dot_claude/skills/constant-time-analysis/SKILL.md
Detects timing side-channel vulnerabilities in cryptographic code. Use when implementing or reviewing crypto code, encountering division on secrets, secret-dependent branches, or constant-time programming questions in C, C++, Go, Rust, Swift, Java, Kotlin, C#, PHP, JavaScript, TypeScript, Python, or Ruby.
npx skillsauth add lv416e/dotfiles constant-time-analysisInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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Analyze cryptographic code to detect operations that leak secret data through execution timing variations.
User writing crypto code? ──yes──> Use this skill
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no
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v
User asking about timing attacks? ──yes──> Use this skill
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no
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v
Code handles secret keys/tokens? ──yes──> Use this skill
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no
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v
Skip this skill
Concrete triggers:
/ or % operators on secret-derived valuessign, verify, encrypt, decrypt, derive_keyBased on the file extension or language context, refer to the appropriate guide:
| Language | File Extensions | Guide |
| ---------- | --------------------------------- | -------------------------------------------------------- |
| C, C++ | .c, .h, .cpp, .cc, .hpp | references/compiled.md |
| Go | .go | references/compiled.md |
| Rust | .rs | references/compiled.md |
| Swift | .swift | references/swift.md |
| Java | .java | references/vm-compiled.md |
| Kotlin | .kt, .kts | references/kotlin.md |
| C# | .cs | references/vm-compiled.md |
| PHP | .php | references/php.md |
| JavaScript | .js, .mjs, .cjs | references/javascript.md |
| TypeScript | .ts, .tsx | references/javascript.md |
| Python | .py | references/python.md |
| Ruby | .rb | references/ruby.md |
# Analyze any supported file type
uv run {baseDir}/ct_analyzer/analyzer.py <source_file>
# Include conditional branch warnings
uv run {baseDir}/ct_analyzer/analyzer.py --warnings <source_file>
# Filter to specific functions
uv run {baseDir}/ct_analyzer/analyzer.py --func 'sign|verify' <source_file>
# JSON output for CI
uv run {baseDir}/ct_analyzer/analyzer.py --json <source_file>
# Cross-architecture testing (RECOMMENDED)
uv run {baseDir}/ct_analyzer/analyzer.py --arch x86_64 crypto.c
uv run {baseDir}/ct_analyzer/analyzer.py --arch arm64 crypto.c
# Multiple optimization levels
uv run {baseDir}/ct_analyzer/analyzer.py --opt-level O0 crypto.c
uv run {baseDir}/ct_analyzer/analyzer.py --opt-level O3 crypto.c
# Analyze Java bytecode
uv run {baseDir}/ct_analyzer/analyzer.py CryptoUtils.java
# Analyze Kotlin bytecode (Android/JVM)
uv run {baseDir}/ct_analyzer/analyzer.py CryptoUtils.kt
# Analyze C# IL
uv run {baseDir}/ct_analyzer/analyzer.py CryptoUtils.cs
Note: Java, Kotlin, and C# compile to bytecode (JVM/CIL) that runs on a virtual machine with JIT compilation. The analyzer examines the bytecode directly, not the JIT-compiled native code. The --arch and --opt-level flags do not apply to these languages.
# Analyze Swift for native architecture
uv run {baseDir}/ct_analyzer/analyzer.py crypto.swift
# Analyze for specific architecture (iOS devices)
uv run {baseDir}/ct_analyzer/analyzer.py --arch arm64 crypto.swift
# Analyze with different optimization levels
uv run {baseDir}/ct_analyzer/analyzer.py --opt-level O0 crypto.swift
Note: Swift compiles to native code like C/C++/Go/Rust, so it uses assembly-level analysis and supports --arch and --opt-level flags.
| Language | Requirements |
| ---------------------- | --------------------------------------------------------- |
| C, C++, Go, Rust | Compiler in PATH (gcc/clang, go, rustc) |
| Swift | Xcode or Swift toolchain (swiftc in PATH) |
| Java | JDK with javac and javap in PATH |
| Kotlin | Kotlin compiler (kotlinc) + JDK (javap) in PATH |
| C# | .NET SDK + ilspycmd (dotnet tool install -g ilspycmd) |
| PHP | PHP with VLD extension or OPcache |
| JavaScript/TypeScript | Node.js in PATH |
| Python | Python 3.x in PATH |
| Ruby | Ruby with --dump=insns support |
macOS users: Homebrew installs Java and .NET as "keg-only". You must add them to your PATH:
# For Java (add to ~/.zshrc)
export PATH="/opt/homebrew/opt/openjdk@21/bin:$PATH"
# For .NET tools (add to ~/.zshrc)
export PATH="$HOME/.dotnet/tools:$PATH"
See references/vm-compiled.md for detailed setup instructions and troubleshooting.
