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06:44
helloc
user4651282
07:03
helloc @Agawa001; // sup?
nothing new, just woke up in face to a bunch of floatting C keywords on my lcd screen.
 
1 hour later…
08:17
Hi ! Does anyone know well documented C Code for elliptic Curves ?
08:27
Helloc
Might you can search mathematicals equations for implement it ?
user4651282
helloc @SebastianNagel;
user4651282
concretize question =)
@Agawa001 <marquee>C keywords</marquee> ? :D
08:53
@Kamiccolo <short-key>C keyword</short-key>
@SebastianNagel I would look in any crypto implementation. OpenSSL, WolfSSL
Crypto++ if you don't need it to be in C
mbedTLS (former PolarSSL)
@deckard thanks :-) will check those . Preferably C as I have to implement the ECC on an 16 bit uc
Then look for a lightweight library, mbed and wolf are quite lightweight and open source
Compare them and use the one with nicer code/docs =}
09:09
OpenSSL => libreSSL
OpenSSL abandoned and some dev are making LibreSSL, easier to use
09:20
@Glastis it was fork, not reimplementation from scratch, right? :}
Yes, it was forked
What do you mean by OpenSSL 'abandoned'?
@DrorK. as I recall, just some people left for more or less political reasons. But... it appears, still going. More or less. Somehow.
I'm not sure but I have heard that OpenSSL is not really active
09:37
@Glastis homepage kind a... backs Your claim:
> 09-Jul-2015Security Advisory: one security fix
09-Jul-2015OpenSSL 1.0.2d is now available, including bug and security fixes
09-Jul-2015OpenSSL 1.0.1p is now available, including bug and security fixes
06-Jul-2015OpenSSL 1.0.2d and 1.0.1p security releases due 9th July 2015
12-Jun-2015New releases to resolve ABI compatibility problems:
but... it's just hours since last commit
Oh sorry for that, it's not abandoned, it's really a fork
 
