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des(n) 1.0 "Data Encryption Standard (DES)"
des - Implementation of the DES and triple-DES ciphers
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
COMMANDS
PROGRAMMING INTERFACE
MODES OF
OPERATION
EXAMPLES
REFERENCES
AUTHORS
SEE ALSO
KEYWORDS
COPYRIGHT
package require Tcl 8.2
package require des 1.0
This is an implementation in Tcl of the Data Encryption Standard
(DES) as published by the U.S. National Institute of Standards and
Technology (NIST) [1]. This implementation also supports triple DES
(3DES) extension to DES. DES is a 64-bit block cipher that uses a
56-bit key. 3DES uses a 168-bit key. DES has now officially been
superceeded by AES but is in common use in many protocols.
The tcllib implementation of DES and 3DES uses an implementation
by Mac Cody and is available as a separate download from [2]. For
anyone concerned about the details of exporting this code please
see the TclDES web pages. The tcllib specific code is a wrapper to
the TclDES API that presents same API for the DES cipher as for
other ciphers in the library.
- ::DES::des ?-mode
[ecb|cbc|cfb|ofb]? ?-dir [encrypt|decrypt]?
-key keydata ?-iv vector? ?-hex? ?-weak? ?-out channel? ?-chunksize size? [ -in channel | data ]
- Perform the DES algorithm on either the data
provided by the argument or on the data read from the -in channel. If an -out channel is
given then the result will be written to this channel.
The -key option must be given. This parameter
takes a binary string of 8 bytes in length and is used to generate
the key schedule. In DES only 56 bits of key data are used. The
highest bit from each byte is discarded.
The -mode and -dir options
are optional and default to cbc mode and encrypt respectively. The
initialization vector -iv takes an 8 byte binary
argument. This defaults to all zeros. See MODES OF OPERATION for more about -mode and the use of the initialization vector.
DES is a 64-bit block cipher. This means that the data must be
provided in units that are a multiple of 8 bytes.
Internal state is maintained in an opaque structure that is
returned from the Init function. In ECB mode the
state is not affected by the input but for other modes some input
dependent state is maintained and may be reset by calling the Reset function with a new initialization vector
value.
- ::DES::Init mode keydata iv ?weak?
- Construct a new DES key schedule using the specified key data
and the given initialization vector. The initialization vector is
not used with ECB mode but is important for other usage modes. See
MODES OF OPERATION.
There are a small number of keys that are known to be weak when
used with DES. By default if such a key is passed in then an error
will be raised. If there is a need to accept such keys then the weak parameter can be set true to avoid the error
being thrown.
- ::DES::Encrypt Key data
- Use a prepared key acquired by calling Init
to encrypt the provided data. The data argument should be a binary
array that is a multiple of the DES block size of 8 bytes. The
result is a binary array the same size as the input of encrypted
data.
- ::DES::Decrypt Key data
- Decipher data using the key. Note that the same key may be used
to encrypt and decrypt data provided that the initialization vector
is reset appropriately for CBC mode.
- ::DES::Reset Key iv
- Reset the initialization vector. This permits the programmer to
re-use a key and avoid the cost of re-generating the key schedule
where the same key data is being used multiple times.
- ::DES::Final Key
- This should be called to clean up resources associated with Key. Once this function has been called the key may
not be used again.
- Electronic Code Book (ECB)
- ECB is the basic mode of all block ciphers. Each block is
encrypted independently and so identical plain text will produce
identical output when encrypted with the same key. Any encryption
errors will only affect a single block however this is vulnerable
to known plaintext attacks.
- Cipher Block Chaining (CBC)
- CBC mode uses the output of the last block encryption to affect
the current block. An initialization vector of the same size as the
cipher block size is used to handle the first block. The
initialization vector should be chosen randomly and transmitted as
the first block of the output. Errors in encryption affect the
current block and the next block after which the cipher will
correct itself. CBC is the most commonly used mode in software
encryption.
- Cipher Feedback (CFB)
- CFB mode can be used to convert block ciphers into stream
ciphers. In CFB mode the initialization vector is encrypted and the
output is then xor'd with the plaintext stream. The result is then
used as the initialization vector for the next round. Errors will
affect the current block and the next block.
- Output Feedback (OFB)
- OFB is similar to CFB except that the output of the cipher is
fed back into the next round and not the xor'd plain text. This
means that errors only affect a single block but the cipher is more
vulnerable to attack.
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% set ciphertext [DES::des -mode cbc -dir encrypt -key $secret $plaintext]
% set plaintext [DES::des -mode cbc -dir decrypt -key $secret $ciphertext]
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set iv [string repeat \\0 8]
set Key [DES::Init cbc \\0\\1\\2\\3\\4\\5\\6\\7 $iv]
set ciphertext [DES::Encrypt $Key "somedata"]
append ciphertext [DES::Encrypt $Key "moredata"]
DES::Reset $Key $iv
set plaintext [DES::Decrypt $Key $ciphertext]
DES::Final $Key
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- "Data Encryption Standard", Federal Information Processing
Standards Publication 46-3, 1999, (http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/fips/fips46-3/fips46-3.pdf)
- "TclDES: munitions-grade Tcl scripting" http://tcldes.sourceforge.net/
Jochen C Loewer, Mac Cody, Pat Thoyts
aes(n) , blowfish(n) , md5(n) , rc4(n)
, sha1(n)
3DES , DES , block
cipher , data integrity , encryption , security
Copyright © 2005, Pat Thoyts
<patthoyts@users.sourceforge.net>