In cryptography, a Schnorr signature is a digital signature produced by the Schnorr signature algorithm that was described by Claus Schnorr. It is a digital signature scheme known for its simplicity, among the first whose security is based on the intractability of certain discrete logarithm problems. It is efficient and generates short signatures. It was covered by which expired in February 2008.
Choose a private signing key,, from the allowed set.
The public verification key is.
Signing
To sign a message, :
Choose a random from the allowed set.
Let.
Let, where denotes concatenation and is represented as a bit string.
Let.
The signature is the pair,. Note that ; if, then the signature representation can fit into 40 bytes.
Verifying
Let
Let
If then the signature is verified.
Proof of correctness
It is relatively easy to see that if the signed message equals the verified message: , and hence. Public elements:,,,,,,. Private elements:,. This shows only that a correctly signed message will verify correctly; many other properties are required for a secure signature algorithm.
Key leakage from nonce reuse
Just as with the closely related signature algorithms DSA, ECDSA, and ElGamal, reusing the secret nonce value on two Schnorr signatures of different messages will allow observers to recover the private key. In the case of Schnorr signatures, this simply requires subtracting values: If but then can be simply isolated. In fact, even slight biases in the value or partial leakage of can reveal the private key, after collecting sufficiently many signatures and solving the hidden number problem.
Security argument
The signature scheme was constructed by applying the Fiat–Shamir transformation to Schnorr's identification protocol. Therefore,, it is secure if is modeled as a random oracle. Its security can also be argued in the generic group model, under the assumption that is "random-prefix preimage resistant" and "random-prefix second-preimage resistant". In particular, does notneed to be collision resistant. In 2012, Seurin provided an exact proof of the Schnorr signature scheme. In particular, Seurin shows that the security proof using the forking lemma is the best possible result for any signature schemes based on one-way group homomorphisms including Schnorr-type signatures and the Guillou–Quisquater signature schemes. Namely, under the ROMDL assumption, any algebraic reduction must lose a factor in its time-to-success ratio, where is a function that remains close to 1 as long as " is noticeably smaller than 1", where is the probability of forging an error making at most queries to the random oracle.
Short Schnorr signatures
The aforementioned process achieves a t-bit security level with 4t-bit signatures. For example, a 128-bit security level would require 512-bit signatures. The security is limited by discrete logarithm attacks on the group, which have a complexity of the square-root of the group size. In Schnorr's original 1991 paper, it was suggested that since collision resistance in the hash is not required, then therefore shorter hash functions may be just as secure, and indeed recent developments suggest that a t-bit security level can be achieved with 3t-bit signatures. Then, a 128-bit security level would require only 384-bit signatures, and this could be achieved by truncating the size of e until it is half the length of the s bitfield.