X-Git-Url: https://bilbo.iut-bm.univ-fcomte.fr/and/gitweb/book_gpu.git/blobdiff_plain/013c063fb5cb99cc33b413d937f330acc42ca73e..a60840091cd318f2c8e530740dd7940fc393e898:/BookGPU/Chapters/chapter18/ch18.tex diff --git a/BookGPU/Chapters/chapter18/ch18.tex b/BookGPU/Chapters/chapter18/ch18.tex index 3808995..d72e9a3 100755 --- a/BookGPU/Chapters/chapter18/ch18.tex +++ b/BookGPU/Chapters/chapter18/ch18.tex @@ -1,8 +1,8 @@ -\chapterauthor{Raphaël Couturier}{Femto-ST Institute, University of Franche-Comte} -\chapterauthor{Christophe Guyeux}{Femto-ST Institute, University of Franche-Comte} +\chapterauthor{Raphaël Couturier and Christophe Guyeux}{Femto-ST Institute, University of Franche-Comte, France} +%\chapterauthor{Christophe Guyeux}{Femto-ST Institute, University of Franche-Comt\'{e}} -\chapter{Pseudo Random Number Generator on GPU} +\chapter{Pseudorandom Number Generator on GPU} \label{chapter18} \section{Introduction} @@ -10,38 +10,36 @@ Randomness is of importance in many fields such as scientific simulations or cryptography. ``Random numbers'' can mainly be generated either by a deterministic and reproducible algorithm called -a pseudorandom number generator (PRNG). In this paper, we focus on +a pseudorandom number generator (PRNG)\index{PRNG}, or by a physical non-deterministic +process having all the characteristics of a random noise, called a truly random number +generator (TRNG). In this chapter, we focus on reproducible generators, useful for instance in Monte-Carlo based simulators. These domains need PRNGs that are statistically irreproachable. In some fields such as in numerical simulations, speed is a strong requirement that is usually attained by using parallel architectures. In that case, a recurrent problem is that a deflation of the statistical qualities is often reported, when the -parallelization of a good PRNG is realized. In some fields such as in -numerical simulations, speed is a strong requirement that is usually -attained by using parallel architectures. In that case, a recurrent -problem is that a deflation of the statistical qualities is often -reported, when the parallelization of a good PRNG is realized. This +parallelization of a good PRNG is realized. This is why ad-hoc PRNGs for each possible architecture must be found to -achieve both speed and randomness. On the other side, speed is not -the main requirement in cryptography: the great need is to +achieve both speed and randomness. On the other hand, speed is not +the main requirement in cryptography: the most important point is to define \emph{secure} generators able to withstand malicious attacks. Roughly speaking, an attacker should not be able in practice to make the distinction between numbers obtained with the secure generator and a true random sequence. Or, in an equivalent formulation, he or she should not be able (in practice) to predict the next bit of the generator, having the knowledge of all the binary -digits that have been already released. ``Being able in practice'' +digits that have been already released~\cite{Goldreich}. ``Being able in practice'' refers here to the possibility to achieve this attack in polynomial time, and to the exponential growth of the difficulty of this challenge when the size of the parameters of the PRNG increases. Finally, a small part of the community working in this domain focuses on a -third requirement, that is to define chaotic generators. -The main idea is to take benefits from a chaotic dynamical system to obtain a +third requirement, that is to define chaotic generators~\cite{kellert1994wake, Wu20051195,gleick2011chaos}. +The main idea is to benefits from a chaotic dynamical system to obtain a generator that is unpredictable, disordered, sensible to its seed, or in other word chaotic. -Their desire is to map a given chaotic dynamics into a sequence that seems random +These scientists' desire is to map a given chaotic dynamics into a sequence that seems random and unassailable due to chaos. However, the chaotic maps used as a pattern are defined in the real line whereas computers deal with finite