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							- #ifndef PUTTY_ECC_H
 
- #define PUTTY_ECC_H
 
- /*
 
-  * Arithmetic functions for the various kinds of elliptic curves used
 
-  * by PuTTY's public-key cryptography.
 
-  *
 
-  * All of these elliptic curves are over the finite field whose order
 
-  * is a large prime p. (Elliptic curves over a field of order 2^n are
 
-  * also known, but PuTTY currently has no need of them.)
 
-  */
 
- /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
 
-  * Weierstrass curves (or rather, 'short form' Weierstrass curves).
 
-  *
 
-  * A curve in this form is defined by two parameters a,b, and the
 
-  * non-identity points on the curve are represented by (x,y) (the
 
-  * 'affine coordinates') such that y^2 = x^3 + ax + b.
 
-  *
 
-  * The identity element of the curve's group is an additional 'point
 
-  * at infinity', which is considered to be the third point on the
 
-  * intersection of the curve with any vertical line. Hence, the
 
-  * inverse of the point (x,y) is (x,-y).
 
-  */
 
- /*
 
-  * Create and destroy Weierstrass curve data structures. The mandatory
 
-  * parameters to the constructor are the prime modulus p, and the
 
-  * curve parameters a,b.
 
-  *
 
-  * 'nonsquare_mod_p' is an optional extra parameter, only needed by
 
-  * ecc_edwards_point_new_from_y which has to take a modular square
 
-  * root. You can pass it as NULL if you don't need that function.
 
-  */
 
- WeierstrassCurve *ecc_weierstrass_curve(
 
-     mp_int *p, mp_int *a, mp_int *b, mp_int *nonsquare_mod_p);
 
- void ecc_weierstrass_curve_free(WeierstrassCurve *);
 
- /*
 
-  * Create points on a Weierstrass curve, given the curve.
 
-  *
 
-  * point_new_identity returns the special identity point.
 
-  * point_new(x,y) returns the non-identity point with the given affine
 
-  * coordinates.
 
-  *
 
-  * point_new_from_x constructs a non-identity point given only the
 
-  * x-coordinate, by using the curve equation to work out what y has to
 
-  * be. Of course the equation only tells you y^2, so it only
 
-  * determines y up to sign; the parameter desired_y_parity controls
 
-  * which of the two values of y you get, by saying whether you'd like
 
-  * its minimal non-negative residue mod p to be even or odd. (Of
 
-  * course, since p itself is odd, exactly one of y and p-y is odd.)
 
-  * This function has to take a modular square root, so it will only
 
-  * work if you passed in a non-square mod p when constructing the
 
-  * curve.
 
-  */
 
- WeierstrassPoint *ecc_weierstrass_point_new_identity(WeierstrassCurve *curve);
 
- WeierstrassPoint *ecc_weierstrass_point_new(
 
-     WeierstrassCurve *curve, mp_int *x, mp_int *y);
 
- WeierstrassPoint *ecc_weierstrass_point_new_from_x(
 
-     WeierstrassCurve *curve, mp_int *x, unsigned desired_y_parity);
 
- /* Memory management: copy and free points. */
 
- void ecc_weierstrass_point_copy_into(
 
-     WeierstrassPoint *dest, WeierstrassPoint *src);
 
- WeierstrassPoint *ecc_weierstrass_point_copy(WeierstrassPoint *wc);
 
- void ecc_weierstrass_point_free(WeierstrassPoint *point);
 
- /* Check whether a point is actually on the curve. */
 
- unsigned ecc_weierstrass_point_valid(WeierstrassPoint *);
 
- /*
 
-  * Add two points and return their sum. This function is fully
 
-  * general: it should do the right thing if the two inputs are the
 
-  * same, or if either (or both) of the input points is the identity,
 
-  * or if the two input points are inverses so the output is the
 
-  * identity. However, it pays for that generality by being slower than
 
-  * the special-purpose functions below..
 
