Difference between revisions of "Tiger"
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=== Best Known Results === | === Best Known Results === | ||
− | The best | + | The best known attack is a 1-bit circular pseudo-near-collision for Tiger with a complexity of about 2<sup>47</sup> of Mendel and Rijmen. The best collision attack on Tiger was presented by Mendel et al. for Tiger reduced to 19 out of 24 rounds. The attack has a complexity of about 2<sup>62</sup>. |
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Line 77: | Line 77: | ||
volume = {4329}, | volume = {4329}, | ||
isbn = {3-540-49767-6}, | isbn = {3-540-49767-6}, | ||
− | abstract = {Tiger is a cryptographic hash function with a 192-bit hash value which was proposed by Anderson and Biham in 1996. At FSE 2006, Kelsey and Lucks presented a collision attack on Tiger reduced to 16 (out of 24) rounds with complexity of about | + | abstract = {Tiger is a cryptographic hash function with a 192-bit hash value which was proposed by Anderson and Biham in 1996. At FSE 2006, Kelsey and Lucks presented a collision attack on Tiger reduced to 16 (out of 24) rounds with complexity of about 2^{44}. Furthermore, they showed that a pseudo-near-collision can be found for a variant of Tiger with 20 rounds with complexity of about 2^{48}. In this article, we show how their attack method can be extended to construct a collision in the Tiger hash function reduced to 19 rounds. We present two different attack strategies for constructing collisions in Tiger-19 with complexity of about 2^{62} and 2^{69}. Furthermore, we present a pseudo-near-collision for a variant of Tiger with 22 rounds with complexity of about 2^{44}.}, |
} | } | ||
</bibtex> | </bibtex> | ||
Line 113: | Line 113: | ||
=== Preimage Attacks === | === Preimage Attacks === | ||
+ | <bibtex> | ||
+ | @INPROCEEDINGS{fseIsobeS09, | ||
+ | author = {Takanori Isobe and Kyoji Shibutani}, | ||
+ | title = {Preimage Attacks on Reduced Tiger and SHA-2}, | ||
+ | booktitle = {Fast Software Encryption}, | ||
+ | year = {2009}, | ||
+ | editor = {Dunkelman, Orr}, | ||
+ | volume = {5665}, | ||
+ | series = {LNCS}, | ||
+ | pages = {139-155}, | ||
+ | publisher = {Springer}, | ||
+ | url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-03317-9} | ||
+ | abstract = {This paper shows new preimage attacks on reduced Tiger and SHA-2. | ||
+ | Indesteege and Preneel presented a preimage attack on Tiger reduced | ||
+ | to 13 rounds (out of 24) with a complexity of 2^{128.5}. Our new | ||
+ | preimage attack finds a one-block preimage of Tiger reduced to 16 | ||
+ | rounds with a complexity of 2^{161}. The proposed attack is based | ||
+ | on meet-in-the-middle attacks. It seems difficult to find “independent | ||
+ | words” of Tiger at first glance, since its key schedule function | ||
+ | is much more complicated than that of MD4 or MD5. However, we developed | ||
+ | techniques to find independent words efficiently by controlling its | ||
+ | internal variables. Surprisingly, the similar techniques can be applied | ||
+ | to SHA-2 including both SHA-256 and SHA-512. We present a one-block | ||
+ | preimage attack on SHA-256 and SHA-512 reduced to 24 (out of 64 and | ||
+ | 80) steps with a complexity of 2^{240} and 2^{480}, respectively. | ||
+ | To the best of our knowledge, our attack is the best known preimage | ||
+ | attack on reduced-round Tiger and our preimage attack on reduced-step | ||
+ | SHA-512 is the first result. Furthermore, our preimage attacks can | ||
+ | also be extended to second preimage attacks directly, because our | ||
+ | attacks can obtain random preimages from an arbitrary IV and an arbitrary | ||
+ | target.}, | ||
+ | } | ||
+ | </bibtex> | ||
+ | |||
+ | <bibtex> | ||
+ | @inproceedings{africacryptMendel09, | ||
+ | author = {Florian Mendel}, | ||
+ | title = {Two Passes of Tiger Are Not One-Way}, | ||
+ | year = {2009}, | ||
+ | pages = {29-40}, | ||
+ | url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-02384-2_3}, | ||
+ | publisher = {Springer}, | ||
+ | series = {LNCS}, | ||
+ | booktitle = {AFRICACRYPT}, | ||
+ | publisher = {Springer}, | ||
+ | volume = {5580}, | ||
+ | abstract = {Tiger is a cryptographic hash function proposed by Anderson and Biham in 1996 and produces a 192-bit hash value. Recently, weaknesses have been shown in round-reduced variants of the Tiger hash function. Collision attacks have been presented for Tiger reduced to 16 and 19 (out of 24) rounds at FSE 2006 and Indocrypt 2006. Furthermore, Mendel and Rijmen presented a 1-bit pseudo-near-collision for the full Tiger hash function at ASIACRYPT 2007. The attack has a complexity of about 2^47 compression function evaluations. While there exist several collision-style attacks for Tiger, the picture is different for preimage attacks. At WEWoRC 2007, Indesteege and Preneel presented a preimage attack on Tiger reduced to 12 and 13 rounds with a complexity of 2^64.5 and 2^128.5, respectively. | ||
