Network Security Essentials
Network Security Essentials
Essentials
Chapter 2
Fourth Edition
by William Stallings
Key Size (bits) Number of Alternative Time required at 1 Time required at 106
Keys decryption/µs decryptions/µs
32 232 = 4.3 109 231 µs = 35.8 minutes 2.15 milliseconds
56 256 = 7.2 1016 255 µs = 1142 years 10.01 hours
128 2128 = 3.4 1038 2127 µs = 5.4 1024 years 5.4 1018 years
168 2168 = 3.7 1050 2167 µs = 5.9 1036 years 5.9 1030 years
26 characters 26! = 4 1026 2 1026 µs = 6.4 1012 years 6.4 106 years
(permutation)
Feistel Cipher Structure
Horst Feistel devised the feistel cipher
based on concept of invertible product cipher
partitions input block into two halves
process through multiple rounds which
perform a substitution on left data half
based on round function of right half & subkey
then have permutation swapping halves
implements Shannon’s S-P net concept
Feistel Cipher Structure
Feistel Cipher Design Elements
block size
key size
number of rounds
subkey generation algorithm
round function
fast software en/decryption
ease of analysis
Data Encryption Standard (DES)
most widely used block cipher in world
adopted in 1977 by NBS (now NIST)
as FIPS PUB 46
encrypts 64-bit data using 56-bit key
has widespread use
has been considerable controversy over
its security
DES History
IBM developed Lucifer cipher
by team led by Feistel in late 60’s
used 64-bit data blocks with 128-bit key
then redeveloped as a commercial cipher
with input from NSA and others
in 1973 NBS issued request for proposals
for a national cipher standard
IBM submitted their revised Lucifer which
was eventually accepted as the DES
DES Design Controversy
although DES standard is public
was considerable controversy over design
in choice of 56-bit key (vs Lucifer 128-bit)
and because design criteria were classified
subsequent events and public analysis
show in fact design was appropriate
use of DES has flourished
especially in financial applications
still standardised for legacy application use
Multiple Encryption & DES
clear a replacement for DES was needed
theoretical attacks that can break it
demonstrated exhaustive key search attacks
AES is a new cipher alternative
prior to this alternative was to use multiple
encryption with DES implementations
Triple-DES is the chosen form
Double-DES?
could use 2 DES encrypts on each block
C = EK2(EK1(P))
issue of reduction to single stage
and have “meet-in-the-middle” attack
works whenever use a cipher twice
since X = EK1(P) = DK2(C)
attack by encrypting P with all keys and store
then decrypt C with keys and match X value
can show takes O(256) steps
Triple-DES with Two-Keys
hence must use 3 encryptions
would seem to need 3 distinct keys
but can use 2 keys with E-D-E sequence
C = EK1(DK2(EK1(P)))
nb encrypt & decrypt equivalent in security
if K1=K2 then can work with single DES
standardized in ANSI X9.17 & ISO8732
no current known practical attacks
several proposed impractical attacks might
become basis of future attacks
Triple-DES with Three-Keys
although are no practical attacks on two-
key Triple-DES have some indications
can use Triple-DES with Three-Keys to
avoid even these
C = EK3(DK2(EK1(P)))
has been adopted by some Internet
applications, eg PGP, S/MIME
Origins
clear a replacement for DES was needed
have theoretical attacks that can break it
have demonstrated exhaustive key search attacks
can use Triple-DES – but slow, has small blocks
US NIST issued call for ciphers in 1997
15 candidates accepted in Jun 98
5 were shortlisted in Aug-99
Rijndael was selected as the AES in Oct-2000
issued as FIPS PUB 197 standard in Nov-2001
The AES Cipher - Rijndael
designed by Rijmen-Daemen in Belgium
has 128/192/256 bit keys, 128 bit data
an iterative rather than feistel cipher
processes data as block of 4 columns of 4 bytes
operates on entire data block in every round
designed to be:
resistant against known attacks
speed and code compactness on many CPUs
design simplicity
AES
Encryption
Process
AES Structure
data block of 4 columns of 4 bytes is state
key is expanded to array of words
has 9/11/13 rounds in which state undergoes:
byte substitution (1 S-box used on every byte)
shift rows (permute bytes between groups/columns)
mix columns (subs using matrix multiply of groups)
add round key (XOR state with key material)
view as alternating XOR key & scramble data bytes
initial XOR key material & incomplete last round
with fast XOR & table lookup implementation
AES Structure
AES Round
Random Numbers
many uses of random numbers in cryptography
nonces in authentication protocols to prevent replay
