher_substitution(x, old, new)
>>> encipher('NAVY')
'ANYV'
>>> encipher(_)
'NAVY'
The substitution cipher, in general, is a method
whereby "units" (not necessarily single characters) of plaintext
are replaced with ciphertext according to a regular system.
>>> ords = dict(zip('abc', ['\\%i' % ord(i) for i in 'abc']))
>>> print(encipher_substitution('abc', ords))
\97\98\99
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Substitution_cipher
"""
return translate(msg, old, new)
######################################################################
#################### Vigenere cipher examples ########################
######################################################################
def encipher_vigenere(msg, key, symbols=None):
"""
Performs the Vigenere cipher encryption on plaintext ``msg``, and
returns the ciphertext.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import encipher_vigenere, AZ
>>> key = "encrypt"
>>> msg = "meet me on monday"
>>> encipher_vigenere(msg, key)
'QRGKKTHRZQEBPR'
Section 1 of the Kryptos sculpture at the CIA headquarters
uses this cipher and also changes the order of the
alphabet [2]_. Here is the first line of that section of
the sculpture:
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import decipher_vigenere, padded_key
>>> alp = padded_key('KRYPTOS', AZ())
>>> key = 'PALIMPSEST'
>>> msg = 'EMUFPHZLRFAXYUSDJKZLDKRNSHGNFIVJ'
>>> decipher_vigenere(msg, key, alp)
'BETWEENSUBTLESHADINGANDTHEABSENC'
Explanation
===========
The Vigenere cipher is named after Blaise de Vigenere, a sixteenth
century diplomat and cryptographer, by a historical accident.
Vigenere actually invented a different and more complicated cipher.
The so-called *Vigenere cipher* was actually invented
by Giovan Batista Belaso in 1553.
This cipher was used in the 1800's, for example, during the American
Civil War. The Confederacy used a brass cipher disk to implement the
Vigenere cipher (now on display in the NSA Museum in Fort
Meade) [1]_.
The Vigenere cipher is a generalization of the shift cipher.
Whereas the shift cipher shifts each letter by the same amount
(that amount being the key of the shift cipher) the Vigenere
cipher shifts a letter by an amount determined by the key (which is
a word or phrase known only to the sender and receiver).
For example, if the key was a single letter, such as "C", then the
so-called Vigenere cipher is actually a shift cipher with a
shift of `2` (since "C" is the 2nd letter of the alphabet, if
you start counting at `0`). If the key was a word with two
letters, such as "CA", then the so-called Vigenere cipher will
shift letters in even positions by `2` and letters in odd positions
are left alone (shifted by `0`, since "A" is the 0th letter, if
you start counting at `0`).
ALGORITHM:
INPUT:
``msg``: string of characters that appear in ``symbols``
(the plaintext)
``key``: a string of characters that appear in ``symbols``
(the secret key)
``symbols``: a string of letters defining the alphabet
OUTPUT:
``ct``: string of characters (the ciphertext message)
STEPS:
0. Number the letters of the alphabet from 0, ..., N
1. Compute from the string ``key`` a list ``L1`` of
corresponding integers. Let ``n1 = len(L1)``.
2. Compute from the string ``msg`` a list ``L2`` of
corresponding integers. Let ``n2 = len(L2)``.
3. Break ``L2`` up sequentially into sublists of size
``n1``; the last sublist may be smaller than ``n1``
4. For each of these sublists ``L`` of ``L2``, compute a
new list ``C`` given by ``C[i] = L[i] + L1[i] (mod N)``
to the ``i``-th element in the sublist, for each ``i``.
5. Assemble these lists ``C`` by concatenation into a new
list of length ``n2``.
6. Compute from the new list a string ``ct`` of
corresponding letters.
Once it is known that the key is, say, `n` characters long,
frequency analysis can be applied to every `n`-th letter of
the ciphertext to determine the plaintext. This method is
called *Kasiski examination* (although it was first discovered
by Babbage). If they key is as long as the message and is
comprised of randomly selected characters -- a one-time pad -- the
message is theoretically unbreakable.
The cipher Vigenere actually discovered is an "auto-key" cipher
described as follows.
ALGORITHM:
INPUT:
``key``: a string of letters (the secret key)
``msg``: string of letters (the plaintext message)
OUTPUT:
``ct``: string of upper-case letters (the ciphertext message)
STEPS:
0. Number the letters of the alphabet from 0, ..., N
1. Compute from the string ``msg`` a list ``L2`` of
corresponding integers. Let ``n2 = len(L2)``.
2. Let ``n1`` be the length of the key. Append to the
string ``key`` the first ``n2 - n1`` characters of
the plaintext message. Compute from this string (also of
length ``n2``) a list ``L1`` of integers corresponding
to the letter numbers in the first step.
3. Compute a new list ``C`` given by
``C[i] = L1[i] + L2[i] (mod N)``.
4. Compute from the new list a string ``ct`` of letters
corresponding to the new integers.
To decipher the auto-key ciphertext, the key is used to decipher
the first ``n1`` characters and then those characters become the
key to decipher the next ``n1`` characters, etc...:
>>> m = AZ('go navy, beat army! yes you can'); m
'GONAVYBEATARMYYESYOUCAN'
>>> key = AZ('gold bug'); n1 = len(key); n2 = len(m)
>>> auto_key = key + m[:n2 - n1]; auto_key
'GOLDBUGGONAVYBEATARMYYE'
>>> ct = encipher_vigenere(m, auto_key); ct
'MCYDWSHKOGAMKZCELYFGAYR'
>>> n1 = len(key)
>>> pt = []
>>> while ct:
... part, ct = ct[:n1], ct[n1:]
... pt.append(decipher_vigenere(part, key))
... key = pt[-1]
...
>>> ''.join(pt) == m
True
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vigenere_cipher
.. [2] https://web.archive.org/web/20071116100808/https://filebox.vt.edu/users/batman/kryptos.html
(short URL: https://goo.gl/ijr22d)
"""
msg, key, A = _prep(msg, key, symbols)
map = {c: i for i, c in enumerate(A)}
key = [map[c] for c in key]
N = len(map)
k = len(key)
rv = []
for i, m in enumerate(msg):
rv.append(A[(map[m] + key[i % k]) % N])
rv = ''.join(rv)
return rv
def decipher_vigenere(msg, key, symbols=None):
"""
Decode using the Vigenere cipher.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import decipher_vigenere
>>> key = "encrypt"
>>> ct = "QRGK kt HRZQE BPR"
>>> decipher_vigenere(ct, key)
'MEETMEONMONDAY'
"""
msg, key, A = _prep(msg, key, symbols)
map = {c: i for i, c in enumerate(A)}
N = len(A) # normally, 26
K = [map[c] for c in key]
n = len(K)
C = [map[c] for c in msg]
rv = ''.join([A[(-K[i % n] + c) % N] for i, c in enumerate(C)])
return rv
#################### Hill cipher ########################
def encipher_hill(msg, key, symbols=None, pad="Q"):
r"""
Return the Hill cipher encryption of ``msg``.
Explanation
===========
The Hill cipher [1]_, invented by Lester S. Hill in the 1920's [2]_,
was the first polygraphic cipher in which it was practical
(though barely) to operate on more than three symbols at once.
The following discussion assumes an elementary knowledge of
matrices.
First, each letter is first encoded as a number starting with 0.
Suppose your message `msg` consists of `n` capital letters, with no
spaces. This may be regarded an `n`-tuple M of elements of
`Z_{26}` (if the letters are those of the English alphabet). A key
in the Hill cipher is a `k x k` matrix `K`, all of whose entries
are in `Z_{26}`, such that the matrix `K` is invertible (i.e., the
linear transformation `K: Z_{N}^k \rightarrow Z_{N}^k`
is one-to-one).
Parameters
==========
msg
Plaintext message of `n` upper-case letters.
key
A `k \times k` invertible matrix `K`, all of whose entries are
in `Z_{26}` (or whatever number of symbols are being used).
pad
Character (default "Q") to use to make length of text be a
multiple of ``k``.
Returns
=======
ct
Ciphertext of upper-case letters.
Notes
=====
ALGORITHM:
STEPS:
0. Number the letters of the alphabet from 0, ..., N
1. Compute from the string ``msg`` a list ``L`` of
corresponding integers. Let ``n = len(L)``.
2. Break the list ``L`` up into ``t = ceiling(n/k)``
sublists ``L_1``, ..., ``L_t`` of size ``k`` (with
the last list "padded" to ensure its size is
``k``).
3. Compute new list ``C_1``, ..., ``C_t`` given by
``C[i] = K*L_i`` (arithmetic is done mod N), for each
``i``.
