github.com/consensys/gnark-crypto@v0.14.0/ecc/bls12-378/g1.go (about) 1 // Copyright 2020 Consensys Software Inc. 2 // 3 // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); 4 // you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. 5 // You may obtain a copy of the License at 6 // 7 // http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 8 // 9 // Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software 10 // distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, 11 // WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. 12 // See the License for the specific language governing permissions and 13 // limitations under the License. 14 15 // Code generated by consensys/gnark-crypto DO NOT EDIT 16 17 package bls12378 18 19 import ( 20 "github.com/consensys/gnark-crypto/ecc" 21 "github.com/consensys/gnark-crypto/ecc/bls12-378/fp" 22 "github.com/consensys/gnark-crypto/ecc/bls12-378/fr" 23 "github.com/consensys/gnark-crypto/internal/parallel" 24 "math/big" 25 "runtime" 26 ) 27 28 // G1Affine is a point in affine coordinates (x,y) 29 type G1Affine struct { 30 X, Y fp.Element 31 } 32 33 // G1Jac is a point in Jacobian coordinates (x=X/Z², y=Y/Z³) 34 type G1Jac struct { 35 X, Y, Z fp.Element 36 } 37 38 // g1JacExtended is a point in extended Jacobian coordinates (x=X/ZZ, y=Y/ZZZ, ZZ³=ZZZ²) 39 type g1JacExtended struct { 40 X, Y, ZZ, ZZZ fp.Element 41 } 42 43 // ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 44 // Affine coordinates 45 46 // Set sets p to a in affine coordinates. 47 func (p *G1Affine) Set(a *G1Affine) *G1Affine { 48 p.X, p.Y = a.X, a.Y 49 return p 50 } 51 52 // setInfinity sets p to the infinity point, which is encoded as (0,0). 53 // N.B.: (0,0) is never on the curve for j=0 curves (Y²=X³+B). 54 func (p *G1Affine) setInfinity() *G1Affine { 55 p.X.SetZero() 56 p.Y.SetZero() 57 return p 58 } 59 60 // ScalarMultiplication computes and returns p = [s]a 61 // where p and a are affine points. 62 func (p *G1Affine) ScalarMultiplication(a *G1Affine, s *big.Int) *G1Affine { 63 var _p G1Jac 64 _p.FromAffine(a) 65 _p.mulGLV(&_p, s) 66 p.FromJacobian(&_p) 67 return p 68 } 69 70 // ScalarMultiplicationBase computes and returns p = [s]g 71 // where g is the affine point generating the prime subgroup. 72 func (p *G1Affine) ScalarMultiplicationBase(s *big.Int) *G1Affine { 73 var _p G1Jac 74 _p.mulGLV(&g1Gen, s) 75 p.FromJacobian(&_p) 76 return p 77 } 78 79 // Add adds two points in affine coordinates. 80 // It uses the Jacobian addition with a.Z=b.Z=1 and converts the result to affine coordinates. 81 // 82 // https://www.hyperelliptic.org/EFD/g1p/auto-shortw-jacobian-0.html#addition-mmadd-2007-bl 83 func (p *G1Affine) Add(a, b *G1Affine) *G1Affine { 84 var q G1Jac 85 // a is infinity, return b 86 if a.IsInfinity() { 87 p.Set(b) 88 return p 89 } 90 // b is infinity, return a 91 if b.IsInfinity() { 92 p.Set(a) 93 return p 94 } 95 if a.X.Equal(&b.X) { 96 // if b == a, we double instead 97 if a.Y.Equal(&b.Y) { 98 q.DoubleMixed(a) 99 return p.FromJacobian(&q) 100 } else { 101 // if b == -a, we return 0 102 return p.setInfinity() 103 } 104 } 105 var H, HH, I, J, r, V fp.Element 106 H.Sub(&b.X, &a.X) 107 HH.Square(&H) 108 I.Double(&HH).Double(&I) 109 J.Mul(&H, &I) 110 r.Sub(&b.Y, &a.Y) 111 r.Double(&r) 112 V.Mul(&a.X, &I) 113 q.X.Square(&r). 114 Sub(&q.X, &J). 115 Sub(&q.X, &V). 116 Sub(&q.X, &V) 117 q.Y.Sub(&V, &q.X). 118 Mul(&q.Y, &r) 119 J.Mul(&a.Y, &J).Double(&J) 120 q.Y.Sub(&q.Y, &J) 121 q.Z.Double(&H) 122 123 return p.FromJacobian(&q) 124 } 125 126 // Double doubles a point in affine coordinates. 127 // It converts the point to Jacobian coordinates, doubles it using Jacobian 128 // addition with a.Z=1, and converts it back to affine coordinates. 129 // 130 // http://www.hyperelliptic.org/EFD/g1p/auto-shortw-jacobian-0.html#doubling-mdbl-2007-bl 131 func (p *G1Affine) Double(a *G1Affine) *G1Affine { 132 var q G1Jac 133 q.FromAffine(a) 134 q.DoubleMixed(a) 135 p.FromJacobian(&q) 136 return p 137 } 138 139 // Sub subtracts two points in affine coordinates. 