Masked Accelerators and Instruction Set Extensions for Post-Quantum Cryptography

Authors

  • Tim Fritzmann Technical University of Munich, TUM Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Chair of Security in Information Technology, Munich, Germany
  • Michiel Van Beirendonck imec-COSIC KU Leuven Kasteelpark Arenberg 10 - bus 2452, 3001 Leuven, Belgium
  • Debapriya Basu Roy Technical University of Munich, TUM Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Chair of Security in Information Technology, Munich, Germany
  • Patrick Karl Technical University of Munich, TUM Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Chair of Security in Information Technology, Munich, Germany
  • Thomas Schamberger Technical University of Munich, TUM Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Chair of Security in Information Technology, Munich, Germany
  • Ingrid Verbauwhede imec-COSIC KU Leuven Kasteelpark Arenberg 10 - bus 2452, 3001 Leuven, Belgium
  • Georg Sigl Technical University of Munich, TUM Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Chair of Security in Information Technology, Munich, Germany; Fraunhofer Institute for Applied and Integrated Security, Garching, Germany

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.46586/tches.v2022.i1.414-460

Keywords:

Post-quantum cryptography, Kyber, Saber, masking, RISC-V, accelerators, instruction set extensions

Abstract

Side-channel attacks can break mathematically secure cryptographic systems leading to a major concern in applied cryptography. While the cryptanalysis and security evaluation of Post-Quantum Cryptography (PQC) have already received an increasing research effort, a cost analysis of efficient side-channel countermeasures is still lacking. In this work, we propose a masked HW/SW codesign of the NIST PQC finalists Kyber and Saber, suitable for their different characteristics. Among others, we present a novel masked ciphertext compression algorithm for non-power-of-two moduli. To accelerate linear performance bottlenecks, we developed a generic Number Theoretic Transform (NTT) multiplier, which, in contrast to previously published accelerators, is also efficient and suitable for schemes not based on NTT. For the critical non-linear operations, masked HW accelerators were developed, allowing a secure execution using RISC-V instruction set extensions. With the proposed design, we achieved a cycle count of K:214k/E:298k/D:313k for Kyber and K:233k/E:312k/D:351k for Saber with NIST Level III parameter sets. For the same parameter sets, the masking overhead for the first-order secure decapsulation operation including randomness generation is a factor of 4.48 for Kyber (D:1403k)
and 2.60 for Saber (D:915k).

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Published

2021-11-19

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Masked Accelerators and Instruction Set Extensions for Post-Quantum Cryptography. (2021). IACR Transactions on Cryptographic Hardware and Embedded Systems, 2022(1), 414-460. https://doi.org/10.46586/tches.v2022.i1.414-460