Article: 31025 of sci.crypt Newsgroups: sci.crypt From: frode@dxcern.cern.ch (Frode Weierud) Subject: Re: Cellular GSM Ecryption Algorithms Message-ID: <1995Jan16.093417.20710@dxcern.cern.ch> Reply-To: frode@dxcern.cern.ch Organization: CERN European Lab for Particle Physics Date: Mon, 16 Jan 1995 09:34:17 GMT Lines: 338 In bauspies@cci.de (Fritz Bauspiess) writes: >Frank Welter <76543.1211@CompuServe.COM> writes: >>I've just read about the encryption algorithms used on the >>european full-digital cellular sistem (GSM). They're called >>A3, A5 and A8, and are used for phone authentication and speech >>encryption... Does anyone know if they are standard or >>propietary, public or private ???? >>Also it would be great if I could find more info about them. >>Thanx >>-- >>FWelter >As far as I know, these algorithms are at least kept secret and >are not (or at least should not :-) ) be published. >I don't know who "owns" these algorithms. >On the other hand these algorithms must be standardized (in the >GSM standard?) to guarantee interoperability of devices of >different vendors. >The only thing I know about the algorithms is that a stream cipher >is used for encryption of the data. >Fritz These algorithms are not that secret. Here is an earlier posting to sci.crypt: From sci.crypt Fri Jun 17 17:11:49 1994 From: rja14@cl.cam.ac.uk (Ross Anderson) Date: 17 Jun 1994 13:43:28 GMT Newsgroups: sci.crypt,alt.security,uk.telecom Subject: A5 (Was: HACKING DIGITAL PHONES) The GSM encryption algorithm, A5, is not much good. Its effective key length is at most five bytes; and anyone with the time and energy to look for faster attacks can find source code for it at the bottom of this post. The politics of all this is bizarre. Readers may recall that there was a fuss last year about whether GSM phones could be exported to the Middle East; the official line then was that A5 was too good for the likes of Saddam Hussein. However, a couple of weeks ago, they switched from saying that A5 was too strong to disclose, to saying that it was too weak to disclose! The government line now pleads that discussing it might harm export sales. Maybe all the fuss was just a ploy to get Saddam to buy A5 chips on the black market; but Occam's razor suggests that we are really seeing the results of the usual blundering, infighting and incompetence of bloated government departments. Indeed, my spies inform me that there was a terrific row between the NATO signals agencies in the mid 1980's over whether GSM encryption should be strong or not. The Germans said it should be, as they shared a long border with the Evil Empire; but the other countries didn't feel this way, and the algorithm as now fielded is a French design. A5 is a stream cipher, and the keystream is the xor of three clock controlled registers. The clock control of each register is that register's own middle bit, xor'ed with a threshold function of the middle bits of all three registers (ie if two or more of the middle bits are 1, then invert each of these bits; otherwise just use them as they are). The register lengths are 19, 22 and 23, and all the feedback polynomials are sparse. Readers will note that there is a trivial 2^40 attack (guess the contents of registers 1 and 2, work out register 3 from the keystream, and then step on to check whether the guess was right). 2^40 trial encryptions could take weeks on a workstation, but the low gate count of the algorithm means that a Xilinx chip can easily be programmed to do keysearch, and an A5 cracker might have a few dozen of these running at maybe 2 keys per microsecond each. Of course, if all you want to do is break the Royal Family's keys for sale to News International, then software would do fine. It is thus clear that A5 should be free of all export controls, just like CDMF and the 40-bit versions of RC2 and RC4. Indeed, there seems to be an even faster attack. As the clock control is stop-go rather than 1-2, one would expect some kind of correlation attack to be possible, and on June 3rd, Dr Simon Shepherd of Bradford University was due to present an attack on A5 to an IEE colloquium in London. However, his talk was spiked at the last minute by GCHQ, and all we know about his attack is: (a) that sparse matrix techniques are used to reconstruct the initial state (this was published as a `trailer' in the April 93 `Mobile Europe'); (b) that he used some of the tricks from my paper `Solving a class of stream ciphers' (Cryptologia XIV no 3 [July 90] pp 285 - 288) and from the follow-up paper `Divide and conquer attacks on certain classes of stream ciphers' by Ed Dawson and Andy Clark (Cryptologia XVIII no 1 [Jan 94] pp 25 - 40) (he mentioned this to me on the phone). I believe that we have to stand up for academic freedom, and I hope that placing A5 in the public domain will lead to the embargo on Simon's paper being lifted. Ross Anderson APPENDIX - AN IMPLEMENTATION OF A5 The documentation we have, which arrived anonymously in two brown envelopes, is