I found a better way to emulate bcpowmod on PHP 4, which works with very big numbers too:
function powmod($m,$e,$n) {
if (intval(PHP_VERSION)>4) {
return(bcpowmod($m,$e,$n));
} else {
$r="";
while ($e!="0") {
$t=bcmod($e,"4096");
$r=substr("000000000000".decbin(intval($t)),-12).$r;
$e=bcdiv($e,"4096");
}
$r=preg_replace("!^0+!","",$r);
if ($r=="") $r="0";
$m=bcmod($m,$n);
$erb=strrev($r);
$q="1";
$a[0]=$m;
for ($i=1;$i<strlen($erb);$i++) {
$a[$i]=bcmod(bcmul($a[$i-1],$a[$i-1]),$n);
}
for ($i=0;$i<strlen($erb);$i++) {
if ($erb[$i]=="1") {
$q=bcmod(bcmul($q,$a[$i]),$n);
}
}
return($q);
}
}
bcpowmod
(PHP 5)
bcpowmod — Raise an arbitrary precision number to another, reduced by a specified modulus
Opis
$left_operand
, string $right_operand
, string $modulus
[, int $scale
] )
Use the fast-exponentiation method to raise
left_operand to the power
right_operand with respect to the modulus
modulus.
Parametry
-
left_operand -
The left operand, as a string.
-
right_operand -
The right operand, as a string.
-
modulus -
The modulus, as a string.
-
skala -
Ten opcjonalny parametr służy do ustawienia liczby cyfr po kropce w wyniku. Możesz także ustawić globalnie domyślną skalę dla wszystkich funkcji używając bcscale().
Zwracane wartości
Returns the result as a string, or NULL if modulus
is 0.
Notatki
Informacja:
Because this method uses the modulus operation, numbers which are not positive integers may give unexpected results.
Przykłady
The following two statements are functionally identical. The bcpowmod() version however, executes in less time and can accept larger parameters.
<?php
$a = bcpowmod($x, $y, $mod);
$b = bcmod(bcpow($x, $y), $mod);
// $a and $b are equal to each other.
?>
However, if you read his full note, you see this paragraph:
"The function bcpowmod(v, e, m) is supposedly equivalent to bcmod(bcpow(v, e), m). However, for the large numbers used as keys in the RSA algorithm, the bcpow function generates a number so big as to overflow it. For any exponent greater than a few tens of thousands, bcpow overflows and returns 1."
So you still can, and should (over bcmod(bcpow(v, e), m) ), use his function if you are using larger exponents, "any exponent greater than a few tens of thousand."
Versions of PHP prior to 5 do not have bcpowmod in their repertoire. This routine simulates this function using bcdiv, bcmod and bcmul. It is useful to have bcpowmod available because it is commonly used to implement the RSA algorithm.
The function bcpowmod(v, e, m) is supposedly equivalent to bcmod(bcpow(v, e), m). However, for the large numbers used as keys in the RSA algorithm, the bcpow function generates a number so big as to overflow it. For any exponent greater than a few tens of thousands, bcpow overflows and returns 1.
This routine will iterate through a loop squaring the result, modulo the modulus, for every one-bit in the exponent. The exponent is shifted right by one bit for each iteration. When it has been reduced to zero, the calculation ends.
This method may be slower than bcpowmod but at least it works.
function PowModSim($Value, $Exponent, $Modulus)
{
// Check if simulation is even necessary.
if (function_exists("bcpowmod"))
return (bcpowmod($Value, $Exponent, $Modulus));
// Loop until the exponent is reduced to zero.
$Result = "1";
while (TRUE)
{
if (bcmod($Exponent, 2) == "1")
$Result = bcmod(bcmul($Result, $Value), $Modulus);
if (($Exponent = bcdiv($Exponent, 2)) == "0") break;
$Value = bcmod(bcmul($Value, $Value), $Modulus);
}
return ($Result);
}
