X-Git-Url: https://bilbo.iut-bm.univ-fcomte.fr/and/gitweb/prng_gpu.git/blobdiff_plain/01d6ea25639436faca9b43ab4c739ec2f86a24c7..9e057cd5768916849c2767ef4bd0f54dd9adc3b4:/prng_gpu.tex?ds=sidebyside diff --git a/prng_gpu.tex b/prng_gpu.tex index c505685..90f00f8 100644 --- a/prng_gpu.tex +++ b/prng_gpu.tex @@ -1,83 +1,1952 @@ -\documentclass{article} +%\documentclass{article} +\documentclass[10pt,journal,letterpaper,compsoc]{IEEEtran} \usepackage[utf8]{inputenc} \usepackage[T1]{fontenc} \usepackage{fullpage} \usepackage{fancybox} \usepackage{amsmath} +\usepackage{amscd} \usepackage{moreverb} \usepackage{commath} +\usepackage[ruled,vlined]{algorithm2e} +\usepackage{listings} +\usepackage[standard]{ntheorem} +\usepackage{algorithmic} +\usepackage{slashbox} -\title{Efficient generation of pseudo random numbers based on chaotic iterations on GPU} +% Pour mathds : les ensembles IR, IN, etc. +\usepackage{dsfont} + +% Pour avoir des intervalles d'entiers +\usepackage{stmaryrd} + +\usepackage{graphicx} +% Pour faire des sous-figures dans les figures +\usepackage{subfigure} + +\usepackage{color} + +\newtheorem{notation}{Notation} + +\newcommand{\X}{\mathcal{X}} +\newcommand{\Go}{G_{f_0}} +\newcommand{\B}{\mathds{B}} +\newcommand{\N}{\mathds{N}} +\newcommand{\BN}{\mathds{B}^\mathsf{N}} +\let\sur=\overline + +\newcommand{\alert}[1]{\begin{color}{blue}\textit{#1}\end{color}} + +\title{Efficient and Cryptographically Secure Generation of Chaotic Pseudorandom Numbers on GPU} \begin{document} -\maketitle +\author{Jacques M. Bahi, Rapha\"{e}l Couturier, Christophe +Guyeux, and Pierre-Cyrille Héam\thanks{Authors in alphabetic order}} + + +\IEEEcompsoctitleabstractindextext{ \begin{abstract} -This is the abstract +In this paper we present a new pseudorandom number generator (PRNG) on +graphics processing units (GPU). This PRNG is based on the so-called chaotic iterations. It +is firstly proven to be chaotic according to the Devaney's formulation. We thus propose an efficient +implementation for GPU that successfully passes the {\it BigCrush} tests, deemed to be the hardest +battery of tests in TestU01. Experiments show that this PRNG can generate +about 20 billion of random numbers per second on Tesla C1060 and NVidia GTX280 +cards. +It is then established that, under reasonable assumptions, the proposed PRNG can be cryptographically +secure. +A chaotic version of the Blum-Goldwasser asymmetric key encryption scheme is finally proposed. + + \end{abstract} +} + +\maketitle + +\IEEEdisplaynotcompsoctitleabstractindextext +\IEEEpeerreviewmaketitle + \section{Introduction} -Interet des itérations chaotiques pour générer des nombre alea\\ -Interet de générer des nombres alea sur GPU -... +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), or by a physical non-deterministic +process having all the characteristics of a random noise, called a truly random number +generator (TRNG). +In this paper, we focus on reproducible generators, useful for instance in +Monte-Carlo based simulators or in several cryptographic schemes. +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. +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 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. +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 +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 +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. +This distortion leads to a deflation of both chaotic properties and speed. +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 authors' opinion is that topological properties of disorder, as they are +properly defined in the mathematical theory of chaos, can reinforce the quality +of a PRNG. But they are not substitutable for security or statistical perfection. +Indeed, to the authors' mind, such properties can be useful in the two following situations. On the +one hand, a post-treatment based on a chaotic dynamical system can be applied +to a PRNG statistically deflective, in order to improve its statistical +properties. Such an improvement can be found, for instance, in~\cite{bgw09:ip,bcgr11:ip}. +On the other hand, chaos can be added to a fast, statistically perfect PRNG and/or a +cryptographically secure one, in case where chaos can be of interest, +\emph{only if these last properties are not lost during +the proposed post-treatment}. Such an assumption is behind this research work. +It leads to the attempts to define a +family of PRNGs that are chaotic while being fast and statistically perfect, +or cryptographically secure. +Let us finish this paragraph 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}. +Chaos, for its part, refers to the well-established definition of a +chaotic dynamical system proposed by Devaney~\cite{Devaney}. + + +In a previous work~\cite{bgw09:ip,guyeux10} we have proposed a post-treatment on PRNGs making them behave +as a chaotic dynamical system. Such a post-treatment leads to a new category of +PRNGs. We have shown that proofs of Devaney's chaos can be established for this +family, and that the sequence obtained after this post-treatment can pass the +NIST~\cite{Nist10}, DieHARD~\cite{Marsaglia1996}, and TestU01~\cite{LEcuyerS07} batteries of tests, even if the inputted generators +cannot. +The proposition of this paper is to improve widely the speed of the formerly +proposed generator, without any lack of chaos or statistical properties. +In particular, a version of this PRNG on graphics processing units (GPU) +is proposed. +Although GPU was initially designed to accelerate +the manipulation of images, they are nowadays commonly used in many scientific +applications. Therefore, it is important to be able to generate pseudorandom +numbers inside a GPU when a scientific application runs in it. This remark +motivates our proposal of a chaotic and statistically perfect PRNG for GPU. +Such device +allows us to generate almost 20 billion of pseudorandom numbers per second. +Furthermore, we show that the proposed post-treatment preserves the +cryptographical security of the inputted PRNG, when this last has such a +property. +Last, but not least, we propose a rewriting of the Blum-Goldwasser asymmetric +key encryption protocol by using the proposed method. + +The remainder of this paper is organized as follows. In Section~\ref{section:related + works} we review some GPU implementations of PRNGs. Section~\ref{section:BASIC + RECALLS} gives some basic recalls on the well-known Devaney's formulation of chaos, + and on an iteration process called ``chaotic +iterations'' on which the post-treatment is based. +The proposed PRNG and its proof of chaos are given in Section~\ref{sec:pseudorandom}. +Section~\ref{sec:efficient PRNG} presents an efficient +implementation of this chaotic PRNG on a CPU, whereas Section~\ref{sec:efficient PRNG + gpu} describes and evaluates theoretically the GPU implementation. +Such generators are experimented in +Section~\ref{sec:experiments}. +We show in Section~\ref{sec:security analysis} that, if the inputted +generator is cryptographically secure, then it is the case too for the +generator provided by the post-treatment. +Such a proof leads to the proposition of a cryptographically secure and +chaotic generator on GPU based on the famous Blum Blum Shub +in Section~\ref{sec:CSGPU}, and to an improvement of the +Blum-Goldwasser protocol in Sect.