140 // It uses a similar approach to Add, but negates the second point before adding. 141 func (p *G1Affine) Sub(a, b *G1Affine) *G1Affine { 142 var bneg G1Affine 143 bneg.Neg(b) 144 p.Add(a, &bneg) 145 return p 146 } 147 148 // Equal tests if two points in affine coordinates are equal. 149 func (p *G1Affine) Equal(a *G1Affine) bool { 150 return p.X.Equal(&a.X) && p.Y.Equal(&a.Y) 151 } 152 153 // Neg sets p to the affine negative point -a = (a.X, -a.Y). 154 func (p *G1Affine) Neg(a *G1Affine) *G1Affine { 155 p.X = a.X 156 p.Y.Neg(&a.Y) 157 return p 158 } 159 160 // FromJacobian converts a point p1 from Jacobian to affine coordinates. 161 func (p *G1Affine) FromJacobian(p1 *G1Jac) *G1Affine { 162 163 var a, b fp.Element 164 165 if p1.Z.IsZero() { 166 p.X.SetZero() 167 p.Y.SetZero() 168 return p 169 } 170 171 a.Inverse(&p1.Z) 172 b.Square(&a) 173 p.X.Mul(&p1.X, &b) 174 p.Y.Mul(&p1.Y, &b).Mul(&p.Y, &a) 175 176 return p 177 } 178 179 // String returns the string representation E(x,y) of the affine point p or "O" if it is infinity. 180 func (p *G1Affine) String() string { 181 if p.IsInfinity() { 182 return "O" 183 } 184 return "E([" + p.X.String() + "," + p.Y.String() + "])" 185 } 186 187 // IsInfinity checks if the affine point p is infinity, which is encoded as (0,0). 188 // N.B.: (0,0) is never on the curve for j=0 curves (Y²=X³+B). 189 func (p *G1Affine) IsInfinity() bool { 190 return p.X.IsZero() && p.Y.IsZero() 191 } 192 193 // IsOnCurve returns true if the affine point p in on the curve. 194 func (p *G1Affine) IsOnCurve() bool { 195 var point G1Jac 196 point.FromAffine(p) 197 return point.IsOnCurve() // call this function to handle infinity point 198 } 199 200 // IsInSubGroup returns true if the affine point p is in the correct subgroup, false otherwise. 201 func (p *G1Affine) IsInSubGroup() bool { 202 var _p G1Jac 203 _p.FromAffine(p) 204 return _p.IsInSubGroup() 205 } 206 207 // ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 208 // Jacobian coordinates 209 210 // Set sets p to a in Jacobian coordinates. 211 func (p *G1Jac) Set(q *G1Jac) *G1Jac { 212 p.X, p.Y, p.Z = q.X, q.Y, q.Z 213 return p 214 } 215 216 // Equal tests if two points in Jacobian coordinates are equal. 217 func (p *G1Jac) Equal(q *G1Jac) bool { 218 // If one point is infinity, the other must also be infinity. 219 if p.Z.IsZero() { 220 return q.Z.IsZero() 221 } 222 // If the other point is infinity, return false since we can't 223 // the following checks would be incorrect. 224 if q.Z.IsZero() { 225 return false 226 } 227 228 var pZSquare, aZSquare fp.Element 229 pZSquare.Square(&p.Z) 230 aZSquare.Square(&q.Z) 231 232 var lhs, rhs fp.Element 233 lhs.Mul(&p.X, &aZSquare) 234 rhs.Mul(&q.X, &pZSquare) 235 if !lhs.Equal(&rhs) { 236 return false 237 } 238 lhs.Mul(&p.Y, &aZSquare).Mul(&lhs, &q.Z) 239 rhs.Mul(&q.Y, &pZSquare).Mul(&rhs, &p.Z) 240 241 return lhs.Equal(&rhs) 242 } 243 244 // Neg sets p to the Jacobian negative point -q = (q.X, -q.Y, q.Z). 245 func (p *G1Jac) Neg(q *G1Jac) *G1Jac { 246 *p = *q 247 p.Y.Neg(&q.Y) 248 return p 249 } 250 251 // AddAssign sets p to p+a in Jacobian coordinates. 252 // 253 // https://hyperelliptic.org/EFD/g1p/auto-shortw-jacobian-3.html#addition-add-2007-bl 254 func (p *G1Jac) AddAssign(q *G1Jac) *G1Jac { 255 256 // p is infinity, return q 257 if p.Z.IsZero() { 258 p.Set(q) 259 return p 260 } 261 262 // q is infinity, return p 263 if q.Z.IsZero() { 264 return p 265 } 266 267 var Z1Z1, Z2Z2, U1, U2, S1, S2, H, I, J, r, V fp.Element 268 Z1Z1.Square(&q.Z) 269 Z2Z2.Square(&p.Z) 270 U1.Mul(&q.X, &Z2Z2) 271 U2.Mul(&p.X, &Z1Z1) 272 S1.Mul(&q.Y, &p.Z). 273 Mul(&S1, &Z2Z2) 274 S2.Mul(&p.Y, &q.Z). 275 Mul(&S2, &Z1Z1) 276 277 // if p == q, we double instead 278 if U1.Equal(&U2) && S1.Equal(&S2) { 279 return p.DoubleAssign() 280 } 281 282 H.Sub(&U2, &U1) 283 I.Double(&H). 284 Square(&I) 285 J.Mul(&H, &I) 286 r.Sub(&S2, &S1).Double(&r) 287 V.Mul(&U1, &I) 288 p.X.Square(&r). 