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Difference between revisions of "Attacking TEA with CPA"

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(Created page with "= TEA Encryption = TEA (Tiny Encryption Algorithm) is a simple encryption algorithm that is meant to be simple enough to memorize. It uses a 128 bit key to encrypt 64 bits of...")
 
(TEA Encryption)
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</pre>
 
</pre>
 
If you're used to looking at the AES algorithm, this one probably looks extremely simple. However, it is surprisingly secure. As of 2016, very few attacks on TEA are known - the best cryptanalysis results require <math>2^{121.5}</math> guesses against a shortened version of the algorithm! The only real weakness is that every key has three other equivalent keys - that is, there are four different keys that all give the exact same encrypted output. This is not a showstopper because <math>2^{126}</math> keys is still too many to brute-force.
 
If you're used to looking at the AES algorithm, this one probably looks extremely simple. However, it is surprisingly secure. As of 2016, very few attacks on TEA are known - the best cryptanalysis results require <math>2^{121.5}</math> guesses against a shortened version of the algorithm! The only real weakness is that every key has three other equivalent keys - that is, there are four different keys that all give the exact same encrypted output. This is not a showstopper because <math>2^{126}</math> keys is still too many to brute-force.
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In order to complete a CPA attack, we need to find some sensitive points of the algorithm. Breaking up the first round of the one-liner
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<pre>
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v[0] += ((v[1]<<4) + k[0]) ^ (v[1] + sum) ^ ((v[1]>>5) + k[1]);
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</pre>
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gives
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<pre>
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uint32_t a = (v[1] << 4) + k[0]; // Attack point 1
 +
uint32_t b = v[1] + 0x9e3779b9;  //
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uint32_t c = (v[1] >> 5) + k[1]; // Attack point 2
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v[0] += (a ^ b ^ c);            // Attack point 3
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</pre>
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The three attack points here are good spots to attack because they are non-linear: addition can cause a single changed bit to carry through to several bits of the result. However, all three of these points have limitations.
 +
# This expression includes a left-shift of 4 bits, so we have no control over the bottom 4 bits. This means we cannot use CPA to recover all 32 bits of <code>k[0]</code> - we can only get 28 of them.
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# Similarly, this expression includes a right-shift of 5 bits, so we can only get at the bottom 27 bits.
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# The last XOR combines the first two results, which use both words of the key (<code>k[0]</code> and <code>k[1]</code>). This means that we can only use it if we already know some of the bits in one of these keys (ie: we can only find the first byte of <code>k[0]</code> if we know the first byte of <code>k[1]</code>).
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However, this is enough information to recover both of these words. Once we know these 64 bits, the second half of the key can be recovered in exactly the same way.

Revision as of 12:23, 4 July 2016

TEA Encryption

TEA (Tiny Encryption Algorithm) is a simple encryption algorithm that is meant to be simple enough to memorize. It uses a 128 bit key to encrypt 64 bits of plaintext with the following C code:

void tea_encrypt(uint32_t* v, uint32_t* k)
{
    uint32_t sum=0, i;
    uint32_t delta= 0x9e3779b9;
    for (i=0; i < 32; i++) {
        sum  += delta;
        v[0] += ((v[1]<<4) + k[0]) ^ (v[1] + sum) ^ ((v[1]>>5) + k[1]);
        v[1] += ((v[0]<<4) + k[2]) ^ (v[0] + sum) ^ ((v[0]>>5) + k[3]);
    }
}

If you're used to looking at the AES algorithm, this one probably looks extremely simple. However, it is surprisingly secure. As of 2016, very few attacks on TEA are known - the best cryptanalysis results require 2^{121.5} guesses against a shortened version of the algorithm! The only real weakness is that every key has three other equivalent keys - that is, there are four different keys that all give the exact same encrypted output. This is not a showstopper because 2^{126} keys is still too many to brute-force.

In order to complete a CPA attack, we need to find some sensitive points of the algorithm. Breaking up the first round of the one-liner

v[0] += ((v[1]<<4) + k[0]) ^ (v[1] + sum) ^ ((v[1]>>5) + k[1]);

gives

uint32_t a = (v[1] << 4) + k[0]; // Attack point 1
uint32_t b = v[1] + 0x9e3779b9;  //
uint32_t c = (v[1] >> 5) + k[1]; // Attack point 2
v[0] += (a ^ b ^ c);             // Attack point 3

The three attack points here are good spots to attack because they are non-linear: addition can cause a single changed bit to carry through to several bits of the result. However, all three of these points have limitations.

  1. This expression includes a left-shift of 4 bits, so we have no control over the bottom 4 bits. This means we cannot use CPA to recover all 32 bits of k[0] - we can only get 28 of them.
  2. Similarly, this expression includes a right-shift of 5 bits, so we can only get at the bottom 27 bits.
  3. The last XOR combines the first two results, which use both words of the key (k[0] and k[1]). This means that we can only use it if we already know some of the bits in one of these keys (ie: we can only find the first byte of k[0] if we know the first byte of k[1]).

However, this is enough information to recover both of these words. Once we know these 64 bits, the second half of the key can be recovered in exactly the same way.