International Association for Cryptologic Research

International Association
for Cryptologic Research

CryptoDB

Tianyou Ding

Publications

Year
Venue
Title
2024
CRYPTO
New Approaches for Estimating the Bias of Differential-Linear Distinguishers
Differential-linear cryptanalysis was introduced by Langford and Hellman in 1994 and has been extensively studied since then. In 2019, Bar-On et al. presented the Differential-Linear Connectivity Table (DLCT), which connects the differential part and the linear part, thus an attacked cipher is divided to 3 subciphers: the differential part, the DLCT part, and the linear part. In this paper, we firstly present an accurate mathematical formula which establishes a relation between differential-linear and truncated differential cryptanalysis. Using the formula, the bias estimate of a differential-linear distinguisher can be converted to the probability calculations of a series of truncated differentials. Then, we propose a novel and natural concept, the TDT, which can be used to accelerate the calculation of the probabilities of truncated differentials. Based on the formula and the TDT, we propose two novel approaches for estimating the bias of a differential-linear distinguisher. We demonstrate the accuracy and efficiency of our new approaches by applying them to 5 symmetric-key primitives: Ascon, Serpent, AES, CLEFIA, and KNOT. For Ascon and Serpent, we update the best known differential-linear distinguishers. For AES, CLEFIA, and KNOT, for the first time we give the theoretical differential-linear biases for different rounds.
2020
TOSC
Improving the MILP-based Security Evaluation Algorithm against Differential/Linear Cryptanalysis Using A Divide-and-Conquer Approach 📺
In recent years, Mixed Integer Linear Programming (MILP) has been widely used in cryptanalysis of symmetric-key primitives. For differential and linear cryptanalysis, MILP can be used to solve two kinds of problems: calculation of the minimum number of differentially/linearly active S-boxes, and search for the best differential/linear characteristics. There are already numerous papers published in this area. However, the efficiency is not satisfactory enough for many symmetric-key primitives. In this paper, we greatly improve the efficiency of the MILP-based search algorithm for both problems. Each of the two problems for an r-round cipher can be converted to an MILP model whose feasible region is the set of all possible r-round differential/linear characteristics. Generally, high-probability differential/linear characteristics are likely to have a low number of active S-boxes at a certain round. Inspired by the idea of a divide-and-conquer approach, we divide the set of all possible differential/linear characteristics into several smaller subsets, then separately search them. That is to say, the search of the whole set is split into easier searches of smaller subsets, and optimal solutions within the smaller subsets are combined to give the optimal solution within the whole set. In addition, we use several techniques to further improve the efficiency of the search algorithm. As applications, we apply our search algorithm to five lightweight block ciphers: PRESENT, GIFT-64, RECTANGLE, LBLOCK and TWINE. For each cipher, we obtain better results than the best-known ones obtained from the MILP method. For the minimum number of differentially/linearly active S-boxes, we reach 31/31, 16/15, 16/16, 20/20 and 20/20 rounds for the five ciphers respectively. For the best differential/linear characteristics, we reach 18/18, 15/13, 15/14, 16/15 and 15/16 rounds for the five ciphers respectively.