Provided by: libhavege-dev_1.9.1-3_amd64 bug

NAME

       libhavege,   havege_create,   havege_run,   havege_rng,   havege_destroy,   havege_status,
       havege_status_dump, havege_version - haveged RNG

SYNOPSIS


       #include <haveged/havege.h>
       H_PARAMS params = {0};
       h_status status;
       char     status_buf[512];

       if (NULL==havege_version(HAVEGE_PREP_VERSION)) exit(1);
       H_PTR handle = havege_create(&params);
       havege_status(handle, &status);
       havege_run(handle);
       rc = havege_rng(handle, handle->io_buf, handle->i_readSz/sizeof(H_UINT));
       havege_status_dump(handle, H_SD_TOPIC_BUILD, status_buf, sizeof(status_buf));
       havege_destroy(handle);

DESCRIPTION

       The libhavege library provides the haveged random number  generator  and  it's  associated
       tuning  and testing facilities in a development sub-package. All haveged conditional build
       features are preserved and all haveged options not directly related to it's daemon or file
       system  interfaces  are  available.  This  means  that the same haveged tuning and testing
       components are present in the library with the equivalent controls provided by the haveged
       command line.

API METHODS

       The  libhavege library uses the opaque handle technique to manage it's required resources.
       Errors are returned in the "error" member  of  the  handle.  The  havege_destroy()  method
       should be called to dispose of any resources claimed by havege_create().

       H_PTR havege_create(H_PARAMS *params);

       Create  an  anchor.  Most members of the H_PARAMS input to this call correspond closely to
       haveged command line options (see haveged(8) for details). The caller should check  for  a
       non-null  return  value  with  a  error  value  of  H_NOERR. Any non-null return should be
       disposed of by a call to havege_destroy() to free any resources.  Possible  error  values:
       H_NOERR, H_NOTESTSPEC, H_NOBUF, H_NOTESTMEM, H_NOINIT

       void havege_destroy(H_PTR hptr);

       Free  all allocated anchor resources. If the multi-core option is used, this method should
       be called from a signal handler to prevent zombie processes. If called by the process that
       called  haveged_create(),  hptr  will  be  freed  when  all  child processes (if any) have
       terminated. If called by a child process, H_EXIT will be set and all children awakened  to
       exit.

       int havege_rng(H_PTR hptr, H_UINT *buf, H_UINT sz);

       Read  random  bytes  from an active anchor. The RNG must have been previously readied by a
       call to havege_run(). The read must take place within the allocated buffer,  hptr->io_buf.
       The  range  specified  is  the number of H_UINT to read. If the multi-core option is used,
       this buffer  is  memory  mapped  between  collectors.   Possible  error  values:  H_NOERR,
       H_NOTESRUN, H_NOPOST, H_NODONE, H_NORQST, H_NOCOMP, H_EXIT

       int havege_run(H_PTR hptr);

       Warm up the RNG and run the start-up tests. The operation succeeded if the error member of
       the  handle  is  H_NOERR.  A  failed  handle  should  be  disposed  of  by   a   call   to
       havege_destroy().  Possible  error  values:  H_NOERR,  H_NOCOLLECT, H_NOWALK, H_NOTESTMEM,
       H_NOTASK, H_NOTESTTOT, H_NOWAIT, H_NOTIMER, and any havege_rng() error.

       void havege_status(H_PTR hptr, H_STATUS hsts);

       Fills in the h_status structure with read-only  information  collected  from  the  package
       build, run-time tuning, and test components.

       int havege_status_dump(H_PTR hptr, H_SD_TOPIC topic, char *buf, size_t len);

       Calls  havege_status() and formats standard presentations of havege status in the supplied
       buffer. The standard formats are:

              H_SD_TOPIC_BUILD

              ver: %s; arch: %s; vend: %s; build: (%s); collect: %dK

              H_SD_TOPIC_TUNE

              cpu: (%s); data: %dK (%s); inst: %dK (%s); idx: %d/%d; sz: %d/%d

              H_SD_TOPIC_TEST

              [tot tests(%s): A:%d/%d B: %d/%d;][continuous tests(%s):  A:%d/%d  B:  %d/%d;][last
              entropy estimate %g]

              H_SD_TOPIC_SUM

              fills: %d, generated: %.4g %c bytes

       const char *havege_version(const char *version);

       Return/check  library  prep version. The prep version is the package version used to build
       the library. A  null  argument  returns  the  prep  version  unconditionally.   Using  the
       definition  of the prep string in havege.h as input returns the prep version if the header
       file is compatible with the library, or NULL if it is not. Intended to  be  called  before
       attempting any initialization.

