Skip to main content

Find any nontrivial factor of a number

Project description

FindAFactor

Find any nontrivial factor of a number

Copyright and license

(c) Daniel Strano and the Qrack contributors 2017-2025. All rights reserved.

Installation

From PyPi:

pip3 install FindAFactor

From Source: install pybind11, then

pip3 install .

in the root source directory (with setup.py).

Windows users might find Windows Subsystem Linux (WSL) to be the easier and preferred choice for installation.

Usage

from FindAFactor import find_a_factor, FactoringMethod

to_factor = 1000

factor = find_a_factor(
    to_factor,
    method=FactoringMethod.PRIME_SOLVER,
    node_count=1, node_id=0,
    trial_division_level=2**20,
    gear_factorization_level=11,
    wheel_factorization_level=11,
    smoothness_bound_multiplier=0.25,
    batch_size_multiplier=8.0
)

The find_a_factor() function should return any nontrivial factor of to_factor (that is, any factor besides 1 or to_factor) if it exists. If a nontrivial factor does not exist (i.e., the number to factor is prime), the function will return 1 or the original to_factor.

  • method (default value: PRIME_SOLVER/0): PRIME_SOLVER/0 will prove that a number is prime (by failing to find any factors with wheel and gear factorization). FACTOR_FINDER/2 is optimized for the assumption that the number has at least two nontrivial factors. MIXED/1 is a factor-solver that is able to demonstrate that a number is prime, if necessary. (FACTOR_FINDER/2 is not yet implemented, but this is the next development goal. It will not necessarily function as a primality prover.)
  • node_count (default value: 1): FindAFactor can perform factorization in a distributed manner, across nodes, without network communication! When node_count is set higher than 1, the search space for factors is segmented equally per node. If the number to factor is semiprime, and brute-force search is used instead of congruence of squares, for example, all nodes except the one that happens to contain the (unknown) prime factor less than the square root of to_factor will ultimately return 1, while one node will find and return this factor. For best performance, every node involved in factorization should have roughly the same CPU throughput capacity.
  • node_id (default value: 0): This is the identifier of this node, when performing distributed factorization with node_count higher than 1. node_id values start at 0 and go as high as (node_count - 1).
  • trial_division_level (default value: 2**20): Trial division is carried out as a preliminary round for all primes up this number. If you need more primes for your smoothness bound, increase this level.
  • gear_factorization_level (default value: 11): This is the value up to which "wheel (and gear) factorization" and trial division are used to check factors and optimize "brute force," in general. The default value of 11 includes all prime factors of 11 and below and works well in general, though significantly higher might be preferred in certain cases.
  • wheel_factorization_level (default value: 11): "Wheel" vs. "gear" factorization balances two types of factorization wheel ("wheel" vs. "gear" design) that often work best when the "wheel" is only a few prime number levels lower than gear factorization. Optimized implementation for wheels is only available up to 13. The primes above "wheel" level, up to "gear" level, are the primes used specifically for "gear" factorization.
  • smoothness_bound_multiplier (default value: 0.25): starting with the first prime number after wheel factorization, the congruence of squares approach (with Quadratic Sieve) has a "smoothness bound" unit with as many distinct prime numbers as bits in the number to facto0r (for argument of 1.0 multiplier). To increase or decrease this number, consider it multiplied by the value of smoothness_bound_multiplier.
  • batch_size_multiplier (default value: 8.0): Each 1.0 increment of the multiplier is 2 cycles of gear and wheel factorization, alternating every other cycle between bottom of guessing range and top of guessing range, for every thread in use.

All variables defaults can also be controlled by environment variables:

  • FINDAFACTOR_METHOD (integer value)
  • FINDAFACTOR_NODE_COUNT
  • FINDAFACTOR_NODE_ID
  • FINDAFACTOR_TRIAL_DIVISION_LEVEL
  • FINDAFACTOR_GEAR_FACTORIZATION_LEVEL
  • FINDAFACTOR_WHEEL_FACTORIZATION_LEVEL
  • FINDAFACTOR_SMOOTHNESS_BOUND_MULTIPLIER
  • FINDAFACTOR_BATCH_SIZE_MULTIPLIER

Factoring parameter strategy

The developer anticipates this single-function set of parameters, as API, is the absolutely most complicated FindAFactor likely ever needs to get. The only required argument is to_factor, and it just works, for any number that should reasonably take about less than a second to a few minutes. However, if you're running larger numbers for longer than that, of course, it's worth investing 15 to 30 minutes to read the explanation above in the README of every argument and play with the settings, a little. But, with these options, you have total control to tune the algorithm in any all ways necessary to adapt to system resource footprint.

Advantage for use_congruence_of_squares is beyond the hardware scale of the developer's experiments, in practicality, but it can be shown to work correctly (at disadvantage, at small factoring bit-width scales). The anticipated use case is to turn this option on when approaching the size of modern-day RSA semiprimes in use.

