Ensures random functions never return zero. This, combined with a check
commitments aren't 0, causes no serialized elements to be 0.
Also directly reads their vectors.
* Update to the latest Serai Substrate
* Add Protobuf to build dependencies
Docker shouldn't need updating as this should've been added to the image
in
2dbace5b01.
* Get substrate to build
* Correct protoc build step
* Remove the benchmarking code
There's some macro resolution error that isn't apparent. I worked on it
for about half an hour but...
* Remove unnecessary clone
* Correct runtime-benchmarks flag usage
Apparently, GitHub doesn't write back to the cache, leading to massive
build times a few moments after its initialization (when a change
happens invalidating it). While this forces a new cache whenever
dependencies change, it'll restore from an older set of dependencies in
that case, still minimizing build times.
* Label the version as an alpha
* Add versions to Cargo.tomls
* Update to Zeroize 1.5
* Drop patch versions from monero-serai Cargo.toml
* Add a repository field
* Move generators to OUT_DIR
IIRC, I didn't do this originally as it constantly re-generated them.
Unfortunately, since cargo is complaining about .generators, we have to.
* Remove Timelock::fee_weight
Transaction::fee_weight's has a comment, "Assumes Timelock::None since
this library won't let you create a TX with a timelock". Accordingly,
this is dead code.
Despite being slower and only used for blinding values, its still
extremely performant. 20 is far more standard and will avoid an eye
raise from reviewers.
While Group::random shouldn't be used instead of a hash to curve, anyone
who did would've previously been insecure and now isn't.
Could've done a recover_x and a raw Point construction, followed by a
cofactor mul, to avoid the serialization, yet the serialization ensures
full validity under the standard from_bytes function. THis also doesn't
need to be micro-optimized.
* Theoretical ed448 impl
* Fixes
* Basic tests
* More efficient scalarmul
Precomputes a table to minimize additions required.
* Add a torsion test
* Split into a constant and variable time backend
The variable time one is still far too slow, at 53s for the tests (~5s a
scalarmul). It should be usable as a PoC though.
* Rename unsafe Ed448
It's not only unworthy of the Serai branding and deserves more clarity
in the name.
* Add wide reduction to ed448
* Add Zeroize to Ed448
* Rename Ed448 group.rs to point.rs
* Minor lint to FROST
* Ed448 ciphersuite with 8032 test vector
* Macro out the backend fields
* Slight efficiency improvement to point decompression
* Disable the multiexp test in FROST for Ed448
* fmt + clippy ed448
* Fix an infinite loop in the constant time ed448 backend
* Add b"chal" to the 8032 context string for Ed448
Successfully tests against proposed vectors for the FROST IETF draft.
* Fix fmt and clippy
* Use a tabled pow algorithm in ed448's const backend
* Slight tweaks to variable time backend
Stop from_repr(MODULUS) from passing.
* Use extended points
Almost two orders of magnitude faster.
* Efficient ed448 doubling
* Remove the variable time backend
With the recent performance improvements, the constant time backend is
now 4x faster than the variable time backend was. While the variable
time backend remains much faster, and the constant time backend is still
slow compared to other libraries, it's sufficiently performant now.
The FROST test, which runs a series of multiexps over the curve, does
take 218.26s while Ristretto takes 1 and secp256k1 takes 4.57s.
While 50x slower than secp256k1 is horrible, it's ~1.5 orders of
magntiude, which is close enough to the desire stated in
https://github.com/serai-dex/serai/issues/108 to meet it.
Largely makes this library safe to use.
* Correct constants in ed448
* Rename unsafe-ed448 to minimal-ed448
Enables all FROST tests against it.
* No longer require the hazmat feature to use ed448
* Remove extraneous as_refs