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David Johnston Random Number Generators—Principles and Practices (Paperback)

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Item specifics

Condition
New: A new, unread, unused book in perfect condition with no missing or damaged pages. See the ...
Book Title
Random Number Generators—Principles and Practices
Title
Random Number Generators—Principles and Practices
Subtitle
A Guide for Engineers and Programmers
ISBN-10
1501515136
EAN
9781501515132
ISBN
9781501515132
Genre
Science Nature & Math
Subject
Computing & Internet
Release Year
2018
Release Date
09/10/2018
Country/Region of Manufacture
US
Item Height
240mm
Publication Year
2018
Type
Textbook
Format
Trade Paperback
Language
English
Publication Name
Random Number Generators--Principles and Practices : a Guide for Engineers and Programmers
Author
David Johnston
Item Length
9.4in
Publisher
DEG Press
Item Width
6.7in
Item Weight
29 Oz
Number of Pages
439 Pages

About this product

Product Information

Random numbers come in many forms and distributions. Some represent measured data. Some are generated numbers intended to have a uniform distribution. Some are generated to have other distributions such as Gaussian (otherwise known as 'normal', binomial, logarithmic or one of many other distributions. They may be represented at decimal numbers or in another base such as hexadecimal which is common in computer science. They may be fractional or floating point. Often they are displayed graphically to show some property. In this book we take a look at some of the more common distributions and forms. Readers will learn: The different types of Random Number Generators The S/W tools used to generate random numbers Testing for randomness

Product Identifiers

Publisher
DEG Press
ISBN-10
1501515136
ISBN-13
9781501515132
eBay Product ID (ePID)
6038736370

Product Key Features

Author
David Johnston
Publication Name
Random Number Generators--Principles and Practices : a Guide for Engineers and Programmers
Format
Trade Paperback
Language
English
Publication Year
2018
Type
Textbook
Number of Pages
439 Pages

Dimensions

Item Length
9.4in
Item Width
6.7in
Item Weight
29 Oz

Additional Product Features

Grade from
College Graduate Student
Grade to
College Graduate Student
Table of Content
1 Introduction 1.1 Tools 1.2 Terminology 1.3 The Many Types of Random Numbers 1.3.1 Uniform Random Numbers 2 Random Number Generators 2.1 Classes of Random Number Generators 2.2 Names for RNGs 3 Making Random Numbers 3.1 A Quick Overview of the RNG Types 3.2 The Structure of Full RNG Implementations 3.3 Pool Extractor Structures 3.4 Multiple Input Extractors 4 Physically Uncloneable Functions 21 4.1 The other kind 'AS Static vs. Dynamic Random Number Generators . 5 Testing Random Numbers 5.1 Known Answer Tests 5.2 Distinguishing From Random 5.3 PRNG Test Suites 5.4 Entropy Measurements 5.5 Min Entropy Estimation 5.6 Model Equivalence Testing 5.7 Statistical Prerequisite Testing 5.8 The problem Distinguishing Entropy and Pseudo-randomness 5.9 PRNG Tests: DieHarder, NIST SP800-22,TestU01, China ICS 35.040 5.10 Entropy Measurements 5.11 Min Entropy Measurements 5.12 Modeling to Test a Source 5.13 Statistical Prerequisites 5.14 Testing for bias . 5.15 results that are 'AYtoo good'AZ (E.G. Chi-square == 0.5) 5.16 Distinguishing Correlation from Bias 5.17 Testing for Stationary properties 5.18 FFT analysis 5.19 Online Testing 5.20 Working From the Source RNG 5.21 Tools 5.22 Summary 6 Entropy Extraction or Distillation 6.1 A simple extractor, the XOR gate 6.2 A simple way of improving the distribution of random numbers that have known missing values using XOR 7 Quantifying Entropy 7.1 Rényi Entropy 7.2 Distance From Uniform Topics to put somewhere in the book- in existing chapters and new chapters 8.1 XOR as a 2 bit extractor 8.2 Properties of real random numbers 8.3 Binomial distributions 8.4 Normal distributions 8.4.1 Dice, more dice 8.4.2 Central limit theorem 8.5 Seeing patterns 8.6 Regression to the mean 8.7 Lack of correlation, bias, algorithmic connections, predictability 8.8 What's a True random number? 8.9 Random numbers in cryptography 8.10 Things they help with liveness, unpredictability, resistance to attacks 8.11 Examples of use 8.11.1 Salting Passwords . 8.11.2 802.11i exchange 8.11.3 PKMv2 exchange 8.11.4 Making Keys 8.12 Examples of RNG crypto failures 8.12.1 Sony PS3 attack 8.12.2 MiFare Classic 8.12.3 Online Poker 8.12.4 Debian OpenSSL Fiasco 8.12.5 Linux Boot Time Entropy 8.13 Humans and random numbers 8.14 Result of asking people for a random number 8.14.1 Normal People 8.14.2 Crypto People 8.15 Mental Random Number Tricks 8.15.1 How to think of a really random number 8.16 PRNGs 8.17 extractors 8.17.1 CBC MAC 8.17.2 BIW 8.17.3 Von Neumann 8.18 Extractor Theory 8.19 Random Number Standards 8.19.1 SP800-90A B C . 8.19.2 Ansi X9.82 8.20 PRNG Algorithms 8.20.1 SP800-90A CTR DRBG 8.20.2 SP800-90A SHA DRBG 8.20.3 XOR Construction 8.20.4 Oversampling Construction 8.21 Yarrow 8.22 Whirlpool 8.23 Linux Kernel random service 8.24 Appendices 8.25 Resources 8.25.1 SW Sources 8.25.2 Online random number sources 8.26 Example Algorithm Vectors 8.26.1 SP800-90A CTR DRBG 128 & 256 8.26.2 SP800-90A Hash DRBG SHA-1 & SHA 256 8.26.3 AES-CBC-MAC Conditioner 128 8.26.4 AES-CBC-MAC Conditioner 8.27 SP800-90 LZ Tests Issues
Copyright Date
2018
Topic
Software Development & Engineering / Quality Assurance & Testing, Programming / Algorithms, Hardware / General, Security / Cryptography
Intended Audience
Scholarly & Professional
Illustrated
Yes
Genre
Computers

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Rarewaves-USA
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