4. Concatenate these into a list ``C = C_1 + ... + C_t``.
5. Compute from ``C`` a string ``ct`` of corresponding
letters. This has length ``k*t``.
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hill_cipher
.. [2] Lester S. Hill, Cryptography in an Algebraic Alphabet,
The American Mathematical Monthly Vol.36, June-July 1929,
pp.306-312.
See Also
========
decipher_hill
"""
assert key.is_square
assert len(pad) == 1
msg, pad, A = _prep(msg, pad, symbols)
map = {c: i for i, c in enumerate(A)}
P = [map[c] for c in msg]
N = len(A)
k = key.cols
n = len(P)
m, r = divmod(n, k)
if r:
P = P + [map[pad]]*(k - r)
m += 1
rv = ''.join([A[c % N] for j in range(m) for c in
list(key*Matrix(k, 1, [P[i]
for i in range(k*j, k*(j + 1))]))])
return rv
def decipher_hill(msg, key, symbols=None):
"""
Deciphering is the same as enciphering but using the inverse of the
key matrix.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import encipher_hill, decipher_hill
>>> from sympy import Matrix
>>> key = Matrix([[1, 2], [3, 5]])
>>> encipher_hill("meet me on monday", key)
'UEQDUEODOCTCWQ'
>>> decipher_hill(_, key)
'MEETMEONMONDAY'
When the length of the plaintext (stripped of invalid characters)
is not a multiple of the key dimension, extra characters will
appear at the end of the enciphered and deciphered text. In order to
decipher the text, those characters must be included in the text to
be deciphered. In the following, the key has a dimension of 4 but
the text is 2 short of being a multiple of 4 so two characters will
be added.
>>> key = Matrix([[1, 1, 1, 2], [0, 1, 1, 0],
... [2, 2, 3, 4], [1, 1, 0, 1]])
>>> msg = "ST"
>>> encipher_hill(msg, key)
'HJEB'
>>> decipher_hill(_, key)
'STQQ'
>>> encipher_hill(msg, key, pad="Z")
'ISPK'
>>> decipher_hill(_, key)
'STZZ'
If the last two characters of the ciphertext were ignored in
either case, the wrong plaintext would be recovered:
>>> decipher_hill("HD", key)
'ORMV'
>>> decipher_hill("IS", key)
'UIKY'
See Also
========
encipher_hill
"""
assert key.is_square
msg, _, A = _prep(msg, '', symbols)
map = {c: i for i, c in enumerate(A)}
C = [map[c] for c in msg]
N = len(A)
k = key.cols
n = len(C)
m, r = divmod(n, k)
if r:
C = C + [0]*(k - r)
m += 1
key_inv = key.inv_mod(N)
rv = ''.join([A[p % N] for j in range(m) for p in
list(key_inv*Matrix(
k, 1, [C[i] for i in range(k*j, k*(j + 1))]))])
return rv
#################### Bifid cipher ########################
def encipher_bifid(msg, key, symbols=None):
r"""
Performs the Bifid cipher encryption on plaintext ``msg``, and
returns the ciphertext.
This is the version of the Bifid cipher that uses an `n \times n`
Polybius square.
Parameters
==========
msg
Plaintext string.
key
Short string for key.
Duplicate characters are ignored and then it is padded with the
characters in ``symbols`` that were not in the short key.
symbols
`n \times n` characters defining the alphabet.
(default is string.printable)
Returns
=======
ciphertext
Ciphertext using Bifid5 cipher without spaces.
See Also
========
decipher_bifid, encipher_bifid5, encipher_bifid6
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bifid_cipher
"""
msg, key, A = _prep(msg, key, symbols, bifid10)
long_key = ''.join(uniq(key)) or A
n = len(A)**.5
if n != int(n):
raise ValueError(
'Length of alphabet (%s) is not a square number.' % len(A))
N = int(n)
if len(long_key) < N**2:
long_key = list(long_key) + [x for x in A if x not in long_key]
# the fractionalization
row_col = {ch: divmod(i, N) for i, ch in enumerate(long_key)}
r, c = zip(*[row_col[x] for x in msg])
rc = r + c
ch = {i: ch for ch, i in row_col.items()}
rv = ''.join(ch[i] for i in zip(rc[::2], rc[1::2]))
return rv
def decipher_bifid(msg, key, symbols=None):
r"""
Performs the Bifid cipher decryption on ciphertext ``msg``, and
returns the plaintext.
This is the version of the Bifid cipher that uses the `n \times n`
Polybius square.
Parameters
==========
msg
Ciphertext string.
key
Short string for key.
Duplicate characters are ignored and then it is padded with the
characters in symbols that were not in the short key.
symbols
`n \times n` characters defining the alphabet.
(default=string.printable, a `10 \times 10` matrix)
Returns
=======
deciphered
Deciphered text.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import (
... encipher_bifid, decipher_bifid, AZ)
Do an encryption using the bifid5 alphabet:
>>> alp = AZ().replace('J', '')
>>> ct = AZ("meet me on monday!")
>>> key = AZ("gold bug")
>>> encipher_bifid(ct, key, alp)
'IEILHHFSTSFQYE'
When entering the text or ciphertext, spaces are ignored so it
can be formatted as desired. Re-entering the ciphertext from the
preceding, putting 4 characters per line and padding with an extra
J, does not cause problems for the deciphering:
>>> decipher_bifid('''
... IEILH
... HFSTS
... FQYEJ''', key, alp)
'MEETMEONMONDAY'
When no alphabet is given, all 100 printable characters will be
used:
>>> key = ''
>>> encipher_bifid('hello world!', key)
'bmtwmg-bIo*w'
>>> decipher_bifid(_, key)
'hello world!'
If the key is changed, a different encryption is obtained:
>>> key = 'gold bug'
>>> encipher_bifid('hello world!', 'gold_bug')
'hg2sfuei7t}w'
And if the key used to decrypt the message is not exact, the
original text will not be perfectly obtained:
>>> decipher_bifid(_, 'gold pug')
'heldo~wor6d!'
"""
msg, _, A = _prep(msg, '', symbols, bifid10)
long_key = ''.join(uniq(key)) or A
n = len(A)**.5
if n != int(n):
raise ValueError(
'Length of alphabet (%s) is not a square number.' % len(A))
N = int(n)
if len(long_key) < N**2:
long_key = list(long_key) + [x for x in A if x not in long_key]
# the reverse fractionalization
row_col = {
ch: divmod(i, N) for i, ch in enumerate(long_key)}
rc = [i for c in msg for i in row_col[c]]
n = len(msg)
rc = zip(*(rc[:n], rc[n:]))
ch = {i: ch for ch, i in row_col.items()}
rv = ''.join(ch[i] for i in rc)
return rv
def bifid_square(key):
"""Return characters of ``key`` arranged in a square.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import (
... bifid_square, AZ, padded_key, bifid5)
>>> bifid_square(AZ().replace('J', ''))
Matrix([
[A, B, C, D, E],
[F, G, H, I, K],
[L, M, N, O, P],
[Q, R, S, T, U],
[V, W, X, Y, Z]])
>>> bifid_square(padded_key(AZ('gold bug!'), bifid5))
Matrix([
[G, O, L, D, B],
[U, A, C, E, F],
[H, I, K, M, N],
[P, Q, R, S, T],
[V, W, X, Y, Z]])
See Also
========
padded_key
"""
A = ''.join(uniq(''.join(key)))
n = len(A)**.5
if n != int(n):
raise ValueError(
'Length of alphabet (%s) is not a square number.' % len(A))
n = int(n)
f = lambda i, j: Symbol(A[n*i + j])
rv = Matrix(n, n, f)
return rv
def encipher_bifid5(msg, key):
r"""
Performs the Bifid cipher encryption on plaintext ``msg``, and
returns the ciphertext.
Explanation
===========
This is the version of the Bifid cipher that uses the `5 \times 5`
Polybius square. The letter "J" is ignored so it must be replaced
with something else (traditionally an "I") before encryption.
ALGORITHM: (5x5 case)
STEPS:
0. Create the `5 \times 5` Polybius square ``S`` associated
to ``key`` as follows:
a) moving from left-to-right, top-to-bottom,
place the letters of the key into a `5 \times 5`
matrix,
b) if the key has less than 25 letters, add the
letters of the alphabet not in the key until the
`5 \times 5` square is filled.
1. Create a list ``P`` of pairs of numbers which are the
coordinates in the Polybius square of the letters in
``msg``.
2. Let ``L1`` be the list of all first coordinates of ``P``
(length of ``L1 = n``), let ``L2`` be the list of all
second coordinates of ``P`` (so the length of ``L2``
is also ``n``).
