Jump to content

Extendable-output function

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Dimawik (talk | contribs) at 23:19, 22 June 2023 (top: style). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Extendable-output function (XOF) is an extension[1] of the cryptographic hash that allows its output to be arbitrarily long. In particular, the nature of the sponge construction makes any sponge hash a natural XOF (the regular hash functions with a fixed-size result are obtained from a sponge mechanism by stopping the squeezing phase after obtaining the fixed number of bits).[2]

The genesis of a XOF makes it collision, preimage and second-preimage resistant. Technically, any XOF can be turned into a cryptographic hash by truncating the result to a fixed length (in practice, hashes and XOFs are defined differently for domain separation[3]). The examples of XOF include the algorithms from the Keccak family: SHAKE128, SHAKE256, and a variant with higher efficiency, KangarooTwelve.[1]

XOFs are used as key derivation functions (KDFs), stream ciphers,[1] mask generation functions.[4]

By their nature, XOFs can produce related outputs (a longer result includes a shorter one as a prefix). The use of KDFs for key derivation can therefore cause related-output problems. As a "naïve" example, if the Triple DES keys are generated with a XOF, and there is a confusion in the implementation that causes some operations to be performed as 3TDEA (3x56 = 168-bit key), and some as 2TDEA (2x56 = 112 bit key), comparing the encryption results will lower the attack complexity to just 56 bits; similar problems can occur if hashes in the NIST SP 800-108 are naïvely replaced by the KDFs.[5]

References

Sources

  • Mittelbach, Arno; Fischlin, Marc (2021). "Extendable Output Functions (XOFs)". The Theory of Hash Functions and Random Oracles: An Approach to Modern Cryptography. Information Security and Cryptography. Springer International Publishing. ISBN 978-3-030-63287-8. Retrieved 2023-06-22.
  • Peyrin, Thomas; Wang, Haoyang (2020). "The MALICIOUS Framework: Embedding Backdoors into Tweakable Block Ciphers" (PDF). Advances in Cryptology – CRYPTO 2020. Springer International Publishing. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-56877-1_9. ISBN 978-3-030-56876-4. ISSN 0302-9743.
  • Perlner, Ray (August 22, 2014). "Extendable-Output Functions (XOFs)". csrc.nist.gov. NIST. Retrieved 22 June 2023.
  • Dworkin, Morris (August 22, 2014). "Domain Extensions". csrc.nist.gov. NIST. Retrieved 22 June 2023.