289 Sub(&p.X, &J). 290 Sub(&p.X, &V). 291 Sub(&p.X, &V) 292 p.Y.Sub(&V, &p.X). 293 Mul(&p.Y, &r) 294 S1.Mul(&S1, &J).Double(&S1) 295 p.Y.Sub(&p.Y, &S1) 296 p.Z.Add(&p.Z, &q.Z) 297 p.Z.Square(&p.Z). 298 Sub(&p.Z, &Z1Z1). 299 Sub(&p.Z, &Z2Z2). 300 Mul(&p.Z, &H) 301 302 return p 303 } 304 305 // SubAssign sets p to p-a in Jacobian coordinates. 306 // It uses a similar approach to AddAssign, but negates the point a before adding. 307 func (p *G1Jac) SubAssign(q *G1Jac) *G1Jac { 308 var tmp G1Jac 309 tmp.Set(q) 310 tmp.Y.Neg(&tmp.Y) 311 p.AddAssign(&tmp) 312 return p 313 } 314 315 // Double sets p to [2]q in Jacobian coordinates. 316 // 317 // https://hyperelliptic.org/EFD/g1p/auto-shortw-jacobian-3.html#doubling-dbl-2007-bl 318 func (p *G1Jac) DoubleMixed(a *G1Affine) *G1Jac { 319 var XX, YY, YYYY, S, M, T fp.Element 320 XX.Square(&a.X) 321 YY.Square(&a.Y) 322 YYYY.Square(&YY) 323 S.Add(&a.X, &YY). 324 Square(&S). 325 Sub(&S, &XX). 326 Sub(&S, &YYYY). 327 Double(&S) 328 M.Double(&XX). 329 Add(&M, &XX) // -> + A, but A=0 here 330 T.Square(&M). 331 Sub(&T, &S). 332 Sub(&T, &S) 333 p.X.Set(&T) 334 p.Y.Sub(&S, &T). 335 Mul(&p.Y, &M) 336 YYYY.Double(&YYYY). 337 Double(&YYYY). 338 Double(&YYYY) 339 p.Y.Sub(&p.Y, &YYYY) 340 p.Z.Double(&a.Y) 341 342 return p 343 } 344 345 // AddMixed sets p to p+a in Jacobian coordinates, where a.Z = 1. 346 // 347 // http://www.hyperelliptic.org/EFD/g1p/auto-shortw-jacobian-0.html#addition-madd-2007-bl 348 func (p *G1Jac) AddMixed(a *G1Affine) *G1Jac { 349 350 //if a is infinity return p 351 if a.IsInfinity() { 352 return p 353 } 354 // p is infinity, return a 355 if p.Z.IsZero() { 356 p.X = a.X 357 p.Y = a.Y 358 p.Z.SetOne() 359 return p 360 } 361 362 var Z1Z1, U2, S2, H, HH, I, J, r, V fp.Element 363 Z1Z1.Square(&p.Z) 364 U2.Mul(&a.X, &Z1Z1) 365 S2.Mul(&a.Y, &p.Z). 366 Mul(&S2, &Z1Z1) 367 368 // if p == a, we double instead 369 if U2.Equal(&p.X) && S2.Equal(&p.Y) { 370 return p.DoubleMixed(a) 371 } 372 373 H.Sub(&U2, &p.X) 374 HH.Square(&H) 375 I.Double(&HH).Double(&I) 376 J.Mul(&H, &I) 377 r.Sub(&S2, &p.Y).Double(&r) 378 V.Mul(&p.X, &I) 379 p.X.Square(&r). 380 Sub(&p.X, &J). 381 Sub(&p.X, &V). 382 Sub(&p.X, &V) 383 J.Mul(&J, &p.Y).Double(&J) 384 p.Y.Sub(&V, &p.X). 385 Mul(&p.Y, &r) 386 p.Y.Sub(&p.Y, &J) 387 p.Z.Add(&p.Z, &H) 388 p.Z.Square(&p.Z). 389 Sub(&p.Z, &Z1Z1). 390 Sub(&p.Z, &HH) 391 392 return p 393 } 394 395 // Double sets p to [2]q in Jacobian coordinates. 396 // 397 // https://hyperelliptic.org/EFD/g1p/auto-shortw-jacobian-3.html#doubling-dbl-2007-bl 398 func (p *G1Jac) Double(q *G1Jac) *G1Jac { 399 p.Set(q) 400 p.DoubleAssign() 401 return p 402 } 403 404 // DoubleAssign doubles p in Jacobian coordinates. 405 // 406 // https://hyperelliptic.org/EFD/g1p/auto-shortw-jacobian-3.html#doubling-dbl-2007-bl 407 func (p *G1Jac) DoubleAssign() *G1Jac { 408 409 var XX, YY, YYYY, ZZ, S, M, T fp.Element 410 411 XX.Square(&p.X) 412 YY.Square(&p.Y) 413 YYYY.Square(&YY) 414 ZZ.Square(&p.Z) 415 S.Add(&p.X, &YY) 416 S.Square(&S). 417 Sub(&S, &XX). 418 Sub(&S, &YYYY). 419 Double(&S) 420 M.Double(&XX).Add(&M, &XX) 421 p.Z.Add(&p.Z, &p.Y). 422 Square(&p.Z). 423 Sub(&p.Z, &YY). 424 Sub(&p.Z, &ZZ) 425 T.Square(&M) 426 p.X = T 427 T.Double(&S) 428 p.X.Sub(&p.X, &T) 429 p.Y.Sub(&S, &p.X). 430 Mul(&p.Y, &M) 431 YYYY.Double(&YYYY).Double(&YYYY).Double(&YYYY) 432 p.Y.Sub(&p.Y, &YYYY) 433 434 return p 435 } 436 437 // ScalarMultiplication computes and returns p = [s]a 438 // where p and a are Jacobian points. 439 // using the GLV technique. 440 // see https://www.iacr.org/archive/crypto2001/21390189.pdf 441 func (p *G1Jac) ScalarMultiplication(q *G1Jac, s *big.Int) *G1Jac { 442 return p.mulGLV(q, s) 443 } 444 445 // ScalarMultiplicationBase computes and returns p = [s]g 446 // where g is the prime subgroup generator. 447 func (p *G1Jac) ScalarMultiplicationBase(s *big.Int) *G1Jac { 448 return p.mulGLV(&g1Gen, s) 449 450 } 451 452 // String converts p to affine coordinates and returns its string representation E(x,y) or "O" if it is infinity. 