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goff migrated to gnark-crypto (/field/goff)


Fast finite field arithmetic in Golang

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goff (go finite field) is a unix-like tool that generates fast field arithmetic in Go.

We introduced goff in this article: the project came from the need to have performant field operations in Go. For most moduli, goff outperforms math/big and optimized libraries written in C++ or Rust.

In particular, goff modular multiplication is blazingly fast. "Faster big-integer modular multiplication for most moduli" explains the algorithmic optimization we discovered and implemented, and presents some benchmarks.

Actively developed and maintained by the team (gnark@consensys.net) behind:

Warning

goff has not been audited and is provided as-is, use at your own risk. In particular, goff makes no security guarantees such as constant time implementation or side-channel attack resistance.

goff generates code optimized for 64bits architectures. It generates optimized assembly for moduli matching the NoCarry condition on amd64 which support ADX/MULX instructions. Other targets have a fallback generic Go code.

Since v0.4.0, goff's code has been migrated into gnark-crypto. This repo contains the unix-like tool only.

<img style="display: block;margin: auto;" width="80%" src="banner_goff.png">

Getting started

Go version

goff is tested with the last 2 major releases of Go (1.15 and 1.16).

Install goff

# dependencies
go get golang.org/x/tools/cmd/goimports
go get github.com/klauspost/asmfmt/cmd/asmfmt

# goff
go get github.com/consensys/goff

Usage

Generated API

Example API doc

API -- go.mod (recommended)

At the root of your repo:

# note that code has been migrated in gnark-crypto since v0.4.0
go get github.com/consensys/gnark-crypto

then in a main.go (that can be called using a go:generate workflow):

import (
  "github.com/consensys/gnark-crypto/field/generator"
  "github.com/consensys/gnark-crypto/field"

fp, _ = field.NewField("fp", "Element", fpModulus)

generator.GenerateFF(fp, "fp"))

Command line interface

goff

running goff version v0.4.0

Usage:
  goff [flags]

Flags:
  -e, --element string   name of the generated struct and file
  -h, --help             help for goff
  -m, --modulus string   field modulus (base 10)
  -o, --output string    destination path to create output files
  -p, --package string   package name in generated files
  -v, --version          version for goff

goff -- a short example

Running

goff -m 21888242871946452262085832188824287194645226208583 -o ./bn256/ -p bn256 -e Element

outputs the .go and .s files in ./bn256/

The generated type has an API that's similar with big.Int

Example API signature

// Mul z = x * y mod q
func (z *Element) Mul(x, y *Element) *Element 

and can be used like so:

var a, b Element
a.SetUint64(2)
b.SetString("984896738")

a.Mul(a, b)

a.Sub(a, a)
 .Add(a, b)
 .Inv(a)
 
b.Exp(b, 42)
b.Neg(b)

Build tags

goff generate optimized assembly for amd64 target.

For the Mul operation, using ADX instructions and ADOX/ADCX result in a significant performance gain.

The "default" target amd64 checks if the running architecture supports these instruction, and reverts to generic path if not. This check adds a branch and forces the function to reserve some bytes on the frame to store the argument to call _mulGeneric .

goff output can be compiled with amd64_adx flag which omits this check. Will crash if the platform running the binary doesn't support the ADX instructions (roughly, before 2016).

Contributing

Please read CONTRIBUTING.md for details on our code of conduct, and the process for submitting pull requests to us. Get in touch: zkteam@consensys.net

Versioning

We use SemVer for versioning. For the versions available, see the tags on this repository.

License

This project is licensed under the Apache 2 License - see the LICENSE file for details