If this is your use case, you want to specifically consider smoothness_bound_multiplier, batch_size_multiplier, and potentially thread_count for managing memory. By default, as many primes are kept for "smooth" number sieving as bits in the number to factor. This is multiplied by smooth_bound_multiplier (and cast to a discrete number of primes in total). This multiplier tends to predominate memory, but batch_size_multiplier can also cause problems if set too high or low, as a high value might exhaust memory, while a low value increases potentially nonproductive Gaussian elimination checks, which might be more efficient if batched higher. Our expectation is that most systems will benefit from significant experimentation with and fine tuning of batch_size_multiplier to something other than default, potentially to the point of using about half of available memory.

wheel_factorization_level and gear_factorization_level are common to both use_congruence_of_squares (i.e., Gaussian elimination for perfect squares) and "brute force." 11 for gear and 5 for wheel limit works well for small numbers. You'll definitely want to consider (gear/wheel) 13/7 or 17/11 (or even other values, maybe system-dependent) as your numbers to factor approach cryptographic relevance.

As for node_count and node_id, believe it or not, factoring parallelism can truly be that simple: just run different node IDs in the set on different (roughly homogenous) isolated CPUs, without networking. The only caveat is that you must manually detect when any single node has found an answer (which is trivial to verify) and manually interrupt other nodes still working (or leave them to complete on their own).

About

This library was originally called "Qimcifa" and demonstrated a (Shor's-like) "quantum-inspired" algorithm for integer factoring. It has since been developed into a general factoring algorithm and tool.

FindAFactor uses heavily wheel-factorized brute-force "exhaust" numbers as "smooth" inputs to Quadratic Sieve, widely regarded as the asymptotically second fastest algorithm class known for cryptographically relevant semiprime factoring. Actually, the primary difference between Quadratic Sieve (QS, regarded second-fastest) and General Number Field Sieve (GNFS, fastest) is based in how "smooth" numbers are generated as intermediate inputs to Gaussian elimination, and the "brute-force exhaust" of Qimcifa provides smooth numbers rather than canonical polynomial generators for QS or GNFS, so whether FindAFactor is theoretically fastest depends on how good its smooth number generation is (which is an open question). FindAFactor is C++ based, with pybind11, which tends to make it faster than pure Python approaches. For the quick-and-dirty application of finding any single nontrivial factor, something like at least 80% of positive integers will factorize in a fraction of a second, but the most interesting cases to consider are semiprime numbers, for which FindAFactor should be about as asymptotically competitive as similar Quadratic Sieve implementations.

Our original contribution to Quadratic Sieve seems to be wheel factorization to 13 or 17 and maybe the idea of using the "exhaust" of a brute-force search for smooth number inputs for Quadratic Sieve. For wheel factorization (or "gear factorization"), we collect a short list of the first primes and remove all of their multiples from a "brute-force" guessing range by mapping a dense contiguous integer set, to a set without these multiples, relying on both a traditional "wheel," up to a middle prime number (of 11), and a "gear-box" that stores increment values per prime according to the principles of wheel factorization, but operating semi-independently, to reduce space of storing the full wheel.

Beyond this, we gain a functional advantage of a square-root over a more naive approach, by setting the brute force guessing range only between the highest prime in wheel factorization and the (modular) square root of the number to factor: if the number is semiprime, there is exactly one correct answer in this range, but including both factors in the range to search would cost us the square root advantage.

Factoring this way is surprisingly easy to distribute: basically 0 network communication is needed to coordinate an arbitrarily high amount of parallelism to factor a single number. Each brute-force trial division instance is effectively 100% independent of all others (i.e. entirely "embarrassingly parallel"), and these guesses can seed independent Gaussian elimination matrices, so FindAFactor offers an extremely simply interface that allows work to be split between an arbitrarily high number of nodes with absolutely no network communication at all. In terms of incentives of those running different, cooperating nodes in the context of this specific number of integer factoring, all one ultimately cares about is knowing the correct factorization answer by any means. For pratical applications, there is no point at all in factoring a number whose factors are already known. When a hypothetical answer is forwarded to the (0-communication) "network" of collaborating nodes, it is trivial to check whether the answer is correct (such as by simply entering the multiplication and equality check with the original number into a Python shell console)! Hence, collaborating node operators only need to trust that all participants in the "network" are actually performing their alloted segment of guesses and would actually communicate the correct answer to the entire group of collaborating nodes if any specific invidual happened to find the answer, but any purported answer is still trivial to verify.

Special thanks to OpenAI GPT "Elara," for indicated region of contributed code!

