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curve25519-donna

Note: this code is from 2008. Since that time, many more, great implementations of curve25519 have been written, including several amd64 assembly versions by djb. You are probably better served now by NaCl or libsodium.

curve25519 is an elliptic curve, developed by Dan Bernstein, for fast Diffie-Hellman key agreement. DJB's original implementation was written in a language of his own devising called qhasm. The original qhasm source isn't available, only the x86 32-bit assembly output.

Since many x86 systems are now 64-bit, and portability is important, this project provides alternative implementations for other platforms.

ImplementationPlatformAuthor32-bit speed64-bit speedConstant Time
curve25519x86 32-bitdjb265µsN/Ayes
curve25519-donna-c6464-bit CaglN/A215µsyes
curve25591-donnaPortable Cagl2179µs610µs

(All tests run on a 2.33GHz Intel Core2)

Usage

The usage is exactly the same as djb's code (as described at http://cr.yp.to/ecdh.html) except that the function is called curve25519\_donna.

To generate a private key, generate 32 random bytes and:

mysecret[0] &= 248;
mysecret[31] &= 127;
mysecret[31] |= 64;

To generate the public key, just do:

static const uint8_t basepoint[32] = {9};
curve25519_donna(mypublic, mysecret, basepoint);

To generate a shared key do:

uint8_t shared_key[32];
curve25519_donna(shared_key, mysecret, theirpublic);

And hash the shared\_key with a cryptographic hash function before using.

For more information, see djb's page.

Building

If you run make, two .a archives will be built, similar to djb's curve25519 code. Alternatively, read on:

ESP8266

If you're interested in running curve25519 on an ESP8266, see this project.