Intel 810 Random Number Generator

Mike A. Harris mharris en meteng.on.ca
Lun Ene 24 21:45:32 CST 2000


On Mon, 24 Jan 2000, Frank v Waveren wrote:

>> Frank v Waveren wrote:
>> > Am I missing something here? I thought that you could mix all the non-random
>> > numbers you want into the entropy pool (long live xor), and it will never make
>> > the entropy worse? So I'd say mixing in the RNG won't do any harm, so why not?
>> 
>> Read the intro text in drivers/char/random.c...
>> 
>> If the RNG provides a lot more data than other entropy sources, it can
>> throw things out of whack.
>
>Hmm, interesting. I quote (in case someone else is interested)
>
> * outside observer to measure.  Randomness from these sources are
> * added to an "entropy pool", which is mixed using a CRC-like function.
> * This is not cryptographically strong, but it is adequate assuming
> * the randomness is not chosen maliciously, and it is fast enough that
> * the overhead of doing it on every interrupt is very reasonable.
>
>Why not use XOR, which is 'pretty quick' too, and *really* doesn't care if
>your mixing in your bookmarks file or radioactive decay data?

Muaahhahahahahah!  Made my day!  ;o)


--
Mike A. Harris                                     Linux advocate     
Computer Consultant                                  GNU advocate  
Capslock Consulting                          Open Source advocate

Join the FreeMWare project - the goal to produce a FREE program in
which you can run Windows 95/98/NT, and other operating systems.

                    http://www.freemware.org


-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo en vger.rutgers.edu
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/



Más información sobre la lista de distribución Ayuda