precision numbers. @@ -50,13 +48,40 @@ Furthermore, authors of such chaotic generators often claim their PRNG as secure due to their chaos properties, but there is no obvious relation between chaos and security as it is understood in cryptography. This is why the use of chaos for PRNG still remains marginal and disputable. - - -The remainder of this paper is organized as follows. -A COMPLETER - - -\section{Basic Recalls} +However, we have established in previous researches that these flaws can +be circumvented by using a tool called choatic iterations. +Such investigations have led to the definition of a new +family of PRNGs that are chaotic while being fast and statistically perfect, +or cryptographically secure~\cite{bgw09:ip,bgw10:ip,bfgw11:ij,bfg12a:ip}. This family is improved and adapted for GPU +architectures in this chapter. + + +Let us finish this introduction by noticing that, in this paper, +statistical perfection refers to the ability to pass the whole +{\it BigCrush} battery of tests, which is widely considered as the most +stringent statistical evaluation of a sequence claimed as random. +This battery can be found in the well-known TestU01 package~\cite{LEcuyerS07}\index{TestU01}. +More precisely, each time we performed a test on a PRNG, we ran it +twice in order to observe if all $p-$values were inside [0.01, 0.99]. In +fact, we observed that few $p-$values (less than ten) are sometimes +outside this interval but inside [0.001, 0.999], so that is why a +second run has allowed us to confirm that the values outside are not for +the same test. With this approach all our PRNGs pass the {\it + BigCrush} successfully and all $p-$values are at least once inside +[0.01, 0.99]. +Chaos, for its part, refers to the well-established definition of a +chaotic dynamical system defined by Devaney~\cite{Devaney}. + +The remainder of this chapter is organized as follows. +Basic definitions and terminologies about both topological chaos +and chaotic iterations are provided in the next section. Various +chaotic iterations based on pseudorandom number generators are then +presented in Section~\ref{sec:efficient PRNG}. They encompass +naive and improved efficient generators for CPU and for GPU. +These generators are finally experimented in Section~\ref{sec:experiments}. + + +\section{Basic Remindees} \label{section:BASIC RECALLS} This section is devoted to basic definitions and terminologies in the fields of @@ -64,13 +89,117 @@ topological chaos and chaotic iterations. We assume the reader is familiar with basic notions on topology (see for instance~\cite{Devaney}). -\subsection{Devaney's Chaotic Dynamical Systems} +\subsection{A Short Presentation of Chaos} + + +Chaos theory studies the behavior of dynamical systems that are perfectly predictable, yet appear to be wildly amorphous and meaningless. +Chaotic systems\index{chaotic systems} are highly sensitive to initial conditions, +which is popularly referred to as the butterfly effect. +In other words, small differences in initial conditions (such as those due to rounding errors in numerical computation) yield widely diverging outcomes, +rendering long-term prediction impossible in general \cite{kellert1994wake}. This happens even though these systems are deterministic, meaning that their future behavior is fully determined by their initial conditions, with no random elements involved \cite{kellert1994wake}. That is, the deterministic nature of these systems does not make them predictable \cite{kellert1994wake,Werndl01032009}. This behavior is known as deterministic chaos, or simply chaos. It has been well-studied in mathematics and +physics, leading among other things to the well-established definition of Devaney which can be found next. + + + + + +\subsection{On Devaney's Definition of Chaos}\index{chaos} +\label{sec:dev} +Consider a metric space $(\mathcal{X},d)$ and a continuous function $f:\mathcal{X}\longrightarrow \mathcal{X}$, for one-dimensional dynamical systems of the form: +\begin{equation} +x^0 \in \mathcal{X} \textrm{ and } \forall n \in \mathds{N}^*, x^n=f(x^{n-1}), +\label{Devaney} +\end{equation} +the following definition of chaotic behavior, formulated by Devaney~\cite{Devaney}, is widely accepted. + +\begin{definition} + A dynamical system of Form~(\ref{Devaney}) is said to be chaotic if the following conditions hold. +\begin{itemize} +\item Topological transitivity\index{topological transitivity}: + +\begin{equation} +\forall U,V \textrm{ open sets of } \mathcal{X},~\exists k>0, f^k(U) \cap V \neq \varnothing . +\end{equation} + +Intuitively, a topologically transitive map has points that eventually move under iteration from one arbitrarily small neighborhood to any other. Consequently, the dynamical system cannot be decomposed into two disjoint open sets that are invariant under the map. Note that if a map possesses a dense orbit, then it is clearly topologically transitive. +\item Density of periodic points in $\mathcal{X}$\index{density of periodic points}. + +Let $P=\{p\in \mathcal{X}|\exists n \in \mathds{N}^{\ast}:f^n(p)=p\}$ the set of periodic points of $f$. Then $P$ is dense in $\mathcal{X}$: + +\begin{equation} + \overline{P}=\mathcal{X} . +\end{equation} + +The density of periodic orbits means that every point in space is closely approached by periodic orbits in an arbitrary way. Topologically mixing systems failing this condition may not display sensitivity to initial conditions presented below, and hence may not be chaotic. +\item Sensitive dependence on initial conditions\index{sensitive dependence on initial conditions}: + +$\exists \varepsilon>0,$ $\forall x \in \mathcal{X},$ $\forall \delta >0,$ $\exists y \in \mathcal{X},$ $\exists n \in \mathbb{N},$ $d(x,y)<\delta$ and $d\left(f^n(x),f^n(y)\right) \geqslant \varepsilon.$ +Intuitively, a map possesses sensitive dependence on initial conditions if there exist points arbitrarily close to $x$ that eventually separate from $x$ by at least $\varepsilon$ under the iteration of $f$. Not all points near $x$ need eventually separate from $x$ under iteration, but there must be at least one such point in every neighborhood of $x$. If a map possesses sensitive dependence on initial conditions, then for all practical purposes, the dynamics of the map defy numerical computation. Small errors in computation that are introduced by round-off may become magnified upon iteration. The results of numerical computation of an orbit, no matter how accurate, may bear no resemblance whatsoever with the real orbit. +\end{itemize} -A COMPLETER +\end{definition} +When $f$ is chaotic, then the system $(\mathcal{X}, f)$ is chaotic and quoting Devaney: ``it is unpredictable because of the sensitive dependence on initial conditions. It cannot be broken down or decomposed into two subsystems which do not interact because of topological transitivity. And, in the midst of this random behavior, we nevertheless have an element of regularity.'' Fundamentally different behaviors are consequently possible and occur in an unpredictable way. + + + + + + +\subsection{Chaotic iterations}\index{chaotic iterations} +\label{subsection:Chaotic iterations} + +Let us now introduce an example of a dynamical systems family that has +the potentiality to become chaotic, depending on the choice of the iteration +function. This family is the basis of the PRNGs we will +develop during this chapter. + +\begin{definition} +\label{Chaotic iterations} +The set $\mathds{B}$ denoting $\{0,1\}$, let $f:\mathds{B}^{\mathsf{N}% +}\longrightarrow \mathds{B}^{\mathsf{N}}$ be an ``iteration'' function and $S$ be a +sequence of subsets of $\llbracket 1, \mathsf{N}\rrbracket$ called a chaotic strategy. Then, the so-called \emph{chaotic iterations} are defined by~\cite{Robert1986}: + +\begin{equation} +\label{eq:generalIC} +\left\{\begin{array}{l} +x^0\in \mathds{B}^{\mathsf{N}}, \\ +\forall n\in \mathds{N}^{\ast },\forall i\in \llbracket1;\mathsf{N}\rrbracket% +,x_i^n= +\left\{ +\begin{array}{ll} +x_i^{n-1} & \text{if}~ i\notin S^n \\ +f(x^{n-1})_{i} & \text{if}~ i \in S^n. +\end{array} +\right. +\end{array} +\right. +\end{equation} +\end{definition} + +In other words, at the $n^{th}$ iteration, only the cells of $S^{n}$ are +``iterated''. +Chaotic iterations generate a set of vectors; +they are defined by an initial state $x^{0}$, an iteration function $f$, and a chaotic strategy $S$~\cite{bg10:ij}. +These ``chaotic iterations'' can behave chaotically as defined by Devaney, +depending on the choice of $f$~\cite{bg10:ij}. For instance, +chaos is obtained when $f$ is the vectorial negation. +Note that, with this example of function, chaotic iterations +defined above can be rewritten as: +\begin{equation} +\label{equation Oplus} +x^0 \in \llbracket 0,2^\mathsf{N}-1\rrbracket,~\mathcal{S}^n \in \mathcal{P}\left(\llbracket 1,2^\mathsf{N}-1\rrbracket\right)^\mathds{N},~~ x^{n+1}=x^n \oplus \mathcal{S}^n, +\end{equation} +where $\mathcal{P}(X)$ stands for the set of subsets of $X$, whereas +$a\oplus b$ is the bitwise exclusive or operation between the binary +representation of the integers $a$ and $b$. Note that the term + $\mathcal{S}^n$ is directly and obviously linked to the $S^n$ of +Eq.\ref{eq:generalIC}. As recalled above, such an iterative sequence +satisfies the Devaney's definition of chaos. + \section{Toward Efficiency and Improvement for CI PRNG} \label{sec:efficient PRNG} @@ -141,7 +270,8 @@ unsigned int CIPRNG() { In Listing~\ref{algo:seqCIPRNG} a sequential version of the proposed PRNG based -on chaotic iterations is presented. The xor operator is represented by +on chaotic iterations is presented, which extends the generator family +formerly presented in~\cite{bgw09:ip,guyeux10}. The xor operator is represented by \textasciicircum. This function uses three classical 64-bits PRNGs, namely the \texttt{xorshift}, the \texttt{xor128}, and the \texttt{xorwow}~\cite{Marsaglia2003}. In the following, we call them ``xor-like @@ -163,11 +293,11 @@ this fast generator cannot be proven as secure. \subsection{Efficient PRNGs based on Chaotic Iterations on GPU} \label{sec:efficient PRNG gpu} -In order to take benefits from the computing power of GPU, a program +In order to benefit from the computing power of GPU, a program needs to have independent blocks of threads that can be computed simultaneously. In general, the larger the number of threads is, the more local memory is used, and the less branching instructions are -used (if, while, ...), the better the performances on GPU is. +used (if, while, ...) and so, the better the performances on GPU are. Obviously, having these requirements in mind, it is possible to build a program similar to the one presented in Listing \ref{algo:seqCIPRNG}, which computes pseudorandom numbers on GPU. To @@ -188,7 +318,7 @@ PRNGs used in these computations must have different parameters. In a given thread, these parameters are randomly picked from another PRNGs. The initialization stage is performed by the CPU. -To do it, the ISAAC PRNG~\cite{Jenkins96} is used to set all the +To do this, the ISAAC PRNG~\cite{Jenkins96} is used to set all the parameters embedded into each thread. The implementation of the three @@ -226,7 +356,7 @@ used simultaneously, the number of random numbers that a thread can generate inside a kernel is limited (\emph{i.e.}, the variable \texttt{n} in algorithm~\ref{algo:gpu_kernel}). For instance, if $100,000$ threads are used and if $n=100$\footnote{in fact, we need to add the initial seed (a 32-bits number)}, -then the memory required to store all of the internals variables of both the xor-like +then the memory required to store all of the internal variables of both the xor-like PRNGs\footnote{we multiply this number by $2$ in order to count 32-bits numbers} and the pseudorandom numbers generated by our PRNG, is equal to $100,000\times ((4+5+6)\times 2+(1+100))=1,310,000$ 32-bits numbers, that is, approximately $52$Mb. @@ -295,19 +425,20 @@ system of Eq.