Side Channels ========================= Many cryptographic systems can be broken by side channels. This document notes side channel protections which are currently implemented, as well as areas of the code which are known to be vulnerable to side channels. The latter are obviously all open for future improvement. The following text assumes the reader is already familiar with cryptographic implementations, side channel attacks, and common countermeasures. RSA ---------------------- Blinding is always used to protect private key operations (there is no way to turn it off). As an optimization, instead of choosing a new random mask and inverse with each decryption, both the mask and its inverse are simply squared to choose the next blinding factor. This is much faster than computing a fresh value each time, and the additional relation is thought to provide only minimal useful information for an attacker. Every BOTAN_BLINDING_REINIT_INTERVAL (default 32) operations, a new starting point is chosen. RSA signing uses the CRT optimization, which is much faster but vulnerable to trivial fault attacks [RsaFault] which can result in the key being entirely compromised. To protect against this (or any other computational error which would have the same effect as a fault attack in this case), after every private key operation the result is checked for consistency with the public key. This introduces only slight additional overhead and blocks most fault attacks; it is possible to use a second fault attack to bypass this verification, but such a double fault attack requires significantly more control on the part of an attacker than a BellCore style attack, which is possible if any error at all occurs during either modular exponentiation involved in the RSA signature operation. See blinding.cpp and rsa.cpp. If the OpenSSL provider is enabled, then no explicit blinding is done; we assume OpenSSL handles this. See openssl_rsa.cpp. Decryption of PKCS #1 v1.5 Ciphertexts ---------------------------------------- This padding scheme is used with RSA, and is very vulnerable to errors. In a scenario where an attacker can repeatedly present RSA ciphertexts, and a legitimate key holder will attempt to decrypt each ciphertext and simply indicates to the attacker if the PKCS padding was valid or not (without revealing any additional information), the attacker can use this behavior as an oracle to perform iterative decryption of arbitrary RSA ciphertexts encrypted under that key. This is the famous million message attack [MillionMsg]. A side channel such as a difference in time taken to handle valid and invalid RSA ciphertexts is enough to mount the attack [MillionMsgTiming]. Preventing this issue in full requires some application level changes. In protocols which know the expected length of the encrypted key, PK_Decryptor provides the function `decrypt_or_random` which first generates a random fake key, then decrypts the presented ciphertext, then in constant time either copies out the random key or the decrypted plaintext depending on if the ciphertext was valid or not (valid padding and expected plaintext length). Then in the case of an attack, the protocol will carry on with a randomly chosen key, which will presumably cause total failure in a way that does not allow an attacker to distinguish (via any timing or other side channel, nor any error messages specific to the one situation vs the other) if the RSA padding was valid or invalid. One very important user of PKCS #1 v1.5 encryption is the TLS protocol. In TLS, some extra versioning information is embedded in the plaintext message, along with the key. It turns out that this version information must be treated in an identical (constant-time) way with the PKCS padding, or again the system is broken. [VersionOracle]. This is supported by a special version of PK_Decryptor::decrypt_or_random that additionally allows verifying one or more content bytes, in addition to the PKCS padding. See eme_pkcs.cpp and pubkey.cpp. Verification of PKCS #1 v1.5 Signatures ---------------------------------------- One way of verifying PKCS #1 v1.5 signature padding is to decode it with an ASN.1 BER parser. However such a design commonly leads to accepting signatures besides the (single) valid RSA PKCS #1 v1.5 signature for any given message, because often the BER parser accepts variations of the encoding which are actually invalid. It also needlessly exposes the BER parser to untrusted inputs. It is safer and simpler to instead re-encode the hash value we are expecting