English

Higher-order CIS codes

Information Theory 2014-06-19 v1 Combinatorics math.IT

Abstract

We introduce {\bf complementary information set codes} of higher-order. A binary linear code of length tktk and dimension kk is called a complementary information set code of order tt (tt-CIS code for short) if it has tt pairwise disjoint information sets. The duals of such codes permit to reduce the cost of masking cryptographic algorithms against side-channel attacks. As in the case of codes for error correction, given the length and the dimension of a tt-CIS code, we look for the highest possible minimum distance. In this paper, this new class of codes is investigated. The existence of good long CIS codes of order 33 is derived by a counting argument. General constructions based on cyclic and quasi-cyclic codes and on the building up construction are given. A formula similar to a mass formula is given. A classification of 3-CIS codes of length 12\le 12 is given. Nonlinear codes better than linear codes are derived by taking binary images of Z4\Z_4-codes. A general algorithm based on Edmonds' basis packing algorithm from matroid theory is developed with the following property: given a binary linear code of rate 1/t1/t it either provides tt disjoint information sets or proves that the code is not tt-CIS. Using this algorithm, all optimal or best known [tk,k][tk, k] codes where t=3,4,,256t=3, 4, \dots, 256 and 1k256/t1 \le k \le \lfloor 256/t \rfloor are shown to be tt-CIS for all such kk and tt, except for t=3t=3 with k=44k=44 and t=4t=4 with k=37k=37.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1406.4547,
  title  = {Higher-order CIS codes},
  author = {Claude Carlet and Finley Freibert and Sylvain Guilley and Michael Kiermaier and Jon-Lark Kim and Patrick Solé},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1406.4547},
  year   = {2014}
}

Comments

13 pages; 1 figure

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