-  */
 
- WeierstrassPoint *ecc_weierstrass_add_general(
 
-     WeierstrassPoint *, WeierstrassPoint *);
 
- /*
 
-  * Fast but less general arithmetic functions: add two points on the
 
-  * condition that they are not equal and neither is the identity, and
 
-  * add a point to itself.
 
-  */
 
- WeierstrassPoint *ecc_weierstrass_add(WeierstrassPoint *, WeierstrassPoint *);
 
- WeierstrassPoint *ecc_weierstrass_double(WeierstrassPoint *);
 
- /*
 
-  * Compute an integer multiple of a point. Not guaranteed to work
 
-  * unless the integer argument is less than the order of the point in
 
-  * the group (because it won't cope if an identity element shows up in
 
-  * any intermediate product).
 
-  */
 
- WeierstrassPoint *ecc_weierstrass_multiply(WeierstrassPoint *, mp_int *);
 
- /*
 
-  * Query functions to get the value of a point back out. is_identity
 
-  * tells you whether the point is the identity; if it isn't, then
 
-  * get_affine will retrieve one or both of its affine coordinates.
 
-  * (You can pass NULL as either output pointer, if you don't need that
 
-  * coordinate as output.)
 
-  */
 
- unsigned ecc_weierstrass_is_identity(WeierstrassPoint *wp);
 
- void ecc_weierstrass_get_affine(WeierstrassPoint *wp, mp_int **x, mp_int **y);
 
- /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
 
-  * Montgomery curves.
 
-  *
 
-  * A curve in this form is defined by two parameters a,b, and the
 
-  * curve equation is by^2 = x^3 + ax^2 + x.
 
-  *
 
-  * As with Weierstrass curves, there's an additional point at infinity
 
-  * that is the identity element, and the inverse of (x,y) is (x,-y).
 
-  *
 
-  * However, we don't actually work with full (x,y) pairs. We just
 
-  * store the x-coordinate (so what we're really representing is not a
 
-  * specific point on the curve but a two-point set {P,-P}). This means
 
-  * you can't quite do point addition, because if you're given {P,-P}
 
-  * and {Q,-Q} as input, you can work out a pair of x-coordinates that
 
-  * are those of P-Q and P+Q, but you don't know which is which.
 
-  *
 
-  * Instead, the basic operation is 'differential addition', in which
 
-  * you are given three parameters P, Q and P-Q and you return P+Q. (As
 
-  * well as disambiguating which of the possible answers you want, that
 
-  * extra input also enables a fast formulae for computing it. This
 
-  * fast formula is more or less why Montgomery curves are useful in
 
-  * the first place.)
 
-  *
 
-  * Doubling a point is still possible to do unambiguously, so you can
 
-  * still compute an integer multiple of P if you start by making 2P
 
-  * and then doing a series of differential additions.
 
-  */
 
- /*
 
-  * Create and destroy Montgomery curve data structures.
 
-  */
 
- MontgomeryCurve *ecc_montgomery_curve(mp_int *p, mp_int *a, mp_int *b);
 
- void ecc_montgomery_curve_free(MontgomeryCurve *);
 
- /*
 
-  * Create, copy and free points on the curve. We don't need to
 
-  * explicitly represent the identity for this application.
 
-  */
 
- MontgomeryPoint *ecc_montgomery_point_new(MontgomeryCurve *mc, mp_int *x);
 
- void ecc_montgomery_point_copy_into(
 
-     MontgomeryPoint *dest, MontgomeryPoint *src);
 
- MontgomeryPoint *ecc_montgomery_point_copy(MontgomeryPoint *orig);
 
- void ecc_montgomery_point_free(MontgomeryPoint *mp);
 
- /*
 
-  * Basic arithmetic routines: differential addition and point-
 
-  * doubling. Each of these assumes that no special cases come up - no
 
-  * input or output point should be the identity, and in diff_add, P
 
-  * and Q shouldn't be the same.
 