3. Let ``L`` be the concatenation of ``L1`` and ``L2``
(length ``L = 2*n``), except that consecutive numbers
are paired ``(L[2*i], L[2*i + 1])``. You can regard
``L`` as a list of pairs of length ``n``.
4. Let ``C`` be the list of all letters which are of the
form ``S[i, j]``, for all ``(i, j)`` in ``L``. As a
string, this is the ciphertext of ``msg``.
Parameters
==========
msg : str
Plaintext string.
Converted to upper case and filtered of anything but all letters
except J.
key
Short string for key; non-alphabetic letters, J and duplicated
characters are ignored and then, if the length is less than 25
characters, it is padded with other letters of the alphabet
(in alphabetical order).
Returns
=======
ct
Ciphertext (all caps, no spaces).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import (
... encipher_bifid5, decipher_bifid5)
"J" will be omitted unless it is replaced with something else:
>>> round_trip = lambda m, k: \
... decipher_bifid5(encipher_bifid5(m, k), k)
>>> key = 'a'
>>> msg = "JOSIE"
>>> round_trip(msg, key)
'OSIE'
>>> round_trip(msg.replace("J", "I"), key)
'IOSIE'
>>> j = "QIQ"
>>> round_trip(msg.replace("J", j), key).replace(j, "J")
'JOSIE'
Notes
=====
The Bifid cipher was invented around 1901 by Felix Delastelle.
It is a *fractional substitution* cipher, where letters are
replaced by pairs of symbols from a smaller alphabet. The
cipher uses a `5 \times 5` square filled with some ordering of the
alphabet, except that "J" is replaced with "I" (this is a so-called
Polybius square; there is a `6 \times 6` analog if you add back in
"J" and also append onto the usual 26 letter alphabet, the digits
0, 1, ..., 9).
According to Helen Gaines' book *Cryptanalysis*, this type of cipher
was used in the field by the German Army during World War I.
See Also
========
decipher_bifid5, encipher_bifid
"""
msg, key, _ = _prep(msg.upper(), key.upper(), None, bifid5)
key = padded_key(key, bifid5)
return encipher_bifid(msg, '', key)
def decipher_bifid5(msg, key):
r"""
Return the Bifid cipher decryption of ``msg``.
Explanation
===========
This is the version of the Bifid cipher that uses the `5 \times 5`
Polybius square; the letter "J" is ignored unless a ``key`` of
length 25 is used.
Parameters
==========
msg
Ciphertext string.
key
Short string for key; duplicated characters are ignored and if
the length is less then 25 characters, it will be padded with
other letters from the alphabet omitting "J".
Non-alphabetic characters are ignored.
Returns
=======
plaintext
Plaintext from Bifid5 cipher (all caps, no spaces).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import encipher_bifid5, decipher_bifid5
>>> key = "gold bug"
>>> encipher_bifid5('meet me on friday', key)
'IEILEHFSTSFXEE'
>>> encipher_bifid5('meet me on monday', key)
'IEILHHFSTSFQYE'
>>> decipher_bifid5(_, key)
'MEETMEONMONDAY'
"""
msg, key, _ = _prep(msg.upper(), key.upper(), None, bifid5)
key = padded_key(key, bifid5)
return decipher_bifid(msg, '', key)
def bifid5_square(key=None):
r"""
5x5 Polybius square.
Produce the Polybius square for the `5 \times 5` Bifid cipher.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import bifid5_square
>>> bifid5_square("gold bug")
Matrix([
[G, O, L, D, B],
[U, A, C, E, F],
[H, I, K, M, N],
[P, Q, R, S, T],
[V, W, X, Y, Z]])
"""
if not key:
key = bifid5
else:
_, key, _ = _prep('', key.upper(), None, bifid5)
key = padded_key(key, bifid5)
return bifid_square(key)
def encipher_bifid6(msg, key):
r"""
Performs the Bifid cipher encryption on plaintext ``msg``, and
returns the ciphertext.
This is the version of the Bifid cipher that uses the `6 \times 6`
Polybius square.
Parameters
==========
msg
Plaintext string (digits okay).
key
Short string for key (digits okay).
If ``key`` is less than 36 characters long, the square will be
filled with letters A through Z and digits 0 through 9.
Returns
=======
ciphertext
Ciphertext from Bifid cipher (all caps, no spaces).
See Also
========
decipher_bifid6, encipher_bifid
"""
msg, key, _ = _prep(msg.upper(), key.upper(), None, bifid6)
key = padded_key(key, bifid6)
return encipher_bifid(msg, '', key)
def decipher_bifid6(msg, key):
r"""
Performs the Bifid cipher decryption on ciphertext ``msg``, and
returns the plaintext.
This is the version of the Bifid cipher that uses the `6 \times 6`
Polybius square.
Parameters
==========
msg
Ciphertext string (digits okay); converted to upper case
key
Short string for key (digits okay).
If ``key`` is less than 36 characters long, the square will be
filled with letters A through Z and digits 0 through 9.
All letters are converted to uppercase.
Returns
=======
plaintext
Plaintext from Bifid cipher (all caps, no spaces).
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import encipher_bifid6, decipher_bifid6
>>> key = "gold bug"
>>> encipher_bifid6('meet me on monday at 8am', key)
'KFKLJJHF5MMMKTFRGPL'
>>> decipher_bifid6(_, key)
'MEETMEONMONDAYAT8AM'
"""
msg, key, _ = _prep(msg.upper(), key.upper(), None, bifid6)
key = padded_key(key, bifid6)
return decipher_bifid(msg, '', key)
def bifid6_square(key=None):
r"""
6x6 Polybius square.
Produces the Polybius square for the `6 \times 6` Bifid cipher.
Assumes alphabet of symbols is "A", ..., "Z", "0", ..., "9".
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import bifid6_square
>>> key = "gold bug"
>>> bifid6_square(key)
Matrix([
[G, O, L, D, B, U],
[A, C, E, F, H, I],
[J, K, M, N, P, Q],
[R, S, T, V, W, X],
[Y, Z, 0, 1, 2, 3],
[4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]])
"""
if not key:
key = bifid6
else:
_, key, _ = _prep('', key.upper(), None, bifid6)
key = padded_key(key, bifid6)
return bifid_square(key)
#################### RSA #############################
def _decipher_rsa_crt(i, d, factors):
"""Decipher RSA using chinese remainder theorem from the information
of the relatively-prime factors of the modulus.
Parameters
==========
i : integer
Ciphertext
d : integer
The exponent component.
factors : list of relatively-prime integers
The integers given must be coprime and the product must equal
the modulus component of the original RSA key.
Examples
========
How to decrypt RSA with CRT:
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import rsa_public_key, rsa_private_key
>>> primes = [61, 53]
>>> e = 17
>>> args = primes + [e]
>>> puk = rsa_public_key(*args)
>>> prk = rsa_private_key(*args)
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import encipher_rsa, _decipher_rsa_crt
>>> msg = 65
>>> crt_primes = primes
>>> encrypted = encipher_rsa(msg, puk)
>>> decrypted = _decipher_rsa_crt(encrypted, prk[1], primes)
>>> decrypted
65
"""
moduluses = [pow(i, d, p) for p in factors]
result = crt(factors, moduluses)
if not result:
raise ValueError("CRT failed")
return result[0]
def _rsa_key(*args, public=True, private=True, totient='Euler', index=None, multipower=None):
r"""A private subroutine to generate RSA key
Parameters
==========
public, private : bool, optional
Flag to generate either a public key, a private key.
totient : 'Euler' or 'Carmichael'
Different notation used for totient.
multipower : bool, optional
Flag to bypass warning for multipower RSA.
"""
if len(args) < 2:
return False
if totient not in ('Euler', 'Carmichael'):
raise ValueError(
"The argument totient={} should either be " \
"'Euler', 'Carmichalel'." \
.format(totient))
if totient == 'Euler':
_totient = _euler
else:
_totient = _carmichael
if index is not None:
index = as_int(index)
if totient != 'Carmichael':
raise ValueError(
"Setting the 'index' keyword argument requires totient"
"notation to be specified as 'Carmichael'.")
primes, e = args[:-1], args[-1]
if not all(isprime(p) for p in primes):
new_primes = []
for i in primes:
new_primes.extend(factorint(i, multiple=True))
primes = new_primes
n = reduce(lambda i, j: i*j, primes)
tally = multiset(primes)
if all(v == 1 for v in tally.values()):
multiple = list(tally.keys())
phi = _totient._from_distinct_primes(*multiple)
else:
if not multipower:
NonInvertibleCipherWarning(
'Non-distinctive primes found in the factors {}. '
'The cipher may not be decryptable for some numbers '
'in the complete residue system Z[{}], but the cipher '
'can still be valid if you restrict the domain to be '
'the reduced residue system Z*[{}]. You can pass '
'the flag multipower=True if you want to suppress this '
'warning.'
