C

Skill 详情

constant-time-analysis

Analyze cryptographic code to detect operations that leak secret data through execution timing variations.

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来源标识:sickn33/antigravity-awesome-skills
源文件:原始说明
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概述 安装 文档 下载

快速判断

Analyze cryptographic code to detect operations that leak secret data through execution timing variations.

最后校验2026-05-27
来源平台GitHub
安全提示
下载副本ZIP 可用

适合任务

  • 把重复任务整理成可复用的 AI 操作流程。
  • 让 AI 在特定场景下按统一规范执行。
  • 为团队或个人工作流提供可复制的任务说明。

输入与输出

输入:任务目标、上下文材料、文件路径、约束条件或需要处理的内容。

输出:按 Skill 说明生成的文档、代码、检查结果、计划、建议或操作步骤。

示例任务

  • 使用 constant-time-analysis 帮我处理当前任务,并说明执行前需要确认的输入。
  • 根据 constant-time-analysis 的说明,给我一个安全的使用步骤清单。

安装方式

  1. 下载本站提供的 Skill ZIP 并解压。
  2. 把解压后的 Skill 目录放入当前 AI 工具支持的 skills 目录。
  3. 如需在线查看原始内容,可打开 GitHub 的 SKILL.md

在线原始地址:constant-time-analysis/SKILL.md

风险边界

使用前请检查权限、外部依赖和要处理的数据类型。不要把密码、密钥、身份信息或敏感客户资料交给未经确认的 Skill。

SKILL.md 文档介绍

Constant-Time Analysis

Analyze cryptographic code to detect operations that leak secret data through execution timing variations.

When to Use

User writing crypto code? ──yes──> Use this skill
         │
         no
         │
         v
User asking about timing attacks? ──yes──> Use this skill
         │
         no
         │
         v
Code handles secret keys/tokens? ──yes──> Use this skill
         │
         no
         │
         v
Skip this skill

Concrete triggers:

  • User implements signature, encryption, or key derivation
  • Code contains / or % operators on secret-derived values
  • User mentions "constant-time", "timing attack", "side-channel", "KyberSlash"
  • Reviewing functions named sign, verify, encrypt, decrypt, derive_key

When NOT to Use

  • Non-cryptographic code (business logic, UI, etc.)
  • Public data processing where timing leaks don't matter
  • Code that doesn't handle secrets, keys, or authentication tokens
  • High-level API usage where timing is handled by the library

Language Selection

Based on the file extension or language context, refer to the appropriate guide:

| Language | File Extensions | Guide |

| ---------- | --------------------------------- | -------------------------------------------------------- |

| C, C++ | .c, .h, .cpp, .cc, .hpp | references/compiled.md |

| Go | .go | references/compiled.md |

| Rust | .rs | references/compiled.md |

| Swift | .swift | references/swift.md |

| Java | .java | references/vm-compiled.md |

| Kotlin | .kt, .kts | references/kotlin.md |

| C# | .cs | references/vm-compiled.md |

| PHP | .php | references/php.md |

| JavaScript | .js, .mjs, .cjs | references/javascript.md |

| TypeScript | .ts, .tsx | references/javascript.md |

| Python | .py | references/python.md |

| Ruby | .rb | references/ruby.md |

Quick Start

# Analyze any supported file type
uv run {baseDir}/ct_analyzer/analyzer.py <source_file>

# Include conditional branch warnings
uv run {baseDir}/ct_analyzer/analyzer.py --warnings <source_file>

# Filter to specific functions
uv run {baseDir}/ct_analyzer/analyzer.py --func 'sign|verify' <source_file>

# JSON output for CI
uv run {baseDir}/ct_analyzer/analyzer.py --json <source_file>

Native Compiled Languages Only (C, C++, Go, Rust)

# Cross-architecture testing (RECOMMENDED)
uv run {baseDir}/ct_analyzer/analyzer.py --arch x86_64 crypto.c
uv run {baseDir}/ct_analyzer/analyzer.py --arch arm64 crypto.c

# Multiple optimization levels
uv run {baseDir}/ct_analyzer/analyzer.py --opt-level O0 crypto.c
uv run {baseDir}/ct_analyzer/analyzer.py --opt-level O3 crypto.c

VM-Compiled Languages (Java, Kotlin, C#)

# Analyze Java bytecode
uv run {baseDir}/ct_analyzer/analyzer.py CryptoUtils.java

# Analyze Kotlin bytecode (Android/JVM)
uv run {baseDir}/ct_analyzer/analyzer.py CryptoUtils.kt

# Analyze C# IL
uv run {baseDir}/ct_analyzer/analyzer.py CryptoUtils.cs

Note: Java, Kotlin, and C# compile to bytecode (JVM/CIL) that runs on a virtual machine with JIT compilation. The analyzer examines the bytecode directly, not the JIT-compiled native code. The --arch and --opt-level flags do not apply to these languages.