-  */
 
- MontgomeryPoint *ecc_montgomery_diff_add(
 
-     MontgomeryPoint *P, MontgomeryPoint *Q, MontgomeryPoint *PminusQ);
 
- MontgomeryPoint *ecc_montgomery_double(MontgomeryPoint *P);
 
- /*
 
-  * Compute an integer multiple of a point.
 
-  */
 
- MontgomeryPoint *ecc_montgomery_multiply(MontgomeryPoint *, mp_int *);
 
- /*
 
-  * Return the affine x-coordinate of a point.
 
-  */
 
- void ecc_montgomery_get_affine(MontgomeryPoint *mp, mp_int **x);
 
- /* ----------------------------------------------------------------------
 
-  * Twisted Edwards curves.
 
-  *
 
-  * A curve in this form is defined by two parameters d,a, and the
 
-  * curve equation is a x^2 + y^2 = 1 + d x^2 y^2.
 
-  *
 
-  * Apparently if you ask a proper algebraic geometer they'll tell you
 
-  * that this is technically not an actual elliptic curve. Certainly it
 
-  * doesn't work quite the same way as the other kinds: in this form,
 
-  * there is no need for a point at infinity, because the identity
 
-  * element is represented by the affine coordinates (0,1). And you
 
-  * invert a point by negating its x rather than y coordinate: the
 
-  * inverse of (x,y) is (-x,y).
 
-  *
 
-  * The usefulness of this representation is that the addition formula
 
-  * is 'strongly unified', meaning that the same formula works for any
 
-  * input and output points, without needing special cases for the
 
-  * identity or for doubling.
 
-  */
 
- /*
 
-  * Create and destroy Edwards curve data structures.
 
-  *
 
-  * Similarly to ecc_weierstrass_curve, you don't have to provide
 
-  * nonsquare_mod_p if you don't need ecc_edwards_point_new_from_y.
 
-  */
 
- EdwardsCurve *ecc_edwards_curve(
 
-     mp_int *p, mp_int *d, mp_int *a, mp_int *nonsquare_mod_p);
 
- void ecc_edwards_curve_free(EdwardsCurve *);
 
- /*
 
-  * Create points.
 
-  *
 
-  * There's no need to have a separate function to create the identity
 
-  * point, because you can just pass x=0 and y=1 to the usual function.
 
-  *
 
-  * Similarly to the Weierstrass curve, ecc_edwards_point_new_from_y
 
-  * creates a point given only its y-coordinate and the desired parity
 
-  * of its x-coordinate, and you can only call it if you provided the
 
-  * optional nonsquare_mod_p argument when creating the curve.
 
-  */
 
- EdwardsPoint *ecc_edwards_point_new(
 
-     EdwardsCurve *curve, mp_int *x, mp_int *y);
 
- EdwardsPoint *ecc_edwards_point_new_from_y(
 
-     EdwardsCurve *curve, mp_int *y, unsigned desired_x_parity);
 
- /* Copy and free points. */
 
- void ecc_edwards_point_copy_into(EdwardsPoint *dest, EdwardsPoint *src);
 
- EdwardsPoint *ecc_edwards_point_copy(EdwardsPoint *ec);
 
- void ecc_edwards_point_free(EdwardsPoint *point);
 
- /*
 
-  * Arithmetic: add two points, and calculate an integer multiple of a
 
-  * point.
 
-  */
 
- EdwardsPoint *ecc_edwards_add(EdwardsPoint *, EdwardsPoint *);
 
- EdwardsPoint *ecc_edwards_multiply(EdwardsPoint *, mp_int *);
 
- /*
 
-  * Query functions: compare two points for equality, and return the
 
-  * affine coordinates of a point.
 
-  */
 
- unsigned ecc_edwards_eq(EdwardsPoint *, EdwardsPoint *);
 
- void ecc_edwards_get_affine(EdwardsPoint *wp, mp_int **x, mp_int **y);
 
- #endif /* PUTTY_ECC_H */
 
 
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