453 func (p *G1Jac) String() string { 454 _p := G1Affine{} 455 _p.FromJacobian(p) 456 return _p.String() 457 } 458 459 // FromAffine converts a point a from affine to Jacobian coordinates. 460 func (p *G1Jac) FromAffine(a *G1Affine) *G1Jac { 461 if a.IsInfinity() { 462 p.Z.SetZero() 463 p.X.SetOne() 464 p.Y.SetOne() 465 return p 466 } 467 p.Z.SetOne() 468 p.X.Set(&a.X) 469 p.Y.Set(&a.Y) 470 return p 471 } 472 473 // IsOnCurve returns true if the Jacobian point p in on the curve. 474 func (p *G1Jac) IsOnCurve() bool { 475 var left, right, tmp, ZZ fp.Element 476 left.Square(&p.Y) 477 right.Square(&p.X).Mul(&right, &p.X) 478 ZZ.Square(&p.Z) 479 tmp.Square(&ZZ).Mul(&tmp, &ZZ) 480 // Mul tmp by bCurveCoeff=1 (nothing to do) 481 right.Add(&right, &tmp) 482 return left.Equal(&right) 483 } 484 485 // IsInSubGroup returns true if p is on the r-torsion, false otherwise. 486 // Z[r,0]+Z[-lambdaG1Affine, 1] is the kernel 487 // of (u,v)->u+lambdaG1Affinev mod r. Expressing r, lambdaG1Affine as 488 // polynomials in x, a short vector of this Zmodule is 489 // 1, x². So we check that p+x²ϕ(p) 490 // is the infinity. 491 func (p *G1Jac) IsInSubGroup() bool { 492 493 var res G1Jac 494 495 res.phi(p). 496 ScalarMultiplication(&res, &xGen). 497 ScalarMultiplication(&res, &xGen). 498 AddAssign(p) 499 500 return res.IsOnCurve() && res.Z.IsZero() 501 502 } 503 504 // mulWindowed computes the 2-bits windowed double-and-add scalar 505 // multiplication p=[s]q in Jacobian coordinates. 506 func (p *G1Jac) mulWindowed(q *G1Jac, s *big.Int) *G1Jac { 507 508 var res G1Jac 509 var ops [3]G1Jac 510 511 ops[0].Set(q) 512 if s.Sign() == -1 { 513 ops[0].Neg(&ops[0]) 514 } 515 res.Set(&g1Infinity) 516 ops[1].Double(&ops[0]) 517 ops[2].Set(&ops[0]).AddAssign(&ops[1]) 518 519 b := s.Bytes() 520 for i := range b { 521 w := b[i] 522 mask := byte(0xc0) 523 for j := 0; j < 4; j++ { 524 res.DoubleAssign().DoubleAssign() 525 c := (w & mask) >> (6 - 2*j) 526 if c != 0 { 527 res.AddAssign(&ops[c-1]) 528 } 529 mask = mask >> 2 530 } 531 } 532 p.Set(&res) 533 534 return p 535 536 } 537 538 // phi sets p to ϕ(a) where ϕ: (x,y) → (w x,y), 539 // where w is a third root of unity. 540 func (p *G1Jac) phi(q *G1Jac) *G1Jac { 541 p.Set(q) 542 p.X.Mul(&p.X, &thirdRootOneG1) 543 return p 544 } 545 546 // mulGLV computes the scalar multiplication using a windowed-GLV method 547 // 548 // see https://www.iacr.org/archive/crypto2001/21390189.pdf 549 func (p *G1Jac) mulGLV(q *G1Jac, s *big.Int) *G1Jac { 550 551 var table [15]G1Jac 552 var res G1Jac 553 var k1, k2 fr.Element 554 555 res.Set(&g1Infinity) 556 557 // table[b3b2b1b0-1] = b3b2 ⋅ ϕ(q) + b1b0*q 558 table[0].Set(q) 559 table[3].phi(q) 560 561 // split the scalar, modifies ±q, ϕ(q) accordingly 562 k := ecc.SplitScalar(s, &glvBasis) 563 564 if k[0].Sign() == -1 { 565 k[0].Neg(&k[0]) 566 table[0].Neg(&table[0]) 567 } 568 if k[1].Sign() == -1 { 569 k[1].Neg(&k[1]) 570 table[3].Neg(&table[3]) 571 } 572 573 // precompute table (2 bits sliding window) 574 // table[b3b2b1b0-1] = b3b2 ⋅ ϕ(q) + b1b0 ⋅ q if b3b2b1b0 != 0 575 table[1].Double(&table[0]) 576 table[2].Set(&table[1]).AddAssign(&table[0]) 577 table[4].Set(&table[3]).AddAssign(&table[0]) 578 table[5].Set(&table[3]).AddAssign(&table[1]) 579 table[6].Set(&table[3]).AddAssign(&table[2]) 580 table[7].Double(&table[3]) 581 table[8].Set(&table[7]).AddAssign(&table[0]) 582 table[9].Set(&table[7]).AddAssign(&table[1]) 583 table[10].Set(&table[7]).AddAssign(&table[2]) 584 table[11].Set(&table[7]).AddAssign(&table[3]) 585 table[12].Set(&table[11]).AddAssign(&table[0]) 586 table[13].Set(&table[11]).AddAssign(&table[1]) 587 table[14].Set(&table[11]).AddAssign(&table[2]) 588 589 // bounds on the lattice base vectors guarantee that k1, k2 are len(r)/2 or len(r)/2+1 bits long max 590 // this is because we use a probabilistic scalar decomposition that replaces a division by a right-shift 591 k1 = k1.SetBigInt(&k[0]).Bits() 