Project details


Release history Release notifications | RSS feed

Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

findafactor-4.2.1.tar.gz (8.1 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distributions

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

FindAFactor-4.2.1-cp313-cp313-macosx_15_0_arm64.whl (118.0 kB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.13macOS 15.0+ ARM64

FindAFactor-4.2.1-cp313-cp313-macosx_14_0_arm64.whl (117.6 kB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.13macOS 14.0+ ARM64

FindAFactor-4.2.1-cp313-cp313-macosx_13_0_x86_64.whl (132.2 kB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.13macOS 13.0+ x86-64

FindAFactor-4.2.1-cp312-cp312-win_amd64.whl (151.4 kB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.12Windows x86-64

FindAFactor-4.2.1-cp312-cp312-manylinux_2_39_x86_64.whl (139.7 kB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.12manylinux: glibc 2.39+ x86-64

FindAFactor-4.2.1-cp310-cp310-manylinux_2_35_x86_64.whl (152.3 kB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.10manylinux: glibc 2.35+ x86-64

FindAFactor-4.2.1-cp38-cp38-manylinux_2_31_x86_64.whl (144.6 kB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.8manylinux: glibc 2.31+ x86-64

File details

Details for the file findafactor-4.2.1.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: findafactor-4.2.1.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 8.1 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.0.1 CPython/3.12.3

File hashes

Hashes for findafactor-4.2.1.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 7355136d0b727efff62df0a97ee5d8659a508d54ec7ddb0de64a56ec2aa369cd
MD5 0ba8f1d83a446792221c4ffc1342aeeb
BLAKE2b-256 17c92234a985be8808d66297a5478e54ecb7f6fb71e0f07dc840d62678d52b23

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file FindAFactor-4.2.1-cp313-cp313-macosx_15_0_arm64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for FindAFactor-4.2.1-cp313-cp313-macosx_15_0_arm64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 b55b21f04cf2dcc674455af7995b4d9d70d43249616debc56b47882841e4a76f
MD5 29d948a4d23afc6dc6d6e6e8515bcc45
BLAKE2b-256 be0daddc4319c901794d5ddec30d3bcbdfb134d9367190db624f837e78b49a37

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file FindAFactor-4.2.1-cp313-cp313-macosx_14_0_arm64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for FindAFactor-4.2.1-cp313-cp313-macosx_14_0_arm64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 968f44d5a3e1419053534ca11ba637b78686881bf54b1bed96fc7be88c7420eb
MD5 1b8056d3606280af563e67d1819306c6
BLAKE2b-256 4eadb5fed83f3fbfcc5279a0cd559d58b0d49ee500b01ac6a49ce72dbe74a245

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file FindAFactor-4.2.1-cp313-cp313-macosx_13_0_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for FindAFactor-4.2.1-cp313-cp313-macosx_13_0_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 9b7e49f678c86ad577c1f65683f05ced40f0f0d5e043201fa6f39acd99da57a6
MD5 cf2528a41f955e531610df8618776f91
BLAKE2b-256 a3a0d759fd54305dae921da5af653a689e49a184eb1042d14d7142c9a3b1eaa3

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file FindAFactor-4.2.1-cp312-cp312-win_amd64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for FindAFactor-4.2.1-cp312-cp312-win_amd64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 98b56ef729bf95cac2ccbabb6d95d869e7d03dc7924c7068be9d814062994910
MD5 5f13c6bbaa192f8924f507d3f26fb875
BLAKE2b-256 e82ab0fa9e7fa4c1a471002a0f936a6c05be6eb5b726b3b1666839c4b936cbf4

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file FindAFactor-4.2.1-cp312-cp312-manylinux_2_39_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for FindAFactor-4.2.1-cp312-cp312-manylinux_2_39_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 ee07d0515eccb8a46f54492c1ffeea5f27a915f9bbdc51f3af0113dc8b86d828
MD5 ef083d211b783c9ee988b8d0526872cf
BLAKE2b-256 9ead8be6bff397545937e3efdd24f5d8a9624fa73c245892cef95e47e444bc63

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file FindAFactor-4.2.1-cp310-cp310-manylinux_2_35_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for FindAFactor-4.2.1-cp310-cp310-manylinux_2_35_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 64b8343846906f42c0c557c7dc7858a9e8ca0a089a8ad1b89b9d0b2980e8ecc2
MD5 d04e3e16ee24c34abce13aaab3920cdd
BLAKE2b-256 d4b9e5d211a257110bef918d0053885d1c6e7187d7fccb73e68d14575a07253b

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file FindAFactor-4.2.1-cp38-cp38-manylinux_2_31_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for FindAFactor-4.2.1-cp38-cp38-manylinux_2_31_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 df33a4d799520e4c1785febbcf14c07c9850c1dce40b4bb3479ea8191b7b3cad
MD5 95be485bf4eff4e68129990128f64b67
BLAKE2b-256 7145b6da126f041355fa359963f31cde65737172a111db620c43bb7ec97c6064

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page