using the PKCS #1 v1.5 encoding rules, and const time compare our expected encoding with the output of the RSA operation. So that is what Botan does. See emsa_pkcs.cpp. OAEP ---------------------- RSA OAEP is (PKCS#1 v2) is the recommended version of RSA encoding standard, because it is not directly vulnerable to Bleichenbacher attack. However, if implemented incorrectly, a side channel can be presented to an attacker and create an oracle for decrypting RSA ciphertexts [OaepTiming]. This attack is avoided in Botan by making the OAEP decoding operation run without any conditional jumps or indexes, with the only variance in runtime coming from the length of the RSA key (which is public information). See eme_oaep.cpp. Modular Exponentiation ------------------------ Modular exponentiation uses a fixed window algorithm with Montgomery representation. In the current code, information about the exponent is leaked through the sequence of memory indexes; we currently rely on randomized blinding at higher levels of the cryptographic stack to hide this. A future project would be to change this to use either Montgomery ladder or use a side channel silent table lookup. See powm_mnt.cpp. The Karatsuba multiplication algorithm has some conditional branches that probably expose information through the branch predictor, but probably? does not expose a timing channel since the same amount of work is done on both sides of the conditional. There is certainly room for improvement here. See mp_karat.cpp for details. The Montgomery reduction is written (and tested) to run in constant time. See mp_monty.cpp. ECC point decoding ---------------------- The API function OS2ECP, which is used to convert byte strings to ECC points, verifies that all points satisfy the ECC curve equation. Points that do not satisfy the equation are invalid, and can sometimes be used to break protocols ([InvalidCurve] [InvalidCurveTLS]). See point_gfp.cpp. ECC scalar multiply ---------------------- There are two implementations of scalar multiply, PointGFp::operator* and the class Blinded_Point_Multiply. The default scalar multiply uses the Montgomery ladder. However it currently leaks the size of the scalar, because the loop iterations are bounded by the scalar size. Blinded_Point_Multiply (used by ECDH, ECDSA, etc) applies several additional side channel countermeasures. The scalar is masked by a small multiple of the group order (this is commonly called Coron's first countermeasure [CoronDpa]), the size of the scalar mask is currently controlled by build.h value BOTAN_POINTGFP_SCALAR_BLINDING_BITS which defaults to 20 bits. Botan stores all ECC points in Jacobian representation. This form allows faster computation by representing points (x,y) as (X,Y,Z) where x=X/Z^2 and y=Y/Z^3. As the representation is redundant, for any randomly chosen r, (X*r^2,Y*r^3,Z*r) is an equivalent point. Changing the point values prevents an attacker from mounting attacks based on the input point remaining unchanged over multiple executions. This is commonly called Coron's third countermeasure, see again [CoronDpa]. Currently Blinded_Point_Multiply uses one of two different algorithms, depending on a build-time flag. If BOTAN_POINTGFP_BLINDED_MULTIPLY_USE_MONTGOMERY_LADDER is set in build.h (default is for it *not* to be set), then a randomized Montgomery ladder algorithm from [RandomMonty] is used. Otherwise, a simple fixed window exponentiation is used; the current version leaks exponent bits through memory index values. We rely on scalar blinding to reduce this leakage. It would obviously be better for Blinded_Point_Multiply to converge on a single side channel silent algorithm. See point_gfp.cpp. ECDH ---------------------- ECDH verifies (through its use of OS2ECP) that all input points received from the other party satisfy the curve equation. This prevents twist attacks. The same check is performed on the output point, which helps prevent fault attacks. ECDSA ---------------------- Inversion of the ECDSA nonce k must be done in constant time, as any leak of even a single bit of the nonce can be sufficient to allow recovering the private key. In Botan all inverses modulo an odd number are performed using a constant time algorithm due to Niels Möller. x25519 ---------------------- The x25519 code is independent of the main Weiserstrass form ECC code, instead based on curve25519-donna-c64.c by Adam Langley. The code seems immune to cache based side channels. It does make use of integer multiplications; on some old CPUs these multiplications