592 k2 = k2.SetBigInt(&k[1]).Bits() 593 594 // we don't target constant-timeness so we check first if we increase the bounds or not 595 maxBit := k1.BitLen() 596 if k2.BitLen() > maxBit { 597 maxBit = k2.BitLen() 598 } 599 hiWordIndex := (maxBit - 1) / 64 600 601 // loop starts from len(k1)/2 or len(k1)/2+1 due to the bounds 602 for i := hiWordIndex; i >= 0; i-- { 603 mask := uint64(3) << 62 604 for j := 0; j < 32; j++ { 605 res.Double(&res).Double(&res) 606 b1 := (k1[i] & mask) >> (62 - 2*j) 607 b2 := (k2[i] & mask) >> (62 - 2*j) 608 if b1|b2 != 0 { 609 s := (b2<<2 | b1) 610 res.AddAssign(&table[s-1]) 611 } 612 mask = mask >> 2 613 } 614 } 615 616 p.Set(&res) 617 return p 618 } 619 620 // ClearCofactor maps a point in curve to r-torsion 621 func (p *G1Affine) ClearCofactor(a *G1Affine) *G1Affine { 622 var _p G1Jac 623 _p.FromAffine(a) 624 _p.ClearCofactor(&_p) 625 p.FromJacobian(&_p) 626 return p 627 } 628 629 // ClearCofactor maps a point in E(Fp) to E(Fp)[r] 630 func (p *G1Jac) ClearCofactor(q *G1Jac) *G1Jac { 631 // cf https://eprint.iacr.org/2019/403.pdf, 5 632 var res G1Jac 633 res.ScalarMultiplication(q, &xGen).Neg(&res).AddAssign(q) 634 p.Set(&res) 635 return p 636 637 } 638 639 // JointScalarMultiplication computes [s1]a1+[s2]a2 using Strauss-Shamir technique 640 // where a1 and a2 are affine points. 641 func (p *G1Jac) JointScalarMultiplication(a1, a2 *G1Affine, s1, s2 *big.Int) *G1Jac { 642 643 var res, p1, p2 G1Jac 644 res.Set(&g1Infinity) 645 p1.FromAffine(a1) 646 p2.FromAffine(a2) 647 648 var table [15]G1Jac 649 650 var k1, k2 big.Int 651 if s1.Sign() == -1 { 652 k1.Neg(s1) 653 table[0].Neg(&p1) 654 } else { 655 k1.Set(s1) 656 table[0].Set(&p1) 657 } 658 if s2.Sign() == -1 { 659 k2.Neg(s2) 660 table[3].Neg(&p2) 661 } else { 662 k2.Set(s2) 663 table[3].Set(&p2) 664 } 665 666 // precompute table (2 bits sliding window) 667 table[1].Double(&table[0]) 668 table[2].Set(&table[1]).AddAssign(&table[0]) 669 table[4].Set(&table[3]).AddAssign(&table[0]) 670 table[5].Set(&table[3]).AddAssign(&table[1]) 671 table[6].Set(&table[3]).AddAssign(&table[2]) 672 table[7].Double(&table[3]) 673 table[8].Set(&table[7]).AddAssign(&table[0]) 674 table[9].Set(&table[7]).AddAssign(&table[1]) 675 table[10].Set(&table[7]).AddAssign(&table[2]) 676 table[11].Set(&table[7]).AddAssign(&table[3]) 677 table[12].Set(&table[11]).AddAssign(&table[0]) 678 table[13].Set(&table[11]).AddAssign(&table[1]) 679 table[14].Set(&table[11]).AddAssign(&table[2]) 680 681 var s [2]fr.Element 682 s[0] = s[0].SetBigInt(&k1).Bits() 683 s[1] = s[1].SetBigInt(&k2).Bits() 684 685 maxBit := k1.BitLen() 686 if k2.BitLen() > maxBit { 687 maxBit = k2.BitLen() 688 } 689 hiWordIndex := (maxBit - 1) / 64 690 691 for i := hiWordIndex; i >= 0; i-- { 692 mask := uint64(3) << 62 693 for j := 0; j < 32; j++ { 694 res.Double(&res).Double(&res) 695 b1 := (s[0][i] & mask) >> (62 - 2*j) 696 b2 := (s[1][i] & mask) >> (62 - 2*j) 697 if b1|b2 != 0 { 698 s := (b2<<2 | b1) 699 res.AddAssign(&table[s-1]) 700 } 701 mask = mask >> 2 702 } 703 } 704 705 p.Set(&res) 706 return p 707 708 } 709 710 // JointScalarMultiplicationBase computes [s1]g+[s2]a using Straus-Shamir technique 711 // where g is the prime subgroup generator. 712 func (p *G1Jac) JointScalarMultiplicationBase(a *G1Affine, s1, s2 *big.Int) *G1Jac { 713 return p.JointScalarMultiplication(&g1GenAff, a, s1, s2) 714 715 } 716 717 // ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 718 // extended Jacobian coordinates 719 720 // Set sets p to a in extended Jacobian coordinates. 721 func (p *g1JacExtended) Set(q *g1JacExtended) *g1JacExtended { 722 p.X, p.Y, p.ZZ, p.ZZZ = q.X, q.Y, q.ZZ, q.ZZZ 723 return p 724 } 725 726 // setInfinity sets p to the infinity point (1,1,0,0). 727 func (p *g1JacExtended) setInfinity() *g1JacExtended { 728 p.X.SetOne() 729 p.Y.SetOne() 730 p.ZZ = fp.Element{} 731 p.ZZZ = fp.Element{} 732 return p 733 } 734 735 // IsInfinity checks if the p is infinity, i.e. p.ZZ=0. 