Swift (iOS/macOS)

# Analyze Swift for native architecture
uv run {baseDir}/ct_analyzer/analyzer.py crypto.swift

# Analyze for specific architecture (iOS devices)
uv run {baseDir}/ct_analyzer/analyzer.py --arch arm64 crypto.swift

# Analyze with different optimization levels
uv run {baseDir}/ct_analyzer/analyzer.py --opt-level O0 crypto.swift

Note: Swift compiles to native code like C/C++/Go/Rust, so it uses assembly-level analysis and supports --arch and --opt-level flags.

Prerequisites

| Language | Requirements |

| ---------------------- | --------------------------------------------------------- |

| C, C++, Go, Rust | Compiler in PATH (gcc/clang, go, rustc) |

| Swift | Xcode or Swift toolchain (swiftc in PATH) |

| Java | JDK with javac and javap in PATH |

| Kotlin | Kotlin compiler (kotlinc) + JDK (javap) in PATH |

| C# | .NET SDK + ilspycmd (dotnet tool install -g ilspycmd) |

| PHP | PHP with VLD extension or OPcache |

| JavaScript/TypeScript | Node.js in PATH |

| Python | Python 3.x in PATH |

| Ruby | Ruby with --dump=insns support |

macOS users: Homebrew installs Java and .NET as "keg-only". You must add them to your PATH:

# For Java (add to ~/.zshrc)
export PATH="/opt/homebrew/opt/openjdk@21/bin:$PATH"

# For .NET tools (add to ~/.zshrc)
export PATH="$HOME/.dotnet/tools:$PATH"

See references/vm-compiled.md for detailed setup instructions and troubleshooting.

Quick Reference

| Problem | Detection | Fix |

| ---------------------- | ------------------------------- | -------------------------------------------- |

| Division on secrets | DIV, IDIV, SDIV, UDIV | Barrett reduction or multiply-by-inverse |

| Branch on secrets | JE, JNE, BEQ, BNE | Constant-time selection (cmov, bit masking) |

| Secret comparison | Early-exit memcmp | Use crypto/subtle or constant-time compare |

| Weak RNG | rand(), mt_rand, Math.random | Use crypto-secure RNG |

| Table lookup by secret | Array subscript on secret index | Bit-sliced lookups |

Interpreting Results

PASSED - No variable-time operations detected.

FAILED - Dangerous instructions found. Example:

[ERROR] SDIV
  Function: decompose_vulnerable
  Reason: SDIV has early termination optimization; execution time depends on operand values

Verifying Results (Avoiding False Positives)

CRITICAL: Not every flagged operation is a vulnerability. The tool has no data flow analysis - it flags ALL potentially dangerous operations regardless of whether they involve secrets.

For each flagged violation, ask: Does this operation's input depend on secret data?

1. Identify the secret inputs to the function (private keys, plaintext, signatures, tokens)

2. Trace data flow from the flagged instruction back to inputs

3. Common false positive patterns:

   // FALSE POSITIVE: Division uses public constant, not secret
   int num_blocks = data_len / 16;  // data_len is length, not content

   // TRUE POSITIVE: Division involves secret-derived value
   int32_t q = secret_coef / GAMMA2;  // secret_coef from private key

4. Document your analysis for each flagged item

Quick Triage Questions

| Question | If Yes | If No |

| ------------------------------------------------- | --------------------- | --------------------- |

| Is the operand a compile-time constant? | Likely false positive | Continue |

| Is the operand a public parameter (length, count)?| Likely false positive | Continue |

| Is the operand derived from key/plaintext/secret? | TRUE POSITIVE | Likely false positive |

| Can an attacker influence the operand value? | TRUE POSITIVE | Likely false positive |

Limitations

1. Static Analysis Only: Analyzes assembly/bytecode, not runtime behavior. Cannot detect cache timing or microarchitectural side-channels.

2. No Data Flow Analysis: Flags all dangerous operations regardless of whether they process secrets. Manual review required.

3. Compiler/Runtime Variations: Different compilers, optimization levels, and runtime versions may produce different output.

Real-World Impact

  • KyberSlash (2023): Division instructions in post-quantum ML-KEM implementations allowed key recovery
  • Lucky Thirteen (2013): Timing differences in CBC padding validation enabled plaintext recovery
  • RSA Timing Attacks: Early implementations leaked private key bits through division timing

References

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