# Shamira #
Implements [Shamir's secret sharing algorithm](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shamir's_Secret_Sharing). Splits a string or a byte sequence byte-per-byte into _n_<255 shares, with any _k_ of them sufficient for reconstruction of the original input.
Outputs the shares as hexadecimal, Base32 or Base64 encoded strings.
## Installation ##
### From pip
Run `pip install shamira`.
### From the source
Can be run straight from the cloned repository by executing the package with `python -m shamira` or simply installed with `python setup.py build`, `python setup.py install`. Then imported in your code with `import shamira` or run from the command line with `shamira`.
## Usage
### As a CLI application
Run `shamira split ...` for splitting and `shamira join ...` for joining the shares back. Appending `--help` will show you the documentation.
### As a library
`from shamira import generate, generate_raw, reconstruct, reconstruct_raw`
`help(function)` will show the documentation.
## Issue tracker
Please report your issues to https://trac.19x19.cz/shamira/report
## Performance ##
As it is, the code is not very fast. Let's assume we have a secret of length _m_. For each byte, the splitting takes _n_ evaluations of a polynomial of order _k_ over Galois field 256, leading to _O(n\*k\*m)_ finite field multiplications. Reconstruction of the constant parameters during joining takes _O(k\*k + k\*m)_ multiplications.
Benchmark results, all values mean _seconds per byte_ of the secret length:
<table>
<tr>
<th>k / n parameters</th>
<th>Split</th>
<th>Join</th>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>2 / 3 (a Raspberry Pi 3)</td>
<td>6.08e-05</td>
<td>0.000435</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>2 / 3 (a laptop)</td>
<td>5.02e-06</td>
<td>4.12e-05</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>254 / 254 (a Raspberry Pi 3)</td>
<td>0.226</td>
<td>0.0314</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>254 / 254 (a laptop)</td>
<td>0.0125</td>
<td>0.00175</td>
</tr>
</table>
While the speeds are not awful, for longer secrets I recommend encrypting them with a random key of your choice and splitting only the key. Anyway, you can run your own benchmark with `shamira benchmark`