Digital Signature Algorithm

The Digital Signature Algorithm (DSA) is a Federal Information Processing Standard for digital signatures. It was proposed by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) in August 1991 for use in their Digital Signature Standard (DSS) and adopted as FIPS 186 in 1993.[1] Four revisions to the initial specification have been released: FIPS 186-1 in 1996,[2] FIPS 186-2 in 2000,[3] FIPS 186-3 in 2009,[4] and FIPS 186-4 in 2013.[5]

DSA is covered by U.S. Patent 5,231,668, filed July 26, 1991 and attributed to David W. Kravitz,[6] a former NSA employee. This patent was given to "The United States of America as represented by the Secretary of Commerce, Washington, D.C.", and NIST has made this patent available worldwide royalty-free.[7] Claus P. Schnorr claims that his U.S. Patent 4,995,082 (expired) covered DSA; this claim is disputed.[8] DSA is a variant of the ElGamal Signature Scheme.

Key generation

Key generation has two phases. The first phase is a choice of algorithm parameters which may be shared between different users of the system, while the second phase computes public and private keys for a single user.

Parameter generation

The algorithm parameters (p, q, g) may be shared between different users of the system.

Per-user keys

Given a set of parameters, the second phase computes private and public keys for a single user:

There exist efficient algorithms for computing the modular exponentiations h(p − 1)/q mod p and gx mod p, such as exponentiation by squaring.

Signing

Let H be the hashing function and m the message:

The first two steps amount to creating a new per-message key. The modular exponentiation here is the most computationally expensive part of the signing operation, and it may be computed before the message hash is known. The modular inverse k^{-1}\bmod\,q is the second most expensive part, and it may also be computed before the message hash is known. It may be computed using the extended Euclidean algorithm or using Fermat's little theorem as k^{q-2}\bmod\,q.

Verifying

DSA is similar to the ElGamal signature scheme.

Correctness of the algorithm

The signature scheme is correct in the sense that the verifier will always accept genuine signatures. This can be shown as follows:

First, if {\textstyle g=h^{(p-1)/q}~\text{mod}~p}, it follows that {\textstyle g^q \equiv h^{p-1} \equiv 1 \mod p} by Fermat's little theorem. Since g>0 and q is prime, g must have order q.

The signer computes

s=k^{-1}(H(m)+xr)\bmod\,q

Thus


\begin{align}
k & \equiv H(m)s^{-1}+xrs^{-1}\\
  & \equiv H(m)w + xrw \pmod{q}
\end{align}

Since g has order q~(\text{mod}~p) we have


\begin{align}
g^k & \equiv g^{H(m)w}g^{xrw}\\
    & \equiv g^{H(m)w}y^{rw}\\
    & \equiv g^{u_1}y^{u_2} \pmod{p}
\end{align}

Finally, the correctness of DSA follows from

\begin{align}
 r &= (g^k \bmod\,p) \bmod\,q\\
   &= (g^{u_1}y^{u_2} \bmod\,p) \bmod\,q\\
   &= v
\end{align}

Sensitivity

With DSA, the entropy, secrecy, and uniqueness of the random signature value k are critical. It is so critical that violating any one of those three requirements can reveal the entire private key to an attacker.[11] Using the same value twice (even while keeping k secret), using a predictable value, or leaking even a few bits of k in each of several signatures, is enough to break DSA.[12]

This issue affects both DSA and ECDSA – in December 2010, a group calling itself fail0verflow announced recovery of the ECDSA private key used by Sony to sign software for the PlayStation 3 game console. The attack was made possible because Sony failed to generate a new random k for each signature.[13]

This issue can be prevented by deriving k deterministically from the private key and the message hash, as described by RFC 6979. This ensures that k is different for each H(m) and unpredictable for attackers who do not know the private key x.

See also

References

External links

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