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An entropy generator using SDR peripherals, including rtl-sdr and BladeRF

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rtl-entropy

rtl-entropy is software using rtl-sdr to turn your DVB-T dongle into a high quality entropy source. It samples atmospheric noise, does Von-Neumann debiasing, runs it through the FIPS 140-2 tests, then optionally (-e) does Kaminsky debiasing if it passes the FIPS tests, then writes to the output. It can be run as a Daemon which by default writes to a FIFO, which can be read by rngd to add entropy to the system pool.

If you're serious about the cryptographic security of your entropy source, you should probably short, or put a 75 Ohm load on the antenna port, and put the whole assembly in a shielded box. Then you're getting entropy from the thermal noise of the amplifiers which is much harder to interfere with than atmospheric radio.

Both of these are analog entropy sources.

This software has been tested on debian linux 7.1, but should work on any linux distribution, and might run on OS X and other POSIX compliant operating systems.

Local modification

  • Add FreeBSD flag and remove all libcap dependencies for FreeBSD

Links

lists

code

Dependencies

  • rtl-sdr
  • libcap - 'apt-get install libcap-dev' or equivalent on your platform.
  • openssl
  • pkg-config

Note: If you want rtl-sdr to automatically detach the kernel driver, compile it with the cmake flag: -DDETACH_KERNEL_DRIVER

eg:

cd ~/rtl-sdr

mkdir build

cd build

cmake ../ -DDETACH_KERNEL_DRIVER

then install as normal.

Installation

git clone https://github.com/pwarren/rtl-entropy/

cd rtl-entropy

mkdir build

cd build

cmake ../

make

sudo make install

You can also do:

sudo make uninstall

Usage

./rtl_entropy > high_entropy.bin and press CTRL+C to stop, and do whatever you like with it.

or

./rtl_entropy -s 2.4M -f 101.5M -e | rngtest -c 1280 -p > high_entropy.bin

to set the sample rate to 2.4Msamples/s. the frequency to tune to as 101.5 MHz and do kaminsky debiasing (encryption), piped to rngtest which checks 1280 runs and stores it in high_entropy.bin

Please see the output of

rtl-entropy -h

for further help!

For Daemon mode, along with rngd from rng-tools on linux:

rtl_entropy -b

rngd -r /var/run/rtl_entropy.fifo -W95%

The daemon mode by default uses /var/run/rtl_entropy.fifo for output and /var/run/rtl_entropy.pid for it's PID file. You may want to tweak the size of your entropy pool, and explore other options for rngd to maximize performance.

If you specify an output file with -o, rtl_entropy will open not attempt to create a FIFO, but will just open the file for writing.

To Do

  • Code Review
  • Break things out of main()
  • Website and Mailing Lists
  • Look at Maurier tests
  • make FIPS optional
  • directly mix in to kernel as option with daemon mode

Done!

  • Implement daemon mode
  • Need a mixing step xor fresh random bytes by with the old data
  • add Kaminsky debiasing to my von neumann debiasing
  • maybe a hash as well?
  • Auto-detach kernel driver
  • Further research and consultation with security experts is needed
  • Do a release!

Credits

Development supported by Star2Star communications.

rtl_entropy was written by Paul Warren [email protected] Contributions from projectgus: https://github.com/projectgus

Uses code from:

Some helpful ideas from

  • Keenerd on the osmocom-sdr mailing list

Cryptography Discussion

As I mentioned above, capturing atmospheric radio is not terribly secure, if someone can transmit over the bandwidth you're listening on they could potentially influence the entropy your getting, and be able then to guess at your private keys!

To combat this, there's n option (-e) to do Kaminsky debiasing, which will dramatically alter the output if the input differs slightly. What this debiasing step does is take the bits rejected from the von neumann filter and create a SHA512 hash from those bits, then encrypt the entropy from the von Neumann filter using the hash as the key.

This makes the output much harder for an attacker to guess, entropy output will differ unpredictably for the attacker as they have to know the quantisation limits of your ADC to know which bits will be used where!

Happy for someone to correct me and justify why you should never use this for real entropy :)

Performance Testing

rtl_entropy | rngtest -c 4096

on my core i5 1.8GHz Macbook Air 5,2 running debian 7.1

Least Significant bits: average bits/s from rngtest, failure count. Averaged over 5 runs.

2: 2577.507, 2

4: 4258.930, 5

6: 5157.910, 45

8: 20.330, 12,856

with 6 bits.

CFLAGS: average bits/s

None: 3383.256

-O2: 5129.748

-O3: 5373.101

-march=native: 3873.854

-march=native -O3: 5320.385

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An entropy generator using SDR peripherals, including rtl-sdr and BladeRF

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