6e1dd068e9
implementation. Rewrite pseudodevice code to use cprng_strong(9). The new pseudodevice is cloning, so each caller gets bits from a stream generated with its own key. Users of /dev/urandom get their generators keyed on a "best effort" basis -- the kernel will rekey generators whenever the entropy pool hits the high water mark -- while users of /dev/random get their generators rekeyed every time key-length bits are output. The underlying cprng_strong API can use AES-256 or AES-128, but we use AES-128 because of concerns about related-key attacks on AES-256. This improves performance (and reduces entropy pool depletion) significantly for users of /dev/urandom but does cause users of /dev/random to rekey twice as often. Also fixes various bugs (including some missing locking and a reseed-counter overflow in the CTR_DRBG code) found while testing this. For long reads, this generator is approximately 20 times as fast as the old generator (dd with bs=64K yields 53MB/sec on 2Ghz Core2 instead of 2.5MB/sec) and also uses a separate mutex per instance so concurrency is greatly improved. For reads of typical key sizes for modern cryptosystems (16-32 bytes) performance is about the same as the old code: a little better for 32 bytes, a little worse for 16 bytes. |
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tcp_rndiss.c | ||
tcp_rndiss.h |