736 func (p *g1JacExtended) IsInfinity() bool { 737 return p.ZZ.IsZero() 738 } 739 740 // fromJacExtended converts an extended Jacobian point to an affine point. 741 func (p *G1Affine) fromJacExtended(q *g1JacExtended) *G1Affine { 742 if q.ZZ.IsZero() { 743 p.X = fp.Element{} 744 p.Y = fp.Element{} 745 return p 746 } 747 p.X.Inverse(&q.ZZ).Mul(&p.X, &q.X) 748 p.Y.Inverse(&q.ZZZ).Mul(&p.Y, &q.Y) 749 return p 750 } 751 752 // fromJacExtended converts an extended Jacobian point to a Jacobian point. 753 func (p *G1Jac) fromJacExtended(q *g1JacExtended) *G1Jac { 754 if q.ZZ.IsZero() { 755 p.Set(&g1Infinity) 756 return p 757 } 758 p.X.Mul(&q.ZZ, &q.X).Mul(&p.X, &q.ZZ) 759 p.Y.Mul(&q.ZZZ, &q.Y).Mul(&p.Y, &q.ZZZ) 760 p.Z.Set(&q.ZZZ) 761 return p 762 } 763 764 // unsafeFromJacExtended converts an extended Jacobian point, distinct from Infinity, to a Jacobian point. 765 func (p *G1Jac) unsafeFromJacExtended(q *g1JacExtended) *G1Jac { 766 p.X.Square(&q.ZZ).Mul(&p.X, &q.X) 767 p.Y.Square(&q.ZZZ).Mul(&p.Y, &q.Y) 768 p.Z = q.ZZZ 769 return p 770 } 771 772 // add sets p to p+q in extended Jacobian coordinates. 773 // 774 // https://www.hyperelliptic.org/EFD/g1p/auto-shortw-xyzz.html#addition-add-2008-s 775 func (p *g1JacExtended) add(q *g1JacExtended) *g1JacExtended { 776 //if q is infinity return p 777 if q.ZZ.IsZero() { 778 return p 779 } 780 // p is infinity, return q 781 if p.ZZ.IsZero() { 782 p.Set(q) 783 return p 784 } 785 786 var A, B, U1, U2, S1, S2 fp.Element 787 788 // p2: q, p1: p 789 U2.Mul(&q.X, &p.ZZ) 790 U1.Mul(&p.X, &q.ZZ) 791 A.Sub(&U2, &U1) 792 S2.Mul(&q.Y, &p.ZZZ) 793 S1.Mul(&p.Y, &q.ZZZ) 794 B.Sub(&S2, &S1) 795 796 if A.IsZero() { 797 if B.IsZero() { 798 return p.double(q) 799 800 } 801 p.ZZ = fp.Element{} 802 p.ZZZ = fp.Element{} 803 return p 804 } 805 806 var P, R, PP, PPP, Q, V fp.Element 807 P.Sub(&U2, &U1) 808 R.Sub(&S2, &S1) 809 PP.Square(&P) 810 PPP.Mul(&P, &PP) 811 Q.Mul(&U1, &PP) 812 V.Mul(&S1, &PPP) 813 814 p.X.Square(&R). 815 Sub(&p.X, &PPP). 816 Sub(&p.X, &Q). 817 Sub(&p.X, &Q) 818 p.Y.Sub(&Q, &p.X). 819 Mul(&p.Y, &R). 820 Sub(&p.Y, &V) 821 p.ZZ.Mul(&p.ZZ, &q.ZZ). 822 Mul(&p.ZZ, &PP) 823 p.ZZZ.Mul(&p.ZZZ, &q.ZZZ). 824 Mul(&p.ZZZ, &PPP) 825 826 return p 827 } 828 829 // double sets p to [2]q in Jacobian extended coordinates. 830 // 831 // http://www.hyperelliptic.org/EFD/g1p/auto-shortw-xyzz.html#doubling-dbl-2008-s-1 832 // N.B.: since we consider any point on Z=0 as the point at infinity 833 // this doubling formula works for infinity points as well. 834 func (p *g1JacExtended) double(q *g1JacExtended) *g1JacExtended { 835 var U, V, W, S, XX, M fp.Element 836 837 U.Double(&q.Y) 838 V.Square(&U) 839 W.Mul(&U, &V) 840 S.Mul(&q.X, &V) 841 XX.Square(&q.X) 842 M.Double(&XX). 843 Add(&M, &XX) // -> + A, but A=0 here 844 U.Mul(&W, &q.Y) 845 846 p.X.Square(&M). 847 Sub(&p.X, &S). 848 Sub(&p.X, &S) 849 p.Y.Sub(&S, &p.X). 850 Mul(&p.Y, &M). 851 Sub(&p.Y, &U) 852 p.ZZ.Mul(&V, &q.ZZ) 853 p.ZZZ.Mul(&W, &q.ZZZ) 854 855 return p 856 } 857 858 // addMixed sets p to p+q in extended Jacobian coordinates, where a.ZZ=1. 859 // 860 // http://www.hyperelliptic.org/EFD/g1p/auto-shortw-xyzz.html#addition-madd-2008-s 861 func (p *g1JacExtended) addMixed(a *G1Affine) *g1JacExtended { 862 863 //if a is infinity return p 864 if a.IsInfinity() { 865 return p 866 } 867 // p is infinity, return a 868 if p.ZZ.IsZero() { 869 p.X = a.X 870 p.Y = a.Y 871 p.ZZ.SetOne() 872 p.ZZZ.SetOne() 873 return p 874 } 875 876 var P, R fp.Element 877 878 // p2: a, p1: p 879 P.Mul(&a.X, &p.ZZ) 880 P.Sub(&P, &p.X) 881 882 R.Mul(&a.Y, &p.ZZZ) 883 R.Sub(&R, &p.Y) 884 885 if P.IsZero() { 886 if R.IsZero() { 887 return p.doubleMixed(a) 888 889 } 890 p.ZZ = fp.Element{} 891 p.ZZZ = fp.Element{} 892 return p 893 } 894 895 var PP, PPP, Q, Q2, RR, X3, Y3 fp.Element 896 897 PP.Square(&P) 898 PPP.Mul(&P, &PP) 899 Q.Mul(&p.X, &PP) 900 RR.Square(&R) 901 X3.Sub(&RR, &PPP) 902 Q2.Double(&Q) 903 p.X.Sub(&X3, &Q2) 904 Y3.Sub(&Q, &p.X).Mul(&Y3, &R) 905 R.Mul(&p.Y, &PPP) 