Description
As part of the work to add an ML-KEM implementation, I took a look at the KEM traits in this repo (in the kem
directory). Given that crates.io shows only a few dependents, I thought some comments might still be acceptable. Mostly fairly minor things.
-
The core point in this API is
EncappedKey
, in the sense that that's the type that knows about all of the types involved in this KEM. That seems odd to me.- The encapsulated key seems more like a "plain data" type than an "intelligent" type.
- It's not clear why the encapped key needs to know the public key types anyway, since once you have an encapped key, you mainly want to know how to decapsulate it.
- I would refactor this to be more like
Signer<S>
andVerifier<S>
, where the things the two sides need to agree on are in the generic parameters. - The analogy here would be
Encapsulator<EK, SS>
andDecapsulator<EK, SS>
, since the encapsulation key and shared secret are the two things that the sender and receiver need to agree on. - That means it will be up to implementors of the traits to define
EK
andSS
, but these are just byte arrays.
-
Encapsulator::try_encap
method is incorrect to take a public key argument.self
should be represent the encapsulation key, just as inDecapsulator::try_decap
,self
represents the decapsulation key. -
I would drop the
AuthDecapsulator
trait for now. It's inappropriate to have that without a correspondingAuthEncapsulator
trait. And AFAIK the only known implementation of these operations is DHKEM, so it doesn't seem worth generalizing right now. -
In
Encapsulator::try_encap
, you don't need to be generic over the RNG type, you can just take&mut impl CryptoRngCore
, as inRandomizedDigestSigner
. -
Unless you're going to provide an infallible version like
Signer
does (try_sign
vs.sign
), I would remove thetry_
from the encap/decap methods. -
I note that there are no
as_bytes
/from_bytes
methods on the traits for encapsulation / decapsulation keys. That seems consistent with other traits in this repo, but just wanted to check it was intended, since at least for encapsulation keys, one will want to ship them around. -
My sense is that there is a general trend toward using more functional names for keys, so for example, "verifying key" or "encapsulation key" instead of "public key" / "signing key" or "decapsulation key" instead of "private key". That seems like a pattern we should follow here, e.g., in the decapsulation key argument to
Encapsulator::try_encaps
. -
I would generally avoid shortening "encapsulate" and "decapsulate" for clarity. So for example
EncapsulatedKey
instead ofEncappedKey
andtry_decapsulate
instead oftry_decap
. -
While I'm not sure there's a really standard spelling here, the "-or" ending to
Encapsulator
andDecapsulator
looks odd to me, and inconsistent with other crates in this repo, which use "-er".- Personally, I would rather use verbs
Encapsulate
/Decapsulate
, in parallel withCopy
,Clone
, etc. - The precedent in other crates in this repo seems mixed. On the one hand,
Signer
,Verifier
,PasswordHasher
. On the other hand,Aead
,KeyInit
,Digest
,Mac
.
- Personally, I would rather use verbs
-
The
kem
traits are not linked from thecrypto
façade, but this seems to not be unique.
In summary, I would probably simplify this interface down to two traits:
pub struct Error; // as now
trait Encapsulate<EK, SS> {
fn encapsulate(&self, rng: &mut impl CryptoRngCore) -> Result<(EK, SS), Error>;
}
trait Decapsulate<EK, SS> {
fn decapsulate(&self, enc: &EK) -> Result<SS, Error>;
}