The SKINNY Family of Block Ciphers and its Low-Latency Variant MANTIS

Jun 2, 2016·
Christof Beierle
,
Jérémy Jean
Stefan Kölbl
Stefan Kölbl
,
Gregor Leander
,
Amir Moradi
,
Thomas Peyrin
,
Yu Sasaki
,
Pascal Sasdrich
,
Siang Meng Sim
· 0 min read
Abstract
We present a new tweakable block cipher family SKINNY, whose goal is to compete with NSA recent design SIMON in terms of hardware/software performances, while proving in addition much stronger security guarantees with regards to differential/linear attacks. In particular, unlike SIMON, we are able to provide strong bounds for all versions, and not only in the single-key model, but also in the related-key or related-tweak model. SKINNY has flexible block/key/tweak sizes and can also benefit from very efficient threshold implementations for side-channel protection. Regarding performances, it outperforms all known ciphers for ASIC round-based implementations, while still reaching an extremely small area for serial implementations and a very good efficiency for software and micro-controllers implementations (SKINNY has the smallest total number of AND/OR/XOR gates used for encryption process). Secondly, we present MANTIS, a dedicated variant of SKINNY for low-latency implementations, that constitutes a very efficient solution to the problem of designing a tweakable block cipher for memory encryption. MANTIS basically reuses well understood, previously studied, known components. Yet, by putting those components together in a new fashion, we obtain a competitive cipher to PRINCE in latency and area, while being enhanced with a tweak input.
Type
Publication
publications
Stefan Kölbl
Authors
Staff Engineer, Tech Lead Manager

I am a Staff Engineer and Tech Lead Manager at Google, where I work in the Security Engineering team. My focus is on post-quantum cryptography and enabling developers at Google and across the internet to use cryptography safely and correctly.

I have a PhD in cryptography and an extensive background in the design and analysis of symmetric-key algorithms, post-quantum cryptography, and lightweight cryptography. I have contributed to several cryptographic standardization efforts, including the SKINNY cipher, which is part of the ISO/IEC 29192-2 standard. I also contributed to the SPHINCS+ signature scheme, which was standardized by NIST as FIPS 205. I currently represent Switzerland in the ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 27/WG 2 committee for cryptography and security mechanisms.

Before joining Google, I was a Senior Technology Manager at Cybercrypt and a postdoctoral researcher at the Technical University of Denmark, working on the H2020 PQCRYPTO project.

Authors