.format(primes, n, n)
# stacklevel=4 because most users will call a function that
# calls this function
).warn(stacklevel=4)
phi = _totient._from_factors(tally)
if igcd(e, phi) == 1:
if public and not private:
if isinstance(index, int):
e = e % phi
e += index * phi
return n, e
if private and not public:
d = mod_inverse(e, phi)
if isinstance(index, int):
d += index * phi
return n, d
return False
def rsa_public_key(*args, **kwargs):
r"""Return the RSA *public key* pair, `(n, e)`
Parameters
==========
args : naturals
If specified as `p, q, e` where `p` and `q` are distinct primes
and `e` is a desired public exponent of the RSA, `n = p q` and
`e` will be verified against the totient
`\phi(n)` (Euler totient) or `\lambda(n)` (Carmichael totient)
to be `\gcd(e, \phi(n)) = 1` or `\gcd(e, \lambda(n)) = 1`.
If specified as `p_1, p_2, \dots, p_n, e` where
`p_1, p_2, \dots, p_n` are specified as primes,
and `e` is specified as a desired public exponent of the RSA,
it will be able to form a multi-prime RSA, which is a more
generalized form of the popular 2-prime RSA.
It can also be possible to form a single-prime RSA by specifying
the argument as `p, e`, which can be considered a trivial case
of a multiprime RSA.
Furthermore, it can be possible to form a multi-power RSA by
specifying two or more pairs of the primes to be same.
However, unlike the two-distinct prime RSA or multi-prime
RSA, not every numbers in the complete residue system
(`\mathbb{Z}_n`) will be decryptable since the mapping
`\mathbb{Z}_{n} \rightarrow \mathbb{Z}_{n}`
will not be bijective.
(Only except for the trivial case when
`e = 1`
or more generally,
.. math::
e \in \left \{ 1 + k \lambda(n)
\mid k \in \mathbb{Z} \land k \geq 0 \right \}
when RSA reduces to the identity.)
However, the RSA can still be decryptable for the numbers in the
reduced residue system (`\mathbb{Z}_n^{\times}`), since the
mapping
`\mathbb{Z}_{n}^{\times} \rightarrow \mathbb{Z}_{n}^{\times}`
can still be bijective.
If you pass a non-prime integer to the arguments
`p_1, p_2, \dots, p_n`, the particular number will be
prime-factored and it will become either a multi-prime RSA or a
multi-power RSA in its canonical form, depending on whether the
product equals its radical or not.
`p_1 p_2 \dots p_n = \text{rad}(p_1 p_2 \dots p_n)`
totient : bool, optional
If ``'Euler'``, it uses Euler's totient `\phi(n)` which is
:meth:`sympy.ntheory.factor_.totient` in SymPy.
If ``'Carmichael'``, it uses Carmichael's totient `\lambda(n)`
which is :meth:`sympy.ntheory.factor_.reduced_totient` in SymPy.
Unlike private key generation, this is a trivial keyword for
public key generation because
`\gcd(e, \phi(n)) = 1 \iff \gcd(e, \lambda(n)) = 1`.
index : nonnegative integer, optional
Returns an arbitrary solution of a RSA public key at the index
specified at `0, 1, 2, \dots`. This parameter needs to be
specified along with ``totient='Carmichael'``.
Similarly to the non-uniquenss of a RSA private key as described
in the ``index`` parameter documentation in
:meth:`rsa_private_key`, RSA public key is also not unique and
there is an infinite number of RSA public exponents which
can behave in the same manner.
From any given RSA public exponent `e`, there are can be an
another RSA public exponent `e + k \lambda(n)` where `k` is an
integer, `\lambda` is a Carmichael's totient function.
However, considering only the positive cases, there can be
a principal solution of a RSA public exponent `e_0` in
`0 < e_0 < \lambda(n)`, and all the other solutions
can be canonicalzed in a form of `e_0 + k \lambda(n)`.
``index`` specifies the `k` notation to yield any possible value
an RSA public key can have.
An example of computing any arbitrary RSA public key:
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import rsa_public_key
>>> rsa_public_key(61, 53, 17, totient='Carmichael', index=0)
(3233, 17)
>>> rsa_public_key(61, 53, 17, totient='Carmichael', index=1)
(3233, 797)
>>> rsa_public_key(61, 53, 17, totient='Carmichael', index=2)
(3233, 1577)
multipower : bool, optional
Any pair of non-distinct primes found in the RSA specification
will restrict the domain of the cryptosystem, as noted in the
explanation of the parameter ``args``.
SymPy RSA key generator may give a warning before dispatching it
as a multi-power RSA, however, you can disable the warning if
you pass ``True`` to this keyword.
Returns
=======
(n, e) : int, int
`n` is a product of any arbitrary number of primes given as
the argument.
`e` is relatively prime (coprime) to the Euler totient
`\phi(n)`.
False
Returned if less than two arguments are given, or `e` is
not relatively prime to the modulus.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import rsa_public_key
A public key of a two-prime RSA:
>>> p, q, e = 3, 5, 7
>>> rsa_public_key(p, q, e)
(15, 7)
>>> rsa_public_key(p, q, 30)
False
A public key of a multiprime RSA:
>>> primes = [2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13]
>>> e = 7
>>> args = primes + [e]
>>> rsa_public_key(*args)
(30030, 7)
Notes
=====
Although the RSA can be generalized over any modulus `n`, using
two large primes had became the most popular specification because a
product of two large primes is usually the hardest to factor
relatively to the digits of `n` can have.
However, it may need further understanding of the time complexities
of each prime-factoring algorithms to verify the claim.
See Also
========
rsa_private_key
encipher_rsa
decipher_rsa
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RSA_%28cryptosystem%29
.. [2] https://cacr.uwaterloo.ca/techreports/2006/cacr2006-16.pdf
.. [3] https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/BFb0055738.pdf
.. [4] https://www.itiis.org/digital-library/manuscript/1381
"""
return _rsa_key(*args, public=True, private=False, **kwargs)
def rsa_private_key(*args, **kwargs):
r"""Return the RSA *private key* pair, `(n, d)`
Parameters
==========
args : naturals
The keyword is identical to the ``args`` in
:meth:`rsa_public_key`.
totient : bool, optional
If ``'Euler'``, it uses Euler's totient convention `\phi(n)`
which is :meth:`sympy.ntheory.factor_.totient` in SymPy.
If ``'Carmichael'``, it uses Carmichael's totient convention
`\lambda(n)` which is
:meth:`sympy.ntheory.factor_.reduced_totient` in SymPy.
There can be some output differences for private key generation
as examples below.
Example using Euler's totient:
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import rsa_private_key
>>> rsa_private_key(61, 53, 17, totient='Euler')
(3233, 2753)
Example using Carmichael's totient:
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import rsa_private_key
>>> rsa_private_key(61, 53, 17, totient='Carmichael')
(3233, 413)
index : nonnegative integer, optional
Returns an arbitrary solution of a RSA private key at the index
specified at `0, 1, 2, \dots`. This parameter needs to be
specified along with ``totient='Carmichael'``.
RSA private exponent is a non-unique solution of
`e d \mod \lambda(n) = 1` and it is possible in any form of
`d + k \lambda(n)`, where `d` is an another
already-computed private exponent, and `\lambda` is a
Carmichael's totient function, and `k` is any integer.
However, considering only the positive cases, there can be
a principal solution of a RSA private exponent `d_0` in
`0 < d_0 < \lambda(n)`, and all the other solutions
can be canonicalzed in a form of `d_0 + k \lambda(n)`.
``index`` specifies the `k` notation to yield any possible value
an RSA private key can have.
An example of computing any arbitrary RSA private key:
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import rsa_private_key
>>> rsa_private_key(61, 53, 17, totient='Carmichael', index=0)
(3233, 413)
>>> rsa_private_key(61, 53, 17, totient='Carmichael', index=1)
(3233, 1193)
>>> rsa_private_key(61, 53, 17, totient='Carmichael', index=2)
(3233, 1973)
multipower : bool, optional
The keyword is identical to the ``multipower`` in
:meth:`rsa_public_key`.
Returns
=======
(n, d) : int, int
`n` is a product of any arbitrary number of primes given as
the argument.
`d` is the inverse of `e` (mod `\phi(n)`) where `e` is the
exponent given, and `\phi` is a Euler totient.
