LOCRMay 27, 2020

CDCL(Crypto) SAT Solvers for Cryptanalysis

arXiv:2005.13415v110 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the problem of slow cryptanalysis for researchers in cryptography by offering a specialized solver approach, though it is incremental as it builds on existing CDCL methods.

The paper tackles the inefficiency of blackbox SAT-based cryptanalysis by proposing CDCL(Crypto), which tailors CDCL SAT solvers with domain-specific knowledge about cryptographic primitives, resulting in significant improvements in differential path and algebraic fault analysis of hash functions.

Over the last two decades, we have seen a dramatic improvement in the efficiency of conflict-driven clause-learning Boolean satisfiability (CDCL SAT) solvers on industrial problems from a variety of domains. The availability of such powerful general-purpose search tools as SAT solvers has led many researchers to propose SAT-based methods for cryptanalysis, including techniques for finding collisions in hash functions and breaking symmetric encryption schemes. Most of the previously proposed SAT-based cryptanalysis approaches are blackbox techniques, in the sense that the cryptanalysis problem is encoded as a SAT instance and then a CDCL SAT solver is invoked to solve the said instance. A weakness of this approach is that the encoding thus generated may be too large for any modern solver to solve efficiently. Perhaps a more important weakness of this approach is that the solver is in no way specialized or tuned to solve the given instance. To address these issues, we propose an approach called CDCL(Crypto) (inspired by the CDCL(T) paradigm in Satisfiability Modulo Theory solvers) to tailor the internal subroutines of the CDCL SAT solver with domain-specific knowledge about cryptographic primitives. Specifically, we extend the propagation and conflict analysis subroutines of CDCL solvers with specialized codes that have knowledge about the cryptographic primitive being analyzed by the solver. We demonstrate the power of this approach in the differential path and algebraic fault analysis of hash functions. Our initial results are very encouraging and reinforce the notion that this approach is a significant improvement over blackbox SAT-based cryptanalysis.

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