~\ref{Blum-Goldwasser}. +This research work ends by a conclusion section, in which the contribution is +summarized and intended future work is presented. + + + + +\section{Related works on GPU based PRNGs} +\label{section:related works} + +Numerous research works on defining GPU based PRNGs have already been proposed in the +literature, so that exhaustivity is impossible. +This is why authors of this document only give reference to the most significant attempts +in this domain, from their subjective point of view. +The quantity of pseudorandom numbers generated per second is mentioned here +only when the information is given in the related work. +A million numbers per second will be simply written as +1MSample/s whereas a billion numbers per second is 1GSample/s. + +In \cite{Pang:2008:cec} a PRNG based on cellular automata is defined +with no requirement to an high precision integer arithmetic or to any bitwise +operations. Authors can generate about +3.2MSamples/s on a GeForce 7800 GTX GPU, which is quite an old card now. +However, there is neither a mention of statistical tests nor any proof of +chaos or cryptography in this document. + +In \cite{ZRKB10}, the authors propose different versions of efficient GPU PRNGs +based on Lagged Fibonacci or Hybrid Taus. They have used these +PRNGs for Langevin simulations of biomolecules fully implemented on +GPU. Performances of the GPU versions are far better than those obtained with a +CPU, and these PRNGs succeed to pass the {\it BigCrush} battery of TestU01. +However the evaluations of the proposed PRNGs are only statistical ones. + + +Authors of~\cite{conf/fpga/ThomasHL09} have studied the implementation of some +PRNGs on different computing architectures: CPU, field-programmable gate array +(FPGA), massively parallel processors, and GPU. This study is of interest, because +the performance of the same PRNGs on different architectures are compared. +FPGA appears as the fastest and the most +efficient architecture, providing the fastest number of generated pseudorandom numbers +per joule. +However, we notice that authors can ``only'' generate between 11 and 16GSamples/s +with a GTX 280 GPU, which should be compared with +the results presented in this document. +We can remark too that the PRNGs proposed in~\cite{conf/fpga/ThomasHL09} are only +able to pass the {\it Crush} battery, which is far easier than the {\it Big Crush} one. + +Lastly, Cuda has developed a library for the generation of pseudorandom numbers called +Curand~\cite{curand11}. Several PRNGs are implemented, among +other things +Xorwow~\cite{Marsaglia2003} and some variants of Sobol. The tests reported show that +their fastest version provides 15GSamples/s on the new Fermi C2050 card. +But their PRNGs cannot pass the whole TestU01 battery (only one test is failed). +\newline +\newline +We can finally remark that, to the best of our knowledge, no GPU implementation has been proven to be chaotic, and the cryptographically secure property has surprisingly never been considered. + +\section{Basic Recalls} +\label{section:BASIC RECALLS} + +This section is devoted to basic definitions and terminologies in the fields of +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} + +In the sequel $S^{n}$ denotes the $n^{th}$ term of a sequence $S$ and $V_{i}$ +denotes the $i^{th}$ component of a vector $V$. $f^{k}=f\circ ...\circ f$ +is for the $k^{th}$ composition of a function $f$. Finally, the following +notation is used: $\llbracket1;N\rrbracket=\{1,2,\hdots,N\}$. + + +Consider a topological space $(\mathcal{X},\tau)$ and a continuous function $f : +\mathcal{X} \rightarrow \mathcal{X}$. + +\begin{definition} +The function $f$ is said to be \emph{topologically transitive} if, for any pair of open sets +$U,V \subset \mathcal{X}$, there exists $k>0$ such that $f^k(U) \cap V \neq +\varnothing$. +\end{definition} + +\begin{definition} +An element $x$ is a \emph{periodic point} for $f$ of period $n\in \mathds{N}^*$ +if $f^{n}(x)=x$.% The set of periodic points of $f$ is denoted $Per(f).$ +\end{definition} + +\begin{definition} +$f$ is said to be \emph{regular} on $(\mathcal{X}, \tau)$ if the set of periodic +points for $f$ is dense in $\mathcal{X}$: for any point $x$ in $\mathcal{X}$, +any neighborhood of $x$ contains at least one periodic point (without +necessarily the same period). +\end{definition} + + +\begin{definition}[Devaney's formulation of chaos~\cite{Devaney}] +The function $f$ is said to be \emph{chaotic} on $(\mathcal{X},\tau)$ if $f$ is regular and +topologically transitive. +\end{definition} + +The chaos property is strongly linked to the notion of ``sensitivity'', defined +on a metric space $(\mathcal{X},d)$ by: + +\begin{definition} +\label{sensitivity} The function $f$ has \emph{sensitive dependence on initial conditions} +if there exists $\delta >0$ such that, for any $x\in \mathcal{X}$ and any +neighborhood $V$ of $x$, there exist $y\in V$ and $n > 0$ such that +$d\left(f^{n}(x), f^{n}(y)\right) >\delta $. + +The constant $\delta$ is called the \emph{constant of sensitivity} of $f$. +\end{definition} + +Indeed, Banks \emph{et al.} have proven in~\cite{Banks92} that when $f$ is +chaotic and $(\mathcal{X}, d)$ is a metric space, then $f$ has the property of +sensitive dependence on initial conditions (this property was formerly an +element of the definition of chaos). To sum up, quoting Devaney +in~\cite{Devaney}, a chaotic dynamical system ``is unpredictable because of the +sensitive dependence on initial conditions. It cannot be broken down or +simplified 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} +\label{sec:chaotic iterations} + + +Let us consider a \emph{system} with a finite number $\mathsf{N} \in +\mathds{N}^*$ of elements (or \emph{cells}), so that each cell has a +Boolean \emph{state}. Having $\mathsf{N}$ Boolean values for these + cells leads to the definition of a particular \emph{state of the +system}. A sequence which elements belong to $\llbracket 1;\mathsf{N} +\rrbracket $ is called a \emph{strategy}. The set of all strategies is +denoted by $\llbracket 1, \mathsf{N} \rrbracket^\mathds{N}.$ + +\begin{definition} +\label{Def:chaotic iterations} +The set $\mathds{B}$ denoting $\{0,1\}$, let +$f:\mathds{B}^{\mathsf{N}}\longrightarrow \mathds{B}^{\mathsf{N}}$ be +a function and $S\in \llbracket 1, \mathsf{N} \rrbracket^\mathds{N}$ be a ``strategy''. The so-called +\emph{chaotic iterations} are defined by $x^0\in +\mathds{B}^{\mathsf{N}}$ and +\begin{equation} +\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 }S^n\neq i \\ + \left(f(x^{n-1})\right)_{S^n} & \text{ if }S^n=i. +\end{array}\right. +\end{equation} +\end{definition} + +In other words, at the $n^{th}$ iteration, only the $S^{n}-$th cell is +\textquotedblleft iterated\textquotedblright . Note that in a more +general formulation, $S^n$ can be a subset of components and +$\left(f(x^{n-1})\right)_{S^{n}}$ can be replaced by +$\left(f(x^{k})\right)_{S^{n}}$, where $k0$. \medskip +\begin{itemize} +\item If $\varepsilon \geqslant 1$, we see that the distance +between $\left( G_{f}(S^n,E^n)\right) $ and $\left( G_{f}(S,E)\right) $ is +strictly less than 1 after the $max(n_{0},n_{1})^{th}$ term (same state). +\medskip +\item If $\varepsilon <1$, then $\exists k\in \mathds{N},10^{-k}\geqslant +\varepsilon > 10^{-(k+1)}$. But $d_{s}(S^n,S)$ converges to 0, so +\begin{equation*} +\exists n_{2}\in \mathds{N},\forall n\geqslant +n_{2},d_{s}(S^n,S)<10^{-(k+2)}, +\end{equation*}% +thus after $n_{2}$, the $k+2$ first terms of $S^n$ and $S$ are equal. +\end{itemize} +\noindent As a consequence, the $k+1$ first entries of the strategies of $% +G_{f}(S^n,E^n)$ and $G_{f}(S,E)$ are the same ($G_{f}$ is a shift of strategies) and due to the definition of $d_{s}$, the floating part of +the distance between $(S^n,E^n)$ and $(S,E)$ is strictly less than $% +10^{-(k+1)}\leqslant \varepsilon $. + +In conclusion, +%%RAPH : ici j'ai rajouté une ligne +$ +\forall \varepsilon >0,$ $\exists N_{0}=max(n_{0},n_{1},n_{2})\in \mathds{N} +,$ $\forall n\geqslant N_{0},$ +$ d\left( G_{f}(S^n,E^n);G_{f}(S,E)\right) +\leqslant \varepsilon . +$ +$G_{f}$ is consequently continuous. +\end{proof} + + +It is now possible to study the topological behavior of the general chaotic +iterations. We will prove that, + +\begin{theorem} +\label{t:chaos des general} + The general chaotic iterations defined on Equation~\ref{general CIs} satisfy +the Devaney's property of chaos. +\end{theorem} + +Let us firstly prove the following lemma. + +\begin{lemma}[Strong transitivity] +\label{strongTrans} + For all couples $X,Y \in \mathcal{X}$ and any neighborhood $V$ of $X$, we can +find $n \in \mathds{N}^*$ and $X' \in V$ such that $G^n(X')=Y$. +\end{lemma} + +\begin{proof} + Let $X=(S,E)$, $\varepsilon>0$, and $k_0 = \lfloor log_{10}(\varepsilon)+1 \rfloor$. +Any point $X'=(S',E')$ such that $E'=E$ and $\forall k \leqslant k_0, S'^k=S^k$, +are in the open ball $\mathcal{B}\left(X,\varepsilon\right)$. Let us define +$\check{X} = \left(\check{S},\check{E}\right)$, where $\check{X}= G^{k_0}(X)$. +We denote by $s\subset \llbracket 1; \mathsf{N} \rrbracket$ the set of coordinates +that are different between $\check{E}$ and the state of $Y$. Thus each point $X'$ of +the form $(S',E')$ where $E'=E$ and $S'$ starts with +$(S^0, S^1, \hdots, S^{k_0},s,\hdots)$, verifies the following properties: +\begin{itemize} + \item $X'$ is in $\mathcal{B}\left(X,\varepsilon\right)$, + \item the state of $G_f^{k_0+1}(X')$ is the state of $Y$. +\end{itemize} +Finally the point $\left(\left(S^0, S^1, \hdots, S^{k_0},s,s^0, s^1, \hdots\right); E\right)$, +where $(s^0,s^1, \hdots)$ is the strategy of $Y$, satisfies the properties +claimed in the lemma. +\end{proof} + +We can now prove the Theorem~\ref{t:chaos des general}. + +\begin{proof}[Theorem~\ref{t:chaos des general}] +Firstly, strong transitivity implies transitivity. + +Let $(S,E) \in\mathcal{X}$ and $\varepsilon >0$. To +prove that $G_f$ is regular, it is sufficient to prove that +there exists a strategy $\tilde S$ such that the distance between +$(\tilde S,E)$ and $(S,E)$ is less than $\varepsilon$, and such that +$(\tilde S,E)$ is a periodic point. + +Let $t_1=\lfloor-\log_{10}(\varepsilon)\rfloor$, and let $E'$ be the +configuration that we obtain from $(S,E)$ after $t_1$ iterations of +$G_f$. As $G_f$ is strongly transitive, there exists a strategy $S'$ +and $t_2\in\mathds{N}$ such +that $E$ is reached from $(S',E')$ after $t_2$ iterations of $G_f$. + +Consider the strategy $\tilde S$ that alternates the first $t_1$ terms +of $S$ and the first $t_2$ terms of $S'$: +%%RAPH : j'ai coupé la ligne en 2 +$$\tilde +S=(S_0,\dots,S_{t_1-1},S'_0,\dots,S'_{t_2-1},S_0,$$$$\dots,S_{t_1-1},S'_0,\dots,S'_{t_2-1},S_0,\dots).$$ It +is clear that $(\tilde S,E)$ is obtained from $(\tilde S,E)$ after +$t_1+t_2$ iterations of $G_f$. So $(\tilde S,E)$ is a periodic +point. Since $\tilde S_t=S_t$ for $t0.9999$. + + +\subsection{Results and discussion} +\label{Results and discussion} +\begin{table*} +\renewcommand{\arraystretch}{1.3} +\caption{NIST and DieHARD tests suite passing rates for PRNGs without CI} +\label{NIST and DieHARD tests suite passing rate the for PRNGs without CI} +\centering + \begin{tabular}{|l||c|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|} + \hline\hline +Types of PRNGs & \multicolumn{2}{c|}{Linear PRNGs} & \multicolumn{4}{c|}{Lagged PRNGs} & \multicolumn{1}{c|}{ICG PRNGs} & \multicolumn{3}{c|}{Mixed PRNGs}\\ \hline +\backslashbox{\textbf{$Tests$}} {\textbf{$PRNG$}} & LCG& MRG& AWC & SWB & SWC & GFSR & INV & LCG2& LCG3& MRG2 \\ \hline +NIST & 11/15 & 14/15 &\textbf{15/15} & \textbf{15/15} & 14/15 & 14/15 & 14/15 & 14/15& 14/15& 14/15 \\ \hline +DieHARD & 16/18 & 16/18 & 15/18 & 16/18 & \textbf{18/18} & 16/18 & 16/18 & 16/18& 16/18& 16/18\\ \hline +\end{tabular} +\end{table*} + +Table~\ref{NIST and DieHARD tests suite passing rate the for PRNGs without CI} shows the results on the batteries recalled above, indicating that almost all the PRNGs cannot pass all their tests. In other words, the statistical quality of these PRNGs cannot fulfill the up-to-date standards presented previously. We will show that the CIPRNG can solve this issue. + +To illustrate the effects of this CIPRNG in detail, experiments will be divided in three parts: +\begin{enumerate} + \item \textbf{Single CIPRNG}: The PRNGs involved in CI computing are of the same category. + \item \textbf{Mixed CIPRNG}: Two different types of PRNGs are mixed during the chaotic iterations process. + \item \textbf{Multiple CIPRNG}: The generator is obtained by repeating the composition of the iteration function as follows: $x^0\in \mathds{B}^{\mathsf{N}}$, and $\forall n\in \mathds{N}^{\ast },\forall i\in \llbracket1;\mathsf{N}\rrbracket,$ +\begin{equation} +\begin{array}{l} +x_i^n=\left\{ +\begin{array}{l} +x_i^{n-1}~~~~~\text{if}~S^n\neq i \\ +\forall j\in \llbracket1;\mathsf{m}\rrbracket,f^m(x^{n-1})_{S^{nm+j}}~\text{if}~S^{nm+j}=i.\end{array} \right. \end{array} +\end{equation} +$m$ is called the \emph{functional power}. +\end{enumerate} + + +We have performed statistical analysis of each of the aforementioned CIPRNGs. +The results are reproduced in Tables~\ref{NIST and DieHARD tests suite passing rate the for PRNGs without CI} and \ref{NIST and DieHARD tests suite passing rate the for single CIPRNGs}. +The scores written in boldface indicate that all the tests have been passed successfully, whereas an asterisk ``*'' means that the considered passing rate has been improved. + +\subsubsection{Tests based on the Single CIPRNG} + +\begin{table*} +\renewcommand{\arraystretch}{1.3} +\caption{NIST and DieHARD tests suite passing rates for PRNGs with CI} +\label{NIST and DieHARD tests suite passing rate the for single CIPRNGs} +\centering + \begin{tabular}{|l||c|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|} + \hline +Types of PRNGs & \multicolumn{2}{c|}{Linear PRNGs} & \multicolumn{4}{c|}{Lagged PRNGs} & \multicolumn{1}{c|}{ICG PRNGs} & \multicolumn{3}{c|}{Mixed PRNGs}\\ \hline +\backslashbox{\textbf{$Tests$}} {\textbf{$Single~CIPRNG$}} & LCG & MRG & AWC & SWB & SWC & GFSR & INV& LCG2 & LCG3& MRG2 \\ \hline\hline +Old CIPRNG\\ \hline \hline +NIST & \textbf{15/15} * & \textbf{15/15} * & \textbf{15/15} & \textbf{15/15} & \textbf{15/15} * & \textbf{15/15} * & \textbf{15/15} *& \textbf{15/15} * & \textbf{15/15} * & \textbf{15/15} \\ \hline +DieHARD & \textbf{18/18} * & \textbf{18/18} * & \textbf{18/18} * & \textbf{18/18} * & \textbf{18/18} & \textbf{18/18} * & \textbf{18/18} *& \textbf{18/18} * & \textbf{18/18} *& \textbf{18/18} * \\ \hline +New CIPRNG\\ \hline \hline +NIST & \textbf{15/15} * & \textbf{15/15} * & \textbf{15/15} & \textbf{15/15} & \textbf{15/15} * & \textbf{15/15} * & \textbf{15/15} *& \textbf{15/15} * & \textbf{15/15} * & \textbf{15/15} \\ \hline +DieHARD & \textbf{18/18} * & \textbf{18/18} * & \textbf{18/18} * & \textbf{18/18} * & \textbf{18/18} & \textbf{18/18} * & \textbf{18/18} * & \textbf{18/18} * & \textbf{18/18} *& \textbf{18/18} *\\ \hline +Xor CIPRNG\\ \hline\hline +NIST & 14/15*& \textbf{15/15} * & \textbf{15/15} & \textbf{15/15} & 14/15 & \textbf{15/15} * & 14/15& \textbf{15/15} * & \textbf{15/15} *& \textbf{15/15} \\ \hline +DieHARD & 16/18 & 16/18 & 17/18* & \textbf{18/18} * & \textbf{18/18} & \textbf{18/18} * & 16/18 & 16/18 & 16/18& 16/18\\ \hline +\end{tabular} +\end{table*} + +The statistical tests results of the PRNGs using the single CIPRNG method are given in Table~\ref{NIST and DieHARD tests suite passing rate the for single CIPRNGs}. +We can observe that, except for the Xor CIPRNG, all of the CIPRNGs have passed the 15 tests of the NIST battery and the 18 tests of the DieHARD one. +Moreover, considering these scores, we can deduce that both the single Old CIPRNG and the single New CIPRNG are relatively steadier than the single Xor CIPRNG approach, when applying them to different PRNGs. +However, the Xor CIPRNG is obviously the fastest approach to generate a CI random sequence, and it still improves the statistical properties relative to each generator taken alone, although the test values are not as good as desired. + +Therefore, all of these three ways are interesting, for different reasons, in the production of pseudorandom numbers and, +on the whole, the single CIPRNG method can be considered to adapt to or improve all kinds of PRNGs. + +To have a realization of the Xor CIPRNG that can pass all the tests embedded into the NIST battery, the Xor CIPRNG with multiple functional powers are investigated in Section~\ref{Tests based on Multiple CIPRNG}. + + +\subsubsection{Tests based on the Mixed CIPRNG} + +To compare the previous approach with the CIPRNG design that uses a Mixed CIPRNG, we have taken into account the same inputted generators than in the previous section. +These inputted couples $(PRNG_1,PRNG_2)$ of PRNGs are used in the Mixed approach as follows: +\begin{equation} +\left\{ +\begin{array}{l} +x^0 \in \llbracket 0, 2^\mathsf{N}-1 \rrbracket, S \in \llbracket 0, 2^\mathsf{N}-1 \rrbracket^\mathds{N} \\ +\forall n \in \mathds{N}^*, x^n = x^{n-1} \oplus PRNG_1\oplus PRNG_2, +\end{array} +\right. +\label{equation Oplus} +\end{equation} + +With this Mixed CIPRNG approach, both the Old CIPRNG and New CIPRNG continue to pass all the NIST and DieHARD suites. +In addition, we can see that the PRNGs using a Xor CIPRNG approach can pass more tests than previously. +The main reason of this success is that the Mixed Xor CIPRNG has a longer period. +Indeed, let $n_{P}$ be the period of a PRNG $P$, then the period deduced from the single Xor CIPRNG approach is obviously equal to: +\begin{equation} +n_{SXORCI}= +\left\{ +\begin{array}{ll} +n_{P}&\text{if~}x^0=x^{n_{P}}\\ +2n_{P}&\text{if~}x^0\neq x^{n_{P}}.\\ +\end{array} +\right. +\label{equation Oplus} +\end{equation} + +Let us now denote by $n_{P1}$ and $n_{P2}$ the periods of respectively the $PRNG_1$ and $PRNG_2$ generators, then the period of the Mixed Xor CIPRNG will be: +\begin{equation} +n_{XXORCI}= +\left\{ +\begin{array}{ll} +LCM(n_{P1},n_{P2})&\text{if~}x^0=x^{LCM(n_{P1},n_{P2})}\\ +2LCM(n_{P1},n_{P2})&\text{if~}x^0\neq x^{LCM(n_{P1},n_{P2})}.\\ +\end{array} +\right. +\label{equation Oplus} +\end{equation} + +In Table~\ref{DieHARD fail mixex CIPRNG}, we only show the results for the Mixed CIPRNGs that cannot pass all DieHARD suites (the NIST tests are all passed). It demonstrates that Mixed Xor CIPRNG involving LCG, MRG, LCG2, LCG3, MRG2, or INV cannot pass the two following tests, namely the ``Matrix Rank 32x32'' and the ``COUNT-THE-1's'' tests contained into the DieHARD battery. Let us recall their definitions: + +\begin{itemize} + \item \textbf{Matrix Rank 32x32.} A random 32x32 binary matrix is formed, each row having a 32-bit random vector. Its rank is an integer that ranges from 0 to 32. Ranks less than 29 must be rare, and their occurences must be pooled with those of rank 29. To achieve the test, ranks of 40,000 such random matrices are obtained, and a chisquare test is performed on counts for ranks 32,31,30 and for ranks $\leq29$. + + \item \textbf{COUNT-THE-1's TEST} Consider the file under test as a stream of bytes (four per 2 bit integer). Each byte can contain from 0 to 8 1's, with probabilities 1,8,28,56,70,56,28,8,1 over 256. Now let the stream of bytes provide a string of overlapping 5-letter words, each ``letter'' taking values A,B,C,D,E. The letters are determined by the number of 1's in a byte: 0,1, or 2 yield A, 3 yields B, 4 yields C, 5 yields D and 6,7, or 8 yield E. Thus we have a monkey at a typewriter hitting five keys with various probabilities (37,56,70,56,37 over 256). There are $5^5$ possible 5-letter words, and from a string of 256,000 (over-lapping) 5-letter words, counts are made on the frequencies for each word. The quadratic form in the weak inverse of the covariance matrix of the cell counts provides a chisquare test: Q5-Q4, the difference of the naive Pearson sums of $(OBS-EXP)^2/EXP$ on counts for 5- and 4-letter cell counts. +\end{itemize} + +The reason of these fails is that the output of LCG, LCG2, LCG3, MRG, and MRG2 under the experiments are in 31-bit. Compare with the Single CIPRNG, using different PRNGs to build CIPRNG seems more efficient in improving random number quality (mixed Xor CI can 100\% pass NIST, but single cannot). + +\begin{table*} +\renewcommand{\arraystretch}{1.3} +\caption{Scores of mixed Xor CIPRNGs when considering the DieHARD battery} +\label{DieHARD fail mixex CIPRNG} +\centering + \begin{tabular}{|l||c|c|c|c|c|c|} + \hline +\backslashbox{\textbf{$PRNG_1$}} {\textbf{$PRNG_0$}} & LCG & MRG & INV & LCG2 & LCG3 & MRG2 \\ \hline\hline +LCG &\backslashbox{} {} &16/18&16/18 &16/18 &16/18 &16/18\\ \hline +MRG &16/18 &\backslashbox{} {} &16/18&16/18 &16/18 &16/18\\ \hline +INV &16/18 &16/18&\backslashbox{} {} &16/18 &16/18&16/18 \\ \hline +LCG2 &16/18 &16/18 &16/18 &\backslashbox{} {} &16/18&16/18\\ \hline +LCG3 &16/18 &16/18 &16/18&16/18&\backslashbox{} {} &16/18\\ \hline +MRG2 &16/18 &16/18 &16/18&16/18 &16/18 &\backslashbox{} {} \\ \hline +\end{tabular} +\end{table*} + +\subsubsection{Tests based on the Multiple CIPRNG} +\label{Tests based on Multiple CIPRNG} + +Until now, the combination of at most two input PRNGs has been investigated. +We now regard the possibility to use a larger number of generators to improve the statistics of the generated pseudorandom numbers, leading to the multiple functional power approach. +For the CIPRNGs which have already pass both the NIST and DieHARD suites with 2 inputted PRNGs (all the Old and New CIPRNGs, and some of the Xor CIPRNGs), it is not meaningful to consider their adaption of this multiple CIPRNG method, hence only the Multiple Xor CIPRNGs, having the following form, will be investigated. +\begin{equation} +\left\{ +\begin{array}{l} +x^0 \in \llbracket 0, 2^\mathsf{N}-1 \rrbracket, S \in \llbracket 0, 2^\mathsf{N}-1 \rrbracket^\mathds{N} \\ +\forall n \in \mathds{N}^*, x^n = x^{n-1} \oplus S^{nm}\oplus S^{nm+1}\ldots \oplus S^{nm+m-1} , +\end{array} +\right. +\label{equation Oplus} +\end{equation} + +The question is now to determine the value of the threshold $m$ (the functional power) making the multiple CIPRNG being able to pass the whole NIST battery. +Such a question is answered in Table~\ref{threshold}. + + +\begin{table*} +\renewcommand{\arraystretch}{1.3} +\caption{Functional