Pseudorandom Function (PRF): Difference between revisions
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PRFs were originally defined by [[ccref#ggm84|[GGM84]]] and are a basic building block for many more complex primitives such as [[Symmetric Encryption (SE)]]. | PRFs were originally defined by [[ccref#ggm84|[GGM84]]] and are a basic building block for many more complex primitives such as [[Symmetric Encryption (SE)]]. | ||
== Formal Definition == | == Formal Definition == | ||
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There are also many folklore results surrounding pseudorandom functions: | There are also many folklore results surrounding pseudorandom functions: | ||
* [[PRP]]s over are [[PRF]]s, due to the switching lemma [[[folklore]]] | * [[PRP]]s over are [[PRF]]s, due to the switching lemma [[[folklore]]] | ||
== Sufficient assumptions == | == Sufficient assumptions == | ||
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* [[LWE]] implies [[PRF]]s | * [[LWE]] implies [[PRF]]s | ||
== Variations == | |||
== Variations | |||
* [[Puncturable PRF]] | * [[Puncturable PRF]] | ||
* [[Invertible PRF]] | * [[Invertible PRF]] | ||
* [[Pseudorandom Permutation (PRP)]] | * [[Pseudorandom Permutation (PRP)]] | ||
* [[Oblivious PRF (OPRF)]] | * [[Oblivious PRF (OPRF)]] | ||
== Other Notes == |
Revision as of 02:27, 28 June 2024
A Pseudorandom Function (PRF) is a primitive that allows someone to succinctly represent a function that is indistinguishable from a random function. A user of a PRF generates a key, which it can use to evaluate a function at many points. Any efficient adversary, who only sees these inputs and outputs of the keyed function, cannot distinguish them from a random function.
PRFs were originally defined by [GGM84] and are a basic building block for many more complex primitives such as Symmetric Encryption (SE).
Formal Definition
Syntax
A Pseudorandom Function (PRF) is a tuple of functions , with respect to a keyspace , domain , and range , such that:
- , takes a security parameter, and outputs a key ,
- , takes a key and input , and outputs an element .
Generally, we assume that is "large," in the sense that it grows exponentially with the security parameter. If instead bounded by some polynomial in the security parameter, then the primitive is a "small-domain" PRF.
Security
A PRF is secure if for all efficient , there exists a negligible function , such that
Weak Security
A PRF is weakly secure if for all efficient , and all polynomials , there exists a negligible function , such that
The difference in this definition is that we sample $s(\lambda)$ inputs at random instead of allowing a distinguisher to choose them. This is strictly weaker, as a distinguisher could always query their oracle at random locations in the stronger definition.
Relationship to other primitives
- PRGs imply the existence of PRFs, due to [GGM84] (this means that OWFs imply the existence of PRFs, in combination with [HILL99])
- PRFs imply the existence of PRPs, due to [LR88]
There are also many folklore results surrounding pseudorandom functions: