open access publication

Proceedings Paper, 2024

The Last Yard: Foundational End-to-End Verification of High-Speed Cryptography

PROCEEDINGS OF THE 13TH ACM SIGPLAN INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON CERTIFIED PROGRAMS AND PROOFS, CPP 2024, ISBN 979-8-4007-0488-8, Pages 30-44, 10.1145/3636501.3636961

Contributors

Haselwarter, Philipp G. (Corresponding author) [1] Hvass, Benjamin Salling [1] Hansen, Lasse Letager [1] Winterhalter, Theo [2] Hritcu, Catalin [3] Spitters, Bas 0000-0002-2802-0973 [1] Timany, A Traytel, D Pientka, B Blazy, S

Affiliations

  1. [1] Aarhus Univ, Aarhus, Denmark
  2. [NORA names: AU Aarhus University; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  3. [2] INRIA, Paris, France
  4. [NORA names: France; Europe, EU; OECD];
  5. [3] MPI SP, Bochum, Germany
  6. [NORA names: Germany; Europe, EU; OECD]

Abstract

The field of high-assurance cryptography is quickly maturing, yet a unified foundational framework for end-to-end formal verification of eficient cryptographic implementations is still missing. To address this gap, we use the Coq proof assistant to formally connect three existing tools: (1) the Hacspec emergent cryptographic specification language; (2) the Jasmin language for eficient, high-assurance cryptographic implementations; and (3) the SSProve foundational verification framework for modular cryptographic proofs. We first connect Hacspec with SSProve by devising a new translation from Hacspec specifications to imperative SSProve code. We validate this translation by considering a second, more standard translation from Hacspec to purely functional Coq code and generate a proof of the equivalence between the code produced by the two translations. We further define a translation from Jasmin to SSProve, which allows us to formally reason in SSProve about efficient cryptographic implementations in Jasmin. We prove this translation correct in Coq with respect to Jasmin's operational semantics. Finally, we demonstrate the usefulness of our approach by giving a foundational end-to-end Coq proof of an efficient AES implementation. For this case study, we start from an existing Jasmin implementation of AES that makes use of hardware acceleration and prove that it conforms to a specification of the AES standard written in Hacspec. We use SSProve to formalize the security of the encryption scheme based on the Jasmin implementation of AES.

Keywords

AES, Coq, computer-aided cryptography, formal verification, high-assurance cryptography

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