~\ref{eq:generalIC}. That is, an iteration of the general chaotic iterations is realized between the last stored value $x$ of the thread and a strategy $t$ (obtained by a bitwise exclusive or between a value provided by a xor-like() call and two values previously obtained by two other threads). -To be certain that we are in the framework of Theorem~\ref{t:chaos des general}, +To be certain that such iterations corresponds to the chaotic one recalled at the +end of Section~\ref{sec:dev}, we must guarantee that this dynamical system iterates on the space -$\mathcal{X} = \mathcal{P}\left(\llbracket 1, \mathsf{N} \rrbracket\right)^\mathds{N}\times\mathds{B}^\mathsf{N}$. +$\mathcal{X} =\mathds{B}^\mathsf{N} \times \mathcal{P}\left(\llbracket 1, 2^\mathsf{N} \rrbracket\right)^\mathds{N}$. The left term $x$ obviously belongs to $\mathds{B}^ \mathsf{N}$. To prevent from any flaws of chaotic properties, we must check that the right term (the last $t$), corresponding to the strategies, can possibly be equal to any -integer of $\llbracket 1, \mathsf{N} \rrbracket$. +integer of $\llbracket 1, 2^\mathsf{N} \rrbracket$. Such a result is obvious, as for the xor-like(), all the integers belonging into its interval of definition can occur at each iteration, and thus the last $t$ respects the requirement. Furthermore, it is possible to -prove by an immediate mathematical induction that, as the initial $x$ -is uniformly distributed (it is provided by a cryptographically secure PRNG), +prove by an immediate mathematical induction that, supposing that the initial $x$ +is uniformly distributed, %(it is provided by a cryptographically secure PRNG), the two other stored values shmem[o1] and shmem[o2] are uniformly distributed too, (this is the induction hypothesis), and thus the next $x$ is finally uniformly distributed. @@ -334,7 +465,7 @@ order to obtain the optimal performances, the storage of pseudorandom numbers into the GPU memory has been removed. This step is time consuming and slows down the numbers generation. Moreover this storage is completely useless, in case of applications that consume the pseudorandom -numbers directly after generation. We can see that when the number of threads is greater +numbers directly after they have been generated. We can see that when the number of threads is greater than approximately 30,000 and lower than 5 million, the number of pseudorandom numbers generated per second is almost constant. With the naive version, this value ranges from 2.5 to 3GSamples/s. With the optimized version, it is approximately equal to @@ -356,37 +487,25 @@ As a comparison, Listing~\ref{algo:seqCIPRNG} leads to the generation of -In Figure~\ref{fig:time_bbs_gpu} we highlight the performances of the optimized -BBS-based PRNG on GPU. On the Tesla C1060 we obtain approximately 700MSample/s -and on the GTX 280 about 670MSample/s, which is obviously slower than the -xorlike-based PRNG on GPU. However, we will show in the next sections that this -new PRNG has a strong level of security, which is necessarily paid by a speed -reduction. - -\begin{figure}[htbp] -\begin{center} - \includegraphics[scale=0.65]{Chapters/chapter18/figures/curve_time_bbs_gpu.pdf} -\end{center} -\caption{Quantity of pseudorandom numbers generated per second using the BBS-based PRNG} -\label{fig:time_bbs_gpu} -\end{figure} -All these experiments allow us to conclude that it is possible to +These experiments allow us to conclude that it is possible to generate a very large quantity of pseudorandom numbers statistically perfect with the xor-like version. -To a certain extend, it is also the case with the secure BBS-based version, the speed deflation being -explained by the fact that the former version has ``only'' -chaotic properties and statistical perfection, whereas the latter is also cryptographically secure, -as it is shown in the next sections. - +\section{Summary} +In this chapter, a PRNG based on chaotic iterations is presented. It is proven to be +chaotic according to Devaney. Efficient implementations on GPU +using xor-like PRNGs as input generators have shown that a very large quantity +of pseudorandom numbers can be generated per second (about 20Gsamples/s on a Tesla C1060), and +that these proposed PRNGs succeed to pass the hardest battery in TestU01, namely +the BigCrush. -\putbib[Chapters/chapter18/biblio] +\putbib[Chapters/chapter18/biblio18]