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chore: change to BINARY_CHUNK_SIZE

al-gkr-basic-workflow
Al-Kindi-0 2 years ago
parent
commit
636c92a78b
1 changed files with 20 additions and 16 deletions
  1. +20
    -16
      crypto/src/hash/rpo/mod.rs

+ 20
- 16
crypto/src/hash/rpo/mod.rs

@ -38,6 +38,9 @@ const DIGEST_SIZE: usize = DIGEST_RANGE.end - DIGEST_RANGE.start;
/// The number of rounds is set to 7 to target 128-bit security level
const NUM_ROUNDS: usize = 7;
/// The number of byte chunks defining a field element when hashing a sequence of bytes
const BINARY_CHUNK_SIZE: usize = 7;
/// S-Box and Inverse S-Box powers;
///
/// The constants are defined for tests only because the exponentiations in the code are unrolled
@ -93,12 +96,12 @@ impl HashFn for Rpo256 {
fn hash(bytes: &[u8]) -> Self::Digest {
// compute the number of elements required to represent the string; we will be processing
// the string in 7-byte chunks, thus the number of elements will be equal to the number
// of such chunks (including a potential partial chunk at the end).
let num_elements = if bytes.len() % 7 == 0 {
bytes.len() / 7
// the string in BINARY_CHUNK_SIZE-byte chunks, thus the number of elements will be equal
// to the number of such chunks (including a potential partial chunk at the end).
let num_elements = if bytes.len() % BINARY_CHUNK_SIZE == 0 {
bytes.len() / BINARY_CHUNK_SIZE
} else {
bytes.len() / 7 + 1
bytes.len() / BINARY_CHUNK_SIZE + 1
};
// initialize state to all zeros, except for the first element of the capacity part, which
@ -107,19 +110,20 @@ impl HashFn for Rpo256 {
let mut state = [ZERO; STATE_WIDTH];
state[CAPACITY_RANGE.start] = Felt::new(num_elements as u64);
// break the string into 7-byte chunks, convert each chunk into a field element, and
// absorb the element into the rate portion of the state. we use 7-byte chunks because
// every 7-byte chunk is guaranteed to map to some field element.
// break the string into BINARY_CHUNK_SIZE-byte chunks, convert each chunk into a field
// element, and absorb the element into the rate portion of the state. we use
// BINARY_CHUNK_SIZE-byte chunks because every BINARY_CHUNK_SIZE-byte chunk is guaranteed
// to map to some field element.
let mut i = 0;
let mut buf = [0_u8; 8];
for chunk in bytes.chunks(7) {
for chunk in bytes.chunks(BINARY_CHUNK_SIZE) {
if i < num_elements - 1 {
buf[..7].copy_from_slice(chunk);
buf[..BINARY_CHUNK_SIZE].copy_from_slice(chunk);
} else {
// if we are dealing with the last chunk, it may be smaller than 7 bytes long, so
// we need to handle it slightly differently. we also append a byte with value 1
// to the end of the string; this pads the string in such a way that adding
// trailing zeros results in different hash
// if we are dealing with the last chunk, it may be smaller than BINARY_CHUNK_SIZE
// bytes long, so we need to handle it slightly differently. We also append a byte
// with value 1 to the end of the string; this pads the string in such a way that
// adding trailing zeros results in different hash
let chunk_len = chunk.len();
buf = [0_u8; 8];
buf[..chunk_len].copy_from_slice(chunk);
@ -129,7 +133,7 @@ impl HashFn for Rpo256 {
// convert the bytes into a field element and absorb it into the rate portion of the
// state; if the rate is filled up, apply the Rescue permutation and start absorbing
// again from zero index.
state[RATE_RANGE.start + i] += Felt::new(u64::from_le_bytes(buf));
state[RATE_RANGE.start + i] = Felt::new(u64::from_le_bytes(buf));
i += 1;
if i % RATE_WIDTH == 0 {
Self::apply_permutation(&mut state);
@ -138,7 +142,7 @@ impl HashFn for Rpo256 {
}
// if we absorbed some elements but didn't apply a permutation to them (would happen when
// the number of elements is not a multiple of RATE_WIDTH), apply the Rescue permutation.
// the number of elements is not a multiple of RATE_WIDTH), apply the RPO permutation.
// we don't need to apply any extra padding because we injected total number of elements
// in the input list into the capacity portion of the state during initialization.
if i > 0 {

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