1 hour later…
10:51
i was thinking in which case two forked processes are using mutex and plotting behind your back
11:04
@Ag
@Agawa001 never ? :-D
11:40
@SebastianNagel using mutex means, 1- you dont have access to memory-segment, 2-two processes alternate on same area to read/write on it synchronically, 3- it can be worse when data is crypted, 4- you can notice that if one of these processes appears once you kill it (means the other mysterious partner is calling it back)
12:12
people i have a question, everyone knows that C rocks in terms of functionability, but how about rand() , the worst function of the worst results ever
@Agawa001 even man-page states:
> Do not use this function in applications intended to be portable when good randomness is needed.
yes i noticed, have they considered a new techniques for randomising numbers ?
@Agawa001 There are plenty of "pseudo" randomization algorithms.
12:28
@Agawa001 The implementation of the function rand, is an implementation detail
(the C language doesn't define it)
And it would be helpful if you could elaborate what kind of need do you have that your implementation doesn't seem to answer
12:40
@Kamiccolo like using time variant ?
I always do this for my C rands and throw the library-function away
On Linux there is /dev/urandom :} Or getrandom syscall.
^ that evil smile
:D
13:14
@Agawa001 So what is it that you're doing, that your rand() doesn't seem to be suited for?
13:44
@DrorK. random cases
project euler rejected my last submission though, it gives correct results
dunno what exactly to do for satisfying these machines
@Agawa001 mhm. Timeout, wrong captcha, or... missing some tiny note on the question?
How do you measure whether rand() performs adequately or poorly?
@DrorK. because it is random
@Kamiccolo mhm, captcha ?
@Agawa001 pseudorandom
How do you measure 'random', what's your criteria?
13:46
@DrorK. i said it, time
a= (time(&t))&(2^10-1);
@Agawa001 which one are You solving? :}
@Agawa001 I'm sorry but I can't seem to understand what you're doing
how does time define entropy? x_X
@Kamiccolo Do you understand his need?
@Kamiccolo im focused more on previous one, i knocked it away than think again, what if it is me the faulty and not the server
13:49
@DrorK. Not anymore. I thought it was a problem with repeating values, or something....
@Agawa001 aha, that happens :}
@Kamiccolo does time seem less or more stochastic for you ?
user4651282
enough. You're talking about a parameter, the other - about the algorithm.
@Kamiccolo its not repeating values, its regular values , look like rand() is just a generated form
Unless your requirement is about cryptographic 'strength', I don't think there's anything wrong with any modern/common implementation of rand()
modern, so thats the point
because i m running VC 2013
dunno which features are being considered in next versions
13:55
Have you tried to seed rand() with something other than time()?
time is random enough for me
It could be insufficient to act as a seed for your rand() implementation
(and it suffers the problem of short/fast intervals, and being predictable)
no itsnt done for cryptographic aims, but time seems for me a sufficient trusty key if mixd with other variants, like username/place/text length etc
infact, i crypted my facebook content basing on time
@Agawa001 and by time You mean... timestamp?
one cant see real content of it without greasemonkey
@Kamiccolo yea clock-ticks,timestamp etc ..
14:06
@Agawa001 Can you produce a few samples of your seed, and see what range of values it generates?
Run it ~10 times, if the range is too low- rand() will repeat the very same sequences again and again (any implementation of rand() would, by definition)
for (int i=1,B;i<100;i++){;time(&t1); t2=t1;while (t2==t1)time(&t2);
B=( ((((int)t1)%i)+(((int)t2))%i))%i;
printf("%d ",B);}
^ how is that random ?
sorry need declaration
time_t t1;time_t t2;
@Agawa001 If you can, please use a paste site with a compiler, such as codepad.org ... so we could see the generated output
@DrorK. ah sure
@DrorK. thanks, I do not know codepad.org
@Glastis It's very handy
14:20
i do prefer rextester
Yeah I haven't to launch my VM to test 3 lines of code anymore, cool. Do you know one whitch works with bash script ?
Feel free to use it then
user4651282
i prefer ideone =)
@Glastis I'm not sure about bash... but if the problem is with the launch-time of your VM, then maybe you should keep your VM alive? :)
In fact I must swich between linux and windows VM
14:23
@Atomic_alarm they are receiving loads of source codes in a voluntary legal way :D
I have cygwin but... Prefer linux
user4651282
@Agawa001, exactly. But to handle such an amount will not be easy. So you don't have to worry about their intellectual property :D
@Atomic_alarm i know, i cant think these tiny servers could deal with such affluent streams of requests (since who build these distant compilers are amateurs)
Hi… any exciting news about the upcoming ISO C conference in Kona?
@Glastis mhm. Why switch instead of just mounting directory through sshfs and having simple ssh connection to deal with "switches"?
14:33
isnt it looking andom ?
^ this is better
@Agawa001 I think that the range is very small, by these samples- it's enough for you to create 4 sequences and to have 2 identical sequence of numbers generated
By your second sampling, 4 sequences will result with 3 identical sequences
(if your seed is the same, you're duplicating the very same sequence by definition)
There are common methods to hash the 'time' object, for having a more reasonable range of values. But this doesn't help for both too short intervals, and predictability
For that you could use system dependent things such as @Kamiccolo suggested, seed with urandom or random
Then you essentially solve both problems, and the probability of having a duplicate sequence shouldn't even be an issue
so you advice ?
@DrorK. aaand on windows there is.... mmhm. msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa379942.aspx
which library does this belong to
on Windows there is no API for entropy pool. So, need to make it Yourself.
14:43
@Agawa001 Unfortunately I'm not really sure what kind of characteristics you require, usually hashing the time object is sufficient, google: srand time hash to see simple common variations, give it a try
@DrorK. im more into the mechanism than symbolic names, do you have an idea how do these hashing-functions work ?
@Agawa001 Just solved another from easy ones :P
Well they're fairly simple, the goal is primarily to avoid issues concerning the representation of the time object, which is not required to be the same
I'm sure you could find an article or two which describes all the considerations in-detail
@DrorK. thanks so much
@Kamiccolo oh, more triangular numbers :D
 
1 hour later…
user4651282
15:54
you a lot of tasks decided?
16:11
@Kamiccolo are you aware of this i hope !
16:24
@Agawa001 darn, just solved 49 and realized, that I've already solved it months ago >_<
@Agawa001 Heh, saw that in answer section :}
@Kamiccolo xD you must rearrange your agenda lmao
@Kamiccolo which oone of these do you want me to race you !
omg the sudoko one is the brilliest gonna unearth the shaggy shabby piece of c code i started last year for ppcg, maybe this place is worthier to post
16:54
@Agawa001 :D
maybe a bit later. Need to finish work.... btw, I'm writing those tasks in Lua... way less boilerplate :}
@Kamiccolo i found this sudoku challenge coming in the perfect right time and i wont miss this chance without the need to race any one, its just fun (you know .... programmers :D)
17:45
yeah, all those weird ways of having fun... :}
 
3 hours later…
20:59
the tag is running crazier than , are we going to throw old single-sheet c coding to trash and adopt oop ?

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