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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Implementation and Design of a Cycle-Efficient 64b/32b Integer Divider Using a Table-Sharing Method

Wang, Jun-Jie 15 June 2001 (has links)
The first topic of this thesis is a mixed radix-16/8/4/2 64b/32b integer divider which uses a variety of techniques, including operand scaling, table partitioning, and table sharing, to increase performance without paying the cost of increasing complexity. The second topic is a noise immune address transition detector¡]ATD¡^circuit. We employ a simple feedback loop to stabilize the generated CS¡]chip select¡^signal and two delay cells to dynamically adjust the width of the CS strobe.
2

Design and Analysis of Modular Architectures for an RNS to Mixed Radix Conversion Multi-processor

Shivashankar, Nithin 27 October 2014 (has links)
No description available.
3

Security of Lightweight Cryptographic Primitives

Vennos, Amy Demetra Geae 10 June 2021 (has links)
Internet-of-Things (IoT) devices are increasing in popularity due to their ability to help automate many aspects of daily life while performing these necessary duties on billions of low-power appliances. However, the perks of these small devices also come with additional constraints to security. Security always has been an issue with the rise of cryptographic backdoors and hackers reverse engineering the security protocols within devices to reveal the original state that was encrypted. Security researchers have done much work to prevent attacks with high power algorithms, such as the international effort to develop the current Advanced Encryption Standard (AES). Unfortunately, IoT devices do not typically have the computational resources to implement high-power algorithms such as AES, and must rely on lightweight primitives such as pseudorandom number generators, or PRNGs.This thesis explores the effectiveness, functionality, and use of PRNGs in different applications. First, this thesis investigates the confidentiality of a single-stage residue number system PRNG, which has previously been shown to provide extremely high quality outputs for simulation and digital communication applications when evaluated through traditional techniques like the battery of statistical tests used in the NIST Random Number Generation and DIEHARD test suites or in using Shannon entropy metrics. In contrast, rather than blindly performing statistical analyses on the outputs of the single-stage RNS PRNG, this thesis provides both white box and black box analyses that facilitate reverse engineering of the underlying RNS number generation algorithm to obtain the residues, or equivalently the key, of the RNS algorithm. This thesis develops and demonstrate a conditional entropy analysis that permits extraction of the key given a priori knowledge of state transitions as well as reverse engineering of the RNS PRNG algorithm and parameters (but not the key) in problems where the multiplicative RNS characteristic is too large to obtain a priori state transitions. This thesis then discusses multiple defenses and perturbations for the RNS system that defeat the original attack algorithm, including deliberate noise injection and code hopping. We present a modification to the algorithm that accounts for deliberate noise, but rapidly increases the search space and complexity. Lastly, a comparison of memory requirements and time required for the attacker and defender to maintain these defenses is presented. The next application of PRNGs is in building a translation for binary PRNGs to non-binary uses like card shuffling in a casino. This thesis explores a shuffler algorithm that utilizes RNS in Fisher-Yates shuffles, and that calls for inputs from any PRNG. Entropy is lost through this algorithm by the use of PRNG in lieu of TRNG and by its RNS component: a surjective mapping from a large domain of size $2^J$ to a substantially smaller set of arbitrary size $n$. Previous research on the specific RNS mapping process had developed a lower bound on the Shannon entropy loss from such a mapping, but this bound eliminates the mixed-radix component of the original formulation. This thesis calculates a more precise formula which takes into account the radix, $n$. This formulation is later used to specify the optimal parameters to simulate the shuffler with different test PRNGs. After implementing the shuffler with PRNGs with varying output entropies, the thesis examines the output value frequencies to discuss if utilizing PRNG is a feasible alternative for casinos to the higher-cost TRNG. / Master of Science / Cryptography, or the encrypting of data, has drawn widespread interest for years, initially sparking public concern through headlines and dramatized reenactments of hackers targeting security protocols. Previous cryptographic research commonly focused on developing the quickest, most secure ways to encrypt information on high-power computers. However, as wireless low-power devices such as smart home, security sensors, and learning thermostats gain popularity in ordinary life, interest is rising in protecting information being sent between devices that don't necessarily have the power and capabilities as those in a government facility. Lightweight primitives, the algorithms used to encrypt information between low-power devices, are one solution to this concern, though they are more susceptible to attackers who wish to reverse engineer the encrypting process. The pesudorandom number generator (PRNG) is a type of lightweight primitive that generates numbers that are essentially random even though it is possible to determine the input value, or seed, from the resulting output values. This thesis explores the effectiveness and functionality of PRNGs in different applications. First, this thesis explores a PRNG that has passed many statistical tests to prove its output values are random enough for certain applications. This project analyzes the quality of this PRNG through a new lens: its resistance to reverse engineering attacks. The thesis describes and implements an attack on the PRNG that allows an individual to reverse engineer the initial seed. The thesis then changes perspective from attacker to designer and develop defenses to this attack: by slightly modifying the algorithm, the designer can ensure that the reverse engineering process is so complex, time-consuming, and memory-requiring that implementing such an attack would be impractical for an attacker. The next application of PRNGs is in the casino industry, in which low-power and cost-effective automatic card shufflers for games like poker are becoming popular. This thesis explores a solution for optimal shuffling of a deck of cards.

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