power $m$ making it possible to pass the whole NIST battery} +\label{threshold} +\centering + \begin{tabular}{|l||c|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|} + \hline +Inputted $PRNG$ & LCG & MRG & SWC & GFSR & INV& LCG2 & LCG3 & MRG2 \\ \hline\hline +Threshold value $m$& 19 & 7 & 2& 1 & 11& 9& 3& 4\\ \hline\hline +\end{tabular} +\end{table*} + +\subsubsection{Results Summary} + +We can summarize the obtained results as follows. +\begin{enumerate} +\item The CIPRNG method is able to improve the statistical properties of a large variety of PRNGs. +\item Using different PRNGs in the CIPRNG approach is better than considering several instances of one unique PRNG. +\item The statistical quality of the outputs increases with the functional power $m$. +\end{enumerate} + +\end{color} + +\section{Efficient PRNG based on Chaotic Iterations} +\label{sec:efficient PRNG} + +Based on the proof presented in the previous section, it is now possible to +improve the speed of the generator formerly presented in~\cite{bgw09:ip,guyeux10}. +The first idea is to consider +that the provided strategy is a pseudorandom Boolean vector obtained by a +given PRNG. +An iteration of the system is simply the bitwise exclusive or between +the last computed state and the current strategy. +Topological properties of disorder exhibited by chaotic +iterations can be inherited by the inputted generator, we hope by doing so to +obtain some statistical improvements while preserving speed. + +%%RAPH : j'ai viré tout ca +%% Let us give an example using 16-bits numbers, to clearly understand how the bitwise xor operations +%% are +%% done. +%% Suppose that $x$ and the strategy $S^i$ are given as +%% binary vectors. +%% Table~\ref{TableExemple} shows the result of $x \oplus S^i$. + +%% \begin{table} +%% \begin{scriptsize} +%% $$ +%% \begin{array}{|cc|cccccccccccccccc|} +%% \hline +%% x &=&1&0&1&1&1&0&1&0&1&0&0&1&0&0&1&0\\ +%% \hline +%% S^i &=&0&1&1&0&0&1&1&0&1&1&1&0&0&1&1&1\\ +%% \hline +%% x \oplus S^i&=&1&1&0&1&1&1&0&0&0&1&1&1&0&1&0&1\\ +%% \hline + +%% \hline +%% \end{array} +%% $$ +%% \end{scriptsize} +%% \caption{Example of an arbitrary round of the proposed generator} +%% \label{TableExemple} +%% \end{table} + + + + +\lstset{language=C,caption={C code of the sequential PRNG based on chaotic iterations},label=algo:seqCIPRNG} +\begin{small} +\begin{lstlisting} + +unsigned int CIPRNG() { + static unsigned int x = 123123123; + unsigned long t1 = xorshift(); + unsigned long t2 = xor128(); + unsigned long t3 = xorwow(); + x = x^(unsigned int)t1; + x = x^(unsigned int)(t2>>32); + x = x^(unsigned int)(t3>>32); + x = x^(unsigned int)t2; + x = x^(unsigned int)(t1>>32); + x = x^(unsigned int)t3; + return x; +} +\end{lstlisting} +\end{small} + + + +In Listing~\ref{algo:seqCIPRNG} a sequential version of the proposed PRNG based +on chaotic iterations is presented. 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 +PRNGs''. As each xor-like PRNG uses 64-bits whereas our proposed generator +works with 32-bits, we use the command \texttt{(unsigned int)}, that selects the +32 least significant bits of a given integer, and the code \texttt{(unsigned + int)(t$>>$32)} in order to obtain the 32 most significant bits of \texttt{t}. + +Thus producing a pseudorandom number needs 6 xor operations with 6 32-bits numbers +that are provided by 3 64-bits PRNGs. This version successfully passes the +stringent BigCrush battery of tests~\cite{LEcuyerS07}. + +\section{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 +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. +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 +do so, we must firstly recall that in the CUDA~\cite{Nvid10} +environment, threads have a local identifier called +\texttt{ThreadIdx}, which is relative to the block containing +them. Furthermore, in CUDA, parts of the code that are executed by the GPU, are +called {\it kernels}. + + +\subsection{Naive Version for GPU} + + +It is possible to deduce from the CPU version a quite similar version adapted to GPU. +The simple principle consists in making each thread of the GPU computing the CPU version of our PRNG. +Of course, the three xor-like +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 +parameters embedded into each thread. + +The implementation of the three +xor-like PRNGs is straightforward when their parameters have been +allocated in the GPU memory. Each xor-like works with an internal +number $x$ that saves the last generated pseudorandom number. Additionally, the +implementation of the xor128, the xorshift, and the xorwow respectively require +4, 5, and 6 unsigned long as internal variables. + + +\begin{algorithm} +\begin{small} +\KwIn{InternalVarXorLikeArray: array with internal variables of the 3 xor-like +PRNGs in global memory\; +NumThreads: number of threads\;} +\KwOut{NewNb: array containing random numbers in global memory} +\If{threadIdx is concerned by the computation} { + retrieve data from InternalVarXorLikeArray[threadIdx] in local variables\; + \For{i=1 to n} { + compute a new PRNG as in Listing\ref{algo:seqCIPRNG}\; + store the new PRNG in NewNb[NumThreads*threadIdx+i]\; + } + store internal variables in InternalVarXorLikeArray[threadIdx]\; +} +\end{small} +\caption{Main kernel of the GPU ``naive'' version of the PRNG based on chaotic iterations} +\label{algo:gpu_kernel} +\end{algorithm} + + + +Algorithm~\ref{algo:gpu_kernel} presents a naive implementation of the proposed PRNG on +GPU. Due to the available memory in the GPU and the number of threads +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 +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. + +This generator is able to pass the whole BigCrush battery of tests, for all +the versions that have been tested depending on their number of threads +(called \texttt{NumThreads} in our algorithm, tested up to $5$ million). + +\begin{remark} +The proposed algorithm has the advantage of manipulating independent +PRNGs, so this version is easily adaptable on a cluster of computers too. The only thing +to ensure is to use a single ISAAC PRNG. To achieve this requirement, a simple solution consists in +using a master node for the initialization. This master node computes the initial parameters +for all the different nodes involved in the computation. +\end{remark} + +\subsection{Improved Version for GPU} + +As GPU cards using CUDA have shared memory between threads of the same block, it +is possible to use this feature in order to simplify the previous algorithm, +i.e., to use less than 3 xor-like PRNGs. The solution consists in computing only +one xor-like PRNG by thread, saving it into the shared memory, and then to use the results +of some other threads in the same block of threads. In order to define which +thread uses the result of which other one, we can use a combination array that +contains the indexes of all threads and for which a combination has been +performed. + +In Algorithm~\ref{algo:gpu_kernel2}, two combination arrays are used. The +variable \texttt{offset} is computed using the value of +\texttt{combination\_size}. Then we can compute \texttt{o1} and \texttt{o2} +representing the indexes of the other threads whose results are used by the +current one. In this algorithm, we consider that a 32-bits xor-like PRNG has +been chosen. In practice, we use the xor128 proposed in~\cite{Marsaglia2003} in +which unsigned longs (64 bits) have been replaced by unsigned integers (32 +bits). + +This version can also pass the whole {\it BigCrush} battery of tests. + +\begin{algorithm} +\begin{small} +\KwIn{InternalVarXorLikeArray: array with internal variables of 1 xor-like PRNGs +in global memory\; +NumThreads: Number of threads\; +array\_comb1, array\_comb2: Arrays containing combinations of size combination\_size\;} + +\KwOut{NewNb: array containing random numbers in global memory} +\If{threadId is concerned} { + retrieve data from InternalVarXorLikeArray[threadId] in local variables including shared memory and x\; + offset = threadIdx\%combination\_size\; + o1 = threadIdx-offset+array\_comb1[offset]\; + o2 = threadIdx-offset+array\_comb2[offset]\; + \For{i=1 to n} { + t=xor-like()\; + t=t\textasciicircum shmem[o1]\textasciicircum shmem[o2]\; + shared\_mem[threadId]=t\; + x = x\textasciicircum t\; + + store the new PRNG in NewNb[NumThreads*threadId+i]\; + } + store internal variables in InternalVarXorLikeArray[threadId]\; +} +\end{small} +\caption{Main kernel for the chaotic iterations based PRNG GPU efficient +version\label{IR}} +\label{algo:gpu_kernel2} +\end{algorithm} + +\subsection{Theoretical Evaluation of the Improved Version} + +A run of Algorithm~\ref{algo:gpu_kernel2} consists in an operation ($x=x\oplus t$) having +the form of Equation~\ref{equation Oplus}, which is equivalent to the iterative +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}, +we must guarantee that this dynamical system iterates on the space +$\mathcal{X} = \mathcal{P}\left(\llbracket 1, \mathsf{N} \rrbracket\right)^\mathds{N}\times\mathds{B}^\mathsf{N}$. +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 $\llbracket 1, \mathsf{N} \rrbracket$. + +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), +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. + +Thus Algorithm~\ref{algo:gpu_kernel2} is a concrete realization of the general +chaotic iterations presented previously, and for this reason, it satisfies the +Devaney's formulation of a chaotic behavior. + +\section{Experiments} +\label{sec:experiments} + +Different experiments have been performed in order to measure the generation +speed. We have used a first computer equipped with a Tesla C1060 NVidia GPU card +and an +Intel Xeon E5530 cadenced at 2.40 GHz, and +a second computer equipped with a smaller CPU and a GeForce GTX 280. +All the +cards have 240 cores. + +In Figure~\ref{fig:time_xorlike_gpu} we compare the quantity of pseudorandom numbers +generated per second with various xor-like based PRNGs. In this figure, the optimized +versions use the {\it xor64} described in~\cite{Marsaglia2003}, whereas the naive versions +embed the three xor-like PRNGs described in Listing~\ref{algo:seqCIPRNG}. In +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 +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 +20GSamples/s. Finally we can remark that both GPU cards are quite similar, but in +practice, the Tesla C1060 has more memory than the GTX 280, and this memory +should be of better quality. +As a comparison, Listing~\ref{algo:seqCIPRNG} leads to the generation of about +138MSample/s when using one core of the Xeon E5530. \begin{figure}[htbp] \begin{center} -\fbox{ -\begin{minipage}{14cm} -unsigned int CIprng() \{\\ - static unsigned int x = 123123123;\\ - unsigned long t1 = xorshift();\\ - unsigned long t2 = xor128();\\ - unsigned long t3 = xorwow();\\ - x = x\^\ (unsigned int)t;\\ - x = x\^\ (unsigned int)(t2$>>$32);\\ - x = x\^\ (unsigned int)(t3$>>$32);\\ - x = x\^\ (unsigned int)t2;\\ - x = x\^\ (unsigned int)(t$>>$32);\\ - x = x\^\ (unsigned int)t3;\\ - return x;\\ -\} -\end{minipage} -} + \includegraphics[width=\columnwidth]{curve_time_xorlike_gpu.pdf} \end{center} -\caption{sequential Chaotic Iteration PRNG} -\label{algo:seqCIprng} +\caption{Quantity of pseudorandom numbers generated per second with the xorlike-based PRNG} +\label{fig:time_xorlike_gpu} \end{figure} -In Figure~\ref{algo:seqCIprng} a sequential version of our chaotic iterations based PRNG is -presented. This version uses three classical 64-bits PRNG: the xorshift, the -xor128 and the xorwow. These three PRNGs are presented in~\cite{Marsaglia2003}. -\section{Efficient prng based on chaotic iterations on GPU} -On parle du passage du sequentiel au GPU -\section{Experiments} -On passe le BigCrush\\ -On donne des temps de générations sur GPU/CPU\\ -On donne des temps de générations de nombre sur GPU puis on rappatrie sur CPU / CPU ? bof bof, on verra +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[width=\columnwidth]{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 +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{Security Analysis} +\label{sec:security analysis} + + + +In this section the concatenation of two strings $u$ and $v$ is classically +denoted by $uv$. +In a cryptographic context, a pseudorandom generator is a deterministic +algorithm $G$ transforming strings into strings and such that, for any +seed $s$ of length $m$, $G(s)$ (the output of $G$ on the input $s$) has size +$\ell_G(m)$ with $\ell_G(m)>m$. +The notion of {\it secure} PRNGs can now be defined as follows. + +\begin{definition} +A cryptographic PRNG $G$ is secure if for any probabilistic polynomial time +algorithm $D$, for any positive polynomial $p$, and for all sufficiently +large $m$'s, +$$| \mathrm{Pr}[D(G(U_m))=1]-Pr[D(U_{\ell_G(m)})=1]|< \frac{1}{p(m)},$$ +where $U_r$ is the uniform distribution over $\{0,1\}^r$ and the +probabilities are taken over $U_m$, $U_{\ell_G(m)}$ as well as over the +internal coin tosses of $D$. +\end{definition} + +Intuitively, it means that there is no polynomial time algorithm that can +distinguish a perfect uniform random generator from $G$ with a non +negligible probability. The interested reader is referred +to~\cite[chapter~3]{Goldreich} for more information. Note that it is +quite easily possible to change the function $\ell$ into any polynomial +function $\ell^\prime$ satisfying $\ell^\prime(m)>m)$~\cite[Chapter 3.3]{Goldreich}. + +The generation schema developed in (\ref{equation Oplus}) is based on a +pseudorandom generator. Let $H$ be a cryptographic PRNG. We may assume, +without loss of generality, that for any string $S_0$ of size $N$, the size +of $H(S_0)$ is $kN$, with $k>2$. It means that $\ell_H(N)=kN$. +Let $S_1,\ldots,S_k$ be the +strings of length $N$ such that $H(S_0)=S_1 \ldots S_k$ ($H(S_0)$ is the concatenation of +the $S_i$'s). The cryptographic PRNG $X$ defined in (\ref{equation Oplus}) +is the algorithm mapping any string of length $2N$ $x_0S_0$ into the string +$(x_0\oplus S_0 \oplus S_1)(x_0\oplus S_0 \oplus S_1\oplus S_2)\ldots +(x_o\bigoplus_{i=0}^{i=k}S_i)$. One in particular has $\ell_{X}(2N)=kN=\ell_H(N)$. +We claim now that if this PRNG is secure, +then the new one is secure too. + +\begin{proposition} +\label{cryptopreuve} +If $H$ is a secure cryptographic PRNG, then $X$ is a secure cryptographic +PRNG too. +\end{proposition} + +\begin{proof} +The proposition is proved by contraposition. Assume that $X$ is not +secure. By Definition, there exists a polynomial time probabilistic +algorithm $D$, a positive polynomial $p$, such that for all $k_0$ there exists +$N\geq \frac{k_0}{2}$ satisfying +$$| \mathrm{Pr}[D(X(U_{2N}))=1]-\mathrm{Pr}[D(U_{kN}=1]|\geq \frac{1}{p(2N)}.