IntegrityChain: FIPS 204 Module-Lattice-Based Digital Signature Standard
FIPS 204 Module-Lattice-Based Digital Signature Standard written in pure/safe Rust for server, desktop, browser and embedded applications. The source repository includes examples demonstrating benchmarking, an embedded target, constant-time statistical measurements, fuzzing, WASM execution, and robust test coverage.
This crate implements the FIPS 204 released standard in pure Rust with minimal and mainstream dependencies, and
without any unsafe code. All three security parameter sets are fully functional and tested. The implementation's
key- and signature-generation functionality operates in constant-time, does not require the standard library, e.g.
#[no_std]
, has no heap allocations, e.g. no alloc
needed, and exposes the RNG
so it is suitable for the full
range of applications down to the bare-metal. The API is stabilized and the code is heavily biased towards safety
and correctness; further performance optimizations will be implemented over time. This crate will quickly follow
any changes related to FIPS 204 as they become available (e.g., pick up more test vectors).
See https://nvlpubs.nist.gov/nistpubs/FIPS/NIST.FIPS.204.pdf for a full description of the target functionality.
The functionality is extremely simple to use, as demonstrated by the following example.
// Use the desired target parameter set.
# use std::error::Error;
#
# fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn Error>> {
# #[cfg(all(feature = "ml-dsa-44", feature = "default-rng"))] {
use fips204::ml_dsa_44; // Could also be ml_dsa_65 or ml_dsa_87.
use fips204::traits::{SerDes, Signer, Verifier};
let message = [0u8, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7];
// Generate key pair and signature
let (pk1, sk) = ml_dsa_44::try_keygen()?; // Generate both public and secret keys
let sig = sk.try_sign(&message, &[])?; // Use the secret key to generate a message signature
// Serialize then send the public key, message and signature
let (pk_send, msg_send, sig_send) = (pk1.into_bytes(), message, sig);
let (pk_recv, msg_recv, sig_recv) = (pk_send, msg_send, sig_send);
// Deserialize the public key and signature, then verify the message
let pk2 = ml_dsa_44::PublicKey::try_from_bytes(pk_recv)?;
let v = pk2.verify(&msg_recv, &sig_recv, &[]); // Use the public to verify message signature
assert!(v);
// Note that the last argument to sign() and verify() is the (NIST specified) context
// value which is typically empty for basic signature generation and verification.
# }
# Ok(())
# }
The Rust Documentation lives under each Module corresponding to the desired security parameter below.
- This crate is fully functional and corresponds to the final released FIPS 204 (August 13, 2024).
- BEWARE: As of November 8, 2024 NIST has not released top-level/external/hash test vectors!
- Constant-time assurances target the source-code level only, with confirmation via
manual review/inspection, the embedded target, and the
dudect
dynamic/statistical measurements. - Note that FIPS 204 places specific requirements on randomness per section 3.6.1, hence the exposed
RNG
. - Requires Rust 1.70 or higher. The minimum supported Rust version may be changed in the future, but it will be done with a minor version bump (once the major version is larger than 0).
- All on-by-default features of this library are covered by
SemVer
. - The FIPS 204 standard and this software should be considered experimental -- USE AT YOUR OWN RISK!
Contents are licensed under either the Apache License, Version 2.0 or MIT license at your option.
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.