Deep Crack / EFF DES Cracker
Summary
In 1998, the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) developed the hardware machine Deep Crack, which executed a brute-force attack against DES in 56 hours.
Architecture
- The EFF DES Cracker's architecture is straightforward, comprising a standard personal computer connected to custom chips. The software instructs the chips to search, running independently until a potentially interesting key is found or new search directions are given. The hardware's role is to eliminate incorrect answers, leaving the software to efficiently search remaining potential keys. The machine's strength lies in replicating a useful search circuit, enabling the software to explore a small portion of the key space. The highly parallelizable nature of the DES key search problem allows multiple machines to work simultaneously, significantly reducing search time. DES Cracker incorporates 1536 chips, employing a brute-force search strategy with variations in key order.
Description
Step 1
Enter these commands in the shell
echo foo echo bar
Step 2
Make sure to read
- War and Peace
- Lord of the Rings
- The Baroque Cycle
Used Hardware
Device to be used with this documentation Maybe another device to be used with this documentation
Courses
- A course where this documentation was used (2017, 2018)
- Another one (2018)
References
- Understanding Cryptography: https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-642-04101-3_3
- Cracking DES: Secrets of Encryption Research, Wiretap Politics, and Chip Design: https://wiki.elvis.science/index.php?title=Cracking_DES:_Secrets_of_Encryption_Research,_Wiretap_Politics_%26_Chip_Design_1st_Edition