False
Returned if less than two arguments are given, or `e` is
not relatively prime to the totient of the modulus.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import rsa_private_key
A private key of a two-prime RSA:
>>> p, q, e = 3, 5, 7
>>> rsa_private_key(p, q, e)
(15, 7)
>>> rsa_private_key(p, q, 30)
False
A private key of a multiprime RSA:
>>> primes = [2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13]
>>> e = 7
>>> args = primes + [e]
>>> rsa_private_key(*args)
(30030, 823)
See Also
========
rsa_public_key
encipher_rsa
decipher_rsa
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RSA_%28cryptosystem%29
.. [2] https://cacr.uwaterloo.ca/techreports/2006/cacr2006-16.pdf
.. [3] https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/BFb0055738.pdf
.. [4] https://www.itiis.org/digital-library/manuscript/1381
"""
return _rsa_key(*args, public=False, private=True, **kwargs)
def _encipher_decipher_rsa(i, key, factors=None):
n, d = key
if not factors:
return pow(i, d, n)
def _is_coprime_set(l):
is_coprime_set = True
for i in range(len(l)):
for j in range(i+1, len(l)):
if igcd(l[i], l[j]) != 1:
is_coprime_set = False
break
return is_coprime_set
prod = reduce(lambda i, j: i*j, factors)
if prod == n and _is_coprime_set(factors):
return _decipher_rsa_crt(i, d, factors)
return _encipher_decipher_rsa(i, key, factors=None)
def encipher_rsa(i, key, factors=None):
r"""Encrypt the plaintext with RSA.
Parameters
==========
i : integer
The plaintext to be encrypted for.
key : (n, e) where n, e are integers
`n` is the modulus of the key and `e` is the exponent of the
key. The encryption is computed by `i^e \bmod n`.
The key can either be a public key or a private key, however,
the message encrypted by a public key can only be decrypted by
a private key, and vice versa, as RSA is an asymmetric
cryptography system.
factors : list of coprime integers
This is identical to the keyword ``factors`` in
:meth:`decipher_rsa`.
Notes
=====
Some specifications may make the RSA not cryptographically
meaningful.
For example, `0`, `1` will remain always same after taking any
number of exponentiation, thus, should be avoided.
Furthermore, if `i^e < n`, `i` may easily be figured out by taking
`e` th root.
And also, specifying the exponent as `1` or in more generalized form
as `1 + k \lambda(n)` where `k` is an nonnegative integer,
`\lambda` is a carmichael totient, the RSA becomes an identity
mapping.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import encipher_rsa
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import rsa_public_key, rsa_private_key
Public Key Encryption:
>>> p, q, e = 3, 5, 7
>>> puk = rsa_public_key(p, q, e)
>>> msg = 12
>>> encipher_rsa(msg, puk)
3
Private Key Encryption:
>>> p, q, e = 3, 5, 7
>>> prk = rsa_private_key(p, q, e)
>>> msg = 12
>>> encipher_rsa(msg, prk)
3
Encryption using chinese remainder theorem:
>>> encipher_rsa(msg, prk, factors=[p, q])
3
"""
return _encipher_decipher_rsa(i, key, factors=factors)
def decipher_rsa(i, key, factors=None):
r"""Decrypt the ciphertext with RSA.
Parameters
==========
i : integer
The ciphertext to be decrypted for.
key : (n, d) where n, d are integers
`n` is the modulus of the key and `d` is the exponent of the
key. The decryption is computed by `i^d \bmod n`.
The key can either be a public key or a private key, however,
the message encrypted by a public key can only be decrypted by
a private key, and vice versa, as RSA is an asymmetric
cryptography system.
factors : list of coprime integers
As the modulus `n` created from RSA key generation is composed
of arbitrary prime factors
`n = {p_1}^{k_1}{p_2}^{k_2}\dots{p_n}^{k_n}` where
`p_1, p_2, \dots, p_n` are distinct primes and
`k_1, k_2, \dots, k_n` are positive integers, chinese remainder
theorem can be used to compute `i^d \bmod n` from the
fragmented modulo operations like
.. math::
i^d \bmod {p_1}^{k_1}, i^d \bmod {p_2}^{k_2}, \dots,
i^d \bmod {p_n}^{k_n}
or like
.. math::
i^d \bmod {p_1}^{k_1}{p_2}^{k_2},
i^d \bmod {p_3}^{k_3}, \dots ,
i^d \bmod {p_n}^{k_n}
as long as every moduli does not share any common divisor each
other.
The raw primes used in generating the RSA key pair can be a good
option.
Note that the speed advantage of using this is only viable for
very large cases (Like 2048-bit RSA keys) since the
overhead of using pure Python implementation of
:meth:`sympy.ntheory.modular.crt` may overcompensate the
theoretical speed advantage.
Notes
=====
See the ``Notes`` section in the documentation of
:meth:`encipher_rsa`
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import decipher_rsa, encipher_rsa
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import rsa_public_key, rsa_private_key
Public Key Encryption and Decryption:
>>> p, q, e = 3, 5, 7
>>> prk = rsa_private_key(p, q, e)
>>> puk = rsa_public_key(p, q, e)
>>> msg = 12
>>> new_msg = encipher_rsa(msg, prk)
>>> new_msg
3
>>> decipher_rsa(new_msg, puk)
12
Private Key Encryption and Decryption:
>>> p, q, e = 3, 5, 7
>>> prk = rsa_private_key(p, q, e)
>>> puk = rsa_public_key(p, q, e)
>>> msg = 12
>>> new_msg = encipher_rsa(msg, puk)
>>> new_msg
3
>>> decipher_rsa(new_msg, prk)
12
Decryption using chinese remainder theorem:
>>> decipher_rsa(new_msg, prk, factors=[p, q])
12
See Also
========
encipher_rsa
"""
return _encipher_decipher_rsa(i, key, factors=factors)
#################### kid krypto (kid RSA) #############################
def kid_rsa_public_key(a, b, A, B):
r"""
Kid RSA is a version of RSA useful to teach grade school children
since it does not involve exponentiation.
Explanation
===========
Alice wants to talk to Bob. Bob generates keys as follows.
Key generation:
* Select positive integers `a, b, A, B` at random.
* Compute `M = a b - 1`, `e = A M + a`, `d = B M + b`,
`n = (e d - 1)//M`.
* The *public key* is `(n, e)`. Bob sends these to Alice.
* The *private key* is `(n, d)`, which Bob keeps secret.
Encryption: If `p` is the plaintext message then the
ciphertext is `c = p e \pmod n`.
