I faced a following problem: generate N unique alphanumeric strings from a restricted alphabet. Here's my solution in C#:

string Alphabet = "ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ0123456789";
Random generator = new Random();
const int ToGenerate = 10000;
const int CharactersCount = 4;
ArrayList generatedStrings = new ArrayList();
while( generatedStrings.Count < ToGenerate ) {
   string newString = "Prefix";
   for( int i = 0; i < CharactersCount; i++ ) {
      int index = generator.Next( Alphabet.Length );
      char character = Alphabet[index];
      newString += character;
   }
   if( !generatedStrings.Contains( newString ) ) {
      generatedStrings.Add( newString );
   }                
}
for( int i = 0; i < generatedStrings.Count; i++ ) {
    System.Console.Out.WriteLine( generatedStrings[i] );
}

it generates 10K strings starting with "Prefix" and otherwise consisting of capital letters and numbers. The output looks good.

Now I see the following problem. The produced strings are for a scenario where they should be unlikely to be predicted by anyone. In my program the seed is time-dependent. Once someone knows the seed value he can run the same code and get the exact same strings. If he knows any two strings he can easily figure out my algorithm (since it is really naive) and attempt to brute-force the seed value - just enumerate all possible seed values until he sees the two known strings in the output.

Is there some simple change that could be done to my code to make the described attack less possible?

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@Jaroslav: The GUID algorithm is specifially deterministic. It's not what he wants. It's unique, not random. – Noon Silk Jul 22 '10 at 9:10
@silky: Good luck guessing the exact tick seed used to generate the GUID, and the next one, ... However you generate the GUID in your code you won't be able to prevent guessing. Only if you use a third party service that can't be reflected or it's hard to guess its algorithm you can be somewhat safe. He wanted a simple change, GUID is way less guessable and simpler to use. – Jaroslav Jandek Jul 22 '10 at 9:33
@Jaroslav "Good Luck"? Are you for real? It's a shame programmers have such a cavalier attitude towards security. Personally, I don't understand it, but I won't waste time arguing with you about it. – Noon Silk Jul 22 '10 at 9:44
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Using a Guid to solve this realistic security problem is an extremely bad idea. Guids are not designed to solve this problem. Do not use a tool that was not designed for solving security problems to solves security problems, particularly when there already is an excellent tool easily available. If you have a security problem use a tool specifically designed to solve that problem. The framework ships with a crypto-strength RNG specifically designed and implemented by world-class security experts to solve this problem; use it. – Eric Lippert Jul 22 '10 at 14:29
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3 Answers

up vote 6 down vote accepted

Well, how would he know the seed? Unless he knew the exact time you ran the code, that is very hard to do. But if you need stronger, you can also create cryptographically strong random numbers via System.Security.Cryptography.RandomNumberGenerator.Create - something like:

        var rng = System.Security.Cryptography.RandomNumberGenerator.Create();
        byte[] buffer = new byte[4];
        char[] chars = new char[CharactersCount];
        for(int i = 0 ; i < chars.Length ; i++)
        {
            rng.GetBytes(buffer);
            int nxt = BitConverter.ToInt32(buffer, 0);
            int index = nxt % Alphabet.Length;
            if(index < 0) index += Alphabet.Length;
            chars[i] = Alphabet[index];
        }
        string s = new string(chars);
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If you have a series of numbers all generated at a very close time, it might be possible to statistically determine the seed by the properties of the numbers. I think it's a wise concern. – Noon Silk Jul 22 '10 at 9:12
I suppose he can brute-force the seed passing different values into Random constuctor, can't he? – sharptooth Jul 22 '10 at 9:16
@sharptooth - but not with RandomNumberGenerator - see the demo code added – Marc Gravell Jul 22 '10 at 9:18
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@sharptooth: Yes. You are right. Given that he could guess the year to within, say, +- 10 years, it leaves only 315,360,000 numbers to try. Which really isn't that many, if you know what you're looking for, as you suggest. – Noon Silk Jul 22 '10 at 9:19
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Marc: Indeed, it is not at all hard to work backwards from even a small sample of stuff generated by a pseudo-RNG to determine what the seed was and hence what all the other output was. The number of seeds is tiny - typically only a few billion, or even a few million. – Eric Lippert Jul 22 '10 at 14:15
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Well, it depends what you consider "simple".

You can "solve" your problem by using a "true" source of random numbers. You can try the free ones (random.org, fourmilab hotbits, etc), or buy one, depending on the sort of operation you're running.

Alternatively (and perhaps better) is to not generate in advance, and instead generate on demand. But this may be a significant change to your business process/model.

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Yeah, random.org and other similar services are a good option since it is much more truly random, random.org uses atmospheric noise, I believe, to get their results, so you could just use the API to this to preload a bunch of randomized data for use, combining this with basic programming "random" algorithms would, I think, yield very good results. – Rick Jul 22 '10 at 10:05
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Use something which uses unpredictable amount of time in the middle and change the seed by time (different seed for every value). You could for example ping some servers or calculate something in a loop with a lot of random values or write something to disk etc.

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A good thought but actually this makes the problem worse, not better. Now the attacker knows that the algorithm is generating strings by the algorithm "give me the first number generated by this seed... now the next seed ... now the next seed". where the seed numbers are monotonically increasing and based on the current time. That massively cuts down on the number of possible generated strings, so an attacker can very easily generate strings that have similar properties, until one of them works. – Eric Lippert Jul 22 '10 at 14:23
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You are missing the forest for the trees here. If your supposition is that you have a source of entropy - truly random timings - then don't use a pseudo-rng seeded from that entropy. Use the entropy. Of course, what is even better is simply call the code that already does that. The crypto random number generator takes entropy from processor timings, keystroke timings, and so on, and serves up that entropy in the form of random numbers. – Eric Lippert Jul 22 '10 at 14:25
@Eric Lippert1: It will take less time to brute-force the string (considering the OP's setup) than guessing the seed. So if the string is only 4 chars wide, there's not much point in building a secure generator when bruteforcing it takes a fraction of the time. The point is the size of the value matters too. There will be only 1.5M combinations with the OP's setup anyway. I hope he's not using such small string in the final version. @Eric Lippert2: Very true. – Jaroslav Jandek Jul 23 '10 at 5:50
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