NOTES

       The sizes of the processor level 1 instruction and data caches are used to tune the HAVEGE
       algorithm for maximum sensitivity. If these sizes not specified, haveged will  attempt  to
       determine  the  sizes  dynamically  from  the  Linux sysfs and/or cpuid instruction with a
       fallback to a compiled default if no better information is not available.

       The haveged RNG includes a run time test facility based upon the test suite defined in the
       AIS-31  specification  from  the  The  German  Federal  Office  for  Information  Security
       (Bundesamt für Sicherheit in der Informationstechnik).  The  test  suite  consists  of  11
       statistical  tests  packaged  into  two test suites ("A" and "B"). The tests can be run at
       initialization (a.k.a. a "tot" test), or continuously to monitor all output. Failure of  a
       suite  will  abort  operation  unless  the behavior is explicitly waived in the test setup
       options.

       Procedure A contains 6 test procedures  designed  to  ensure  statistically  inconspicuous
       behavior.  The  first test, "test0", checks the disjointedness of 65k six-bit strings. The
       remainder of the procedure consists of 257 repetitions of  the  FIPS140-1  tests,  "test1"
       through  "test4", and an auto-correlation test, "test5". The fixed size of the Procedure A
       input makes it ideal for continuous use, but the procedure is slow and resource intensive.
       In  particular,  test5 is several orders of magnitude slower than any other individual AIS
       test. As an alternative for those who cannot tolerate this load, procedure A variants A<n>
       are provided that execute all included tests but execute test5 only every 2^n repetitions.
       Even with this accommodation, procedure A is much slower than procedure B.

       Procedure B contains 5 tests, "test6a", "test6b', "test7a",  "test7b",  and  "test8".  The
       first  4  tests  verify  the  expected frequencies for samples 100,000 one-step, two-step,
       three-step, and four-step bit transitions. The last test  provides  an  empirical  entropy
       estimate  of  the input. The input required to complete these tests is variable, resulting
       in an ever-shifting bit alignment that guards against buffering artifacts.

       Each test procedure requires more than 1MB of data. Test input is managed by a  bit  index
       into  the  collection  buffer.  An independent index manages where integer output is taken
       from the same buffer. A buffer fill is triggered when the output index indicates all  data
       has  been  extracted from the buffer. Online testing takes place after the buffer has been
       refilled but before the output index update allows output to resume. If  any  online  test
       fails  while  processing the buffer, the buffer will be refilled and reprocessed until any
       retry is complete and the buffer contains no  failed  online  tests  or  the  online  test
       procedure has failed and the RNG is considered broken.

       It is recommend to run both AIS test procedures at start-up to ensure the  RNG is properly
       initialized. If resources are in short supply, omitting procedure A will save  memory  and
       time,  with  little  risk  in  circumstances  where  output is mixed with other sources in
       /dev/random or other csprng. Continuous testing is also recommended where  the  throughput
       penalty is acceptable. One recent assessment of testing throughput costs is shown below.

              haveged -n0 -oc | pv > /dev/null        400MiB/s

              haveged -n0 -ocb | pv > /dev/null       70MiB/s

              haveged -n0 -oca8b | pv > /dev/null     13MiB/s

              haveged -n0 -oca8 | pv > /dev/null      8MiB/s

              haveged -n0 -oca | pv > /dev/null       100kiB/s

       Continuous  testing  also  exposes another possible pitfall. Even an ideal RNG has a 10e-4
       chance of failing either test procedure. The strict retry policy of AIS-31 is designed  to
       guarantee  an  ideal  RNG  will  "almost  never"  fail a test procedure. A single retry is
       mandated only to recover from a previous attempt that experienced a single individual test
       failure.  The  haveged  implementation  logs  all retries and terminates on test procedure
       failures unless the procedure has been flagged  as  advisory  by  the  "w"  argument  (see
       --onlinetest  in haveged(8) ). Little evidence of the retry mechanism is seen unless large
       data sets are processed. Procedure A is too slow to be practical in these  situations,  so
       procedure  B  has  been  the best studied. Retries are observed at the approximate rate of
       0.7-0.8 failures/GB, mostly in the test7 multi-step transition checks.

       The probability that procedureB will fail two times in a row (in which  case  the  program
       will  be  terminated unless w option was specified) is 4e-7 which is expected to happen at
       an approximate rate of once per 3,000 TB. When producing large amounts of data in order of
       TBs  it's  recommended  to  use  -w  option to make sure that program will not prematurely
       terminate because of a failed retry and  carefully  examine  the  stderr  output  for  any
       problems.