take variable time and might allow a side channel attack. This is not considered a problem on modern processors. TLS CBC ciphersuites ---------------------- The original TLS v1.0 CBC Mac-then-Encrypt mode is vulnerable to an oracle attack. If an attacker can distinguish padding errors through different error messages [TlsCbcOracle] or via a side channel attack like [Lucky13], they can abuse the server as a decryption oracle. The side channel protection for Lucky13 follows the approach proposed in the Lucky13 paper. It is not perfectly constant time, but does hide the padding oracle in practice. Tools to test TLS CBC decoding are included in the timing tests. See https://github.com/randombit/botan/pull/675 for more information. The Encrypt-then-MAC extension, which completely avoids the side channel, is implemented and used by default for CBC ciphersuites. CBC mode padding ---------------------- In theory, any good protocol protects CBC ciphertexts with a MAC. But in practice, some protocols are not good and cannot be fixed immediately. To avoid making a bad problem worse, the code to handle decoding CBC ciphertext padding bytes runs in constant time, depending only on the block size of the cipher. AES ---------------------- On x86 processors which support it, AES-NI instruction set is used, as it is fast and (presumed) side channel silent. There is no support at the moment for the similar ARMv8 or POWER AES instructions; patches would be welcome. On x86 processors without AES-NI but with SSSE3 (which includes older Intel Atoms and Core2 Duos, and even now some embedded or low power x86 chips), a version of AES using pshufb is used which is both fast and side channel silent. It is based on code by Mike Hamburg [VectorAes], see aes_ssse3.cpp. This same technique could be applied with NEON or AltiVec, and the paper suggests some optimizations for the AltiVec shuffle. On all other processors, a class 4K table lookup version based on the original Rijndael code is used. This approach relatively fast, but now known to be very vulnerable to side channels. The implementation does make modifications in the first and last rounds to reduce the cache signature, but these merely increase the number of observations required. See [AesCacheColl] for one paper which analyzes a number of implementations including Botan. Botan already follows both of their suggested countermeasures, which increased the number of samples required from 2**13 to the only slightly less pitiful 2**19 samples. The Botan block cipher API already supports bitslicing implementations, so a const time 8x bitsliced AES could be integrated fairly easily. GCM --------------------- On x86 platforms which support the clmul instruction, GCM support is fast and constant time. On all other platforms, GCM is slow and constant time. It uses a simple bit at at time loop. It would be much faster using a table lookup, but we wish to avoid side channels. One improvement here would be the option of using a 2K or 4K table, but using a side-channel silent (masked) table lookup. OCB ----------------------- It is straightforward to implement OCB mode in a efficient way that does not depend on any secret branches or lookups. See ocb.cpp for the implementation. Poly1305 ---------------------- The Poly1305 implementation does not have any secret lookups or conditionals. The code is based on the public domain version by Andrew Moon. DES/3DES ---------------------- The DES implementation uses table lookups, and is likely vulnerable to side channel attacks. DES or 3DES should be avoided in new systems. The proper fix would be a scalar bitsliced implementation, this is not seen as worth the engineering investment given these algorithms end of life status. Twofish ------------------------ This algorithm uses table lookups with secret sboxes. No cache-based side channel attack on Twofish has ever been published, but it is possible nobody sufficiently skilled has ever tried. ChaCha20, Serpent, Threefish, ... ----------------------------------- Some algorithms including ChaCha, Salsa, Serpent and Threefish are 'naturally' silent to cache and timing side channels on all recent processors. IDEA --------------- IDEA encryption, decryption, and key schedule are implemented to take constant time regardless of their inputs. Hash Functions ------------------------- Most hash functions included in Botan such as MD5, SHA-1, SHA-2, SHA-3, Skein, and BLAKE2 do not require any input-dependent memory lookups, and so seem to not be affected by common CPU