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hetest's Introduction

HEtest

HEtest comprises several tools that aid in the testing and evaluation of homomorphic encryption schemes. First, HEtest includes a circuit generator that creates circuits with a given width, depth, and batch size over a given set of gates. Second, HEtest includes a test harness that can drive any software implementing homomorphic encryption and instrument its performance. Finally, HEtest includes a baseline that evaluates such circuits without any homomorphic encryption for comparison purposes.

MIT Lincoln Laboratory developed HEtest for use during the testing and evaluation of the IARPA SPAR project, and thus the circuit generation and baseline include some features that are specialized for SPAR submissions. Nevertheless, the tools in HEtest are extensible and can easily be used to test other homomorphic encryption schemes as well.

A copy of our paper, which was presented at the Workshop on Encrypted Computing and Homomorphic Encryption at the 2015 Financial Cryptography and Data Security conference, is linked below.

Quick Links

Introduction

In order to evaluate homomorphic encryption schemes for the IARPA SPAR project, MIT Lincoln Laboratory has built the following:

  1. A test harness capable of executing the server and client executables for a homomorphic encryption scheme. The inputs to the test harness are the paths to: the server executable, the client executable, and the test script. The harness spawns the server and client, and then it iteratively feeds them key generation, circuit ingestion, encryption, homomorphic evaluation, and decryption requests. The key generation, encryption, and decryption requests are sent to the client, whereas the circuit ingestion and homomorphic evaluation requests are sent to the server. The order and contents of these requests are spelled out by a test script.

  2. A circuit generator capable of generating circuits randomly from the families supported by IBM and Stealth, respectively.

  3. A baseline that parses and evaluates the circuits described in (2), but without homomorphic encryption. In fact, the baseline is able to play the role of the server in all five protocols described in (1).

  4. A dummy client that is able to respond to requests made to it by the test harness. Its requests are meaningless (for instance, it always responds to "key" messages with "0", rather than providing a legitimate public key). The purpose of the dummy client is to allow Lincoln's baseline to be executed on the test harness in the role of the "server."

Note that all of these tools can either be used directly or augmented in a reasonably straightforward way to support testing for new homomorphic encryption schemes that were not part of the SPAR project.

There are two ways to utilize Lincoln's software: either use our pre-built binaries, or compile the code yourself. The latter option will give you more flexibility, particularly if you wish to change some feature of our code to support your own testing.

Making Circuits

In order to build new circuits, you can run our circuit generator using the generate_all.sh scripts located in hetest/python/circuit_generation/ibm and hetest/python/circuit_generation/stealth. Stealth circuits can be much larger in size (up to tens of gigabytes) and take much longer to generate than the IBM ones.

If you instead want to generate only a few circuits, you can use the stealth_generate.py or ibm_generate.py commands in these directories, or just open the generate_all.sh file and delete the lines that you don't want.

Eventually, you may wish to augment our circuit generator tools to create circuits of your own. The circuit generation tools are written in Python, and they are located in /hetest/python. The circuit generators have several tunable parameters. Please read the following README files to get a detailed explanation of these parameters and how to alter them to your needs:

  • hetest/python/circuit_generation/ibm/README.txt
  • hetest/python/circuit_generation/stealth/README.txt

Building the Test Harness and Baselines

If you are more adventurous and would like to compile our code from scratch or augment it to add new features, this sections will explain how to build the test harness and baseline.

Prerequisites

All of the test harness, baseline, and dummy client code is written in C++ and located in hetest/cpp. You will likely need the following programs/libraries to compile the code:

  • g++
  • scons
  • lemon
  • flex
  • libevent-dev
  • libboost-all-dev

If you are using Ubuntu Server 12.04 (as Lincoln is), you can install any of these with the following command:

sudo apt-get install <package-name>

Compiling and running unit tests

Run scons from the cpp root hetest/cpp or scons -u from any subdirectory. To compile a release build, pass the flags --opt. You may also enable valgrind and/or gprof using the optional flags --valgrind and --gprof.

To run all unit tests, pass the optional argument cpp_test. You should see no failures (although some tests will fail on very rare occasions due to random number generation).

NOTE: The first time you run scons, you may see an error message like this:

scons: *** [hetest/cpp/baseline/ibm/opt/unary-gate.o] Error 4
os.chdir('hetest/cpp/baseline/stealth/opt')
scons: building terminated because of errors.

If you get an error, don't worry; just compile again and it will work the second time.

The binary executables are (from the source root):

  • TEST HARNESS: cpp/test-harness/opt/test-harness
  • DUMMY CLIENT: cpp/test-harness/opt/dummy-client
  • IBM BASELINE: cpp/baseline/ibm/ibm-baseline-main
  • STEALTH BASELINE: cpp/baseline/stealth/stealth-baseline-main

Running the test-harness

To run the test-harness, run

./test-harness –s <baseline> –c <client> –t <test-script>

specifying the path to the baseline, client, and test script, respectively. The test scripts are created during circuit generation. For a complete list of options, run the test-harness with the help flag -h.

The results of the test will be written to a file called "results" in the current directory. Optionally, specify –d <debug-file-name> to have the test-harness write out 4 log files corresponding to the stdin/out of the client/server, or specify –r to have the test harness recover from a previous crash (and thus continue with the circuit under test at the time of the crash, rather than starting over).

We strongly suggest that you run the test-harness with the -h flag the first time you use it, as it will then print out a help screen.

Contributors

  • Oliver Dain
  • Nick Hwang
  • Sophia Yakoubov
  • Yang Yang

Contact: [email protected]

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