incomplete; we do not know the feedback taps of registers 2 and 3, but we do know from the chip's gate count that they have at most 6 feedback taps between them. The following implementation of A5 is due to Mike Roe , and all comments and queries should be sent to him. /* * In writing this program, I've had to guess a few pices of information: * * 1. Which bits of the key are loaded into which bits of the shift register * 2. Which order the frame sequence number is shifted into the SR (MSB * first or LSB first) * 3. The position of the feedback taps on R2 and R3 (R1 is known). * 4. The position of the clock control taps. These are on the `middle' one, * I've assumed to be 9 on R1, 11 on R2, 11 on R3. */ /* * Look at the `middle' stage of each of the 3 shift registers. * Either 0, 1, 2 or 3 of these 3 taps will be set high. * If 0 or 1 or one of them are high, return true. This will cause each of * the middle taps to be inverted before being used as a clock control. In * all cases either 2 or 3 of the clock enable lines will be active. Thus, * at least two shift registers change on every clock-tick and the system * never becomes stuck. */ static int threshold(r1, r2, r3) unsigned int r1; unsigned int r2; unsigned int r3; { int total; total = (((r1 >> 9) & 0x1) == 1) + (((r2 >> 11) & 0x1) == 1) + (((r3 >> 11) & 0x1) == 1); if (total > 1) return (0); else return (1); } unsigned long clock_r1(ctl, r1) int ctl; unsigned long r1; { unsigned long feedback; /* * Primitive polynomial x**19 + x**5 + x**2 + x + 1 */ ctl ^= ((r1 >> 9) & 0x1); if (ctl) { feedback = (r1 >> 18) ^ (r1 >> 17) ^ (r1 >> 16) ^ (r1 >> 13); r1 = (r1 << 1) & 0x7ffff; if (feedback & 0x01) r1 ^= 0x01; } return (r1); } unsigned long clock_r2(ctl, r2) int ctl; unsigned long r2; { unsigned long feedback; /* * Primitive polynomial x**22 + x**9 + x**5 + x + 1 */ ctl ^= ((r2 >> 11) & 0x1); if (ctl) { feedback = (r2 >> 21) ^ (r2 >> 20) ^ (r2 >> 16) ^ (r2 >> 12); r2 = (r2 << 1) & 0x3fffff; if (feedback & 0x01) r2 ^= 0x01; } return (r2); } unsigned long clock_r3(ctl, r3) int ctl; unsigned long r3; { unsigned long feedback; /* * Primitive polynomial x**23 + x**5 + x**4 + x + 1 */ ctl ^= ((r3 >> 11) & 0x1); if (ctl) { feedback = (r3 >> 22) ^ (r3 >> 21) ^ (r3 >> 18) ^ (r3 >> 17); r3 = (r3 << 1) & 0x7fffff; if (feedback & 0x01) r3 ^= 0x01; } return (r3); } int keystream(key, frame, alice, bob) unsigned char *key; /* 64 bit session key */ unsigned long frame; /* 22 bit frame sequence number */ unsigned char *alice; /* 114 bit Alice to Bob key stream */ unsigned char *bob; /* 114 bit Bob to Alice key stream */ { unsigned long r1; /* 19 bit shift register */ unsigned long r2; /* 22 bit shift register */ unsigned long r3; /* 23 bit shift register */ int i; /* counter for loops */ int clock_ctl; /* xored with clock enable on each shift register */ unsigned char *ptr; /* current position in keystream */ unsigned char byte; /* byte of keystream being assembled */ unsigned int bits; /* number of bits of keystream in byte */ unsigned int bit; /* bit output from keystream generator */ /* Initialise shift registers from session key */ r1 = (key[0] | (key[1] << 8) | (key[2] << 16) ) & 0x7ffff; r2 = ((key[2] >> 3) | (key[3] << 5) | (key[4] << 13) | (key[5] << 21)) & 0x3fffff; r3 = ((key[5] >> 1) | (key[6] << 7) | (key[7] << 15) ) & 0x7fffff; /* Merge frame sequence number into shift register state, by xor'ing it * into the feedback path */ for (i=0;i<22;i++) { clock_ctl = threshold(r1, r2, r2); r1 = clock_r1(clock_ctl, r1); r2 = clock_r2(clock_ctl, r2); r3 = clock_r3(clock_ctl, r3); if (frame & 1) { r1 ^= 1; r2 ^= 1; r3 ^= 1; } frame = frame >> 1; } /* Run shift registers for 100 clock ticks to allow frame number to * be diffused into all the bits of the shift registers */ for (i=0;i<100;i++) { clock_ctl = threshold(r1, r2, r2); r1 = clock_r1(clock_ctl, r1); r2 = clock_r2(clock_ctl, r2); r3 = clock_r3(clock_ctl, r3); } /* Produce 114 bits of Alice->Bob key stream */ ptr = alice; bits = 0; byte = 0; for (i=0;i<114;i++) { clock_ctl = threshold(r1, r2, r2); r1 = clock_r1(clock_ctl, r1); r2 = clock_r2(clock_ctl, r2); r3 = clock_r3(clock_ctl, r3); bit = ((r1 >> 18) ^ (r2 >> 21) ^ (r3 >> 22)) & 0x01; byte = (byte << 1) | bit; bits++; if (bits == 8) { *ptr = byte; ptr++; bits = 0; byte = 0; } } if (bits) *ptr = byte; /* Run shift registers for another 100 bits to hide relationship between * Alice->Bob key stream and Bob->Alice key stream. */ for (i=0;i<100;i++) { clock_ctl = threshold(r1, r2, r2); r1 = clock_r1(clock_ctl, r1); r2 = clock_r2(clock_ctl, r2); r3 = clock_r3(clock_ctl, r3); } /* Produce 114 bits of Bob->Alice key stream */ ptr = bob; bits = 0; byte = 0; for (i=0;i<114;i++) { clock_ctl = threshold(r1, r2, r2); r1 = clock_r1(clock_ctl, r1); r2 = clock_r2(clock_ctl, r2); r3 = clock_r3(clock_ctl, r3); bit = ((r1 >> 18) ^ (r2 >> 21) ^ (r3 >> 22)) & 0x01; byte = (byte << 1) | bit; bits++; if (bits == 8) { *ptr = byte; ptr++; bits = 0; byte = 0; } } if (bits) *ptr = byte; return (0); }