Abstract

Today, the question of the stability of modern existing cryptographic mechanisms to quantum algorithms of cryptanalysis in particular and quantum computers in general is quite acute. This issue is actively discussed at the international level. Therefore, to solve it, NIST USA has decided to organize and is currently holding a competition for candidates for post-quantum cryptographic algorithms NIST PQC. The result of the competition should be the adoption of various types of cryptographic algorithms for standardization, namely, asymmetric encryption, key encapsulation and electronic signature (at least one algorithm of each type). 82 algorithms were submitted by the start of the competition for the standardization process. Based on the minimum eligibility criteria defined by NIST, 69 algorithms were considered for the 1st round. Given several parameters, namely, security, cost, performance, implementation characteristics, etc., 43 and 11 algorithms were excluded at the end of the 1st and 2nd rounds, respectively, and the other 15 algorithms were left for participation in the 3rd round. The algorithms left in the 2nd round can be divided into 5 different categories depending on their mathematical basis: those based on the isogeny of elliptic curves, those based on algebraic lattices, those based on mathematical code, those based on multivariate transformations and those based on hash functions. Security is the main evaluation criterion that determines competition in the NIST competition, and it is clear that candidates' software implementations are focused mainly on it. However, it is extremely important that the algorithm has an effective hardware implementation. Timely identification of hardware inefficiencies will help focus the cryptographic community efforts on more promising candidates, potentially saving a large amount of time that can be spent on cryptanalysis. This paper discusses and compares the FPGAs of Xilinx family. Data on the implementation of the candidates of the 2nd round in the process of standardization of post-quantum cryptography NIST, which are focused on the FPGA of the Xilinx family, are presented and compared.

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