$$ +We describe a new probabilistic algorithm $D^\prime$ on an input $w$ of size +$kN$: +\begin{enumerate} +\item Decompose $w$ into $w=w_1\ldots w_{k}$, where each $w_i$ has size $N$. +\item Pick a string $y$ of size $N$ uniformly at random. +\item Compute $z=(y\oplus w_1)(y\oplus w_1\oplus w_2)\ldots (y + \bigoplus_{i=1}^{i=k} w_i).$ +\item Return $D(z)$. +\end{enumerate} + + +Consider for each $y\in \mathbb{B}^{kN}$ the function $\varphi_{y}$ +from $\mathbb{B}^{kN}$ into $\mathbb{B}^{kN}$ mapping $w=w_1\ldots w_k$ +(each $w_i$ has length $N$) to +$(y\oplus w_1)(y\oplus w_1\oplus w_2)\ldots (y + \bigoplus_{i=1}^{i=k_1} w_i).$ By construction, one has for every $w$, +\begin{equation}\label{PCH-1} +D^\prime(w)=D(\varphi_y(w)), +\end{equation} +where $y$ is randomly generated. +Moreover, for each $y$, $\varphi_{y}$ is injective: if +$(y\oplus w_1)(y\oplus w_1\oplus w_2)\ldots (y\bigoplus_{i=1}^{i=k_1} +w_i)=(y\oplus w_1^\prime)(y\oplus w_1^\prime\oplus w_2^\prime)\ldots +(y\bigoplus_{i=1}^{i=k} w_i^\prime)$, then for every $1\leq j\leq k$, +$y\bigoplus_{i=1}^{i=j} w_i^\prime=y\bigoplus_{i=1}^{i=j} w_i$. It follows, +by a direct induction, that $w_i=w_i^\prime$. Furthermore, since $\mathbb{B}^{kN}$ +is finite, each $\varphi_y$ is bijective. Therefore, and using (\ref{PCH-1}), +one has +$\mathrm{Pr}[D^\prime(U_{kN})=1]=\mathrm{Pr}[D(\varphi_y(U_{kN}))=1]$ and, +therefore, +\begin{equation}\label{PCH-2} +\mathrm{Pr}[D^\prime(U_{kN})=1]=\mathrm{Pr}[D(U_{kN})=1]. +\end{equation} + +Now, using (\ref{PCH-1}) again, one has for every $x$, +\begin{equation}\label{PCH-3} +D^\prime(H(x))=D(\varphi_y(H(x))), +\end{equation} +where $y$ is randomly generated. By construction, $\varphi_y(H(x))=X(yx)$, +thus +\begin{equation}%\label{PCH-3} %%RAPH : j'ai viré ce label qui existe déjà, il est 3 ligne avant +D^\prime(H(x))=D(yx), +\end{equation} +where $y$ is randomly generated. +It follows that -\section{Lyapunov} +\begin{equation}\label{PCH-4} +\mathrm{Pr}[D^\prime(H(U_{N}))=1]=\mathrm{Pr}[D(U_{2N})=1]. +\end{equation} + From (\ref{PCH-2}) and (\ref{PCH-4}), one can deduce that +there exists a polynomial time probabilistic +algorithm $D^\prime$, a positive polynomial $p$, such that for all $k_0$ there exists +$N\geq \frac{k_0}{2}$ satisfying +$$| \mathrm{Pr}[D(H(U_{N}))=1]-\mathrm{Pr}[D(U_{kN}=1]|\geq \frac{1}{p(2N)},$$ +proving that $H$ is not secure, which is a contradiction. +\end{proof} + + +\section{Cryptographical Applications} + +\subsection{A Cryptographically Secure PRNG for GPU} +\label{sec:CSGPU} + +It is possible to build a cryptographically secure PRNG based on the previous +algorithm (Algorithm~\ref{algo:gpu_kernel2}). Due to Proposition~\ref{cryptopreuve}, +it simply consists in replacing +the {\it xor-like} PRNG by a cryptographically secure one. +We have chosen the Blum Blum Shub generator~\cite{BBS} (usually denoted by BBS) having the form: +$$x_{n+1}=x_n^2~ mod~ M$$ where $M$ is the product of two prime numbers (these +prime numbers need to be congruent to 3 modulus 4). BBS is known to be +very slow and only usable for cryptographic applications. + + +The modulus operation is the most time consuming operation for current +GPU cards. So in order to obtain quite reasonable performances, it is +required to use only modulus on 32-bits integer numbers. Consequently +$x_n^2$ need to be lesser than $2^{32}$, and thus the number $M$ must be +lesser than $2^{16}$. So in practice we can choose prime numbers around +256 that are congruent to 3 modulus 4. With 32-bits numbers, only the +4 least significant bits of $x_n$ can be chosen (the maximum number of +indistinguishable bits is lesser than or equals to +$log_2(log_2(M))$). In other words, to generate a 32-bits number, we need to use +8 times the BBS algorithm with possibly different combinations of $M$. This +approach is not sufficient to be able to pass all the tests of TestU01, +as small values of $M$ for the BBS lead to + small periods. So, in order to add randomness we have proceeded with +the followings modifications. +\begin{itemize} +\item +Firstly, we define 16 arrangement arrays instead of 2 (as described in +Algorithm \ref{algo:gpu_kernel2}), but only 2 of them are used at each call of +the PRNG kernels. In practice, the selection of combination +arrays to be used is different for all the threads. It is determined +by using the three last bits of two internal variables used by BBS. +%This approach adds more randomness. +In Algorithm~\ref{algo:bbs_gpu}, +character \& is for the bitwise AND. Thus using \&7 with a number +gives the last 3 bits, thus providing a number between 0 and 7. +\item +Secondly, after the generation of the 8 BBS numbers for each thread, we +have a 32-bits number whose period is possibly quite small. So +to add randomness, we generate 4 more BBS numbers to +shift the 32-bits numbers, and add up to 6 new bits. This improvement is +described in Algorithm~\ref{algo:bbs_gpu}. In practice, the last 2 bits +of the first new BBS number are used to make a left shift of at most +3 bits. The last 3 bits of the second new BBS number are added to the +strategy whatever the value of the first left shift. The third and the +fourth new BBS numbers are used similarly to apply a new left shift +and add 3 new bits. +\item +Finally, as we use 8 BBS numbers for each thread, the storage of these +numbers at the end of the kernel is performed using a rotation. So, +internal variable for BBS number 1 is stored in place 2, internal +variable for BBS number 2 is stored in place 3, ..., and finally, internal +variable for BBS number 8 is stored in place 1. +\end{itemize} + +\begin{algorithm} +\begin{small} +\KwIn{InternalVarBBSArray: array with internal variables of the 8 BBS +in global memory\; +NumThreads: Number of threads\; +array\_comb: 2D Arrays containing 16 combinations (in first dimension) of size combination\_size (in second dimension)\; +array\_shift[4]=\{0,1,3,7\}\; +} + +\KwOut{NewNb: array containing random numbers in global memory} +\If{threadId is concerned} { + retrieve data from InternalVarBBSArray[threadId] in local variables including shared memory and x\; + we consider that bbs1 ... bbs8 represent the internal states of the 8 BBS numbers\; + offset = threadIdx\%combination\_size\; + o1 = threadIdx-offset+array\_comb[bbs1\&7][offset]\; + o2 = threadIdx-offset+array\_comb[8+bbs2\&7][offset]\; + \For{i=1 to n} { + t$<<$=4\; + t|=BBS1(bbs1)\&15\; + ...