session keys
public key generation
keystream for a one-time pad
in all cases its critical that these values be
statistically random, uniform distribution, independent
unpredictability of future values from previous values
true random numbers provide this
care needed with generated random numbers
Pseudorandom Number
Generators (PRNGs)
often use deterministic algorithmic
techniques to create “random numbers”
although are not truly random
can pass many tests of “randomness”
known as “pseudorandom numbers”
created by “Pseudorandom Number
Generators (PRNGs)”
Random & Pseudorandom
Number Generators
Stream Cipher Structure
Stream Cipher Properties
some design considerations are:
long period with no repetitions
statistically random
depends on large enough key
large linear complexity
properly designed, can be as secure as a
block cipher with same size key
but usually simpler & faster
RC4
a proprietary cipher owned by RSA DSI
another Ron Rivest design, simple but effective
variable key size, byte-oriented stream cipher
widely used (web SSL/TLS, wireless WEP/WPA)
key forms random permutation of all 8-bit values
uses that permutation to scramble input info
processed a byte at a time
RC4 Key Schedule
starts with an array S of numbers: 0..255
use key to well and truly shuffle
S forms internal state of the cipher
for i = 0 to 255 do
S[i] = i
T[i] = K[i mod keylen])
j = 0
for i = 0 to 255 do
j = (j + S[i] + T[i]) (mod 256)
swap (S[i], S[j])
RC4 Encryption
encryption continues shuffling array values
sum of shuffled pair selects "stream key" value
from permutation
XOR S[t] with next byte of message to
en/decrypt
i = j = 0
for each message byte Mi
i = (i + 1) (mod 256)
j = (j + S[i]) (mod 256)
swap(S[i], S[j])
t = (S[i] + S[j]) (mod 256)
Ci = Mi XOR S[t]
RC4 Overview
RC4 Security
claimed secure against known attacks
have some analyses, none practical
result is very non-linear
since RC4 is a stream cipher, must never
reuse a key
have a concern with WEP, but due to key
handling rather than RC4 itself
Modes of Operation
block ciphers encrypt fixed size blocks
eg. DES encrypts 64-bit blocks with 56-bit key
need some way to en/decrypt arbitrary
amounts of data in practise
NIST SP 800-38A defines 5 modes
have block and stream modes
to cover a wide variety of applications
can be used with any block cipher
Electronic Codebook Book (ECB)
message is broken into independent
blocks which are encrypted
each block is a value which is substituted,
like a codebook, hence name
each block is encoded independently of
the other blocks
Ci = EK(Pi)
uses: secure transmission of single values
Advantages and Limitations of
ECB
message repetitions may show in ciphertext
if aligned with message block
particularly with data such graphics
or with messages that change very little, which
become a code-book analysis problem
weakness is due to the encrypted message
blocks being independent
main use is sending a few blocks of data
Cipher Block Chaining (CBC)
message is broken into blocks
linked together in encryption operation
each previous cipher blocks is chained
with current plaintext block, hence name
use Initial Vector (IV) to start process
Ci = EK(Pi XOR Ci-1)
C-1 = IV
uses: bulk data encryption, authentication
Cipher
Block
Chaining
(CBC)
Cipher FeedBack (CFB)
message is treated as a stream of bits
added to the output of the block cipher
result is feed back for next stage (hence name)
standard allows any number of bit (1,8, 64 or 128
etc) to be feed back
denoted CFB-1, CFB-8, CFB-64, CFB-128 etc
most efficient to use all bits in block (64 or 128)
Ci = Pi XOR EK(Ci-1)
C-1 = IV
uses: stream data encryption, authentication
s-bit
Cipher
FeedBack
(CFB-s)
Advantages and Limitations of
CFB
appropriate when data arrives in bits/bytes
most common stream mode
limitation is need to stall while do block
encryption after every n-bits
note that the block cipher is used in
encryption mode at both ends
errors propogate for several blocks after
the error
Counter (CTR)
a “new” mode, though proposed early on
similar to OFB but encrypts counter value
rather than any feedback value
must have a different key & counter value
for every plaintext block (never reused)
Oi = EK(i)
Ci = Pi XOR Oi
uses: high-speed network encryptions
Counter
(CTR)
Advantages and Limitations of
CTR
efficiency
can do parallel encryptions in h/w or s/w
can preprocess in advance of need
good for bursty high speed links
random access to encrypted data blocks
provable security (good as other modes)
but must ensure never reuse key/counter
values, otherwise could break (cf OFB)