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Distributed FPGA Number Crunching For The Masses

Type
Slides
Tags
cracking, FPGA
Authors
Felix Domke
Event
Chaos Communication Congress 27th (27C3) 2010
Indexed on
Mar 27, 2013
URL
http://events.ccc.de/congress/2010/Fahrplan/attachments/1801_27C3%20-%20Distributed%20FPGA%20Number%20Crunching%20for%20the%20Masses.pdf
File name
1801_27C3%20-%20Distributed%20FPGA%20Number%20Crunching%20for%20the%20Masses.pdf
File size
4.8 MB
MD5
da98fac66d9b73bce8c3882f1baa1564
SHA1
75412e6045da0254021faf9ffe3d5307475fe5fb

In 1998, the EFF built "Deep Crack", a machine designed to perform a walk over DES's 56-bit keyspace in nine days, for $250.000. With today's FPGA technology, a cost decrease of 25x can be achieved, as the copacobana project has shown. If that's still too much, two approaches should be considered: Recycling hardware and distributed computing. This talk will be about combining both approaches for the greater good. A number of projects (Copacobana, Picocomputing) have shown that with today's technology enough brute force computing power to break limited keylength ciphers (like DES) is affordable even for small companies. But what about Joe Geek at home? Recycling FPGAs is one option (nsa@home), distributed computing another (distributed.net, ...). This project combines both approaches, developing a toolchain that can be used to prototype a project on a low-end FPGA (or even in a free simulator), and then scaling up the effort across different implementations onto a large number of devices. An example client implementation uses an FPGA in a widely available consumer device to provide computing power when the device is in standby. Another approach that will be discussed in detail is how to obtain decommissioned high-end FPGA-based hardware. We will have hardware to show with a live demo!

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