Heuristically picking # of bits for gnutls_dh_params_generate2
Sam Varshavchik
mrsam at courier-mta.com
Sat Dec 10 17:41:42 CET 2011
Does anyone happen to know of a good heuristic to come up with some
reasonable number of bits at runtime that I can give to
gnutls_dh_params_generate2, and have reasonably odds of coming up with a DH
pair in, maybe, 5-10 seconds.
I was hacking on some code in a 32 bit guest VM, and I thought that I was
corrupting something, because gnutls_dh_params_generate2 was seemingly
getting stuck, spinning forever. But it turns out that it was really just
very, very slow.
I don't think it's the VM itself, it seems to run reasonably well to me.
Regular compiles get completed at a fairly reasonable pace. I don't know if
it's just that gmp is slow on i686, if something is not right with the rnd
generator, or something other reason. I'm just used to my native x86-64 bare
metal cranking out a key at a good clip. After feeding 2048 bits to
gnutls_dh_params_generate2 it cranks something out in only a few seconds.
But, for whatever reason may be, flipping over to an i686 guest VM, and
gnutls_dh_params_generate2 runs slow as molasses. I'm clocking a 1024 bit
run of gnutls_dh_params_generate2 to take several minutes long, typically.
Sometimes I get lucky, and come up with a 1024-bit based parameter in 5-10
seconds. But my last two runs took a minute and a half, and over three
minutes, each, and that's typical. With GNUTLS_SEC_PARAM_NORMAL telling me
that I should use 3072 bits, that'll probably take a day.
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