| Problem | Detection | Fix |
| ---------------------- | ------------------------------- | -------------------------------------------- |
| Division on secrets | DIV, IDIV, SDIV, UDIV | Barrett reduction or multiply-by-inverse |
| Branch on secrets | JE, JNE, BEQ, BNE | Constant-time selection (cmov, bit masking) |
| Secret comparison | Early-exit memcmp | Use crypto/subtle or constant-time compare |
| Weak RNG | rand(), mt_rand, Math.random | Use crypto-secure RNG |
| Table lookup by secret | Array subscript on secret index | Bit-sliced lookups |
PASSED - No variable-time operations detected.
FAILED - Dangerous instructions found. Example:
[ERROR] SDIV
Function: decompose_vulnerable
Reason: SDIV has early termination optimization; execution time depends on operand values
CRITICAL: Not every flagged operation is a vulnerability. The tool has no data flow analysis - it flags ALL potentially dangerous operations regardless of whether they involve secrets.
For each flagged violation, ask: Does this operation's input depend on secret data?
Identify the secret inputs to the function (private keys, plaintext, signatures, tokens)
Trace data flow from the flagged instruction back to inputs
Common false positive patterns:
// FALSE POSITIVE: Division uses public constant, not secret
int num_blocks = data_len / 16; // data_len is length, not content
// TRUE POSITIVE: Division involves secret-derived value
int32_t q = secret_coef / GAMMA2; // secret_coef from private key
Document your analysis for each flagged item
| Question | If Yes | If No | | ------------------------------------------------- | --------------------- | --------------------- | | Is the operand a compile-time constant? | Likely false positive | Continue | | Is the operand a public parameter (length, count)?| Likely false positive | Continue | | Is the operand derived from key/plaintext/secret? | TRUE POSITIVE | Likely false positive | | Can an attacker influence the operand value? | TRUE POSITIVE | Likely false positive |
Static Analysis Only: Analyzes assembly/bytecode, not runtime behavior. Cannot detect cache timing or microarchitectural side-channels.
No Data Flow Analysis: Flags all dangerous operations regardless of whether they process secrets. Manual review required.
Compiler/Runtime Variations: Different compilers, optimization levels, and runtime versions may produce different output.
development
Use this skill any time a spreadsheet file is the primary input or output. This means any task where the user wants to: open, read, edit, or fix an existing .xlsx, .xlsm, .csv, or .tsv file (e.g., adding columns, computing formulas, formatting, charting, cleaning messy data); create a new spreadsheet from scratch or from other data sources; or convert between tabular file formats. Trigger especially when the user references a spreadsheet file by name or path — even casually (like "the xlsx in my downloads") — and wants something done to it or produced from it. Also trigger for cleaning or restructuring messy tabular data files (malformed rows, misplaced headers, junk data) into proper spreadsheets. The deliverable must be a spreadsheet file. Do NOT trigger when the primary deliverable is a Word document, HTML report, standalone Python script, database pipeline, or Google Sheets API integration, even if tabular data is involved.
testing
Use when creating new skills, editing existing skills, or verifying skills work before deployment - applies TDD to process documentation by testing with subagents before writing, iterating until bulletproof against rationalization | 新しいスキルの作成、既存スキルの編集、またはデプロイ前にスキルが機能するか検証する際に使用 - プロセスドキュメントにTDDを適用し、記述前にサブエージェントでテストし、合理化に対して堅牢になるまで反復
development
Use when design is complete and you need detailed implementation tasks for engineers with zero codebase context - creates comprehensive implementation plans with exact file paths, complete code examples, and verification steps assuming engineer has minimal domain knowledge | 設計が完了し、コードベースの知識がゼロのエンジニア向けに詳細な実装タスクが必要な場合に使用 - 正確なファイルパス、完全なコード例、検証ステップを含む包括的な実装計画を作成。エンジニアの領域知識が最小限であることを前提
tools
Toolkit for interacting with and testing local web applications using Playwright. Supports verifying frontend functionality, debugging UI behavior, capturing browser screenshots, and viewing browser logs.