Results 1 -
2 of
2
Customizable elliptic curve cryptosystems
- IEEE Transactions on Very Large Scale Integration (VLSI) Systems
, 2005
"... Abstract—This paper presents a method for producing hardware designs for elliptic curve cryptography (ECC) systems over the finite field qp@P A, using the optimal normal basis for the representation of numbers. Our field multiplier design is based on a parallel architecture containing multiple-bit s ..."
Abstract
-
Cited by 8 (0 self)
- Add to MetaCart
Abstract—This paper presents a method for producing hardware designs for elliptic curve cryptography (ECC) systems over the finite field qp@P A, using the optimal normal basis for the representation of numbers. Our field multiplier design is based on a parallel architecture containing multiple-bit serial multipliers; by changing the number of such serial multipliers, designers can obtain implementations with different tradeoffs in speed, size and level of security. A design generator has been developed which can automatically produce a customised ECC hardware design that meets user-defined requirements. To facilitate performance characterization, we have developed a parametric model for estimating the number of cycles for our generic ECC architecture. The resulting hardware implementations are among the fastest reported: for a key size of 270 bits, a point multiplication in a Xilinx XC2V6000 FPGA at 35 MHz can run over 1000 times faster
Implementing the Elliptic Curve Method of Factoring in Reconfigurable Hardware
"... A novel portable hardware architecture of the Elliptic Curve Method of factoring, designed and optimized for application in the relation collection step of the Number Field Sieve, is described and analyzed. A comparison with an earlier proof-of-concept design by Pelzl, Simka, et al. has been perform ..."
Abstract
-
Cited by 6 (0 self)
- Add to MetaCart
A novel portable hardware architecture of the Elliptic Curve Method of factoring, designed and optimized for application in the relation collection step of the Number Field Sieve, is described and analyzed. A comparison with an earlier proof-of-concept design by Pelzl, Simka, et al. has been performed, and a substantial improvement has been demonstrated in terms of both the execution time and the area-time product. The ECM architecture has been ported across five different families of FPGA devices in order to select the family with the best performance to cost ratio. A timing comparison with the highly optimized software implementation, GMP-ECM, has been performed. Our results indicate that low-cost families of FPGAs, such as Spartan-3 and Spartan-3E, offer at least an order of magnitude improvement over the same generation of microprocessors in terms of the performance to cost ratio. 1.