\; + t$<<$=4\; + t|=BBS8(bbs8)\&15\; + \tcp{two new shifts} + shift=BBS3(bbs3)\&3\; + t$<<$=shift\; + t|=BBS1(bbs1)\&array\_shift[shift]\; + shift=BBS7(bbs7)\&3\; + t$<<$=shift\; + t|=BBS2(bbs2)\&array\_shift[shift]\; + t=t\textasciicircum shmem[o1]\textasciicircum shmem[o2]\; + shared\_mem[threadId]=t\; + x = x\textasciicircum t\; + + store the new PRNG in NewNb[NumThreads*threadId+i]\; + } + store internal variables in InternalVarXorLikeArray[threadId] using a rotation\; +} +\end{small} +\caption{main kernel for the BBS based PRNG GPU} +\label{algo:bbs_gpu} +\end{algorithm} + +In Algorithm~\ref{algo:bbs_gpu}, $n$ is for the quantity of random numbers that +a thread has to generate. The operation t<<=4 performs a left shift of 4 bits +on the variable $t$ and stores the result in $t$, and $BBS1(bbs1)\&15$ selects +the last four bits of the result of $BBS1$. Thus an operation of the form +$t<<=4; t|=BBS1(bbs1)\&15\;$ realizes in $t$ a left shift of 4 bits, and then +puts the 4 last bits of $BBS1(bbs1)$ in the four last positions of $t$. Let us +remark that the initialization $t$ is not a necessity as we fill it 4 bits by 4 +bits, until having obtained 32-bits. The two last new shifts are realized in +order to enlarge the small periods of the BBS used here, to introduce a kind of +variability. In these operations, we make twice a left shift of $t$ of \emph{at + most} 3 bits, represented by \texttt{shift} in the algorithm, and we put +\emph{exactly} the \texttt{shift} last bits from a BBS into the \texttt{shift} +last bits of $t$. For this, an array named \texttt{array\_shift}, containing the +correspondence between the shift and the number obtained with \texttt{shift} 1 +to make the \texttt{and} operation is used. For example, with a left shift of 0, +we make an and operation with 0, with a left shift of 3, we make an and +operation with 7 (represented by 111 in binary mode). + +It should be noticed that this generator has once more the form $x^{n+1} = x^n \oplus S^n$, +where $S^n$ is referred in this algorithm as $t$: each iteration of this +PRNG ends with $x = x \wedge t$. This $S^n$ is only constituted +by secure bits produced by the BBS generator, and thus, due to +Proposition~\ref{cryptopreuve}, the resulted PRNG is cryptographically +secure. + + + +\begin{color}{red} +\subsection{Practical Security Evaluation} + +Suppose now that the PRNG will work during +$M=100$ time units, and that during this period, +an attacker can realize $10^{12}$ clock cycles. +We thus wonder whether, during the PRNG's +lifetime, the attacker can distinguish this +sequence from truly random one, with a probability +greater than $\varepsilon = 0.2$. +We consider that $N$ has 900 bits. + +The random process is the BBS generator, which +is cryptographically secure. More precisely, it +is $(T,\varepsilon)-$secure: no +$(T,\varepsilon)-$distinguishing attack can be +successfully realized on this PRNG, if~\cite{Fischlin} +$$ +T \leqslant \dfrac{L(N)}{6 N (log_2(N))\varepsilon^{-2}M^2}-2^7 N \varepsilon^{-2} M^2 log_2 (8 N \varepsilon^{-1}M) +$$ +where $M$ is the length of the output ($M=100$ in +our example), and $L(N)$ is equal to +$$ +2.8\times 10^{-3} exp \left(1.9229 \times (N ~ln(2)^\frac{1}{3}) \times ln(N~ln 2)^\frac{2}{3}\right) +$$ +is the number of clock cycles to factor a $N-$bit +integer. + +A direct numerical application shows that this attacker +cannot achieve its $(10^{12},0.2)$ distinguishing +attack in that context. + +\end{color} + +\subsection{Toward a Cryptographically Secure and Chaotic Asymmetric Cryptosystem} +\label{Blum-Goldwasser} +We finish this research work by giving some thoughts about the use of +the proposed PRNG in an asymmetric cryptosystem. +This first approach will be further investigated in a future work. + +\subsubsection{Recalls of the Blum-Goldwasser Probabilistic Cryptosystem} + +The Blum-Goldwasser cryptosystem is a cryptographically secure asymmetric key encryption algorithm +proposed in 1984~\cite{Blum:1985:EPP:19478.19501}. The encryption algorithm +implements a XOR-based stream cipher using the BBS PRNG, in order to generate +the keystream. Decryption is done by obtaining the initial seed thanks to +the final state of the BBS generator and the secret key, thus leading to the + reconstruction of the keystream. + +The key generation consists in generating two prime numbers $(p,q)$, +randomly and independently of each other, that are + congruent to 3 mod 4, and to compute the modulus $N=pq$. +The public key is $N$, whereas the secret key is the factorization $(p,q)$. + + +Suppose Bob wishes to send a string $m=(m_0, \dots, m_{L-1})$ of $L$ bits to Alice: +\begin{enumerate} +\item Bob picks an integer $r$ randomly in the interval $\llbracket 1,N\rrbracket$ and computes $x_0 = r^2~mod~N$. +\item He uses the BBS to generate the keystream of $L$ pseudorandom bits $(b_0, \dots, b_{L-1})$, as follows. For $i=0$ to $L-1$, +\begin{itemize} +\item $i=0$. +\item While $i \leqslant L-1$: +\begin{itemize} +\item Set $b_i$ equal to the least-significant\footnote{As signaled previously, BBS can securely output up to $\mathsf{N} = \lfloor log(log(N)) \rfloor$ of the least-significant bits of $x_i$ during each round.} bit of $x_i$, +\item $i=i+1$, +\item $x_i = (x_{i-1})^2~mod~N.$ +\end{itemize} +\end{itemize} +\item The ciphertext is computed by XORing the plaintext bits $m$ with the keystream: $ c = (c_0, \dots, c_{L-1}) = m \oplus b$. This ciphertext is $[c, y]$, where $y=x_{0}^{2^{L}}~mod~N.$ +\end{enumerate} + + +When Alice receives $\left[(c_0, \dots, c_{L-1}), y\right]$, she can recover $m$ as follows: +\begin{enumerate} +\item Using the secret key $(p,q)$, she computes $r_p = y^{((p+1)/4)^{L}}~mod~p$ and $r_q = y^{((q+1)/4)^{L}}~mod~q$. +\item The initial seed can be obtained using the following procedure: $x_0=q(q^{-1}~{mod}~p)r_p + p(p^{-1}~{mod}~q)r_q~{mod}~N$. +\item She recomputes the bit-vector $b$ by using BBS and $x_0$. +\item Alice finally computes the plaintext by XORing the keystream with the ciphertext: $ m = c \oplus b$. +\end{enumerate} + + +\subsubsection{Proposal of a new Asymmetric Cryptosystem Adapted from Blum-Goldwasser} + +We propose to adapt the Blum-Goldwasser protocol as follows. +Let $\mathsf{N} = \lfloor log(log(N)) \rfloor$ be the number of bits that can +be obtained securely with the BBS generator using the public key $N$ of Alice. +Alice will pick randomly $S^0$ in $\llbracket 0, 2^{\mathsf{N}-1}\rrbracket$ too, and +her new public key will be $(S^0, N)$. + +To encrypt his message, Bob will compute +%%RAPH : ici, j'ai mis un simple $ +%\begin{equation} +$c = \left(m_0 \oplus (b_0 \oplus S^0), m_1 \oplus (b_0 \oplus b_1 \oplus S^0), \hdots, \right.$ +$ \left. m_{L-1} \oplus (b_0 \oplus b_1 \hdots \oplus b_{L-1} \oplus S^0) \right)$ +%%\end{equation} +instead of $\left(m_0 \oplus b_0, m_1 \oplus b_1, \hdots, m_{L-1} \oplus b_{L-1} \right)$. + +The same decryption stage as in Blum-Goldwasser leads to the sequence +$\left(m_0 \oplus S^0, m_1 \oplus S^0, \hdots, m_{L-1} \oplus S^0 \right)$. +Thus, with a simple use of $S^0$, Alice can obtain the plaintext. +By doing so, the proposed generator is used in place of BBS, leading to +the inheritance of all the properties presented in this paper. \section{Conclusion} -\bibliographystyle{plain} + + +In this paper, a formerly proposed PRNG based on chaotic iterations +has been generalized to improve its speed. It has been 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), and that these proposed PRNGs succeed to pass the hardest battery in TestU01, +namely the BigCrush. +Furthermore, we have shown that when the inputted generator is cryptographically +secure, then it is the case too for the PRNG we propose, thus leading to +the possibility to develop fast and secure PRNGs using the GPU architecture. +\begin{color}{red} An improvement of the Blum-Goldwasser cryptosystem, making it +behaves chaotically, has finally been proposed. \end{color} + +In future work we plan to extend this research, building a parallel PRNG for clusters or +grid computing. Topological properties of the various proposed generators will be investigated, +and the use of other categories of PRNGs as input will be studied too. The improvement +of Blum-Goldwasser will be deepened. Finally, we +will try to enlarge the quantity of pseudorandom numbers generated per second either +in a simulation context or in a cryptographic one. + + + +\bibliographystyle{plain} \bibliography{mabase} \end{document}