Recently the PQM4 project fixed a bug that was preventing us from turning on optimizations. Please see https://github.com/mupq/pqm4/issues/229 . Naturally, this means we can run benchmarks now! You can see the results on our benchmarking page at https://www.wolfssl.com/docs/benchmarks/#pq_kyber_kem_l1_pqm4_on_stm32. Here is an abbreviated and reformatted version of our results. We want to compare Kyber Level 1 […]
Read MoreMore TagAuthor: Kajal Sapkota
wolfSSH on Green Hills INTEGRITY RTOS
wolfSSH now runs on Green Hills Software’s INTEGRITY RTOS. Rejoice! wolfSSH will build and run almost out of the box. You will have to do a little integration work to get INTEGRITY to start the server appropriately, but at that point it plays nice with the shell application and allows for SFTP. Users can log […]
Read MoreMore TagSupport for MAXQ1065 in wolfSSL
Do you want to use the Analog Devices Inc./Maxim Integrated MAXQ1065 ultra-low-power secure authenticator? If so, then you’ll be interested to know that wolfSSL now supports it! You can use the MAXQ1065 to accelerate your TLS 1.2 connections in your applications by taking advantage of wolfSSL’s integration into the MAXQ10xx SDK. With this new addition, […]
Read MoreMore TagDTLS 1.3 Benchmarks
wolfSSL has support for the new DTLS 1.3 protocol. You can learn more about this protocol in our “What’s new in DTLS 1.3” blog post (https://www.wolfssl.com/whats-new-dtls-1-3/) and how to use it in our “DTLS 1.3 Examples and Use Cases” blog post (https://www.wolfssl.com/dtls-1-3-examples-use-cases/). In this post we will compare some benchmarks between DTLS 1.2 and 1.3. […]
Read MoreMore TagDTLS 1.3 Examples and Use Cases
wolfSSL has support for the new DTLS 1.3 protocol. You can learn more about this protocol in our “What’s new in DTLS 1.3” blog post (https://www.wolfssl.com/whats-new-dtls-1-3/). Using DTLS 1.3 in wolfSSL is almost as easy as using DTLS 1.2! Client implementations only need to change their existing wolfDTLSv1_2_client_method() calls into wolfDTLSv1_3_client_method(). If you are using […]
Read MoreMore TagWhat’s new in DTLS 1.3
The DTLS 1.3 standard has recently been published in April 2022 in RFC 9147. It features many improvements and additions to increase security and efficiency of the DTLS protocol. At wolfSSL, we like to be very quick adopters of new standards which is why initial support for DTLS 1.3 was merged in June and appeared […]
Read MoreMore TagCustomized ad-hoc secure boot with wolfBoot
wolfBoot is known for being the universal secure bootloader for all types of embedded systems. While initially targeting 32-bit microcontrollers, wolfBoot has grown into a full framework to implement secure boot solutions on a wide range of different systems and architectures. This is mostly due to wolfBoot modularity and flexibility, which makes our solution easy […]
Read MoreMore TagwolfSSL running on Xilinx Versal Hardware Encryption
Our Xilinx Versaldemo shows wolfSSL making calls to Xilinx hardened crypto, doing both basic unit tests and benchmarking with it. Xilinx hardened crypto is accelerated crypto operations (SHA3-384 / AES-GCM / RSA / ECDSA) available on Ultrascale+ devices and is available for use with the latest and greatest Versal boards. wolfSSL makes these calls using […]
Read MoreMore TagwolfSSL TriCore HSM Support
The Infineon Tricore TC2xx and the new TC3xx series chips are popular chips among safety and security critical applications. As the name implies, these chips come with multiple CPU cores to meet the demands of real time computing, however some variants come with a built in HSM core that is an ARM Cortex M3 operating […]
Read MoreMore TagwolfSSL 5.5.3 release
wolfSSL 5.5.3 is available! This is a minor release, containing some enhancements, fixes and one vulnerability fix. The vulnerability fix was thanks to a report from the Trail of Bits team! It affects a very specific build, having the debug macro WOLFSSL_CALLBACKS set. If using WOLFSSL_CALLBACKS it is recommended to upgrade to wolfSSL version 5.5.3 […]
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