FILES

       Tuning  information  may  be  extracted from the following virtual file paths if tuning is
       required and the path exists.

              /proc/cpuinfo

              /proc/self/status

              /sys/devices/system/cpu/online

              /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu%d/cache/index%d/level

DIAGNOSTICS

       To enable diagnostic output, supply a msg_out  callback  when  creating  the  handle.  All
       possible errors are enumerated in havege.h and reproduced here for reference.

       01 H_NOHANDLE
              No memory for handle

       02 H_NOBUF
              Output buffer allocation failed

       03 H_NOINIT
              Semaphore init failed

       04 H_NOCOLLECT
              Collector allocation failed

       05 H_NOWALK
              Walk buffer allocation failed

       06 H_NOTESTSPEC
              Invalid test specification

       07 H_NOTESTINIT
              Test setup failed

       08 H_NOTESTMEM
              Unable to allocate test memory

       09 H_NOTESTTOT
              Power on (i.e. 'tot') test failed

       10 H_NOTESTRUN
              Continuous test failed

       11 H_NOCORES
              Too many cores specified

       12 H_NOTASK
              Unable to create child task

       13 H_NOWAIT
              sem_wait failed

       14 H_NOPOST
              sem_post failed

       15 H_NODONE
              sem_post done failed

       16 H_NORQST
              sem_post request failed

       17 H_NOCOMP
              wait for completion failed

       18 H_EXIT
              Exit signal

       19 H_NOTIMER
              Timer failed

EXAMPLE

       The  following minimal program writes the contents of 16 collection buffers of random data
       to stdout with continuous testing.

       #include <stdio.h>
       #include <haveged/havege.h>
       int main(void)
       {
       H_PTR havege_state;
       H_PARAMS havege_parameters = {0};
       int i, rc;

       if (NULL==havege_version(HAVEGE_PREP_VERSION)) {
         fprintf(stderr, "Incompatible library %s\n", havege_version(NULL));
         return 1;
         }
       havege_parameters.testSpec="ta8bcb";
       havege_state = havege_create(&havege_parameters);
       rc = havege_state==NULL? H_NOHANDLE : havege_state->error;
       if (H_NOERR==rc) {
         if (0==havege_run(havege_state)) {
           H_UINT *buf = havege_state->io_buf;
           int size = havege_state->i_readSz /sizeof(H_UINT);
           char info[256];

           for(i=0;i<16;i++) {
               rc = havege_rng(havege_state, buf, size);
               if (rc != size) {
                   fprintf(stderr, "RNG read failed %d\n", havege_state->error);
                   break;
                   }
               rc = fwrite(buf, 1, size*sizeof(H_UINT), stdout);
               if ( rc < size ) {
                   fprintf(stderr, "Write failed\n");
                   break;
                   }
               }
           i = havege_status_dump(havege_state, H_SD_TOPIC_TEST, info, sizeof(info));
           info[i++] = '\n';
           havege_status_dump(havege_state, H_SD_TOPIC_SUM, info+i, sizeof(info)-i);
           fprintf(stderr, "%s\n", info);
           }
         else fprintf(stderr, "Initialize failed %d\n", havege_state->error);
         havege_destroy(havege_state);
         }
       else fprintf(stderr, "Create failed %d\n", rc);
       return rc;
       }

       Defaults are provided for all inputs to havege_create() as documented in havege.h. In this
       case  for  example,  (16*4kb=65kb)  will be written to stdout because the default size for
       i_readsz in 4kb.

SEE ALSO

       haveged(8)

REFERENCES

       haveged(8) references provides a basic reading list. The following links are suggested  as
       sources for further exploration.

       The origins of the HAVEGE concept can be found at:
              http://www.irisa.fr/caps/projects/hipsor/

       Tuning concepts inspired by (the complexity) at:
              http://www.open-mpi.org/projects/hwloc/

       Reference documentation for the AIS-31 test suite can be found at:
              https://www.bsi.bund.de/SharedDocs/Downloads/DE/BSI/Zertifizierung/Interpretationen/AIS_31_Functionality_classes_for_random_number_generators_e.pdf?__blob=publicationFile

       Implementation and design information available at:
              http://www.issihosts.com/haveged/

AUTHORS

       Gary Wuertz <gary@issiweb.com> and Jirka Hladky <hladky jiri AT gmail DOT com>