906 p.Y.Sub(&Y3, &R) 907 p.ZZ.Mul(&p.ZZ, &PP) 908 p.ZZZ.Mul(&p.ZZZ, &PPP) 909 910 return p 911 912 } 913 914 // subMixed works the same as addMixed, but negates a.Y. 915 // 916 // http://www.hyperelliptic.org/EFD/g1p/auto-shortw-xyzz.html#addition-madd-2008-s 917 func (p *g1JacExtended) subMixed(a *G1Affine) *g1JacExtended { 918 919 //if a is infinity return p 920 if a.IsInfinity() { 921 return p 922 } 923 // p is infinity, return a 924 if p.ZZ.IsZero() { 925 p.X = a.X 926 p.Y.Neg(&a.Y) 927 p.ZZ.SetOne() 928 p.ZZZ.SetOne() 929 return p 930 } 931 932 var P, R fp.Element 933 934 // p2: a, p1: p 935 P.Mul(&a.X, &p.ZZ) 936 P.Sub(&P, &p.X) 937 938 R.Mul(&a.Y, &p.ZZZ) 939 R.Neg(&R) 940 R.Sub(&R, &p.Y) 941 942 if P.IsZero() { 943 if R.IsZero() { 944 return p.doubleNegMixed(a) 945 946 } 947 p.ZZ = fp.Element{} 948 p.ZZZ = fp.Element{} 949 return p 950 } 951 952 var PP, PPP, Q, Q2, RR, X3, Y3 fp.Element 953 954 PP.Square(&P) 955 PPP.Mul(&P, &PP) 956 Q.Mul(&p.X, &PP) 957 RR.Square(&R) 958 X3.Sub(&RR, &PPP) 959 Q2.Double(&Q) 960 p.X.Sub(&X3, &Q2) 961 Y3.Sub(&Q, &p.X).Mul(&Y3, &R) 962 R.Mul(&p.Y, &PPP) 963 p.Y.Sub(&Y3, &R) 964 p.ZZ.Mul(&p.ZZ, &PP) 965 p.ZZZ.Mul(&p.ZZZ, &PPP) 966 967 return p 968 969 } 970 971 // doubleNegMixed works the same as double, but negates q.Y. 972 func (p *g1JacExtended) doubleNegMixed(a *G1Affine) *g1JacExtended { 973 974 var U, V, W, S, XX, M, S2, L fp.Element 975 976 U.Double(&a.Y) 977 U.Neg(&U) 978 V.Square(&U) 979 W.Mul(&U, &V) 980 S.Mul(&a.X, &V) 981 XX.Square(&a.X) 982 M.Double(&XX). 983 Add(&M, &XX) // -> + A, but A=0 here 984 S2.Double(&S) 985 L.Mul(&W, &a.Y) 986 987 p.X.Square(&M). 988 Sub(&p.X, &S2) 989 p.Y.Sub(&S, &p.X). 990 Mul(&p.Y, &M). 991 Add(&p.Y, &L) 992 p.ZZ.Set(&V) 993 p.ZZZ.Set(&W) 994 995 return p 996 } 997 998 // doubleMixed sets p to [2]a in Jacobian extended coordinates, where a.ZZ=1. 999 // 1000 // http://www.hyperelliptic.org/EFD/g1p/auto-shortw-xyzz.html#doubling-dbl-2008-s-1 1001 func (p *g1JacExtended) doubleMixed(a *G1Affine) *g1JacExtended { 1002 1003 var U, V, W, S, XX, M, S2, L fp.Element 1004 1005 U.Double(&a.Y) 1006 V.Square(&U) 1007 W.Mul(&U, &V) 1008 S.Mul(&a.X, &V) 1009 XX.Square(&a.X) 1010 M.Double(&XX). 1011 Add(&M, &XX) // -> + A, but A=0 here 1012 S2.Double(&S) 1013 L.Mul(&W, &a.Y) 1014 1015 p.X.Square(&M). 1016 Sub(&p.X, &S2) 1017 p.Y.Sub(&S, &p.X). 1018 Mul(&p.Y, &M). 1019 Sub(&p.Y, &L) 1020 p.ZZ.Set(&V) 1021 p.ZZZ.Set(&W) 1022 1023 return p 1024 } 1025 1026 // BatchJacobianToAffineG1 converts points in Jacobian coordinates to Affine coordinates 1027 // performing a single field inversion using the Montgomery batch inversion trick. 1028 func BatchJacobianToAffineG1(points []G1Jac) []G1Affine { 1029 result := make([]G1Affine, len(points)) 1030 zeroes := make([]bool, len(points)) 1031 accumulator := fp.One() 1032 1033 // batch invert all points[].Z coordinates with Montgomery batch inversion trick 1034 // (stores points[].Z^-1 in result[i].X to avoid allocating a slice of fr.Elements) 1035 for i := 0; i < len(points); i++ { 1036 if points[i].Z.IsZero() { 1037 zeroes[i] = true 1038 continue 1039 } 1040 result[i].X = accumulator 1041 accumulator.Mul(&accumulator, &points[i].Z) 1042 } 1043 1044 var accInverse fp.Element 1045 accInverse.Inverse(&accumulator) 1046 1047 for i := len(points) - 1; i >= 0; i-- { 1048 if zeroes[i] { 1049 // do nothing, (X=0, Y=0) is infinity point in affine 1050 continue 1051 } 1052 result[i].X.Mul(&result[i].X, &accInverse) 1053 accInverse.Mul(&accInverse, &points[i].Z) 1054 } 1055 1056 // batch convert to affine. 1057 parallel.Execute(len(points), func(start, end int) { 1058 for i := start; i < end; i++ { 1059 if zeroes[i] { 1060 // do nothing, (X=0, Y=0) is infinity point in affine 1061 continue 1062 } 1063 var a, b fp.Element 1064 a = result[i].X 1065 b.Square(&a) 1066 result[i].X.Mul(&points[i].X, &b) 1067 result[i].Y.Mul(&points[i].Y, &b). 