+ | In this article, we show a preimage attack on Tiger with two passes (16 rounds) with a complexity of about 2^174 compression function evaluations. Furthermore, we show how the attack can be extended to 17 rounds with a complexity of about 2^185. Even though the attacks are only slightly faster than brute force search, they present a step forward in the cryptanalysis of Tiger. | ||
+ | } | ||
+ | </bibtex> | ||
+ | |||
+ | <bibtex> | ||
+ | @inproceedings{DBLP:conf/weworc/IndesteegeP07, | ||
+ | author = {Sebastiaan Indesteege and | ||
+ | Bart Preneel}, | ||
+ | title = {Preimages for Reduced-Round Tiger}, | ||
+ | year = {2007}, | ||
+ | pages = {90-99}, | ||
+ | url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-88353-1_8}, | ||
+ | editor = {Stefan Lucks and | ||
+ | Ahmad-Reza Sadeghi and | ||
+ | Christopher Wolf}, | ||
+ | booktitle = {WEWoRC}, | ||
+ | publisher = {Springer}, | ||
+ | series = {LNCS}, | ||
+ | volume = {4945}, | ||
+ | abstract = {The cryptanalysis of the cryptographic hash function Tiger has, until now, focussed on finding collisions. In this paper we describe a preimage attack on the compression function of Tiger-12, i.e., Tiger reduced to 12 rounds out of 24, with a complexity of 2^63.5 compression function evaluations. We show how this can be used to construct second preimages with complexity 2^63.5 and first preimages with complexity 2^64.5 for Tiger-12. These attacks can also be extended to Tiger-13 at the expense of an additional factor of 2^64 in complexity. }, | ||
+ | } | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | </bibtex> | ||
---- | ---- | ||
=== Others === | === Others === |
Latest revision as of 15:10, 18 September 2009
Contents
1 Specification
- digest size: 192/160/128 bits
- max. message length: < 264 bits
- compression function: 512-bit message block, 192-bit chaining variable
- Specification: Tiger: A Fast New Cryptographic Hash Function
Ross J. Anderson, Eli Biham - TIGER: A Fast New Hash Function
- FSE 1039:89-97,1996
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/3-540-60865-6
BibtexAuthor : Ross J. Anderson, Eli Biham
Title : TIGER: A Fast New Hash Function
In : FSE -
Address :
Date : 1996
2 Cryptanalysis
2.1 Best Known Results
The best known attack is a 1-bit circular pseudo-near-collision for Tiger with a complexity of about 247 of Mendel and Rijmen. The best collision attack on Tiger was presented by Mendel et al. for Tiger reduced to 19 out of 24 rounds. The attack has a complexity of about 262.
2.2 Generic Attacks
2.3 Collision Attacks
Florian Mendel, Vincent Rijmen - Cryptanalysis of the Tiger Hash Function
- ASIACRYPT 4833:536-550,2007
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-76900-2_33
BibtexAuthor : Florian Mendel, Vincent Rijmen
Title : Cryptanalysis of the Tiger Hash Function
In : ASIACRYPT -
Address :
Date : 2007
Florian Mendel, Bart Preneel, Vincent Rijmen, Hirotaka Yoshida, Dai Watanabe - Update on Tiger
- INDOCRYPT 4329:63-79,2006
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/11941378_6
BibtexAuthor : Florian Mendel, Bart Preneel, Vincent Rijmen, Hirotaka Yoshida, Dai Watanabe
Title : Update on Tiger
In : INDOCRYPT -
Address :
Date : 2006
John Kelsey, Stefan Lucks - Collisions and Near-Collisions for Reduced-Round Tiger
- FSE 4047:111-125,2006
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/11799313_8
BibtexAuthor : John Kelsey, Stefan Lucks
Title : Collisions and Near-Collisions for Reduced-Round Tiger
In : FSE -
Address :
Date : 2006
2.4 Second Preimage Attacks
2.5 Preimage Attacks
Takanori Isobe, Kyoji Shibutani - Preimage Attacks on Reduced Tiger and SHA-2
- Fast Software Encryption 5665:139-155,2009
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-03317-9
BibtexAuthor : Takanori Isobe, Kyoji Shibutani
Title : Preimage Attacks on Reduced Tiger and SHA-2
In : Fast Software Encryption -
Address :
Date : 2009
Florian Mendel - Two Passes of Tiger Are Not One-Way
- AFRICACRYPT 5580:29-40,2009
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-02384-2_3
BibtexAuthor : Florian Mendel
Title : Two Passes of Tiger Are Not One-Way
In : AFRICACRYPT -
Address :
Date : 2009
Sebastiaan Indesteege, Bart Preneel - Preimages for Reduced-Round Tiger
- WEWoRC 4945:90-99,2007
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-88353-1_8
BibtexAuthor : Sebastiaan Indesteege, Bart Preneel
Title : Preimages for Reduced-Round Tiger
In : WEWoRC -
Address :
Date : 2007