Decryption: If `c` is the ciphertext message then the
plaintext is `p = c d \pmod n`.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import kid_rsa_public_key
>>> a, b, A, B = 3, 4, 5, 6
>>> kid_rsa_public_key(a, b, A, B)
(369, 58)
"""
M = a*b - 1
e = A*M + a
d = B*M + b
n = (e*d - 1)//M
return n, e
def kid_rsa_private_key(a, b, A, B):
"""
Compute `M = a b - 1`, `e = A M + a`, `d = B M + b`,
`n = (e d - 1) / M`. The *private key* is `d`, which Bob
keeps secret.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import kid_rsa_private_key
>>> a, b, A, B = 3, 4, 5, 6
>>> kid_rsa_private_key(a, b, A, B)
(369, 70)
"""
M = a*b - 1
e = A*M + a
d = B*M + b
n = (e*d - 1)//M
return n, d
def encipher_kid_rsa(msg, key):
"""
Here ``msg`` is the plaintext and ``key`` is the public key.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import (
... encipher_kid_rsa, kid_rsa_public_key)
>>> msg = 200
>>> a, b, A, B = 3, 4, 5, 6
>>> key = kid_rsa_public_key(a, b, A, B)
>>> encipher_kid_rsa(msg, key)
161
"""
n, e = key
return (msg*e) % n
def decipher_kid_rsa(msg, key):
"""
Here ``msg`` is the plaintext and ``key`` is the private key.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import (
... kid_rsa_public_key, kid_rsa_private_key,
... decipher_kid_rsa, encipher_kid_rsa)
>>> a, b, A, B = 3, 4, 5, 6
>>> d = kid_rsa_private_key(a, b, A, B)
>>> msg = 200
>>> pub = kid_rsa_public_key(a, b, A, B)
>>> pri = kid_rsa_private_key(a, b, A, B)
>>> ct = encipher_kid_rsa(msg, pub)
>>> decipher_kid_rsa(ct, pri)
200
"""
n, d = key
return (msg*d) % n
#################### Morse Code ######################################
morse_char = {
".-": "A", "-...": "B",
"-.-.": "C", "-..": "D",
".": "E", "..-.": "F",
"--.": "G", "....": "H",
"..": "I", ".---": "J",
"-.-": "K", ".-..": "L",
"--": "M", "-.": "N",
"---": "O", ".--.": "P",
"--.-": "Q", ".-.": "R",
"...": "S", "-": "T",
"..-": "U", "...-": "V",
".--": "W", "-..-": "X",
"-.--": "Y", "--..": "Z",
"-----": "0", ".----": "1",
"..---": "2", "...--": "3",
"....-": "4", ".....": "5",
"-....": "6", "--...": "7",
"---..": "8", "----.": "9",
".-.-.-": ".", "--..--": ",",
"---...": ":", "-.-.-.": ";",
"..--..": "?", "-....-": "-",
"..--.-": "_", "-.--.": "(",
"-.--.-": ")", ".----.": "'",
"-...-": "=", ".-.-.": "+",
"-..-.": "/", ".--.-.": "@",
"...-..-": "$", "-.-.--": "!"}
char_morse = {v: k for k, v in morse_char.items()}
def encode_morse(msg, sep='|', mapping=None):
"""
Encodes a plaintext into popular Morse Code with letters
separated by ``sep`` and words by a double ``sep``.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import encode_morse
>>> msg = 'ATTACK RIGHT FLANK'
>>> encode_morse(msg)
'.-|-|-|.-|-.-.|-.-||.-.|..|--.|....|-||..-.|.-..|.-|-.|-.-'
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morse_code
"""
mapping = mapping or char_morse
assert sep not in mapping
word_sep = 2*sep
mapping[" "] = word_sep
suffix = msg and msg[-1] in whitespace
# normalize whitespace
msg = (' ' if word_sep else '').join(msg.split())
# omit unmapped chars
chars = set(''.join(msg.split()))
ok = set(mapping.keys())
msg = translate(msg, None, ''.join(chars - ok))
morsestring = []
words = msg.split()
for word in words:
morseword = []
for letter in word:
morseletter = mapping[letter]
morseword.append(morseletter)
word = sep.join(morseword)
morsestring.append(word)
return word_sep.join(morsestring) + (word_sep if suffix else '')
def decode_morse(msg, sep='|', mapping=None):
"""
Decodes a Morse Code with letters separated by ``sep``
(default is '|') and words by `word_sep` (default is '||)
into plaintext.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import decode_morse
>>> mc = '--|---|...-|.||.|.-|...|-'
>>> decode_morse(mc)
'MOVE EAST'
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morse_code
"""
mapping = mapping or morse_char
word_sep = 2*sep
characterstring = []
words = msg.strip(word_sep).split(word_sep)
for word in words:
letters = word.split(sep)
chars = [mapping[c] for c in letters]
word = ''.join(chars)
characterstring.append(word)
rv = " ".join(characterstring)
return rv
#################### LFSRs ##########################################
def lfsr_sequence(key, fill, n):
r"""
This function creates an LFSR sequence.
Parameters
==========
key : list
A list of finite field elements, `[c_0, c_1, \ldots, c_k].`
fill : list
The list of the initial terms of the LFSR sequence,
`[x_0, x_1, \ldots, x_k].`
n
Number of terms of the sequence that the function returns.
Returns
=======
L
The LFSR sequence defined by
`x_{n+1} = c_k x_n + \ldots + c_0 x_{n-k}`, for
`n \leq k`.
Notes
=====
S. Golomb [G]_ gives a list of three statistical properties a
sequence of numbers `a = \{a_n\}_{n=1}^\infty`,
`a_n \in \{0,1\}`, should display to be considered
"random". Define the autocorrelation of `a` to be
.. math::
C(k) = C(k,a) = \lim_{N\rightarrow \infty} {1\over N}\sum_{n=1}^N (-1)^{a_n + a_{n+k}}.
In the case where `a` is periodic with period
`P` then this reduces to
.. math::
C(k) = {1\over P}\sum_{n=1}^P (-1)^{a_n + a_{n+k}}.
Assume `a` is periodic with period `P`.
- balance:
.. math::
\left|\sum_{n=1}^P(-1)^{a_n}\right| \leq 1.
- low autocorrelation:
.. math::
C(k) = \left\{ \begin{array}{cc} 1,& k = 0,\\ \epsilon, & k \ne 0. \end{array} \right.
(For sequences satisfying these first two properties, it is known
that `\epsilon = -1/P` must hold.)
- proportional runs property: In each period, half the runs have
length `1`, one-fourth have length `2`, etc.
Moreover, there are as many runs of `1`'s as there are of
`0`'s.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import lfsr_sequence
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import FF
>>> F = FF(2)
>>> fill = [F(1), F(1), F(0), F(1)]
>>> key = [F(1), F(0), F(0), F(1)]
>>> lfsr_sequence(key, fill, 10)
[1 mod 2, 1 mod 2, 0 mod 2, 1 mod 2, 0 mod 2,
1 mod 2, 1 mod 2, 0 mod 2, 0 mod 2, 1 mod 2]
References
==========
.. [G] Solomon Golomb, Shift register sequences, Aegean Park Press,
Laguna Hills, Ca, 1967
"""
if not isinstance(key, list):
raise TypeError("key must be a list")
if not isinstance(fill, list):
raise TypeError("fill must be a list")
p = key[0].mod
F = FF(p)
s = fill
k = len(fill)
L = []
for i in range(n):
s0 = s[:]
L.append(s[0])
s = s[1:k]
x = sum([int(key[i]*s0[i]) for i in range(k)])
s.append(F(x))
return L # use [x.to_int() for x in L] for int version
def lfsr_autocorrelation(L, P, k):
"""
This function computes the LFSR autocorrelation function.
Parameters
==========
L
A periodic sequence of elements of `GF(2)`.
L must have length larger than P.
P
The period of L.
k : int
An integer `k` (`0 < k < P`).
Returns
=======
autocorrelation
The k-th value of the autocorrelation of the LFSR L.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import (
... lfsr_sequence, lfsr_autocorrelation)
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import FF
>>> F = FF(2)
>>> fill = [F(1), F(1), F(0), F(1)]
>>> key = [F(1), F(0), F(0), F(1)]
>>> s = lfsr_sequence(key, fill, 20)
>>> lfsr_autocorrelation(s, 15, 7)
-1/15
>>> lfsr_autocorrelation(s, 15, 0)
1
"""
if not isinstance(L, list):
raise TypeError("L (=%s) must be a list" % L)
P = int(P)
k = int(k)
L0 = L[:P] # slices makes a copy
L1 = L0 + L0[:k]
L2 = [(-1)**(L1[i].to_int() + L1[i + k].to_int()) for i in range(P)]
tot = sum(L2)
return Rational(tot, P)
def lfsr_connection_polynomial(s):
"""
This function computes the LFSR connection polynomial.
Parameters
==========
s
A sequence of elements of even length, with entries in a finite
field.
Returns
=======
C(x)
The connection polynomial of a minimal LFSR yielding s.
This implements the algorithm in section 3 of J. L. Massey's
article [M]_.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import (
... lfsr_sequence, lfsr_connection_polynomial)
>>> from sympy.polys.domains import FF
>>> F = FF(2)
>>> fill = [F(1), F(1), F(0), F(1)]
>>> key = [F(1), F(0), F(0), F(1)]
>>> s = lfsr_sequence(key, fill, 20)
>>> lfsr_connection_polynomial(s)
x**4 + x + 1
>>> fill = [F(1), F(0), F(0), F(1)]
>>> key = [F(1), F(1), F(0), F(1)]
>>> s = lfsr_sequence(key, fill, 20)
>>> lfsr_connection_polynomial(s)
x**3 + 1
>>> fill = [F(1), F(0), F(1)]
>>> key = [F(1), F(1), F(0)]
>>> s = lfsr_sequence(key, fill, 20)
>>> lfsr_connection_polynomial(s)
x**3 + x**2 + 1
>>> fill = [F(1), F(0), F(1)]
>>> key = [F(1), F(0), F(1)]
>>> s = lfsr_sequence(key, fill, 20)
>>> lfsr_connection_polynomial(s)
x**3 + x + 1
References
==========
.. [M] James L. Massey, "Shift-Register Synthesis and BCH Decoding."
IEEE Trans. on Information Theory, vol. 15(1), pp. 122-127,
Jan 1969.