side channels. Memory comparisons ---------------------- The function same_mem in header mem_ops.h provides a constant-time comparison function. It is used when comparing MACs or other secret values. It is also exposed for application use. Memory zeroizing ---------------------- There is no way in portable C/C++ to zero out an array before freeing it, in such a way that it is guaranteed that the compiler will not elide the 'additional' (seemingly unnecessary) writes to zero out the memory. The function secure_scrub_memory (in mem_ops.cpp) uses some system specific trick to zero out an array. On Windows it uses the directly supported API function RtlSecureZeroMemory. On other platforms, by default the trick of referencing memset through a volatile function pointer is used. This approach is not guaranteed to work on all platforms, and currently there is no systematic check of the resulting binary function that it is compiled as expected. But, it is the best approach currently known and has been verified to work as expected on common platforms. If BOTAN_USE_VOLATILE_MEMSET_FOR_ZERO is set to 0 in build.h (not the default) a byte at a time loop through a volatile pointer is used to overwrite the array. Memory allocation ---------------------- Botan's secure_vector type is a std::vector with a custom allocator. The allocator calls secure_scrub_memory before freeing memory. Some operating systems support an API call to lock a range of pages into memory, such that they will never be swapped out (mlock on POSIX, VirtualLock on Windows). On many POSIX systems mlock is only usable by root, but on Linux, FreeBSD and possibly other systems a small amount of memory can be mlock'ed by processes without extra credentials. If available, Botan uses such a region for storing key material. It is created in anonymous mapped memory (not disk backed), locked in memory, and scrubbed on free. This memory pool is used by secure_vector when available. It can be disabled at runtime setting the environment variable BOTAN_MLOCK_POOL_SIZE to 0. Automated Analysis --------------------- Currently the main tool used by the Botan developers for testing for side channels at runtime is valgrind; valgrind's runtime API is used to taint memory values, and any jumps or indexes using data derived from these values will cause a valgrind warning. This technique was first used by Adam Langley in ctgrind. See header ct_utils.h. To check, install valgrind, configure the build with --with-valgrind, and run the tests. References --------------- [AesCacheColl] Bonneau, Mironov "Cache-Collision Timing Attacks Against AES" (http://www.jbonneau.com/doc/BM06-CHES-aes_cache_timing.pdf) [CoronDpa] Coron, "Resistance against Differential Power Analysis for Elliptic Curve Cryptosystems" (http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.1.5695) [InvalidCurve] Biehl, Meyer, Müller: Differential fault attacks on elliptic curve cryptosystems (http://www.iacr.org/archive/crypto2000/18800131/18800131.pdf) [InvalidCurveTLS] Jager, Schwenk, Somorovsky: Practical Invalid Curve Attacks on TLS-ECDH (https://www.nds.rub.de/research/publications/ESORICS15/) [SafeCurves] Bernstein, Lange: SafeCurves: choosing safe curves for elliptic-curve cryptography. (http://safecurves.cr.yp.to) [Lucky13] AlFardan, Paterson "Lucky Thirteen: Breaking the TLS and DTLS Record Protocols" (http://www.isg.rhul.ac.uk/tls/TLStiming.pdf) [MillionMsg] Bleichenbacher "Chosen Ciphertext Attacks Against Protocols Based on the RSA Encryption Standard PKCS1" (http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.19.8543) [MillionMsgTiming] Meyer, Somorovsky, Weiss, Schwenk, Schinzel, Tews: Revisiting SSL/TLS Implementations: New Bleichenbacher Side Channels and Attacks (https://www.nds.rub.de/research/publications/mswsst2014-bleichenbacher-usenix14/) [OaepTiming] Manger, "A Chosen Ciphertext Attack on RSA Optimal Asymmetric Encryption Padding (OAEP) as Standardized in PKCS #1 v2.0" (http://archiv.infsec.ethz.ch/education/fs08/secsem/Manger01.pdf) [RsaFault] Boneh, Demillo, Lipton "On the importance of checking cryptographic protocols for faults" (http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.48.9764) [RandomMonty] Le, Tan, Tunstall "Randomizing the Montgomery Powering Ladder" (https://eprint.iacr.org/2015/657) [VectorAes] Hamburg, "Accelerating AES with Vector Permute Instructions" https://shiftleft.org/papers/vector_aes/vector_aes.pdf [VersionOracle] Klíma, Pokorný, Rosa "Attacking RSA-based Sessions in SSL/TLS" (https://eprint.iacr.org/2003/052)