1068 Mul(&result[i].Y, &a) 1069 } 1070 }) 1071 1072 return result 1073 } 1074 1075 // BatchScalarMultiplicationG1 multiplies the same base by all scalars 1076 // and return resulting points in affine coordinates 1077 // uses a simple windowed-NAF-like multiplication algorithm. 1078 func BatchScalarMultiplicationG1(base *G1Affine, scalars []fr.Element) []G1Affine { 1079 // approximate cost in group ops is 1080 // cost = 2^{c-1} + n(scalar.nbBits+nbChunks) 1081 1082 nbPoints := uint64(len(scalars)) 1083 min := ^uint64(0) 1084 bestC := 0 1085 for c := 2; c <= 16; c++ { 1086 cost := uint64(1 << (c - 1)) // pre compute the table 1087 nbChunks := computeNbChunks(uint64(c)) 1088 cost += nbPoints * (uint64(c) + 1) * nbChunks // doublings + point add 1089 if cost < min { 1090 min = cost 1091 bestC = c 1092 } 1093 } 1094 c := uint64(bestC) // window size 1095 nbChunks := int(computeNbChunks(c)) 1096 1097 // last window may be slightly larger than c; in which case we need to compute one 1098 // extra element in the baseTable 1099 maxC := lastC(c) 1100 if c > maxC { 1101 maxC = c 1102 } 1103 1104 // precompute all powers of base for our window 1105 // note here that if performance is critical, we can implement as in the msmX methods 1106 // this allocation to be on the stack 1107 baseTable := make([]G1Jac, (1 << (maxC - 1))) 1108 baseTable[0].FromAffine(base) 1109 for i := 1; i < len(baseTable); i++ { 1110 baseTable[i] = baseTable[i-1] 1111 baseTable[i].AddMixed(base) 1112 } 1113 // convert our base exp table into affine to use AddMixed 1114 baseTableAff := BatchJacobianToAffineG1(baseTable) 1115 toReturn := make([]G1Jac, len(scalars)) 1116 1117 // partition the scalars into digits 1118 digits, _ := partitionScalars(scalars, c, runtime.NumCPU()) 1119 1120 // for each digit, take value in the base table, double it c time, voilà. 1121 parallel.Execute(len(scalars), func(start, end int) { 1122 var p G1Jac 1123 for i := start; i < end; i++ { 1124 p.Set(&g1Infinity) 1125 for chunk := nbChunks - 1; chunk >= 0; chunk-- { 1126 if chunk != nbChunks-1 { 1127 for j := uint64(0); j < c; j++ { 1128 p.DoubleAssign() 1129 } 1130 } 1131 offset := chunk * len(scalars) 1132 digit := digits[i+offset] 1133 1134 if digit == 0 { 1135 continue 1136 } 1137 1138 // if msbWindow bit is set, we need to subtract 1139 if digit&1 == 0 { 1140 // add 1141 p.AddMixed(&baseTableAff[(digit>>1)-1]) 1142 } else { 1143 // sub 1144 t := baseTableAff[digit>>1] 1145 t.Neg(&t) 1146 p.AddMixed(&t) 1147 } 1148 } 1149 1150 // set our result point 1151 toReturn[i] = p 1152 1153 } 1154 }) 1155 toReturnAff := BatchJacobianToAffineG1(toReturn) 1156 return toReturnAff 1157 } 1158 1159 // batchAddG1Affine adds affine points using the Montgomery batch inversion trick. 1160 // Special cases (doubling, infinity) must be filtered out before this call. 1161 func batchAddG1Affine[TP pG1Affine, TPP ppG1Affine, TC cG1Affine](R *TPP, P *TP, batchSize int) { 1162 var lambda, lambdain TC 1163 1164 // add part 1165 for j := 0; j < batchSize; j++ { 1166 lambdain[j].Sub(&(*P)[j].X, &(*R)[j].X) 1167 } 1168 1169 // invert denominator using montgomery batch invert technique 1170 { 1171 var accumulator fp.Element 1172 lambda[0].SetOne() 1173 accumulator.Set(&lambdain[0]) 1174 1175 for i := 1; i < batchSize; i++ { 1176 lambda[i] = accumulator 1177 accumulator.Mul(&accumulator, &lambdain[i]) 1178 } 1179 1180 accumulator.Inverse(&accumulator) 1181 1182 for i := batchSize - 1; i > 0; i-- { 1183 lambda[i].Mul(&lambda[i], &accumulator) 1184 accumulator.Mul(&accumulator, &lambdain[i]) 1185 } 1186 lambda[0].Set(&accumulator) 1187 } 1188 1189 var d fp.Element 1190 var rr G1Affine 1191 1192 // add part 1193 for j := 0; j < batchSize; j++ { 1194 // computa lambda 1195 d.Sub(&(*P)[j].Y, &(*R)[j].Y) 1196 lambda[j].Mul(&lambda[j], &d) 1197 1198 // compute X, Y 1199 rr.X.Square(&lambda[j]) 1200 rr.X.Sub(&rr.X, &(*R)[j].X) 1201 rr.X.Sub(&rr.X, &(*P)[j].X) 1202 d.Sub(&(*R)[j].X, &rr.X) 1203 rr.Y.Mul(&lambda[j], &d) 1204 rr.Y.Sub(&rr.Y, &(*R)[j].Y) 1205 (*R)[j].Set(&rr) 1206 } 1207 }