"""
# Initialization:
p = s[0].mod
x = Symbol("x")
C = 1*x**0
B = 1*x**0
m = 1
b = 1*x**0
L = 0
N = 0
while N < len(s):
if L > 0:
dC = Poly(C).degree()
r = min(L + 1, dC + 1)
coeffsC = [C.subs(x, 0)] + [C.coeff(x**i)
for i in range(1, dC + 1)]
d = (s[N].to_int() + sum([coeffsC[i]*s[N - i].to_int()
for i in range(1, r)])) % p
if L == 0:
d = s[N].to_int()*x**0
if d == 0:
m += 1
N += 1
if d > 0:
if 2*L > N:
C = (C - d*((b**(p - 2)) % p)*x**m*B).expand()
m += 1
N += 1
else:
T = C
C = (C - d*((b**(p - 2)) % p)*x**m*B).expand()
L = N + 1 - L
m = 1
b = d
B = T
N += 1
dC = Poly(C).degree()
coeffsC = [C.subs(x, 0)] + [C.coeff(x**i) for i in range(1, dC + 1)]
return sum([coeffsC[i] % p*x**i for i in range(dC + 1)
if coeffsC[i] is not None])
#################### ElGamal #############################
def elgamal_private_key(digit=10, seed=None):
r"""
Return three number tuple as private key.
Explanation
===========
Elgamal encryption is based on the mathematical problem
called the Discrete Logarithm Problem (DLP). For example,
`a^{b} \equiv c \pmod p`
In general, if ``a`` and ``b`` are known, ``ct`` is easily
calculated. If ``b`` is unknown, it is hard to use
``a`` and ``ct`` to get ``b``.
Parameters
==========
digit : int
Minimum number of binary digits for key.
Returns
=======
tuple : (p, r, d)
p = prime number.
r = primitive root.
d = random number.
Notes
=====
For testing purposes, the ``seed`` parameter may be set to control
the output of this routine. See sympy.core.random._randrange.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import elgamal_private_key
>>> from sympy.ntheory import is_primitive_root, isprime
>>> a, b, _ = elgamal_private_key()
>>> isprime(a)
True
>>> is_primitive_root(b, a)
True
"""
randrange = _randrange(seed)
p = nextprime(2**digit)
return p, primitive_root(p), randrange(2, p)
def elgamal_public_key(key):
r"""
Return three number tuple as public key.
Parameters
==========
key : (p, r, e)
Tuple generated by ``elgamal_private_key``.
Returns
=======
tuple : (p, r, e)
`e = r**d \bmod p`
`d` is a random number in private key.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import elgamal_public_key
>>> elgamal_public_key((1031, 14, 636))
(1031, 14, 212)
"""
p, r, e = key
return p, r, pow(r, e, p)
def encipher_elgamal(i, key, seed=None):
r"""
Encrypt message with public key.
Explanation
===========
``i`` is a plaintext message expressed as an integer.
``key`` is public key (p, r, e). In order to encrypt
a message, a random number ``a`` in ``range(2, p)``
is generated and the encryped message is returned as
`c_{1}` and `c_{2}` where:
`c_{1} \equiv r^{a} \pmod p`
`c_{2} \equiv m e^{a} \pmod p`
Parameters
==========
msg
int of encoded message.
key
Public key.
Returns
=======
tuple : (c1, c2)
Encipher into two number.
Notes
=====
For testing purposes, the ``seed`` parameter may be set to control
the output of this routine. See sympy.core.random._randrange.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import encipher_elgamal, elgamal_private_key, elgamal_public_key
>>> pri = elgamal_private_key(5, seed=[3]); pri
(37, 2, 3)
>>> pub = elgamal_public_key(pri); pub
(37, 2, 8)
>>> msg = 36
>>> encipher_elgamal(msg, pub, seed=[3])
(8, 6)
"""
p, r, e = key
if i < 0 or i >= p:
raise ValueError(
'Message (%s) should be in range(%s)' % (i, p))
randrange = _randrange(seed)
a = randrange(2, p)
return pow(r, a, p), i*pow(e, a, p) % p
def decipher_elgamal(msg, key):
r"""
Decrypt message with private key.
`msg = (c_{1}, c_{2})`
`key = (p, r, d)`
According to extended Eucliden theorem,
`u c_{1}^{d} + p n = 1`
`u \equiv 1/{{c_{1}}^d} \pmod p`
`u c_{2} \equiv \frac{1}{c_{1}^d} c_{2} \equiv \frac{1}{r^{ad}} c_{2} \pmod p`
`\frac{1}{r^{ad}} m e^a \equiv \frac{1}{r^{ad}} m {r^{d a}} \equiv m \pmod p`
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import decipher_elgamal
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import encipher_elgamal
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import elgamal_private_key
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import elgamal_public_key
>>> pri = elgamal_private_key(5, seed=[3])
>>> pub = elgamal_public_key(pri); pub
(37, 2, 8)
>>> msg = 17
>>> decipher_elgamal(encipher_elgamal(msg, pub), pri) == msg
True
"""
p, _, d = key
c1, c2 = msg
u = igcdex(c1**d, p)[0]
return u * c2 % p
################ Diffie-Hellman Key Exchange #########################
def dh_private_key(digit=10, seed=None):
r"""
Return three integer tuple as private key.
Explanation
===========
Diffie-Hellman key exchange is based on the mathematical problem
called the Discrete Logarithm Problem (see ElGamal).
Diffie-Hellman key exchange is divided into the following steps:
* Alice and Bob agree on a base that consist of a prime ``p``
and a primitive root of ``p`` called ``g``
* Alice choses a number ``a`` and Bob choses a number ``b`` where
``a`` and ``b`` are random numbers in range `[2, p)`. These are
their private keys.
* Alice then publicly sends Bob `g^{a} \pmod p` while Bob sends
Alice `g^{b} \pmod p`
* They both raise the received value to their secretly chosen
number (``a`` or ``b``) and now have both as their shared key
`g^{ab} \pmod p`
Parameters
==========
digit
Minimum number of binary digits required in key.
Returns
=======
tuple : (p, g, a)
p = prime number.
g = primitive root of p.
a = random number from 2 through p - 1.
Notes
=====
For testing purposes, the ``seed`` parameter may be set to control
the output of this routine. See sympy.core.random._randrange.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import dh_private_key
>>> from sympy.ntheory import isprime, is_primitive_root
>>> p, g, _ = dh_private_key()
>>> isprime(p)
True
>>> is_primitive_root(g, p)
True
>>> p, g, _ = dh_private_key(5)
>>> isprime(p)
True
>>> is_primitive_root(g, p)
True
"""
p = nextprime(2**digit)
g = primitive_root(p)
randrange = _randrange(seed)
a = randrange(2, p)
return p, g, a
def dh_public_key(key):
r"""
Return three number tuple as public key.
This is the tuple that Alice sends to Bob.
Parameters
==========
key : (p, g, a)
A tuple generated by ``dh_private_key``.
Returns
=======
tuple : int, int, int
A tuple of `(p, g, g^a \mod p)` with `p`, `g` and `a` given as
parameters.s
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import dh_private_key, dh_public_key
>>> p, g, a = dh_private_key();
>>> _p, _g, x = dh_public_key((p, g, a))
>>> p == _p and g == _g
True
>>> x == pow(g, a, p)
True
"""
p, g, a = key
return p, g, pow(g, a, p)
def dh_shared_key(key, b):
"""
Return an integer that is the shared key.
This is what Bob and Alice can both calculate using the public
keys they received from each other and their private keys.
Parameters
==========
key : (p, g, x)
Tuple `(p, g, x)` generated by ``dh_public_key``.
b
Random number in the range of `2` to `p - 1`
(Chosen by second key exchange member (Bob)).
Returns
=======
int
A shared key.
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import (
... dh_private_key, dh_public_key, dh_shared_key)
>>> prk = dh_private_key();
>>> p, g, x = dh_public_key(prk);
>>> sk = dh_shared_key((p, g, x), 1000)
>>> sk == pow(x, 1000, p)
True
"""
p, _, x = key
if 1 >= b or b >= p:
raise ValueError(filldedent('''
Value of b should be greater 1 and less
than prime %s.''' % p))
return pow(x, b, p)
################ Goldwasser-Micali Encryption #########################
def _legendre(a, p):
"""
Returns the legendre symbol of a and p
assuming that p is a prime.
i.e. 1 if a is a quadratic residue mod p
-1 if a is not a quadratic residue mod p
0 if a is divisible by p
Parameters
==========
a : int
The number to test.
p : prime
The prime to test ``a`` against.
Returns
=======
int
Legendre symbol (a / p).
"""
sig = pow(a, (p - 1)//2, p)
if sig == 1:
return 1
elif sig == 0:
return 0
else:
return -1
def _random_coprime_stream(n, seed=None):
randrange = _randrange(seed)
while True:
y = randrange(n)
if gcd(y, n) == 1:
yield y
def gm_private_key(p, q, a=None):
r"""
Check if ``p`` and ``q`` can be used as private keys for
the Goldwasser-Micali encryption. The method works
roughly as follows.
Explanation
===========
#. Pick two large primes $p$ and $q$.
#. Call their product $N$.
#. Given a message as an integer $i$, write $i$ in its bit representation $b_0, \dots, b_n$.
#. For each $k$,
if $b_k = 0$:
let $a_k$ be a random square
(quadratic residue) modulo $p q$
such that ``jacobi_symbol(a, p*q) = 1``
if $b_k = 1$:
let $a_k$ be a random non-square
(non-quadratic residue) modulo $p q$
such that ``jacobi_symbol(a, p*q) = 1``
returns $\left[a_1, a_2, \dots\right]$
$b_k$ can be recovered by checking whether or not
$a_k$ is a residue. And from the $b_k$'s, the message
can be reconstructed.
The idea is that, while ``jacobi_symbol(a, p*q)``
can be easily computed (and when it is equal to $-1$ will
tell you that $a$ is not a square mod $p q$), quadratic
residuosity modulo a composite number is hard to compute
without knowing its factorization.
Moreover, approximately half the numbers coprime to $p q$ have
:func:`~.jacobi_symbol` equal to $1$ . And among those, approximately half
are residues and approximately half are not. This maximizes the
entropy of the code.
Parameters
==========
p, q, a
Initialization variables.
Returns
=======
tuple : (p, q)
The input value ``p`` and ``q``.
Raises
======
ValueError
If ``p`` and ``q`` are not distinct odd primes.
"""
if p == q:
raise ValueError("expected distinct primes, "
"got two copies of %i" % p)
elif not isprime(p) or not isprime(q):
raise ValueError("first two arguments must be prime, "
"got %i of %i" % (p, q))
elif p == 2 or q == 2:
raise ValueError("first two arguments must not be even, "
"got %i of %i" % (p, q))
return p, q
def gm_public_key(p, q, a=None, seed=None):
"""
Compute public keys for ``p`` and ``q``.
Note that in Goldwasser-Micali Encryption,
public keys are randomly selected.
Parameters
==========
p, q, a : int, int, int
Initialization variables.
Returns
=======
tuple : (a, N)
``a`` is the input ``a`` if it is not ``None`` otherwise
some random integer coprime to ``p`` and ``q``.
``N`` is the product of ``p`` and ``q``.
"""
p, q = gm_private_key(p, q)
N = p * q
if a is None:
randrange = _randrange(seed)
while True:
a = randrange(N)
if _legendre(a, p) == _legendre(a, q) == -1:
break
else:
if _legendre(a, p) != -1 or _legendre(a, q) != -1:
return False
return (a, N)
def encipher_gm(i, key, seed=None):
"""
Encrypt integer 'i' using public_key 'key'
Note that gm uses random encryption.
Parameters
==========
i : int
The message to encrypt.
key : (a, N)
The public key.
Returns
=======
list : list of int
The randomized encrypted message.
"""
if i < 0:
raise ValueError(
"message must be a non-negative "
"integer: got %d instead" % i)
a, N = key
bits = []
while i > 0:
bits.append(i % 2)
i //= 2
gen = _random_coprime_stream(N, seed)
rev = reversed(bits)
encode = lambda b: next(gen)**2*pow(a, b) % N
return [ encode(b) for b in rev ]
def decipher_gm(message, key):
"""
Decrypt message 'message' using public_key 'key'.
Parameters
==========
message : list of int
The randomized encrypted message.
key : (p, q)
The private key.
Returns
=======
int
The encrypted message.
"""
p, q = key
res = lambda m, p: _legendre(m, p) > 0
bits = [res(m, p) * res(m, q) for m in message]
m = 0
for b in bits:
m <<= 1
m += not b
return m
########### RailFence Cipher #############
def encipher_railfence(message,rails):
"""
Performs Railfence Encryption on plaintext and returns ciphertext
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import encipher_railfence
>>> message = "hello world"
>>> encipher_railfence(message,3)
'horel ollwd'
Parameters
==========
message : string, the message to encrypt.
rails : int, the number of rails.
Returns
=======
The Encrypted string message.
References
==========
.. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rail_fence_cipher
"""
r = list(range(rails))
p = cycle(r + r[-2:0:-1])
return ''.join(sorted(message, key=lambda i: next(p)))
def decipher_railfence(ciphertext,rails):
"""
Decrypt the message using the given rails
Examples
========
>>> from sympy.crypto.crypto import decipher_railfence
>>> decipher_railfence("horel ollwd",3)
'hello world'
Parameters
==========
message : string, the message to encrypt.
rails : int, the number of rails.
Returns
=======
The Decrypted string message.
"""
r = list(range(rails))
p = cycle(r + r[-2:0:-1])
idx = sorted(range(len(ciphertext)), key=lambda i: next(p))
res = [''] * len(ciphertext)
for i, c in zip(idx, ciphertext):
res[i] = c
return ''.join(res)
################ Blum-Goldwasser cryptosystem #########################
def bg_private_key(p, q):
"""
Check if p and q can be used as private keys for
the Blum-Goldwasser cryptosystem.
Explanation
===========
The three necessary checks for p and q to pass
so that they can be used as private keys:
1. p and q must both be prime
2. p and q must be distinct
3. p and q must be congruent to 3 mod 4
Parameters
==========
p, q
The keys to be checked.
Returns
=======
p, q
Input values.
Raises
======
ValueError
If p and q do not pass the above conditions.
"""
if not isprime(p) or not isprime(q):
raise ValueError("the two arguments must be prime, "
"got %i and %i" %(p, q))
elif p == q:
raise ValueError("the two arguments must be distinct, "
"got two copies of %i. " %p)
elif (p - 3) % 4 != 0 or (q - 3) % 4 != 0:
raise ValueError("the two arguments must be congruent to 3 mod 4, "
"got %i and %i" %(p, q))
return p, q
def bg_public_key(p, q):
"""
Calculates public keys from private keys.
Explanation
===========
The function first checks the validity of
private keys passed as arguments and
then returns their product.
Parameters
==========
p, q
The private keys.
Returns
=======
N
The public key.
"""
p, q = bg_private_key(p, q)
N = p * q
return N
def encipher_bg(i, key, seed=None):
"""
Encrypts the message using public key and seed.
Explanation
===========
ALGORITHM:
1. Encodes i as a string of L bits, m.
2. Select a random element r, where 1 < r < key, and computes
x = r^2 mod key.
3. Use BBS pseudo-random number generator to generate L random bits, b,
using the initial seed as x.
4. Encrypted message, c_i = m_i XOR b_i, 1 <= i <= L.
5. x_L = x^(2^L) mod key.
6. Return (c, x_L)
Parameters
==========
i
Message, a non-negative integer
key
The public key
Returns
=======
Tuple
(encrypted_message, x_L)
Raises
======
ValueError
If i is negative.
"""
if i < 0:
raise ValueError(
"message must be a non-negative "
"integer: got %d instead" % i)
enc_msg = []
while i > 0:
enc_msg.append(i % 2)
i //= 2
enc_msg.reverse()
L = len(enc_msg)
r = _randint(seed)(2, key - 1)
x = r**2 % key
x_L = pow(int(x), int(2**L), int(key))
rand_bits = []
for _ in range(L):
rand_bits.append(x % 2)
x = x**2 % key
encrypt_msg = [m ^ b for (m, b) in zip(enc_msg, rand_bits)]
return (encrypt_msg, x_L)
def decipher_bg(message, key):
"""
Decrypts the message using private keys.
Explanation
===========
ALGORITHM:
1. Let, c be the encrypted message, y the second number received,
and p and q be the private keys.
2. Compute, r_p = y^((p+1)/4 ^ L) mod p and
r_q = y^((q+1)/4 ^ L) mod q.
3. Compute x_0 = (q(q^-1 mod p)r_p + p(p^-1 mod q)r_q) mod N.
4. From, recompute the bits using the BBS generator, as in the
encryption algorithm.
5. Compute original message by XORing c and b.
Parameters
==========
message
Tuple of encrypted message and a non-negative integer.
key
Tuple of private keys.
Returns
=======
orig_msg
The original message
"""
p, q = key
encrypt_msg, y = message
public_key = p * q
L = len(encrypt_msg)
p_t = ((p + 1)/4)**L
q_t = ((q + 1)/4)**L
r_p = pow(int(y), int(p_t), int(p))
r_q = pow(int(y), int(q_t), int(q))
x = (q * mod_inverse(q, p) * r_p + p * mod_inverse(p, q) * r_q) % public_key
orig_bits = []
for _ in range(L):
orig_bits.append(x % 2)
x = x**2 % public_key
orig_msg = 0
for (m, b) in zip(encrypt_msg, orig_bits):
orig_msg = orig_msg * 2
orig_msg += (m ^ b)
return orig_msg