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Cryptography and Network Security: Third Edition by William Stallings Lecture Slides by Lawrie Brown

This document discusses the Advanced Encryption Standard (AES). It describes how Rijndael was selected as the AES cipher through a competition process. The key details of the Rijndael cipher are then explained, including the round structure using byte substitution, shift rows, mix columns, and adding the round key. Implementation aspects that help make AES efficient in both software and hardware are also covered.

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Eli Priyatna
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
161 views

Cryptography and Network Security: Third Edition by William Stallings Lecture Slides by Lawrie Brown

This document discusses the Advanced Encryption Standard (AES). It describes how Rijndael was selected as the AES cipher through a competition process. The key details of the Rijndael cipher are then explained, including the round structure using byte substitution, shift rows, mix columns, and adding the round key. Implementation aspects that help make AES efficient in both software and hardware are also covered.

Uploaded by

Eli Priyatna
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Cryptography and Network

Security
Third Edition
by William Stallings

Lecture slides by Lawrie Brown


Chapter 5 –Advanced Encryption
Standard

"It seems very simple."


"It is very simple. But if you don't know what
the key is it's virtually indecipherable."
—Talking to Strange Men, Ruth Rendell
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 with 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
AES Requirements
• private key symmetric block cipher
• 128-bit data, 128/192/256-bit keys
• stronger & faster than Triple-DES
• active life of 20-30 years (+ archival use)
• provide full specification & design details
• both C & Java implementations
• NIST have released all submissions &
unclassified analyses
AES Evaluation Criteria
• initial criteria:
– security – effort to practically cryptanalyse
– cost – computational
– algorithm & implementation characteristics
• final criteria
– general security
– software & hardware implementation ease
– implementation attacks
– flexibility (in en/decrypt, keying, other factors)
AES Shortlist
• after testing and evaluation, shortlist in Aug-99:
– MARS (IBM) - complex, fast, high security margin
– RC6 (USA) - v. simple, v. fast, low security margin
– Rijndael (Belgium) - clean, fast, good security margin
– Serpent (Euro) - slow, clean, v. high security margin
– Twofish (USA) - complex, v. fast, high security margin
• then subject to further analysis & comment
• saw contrast between algorithms with
– few complex rounds verses many simple rounds
– which refined existing ciphers verses new proposals
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
– treats data in 4 groups of 4 bytes
– operates an entire block in every round
• designed to be:
– resistant against known attacks
– speed and code compactness on many CPUs
– design simplicity
Rijndael
• processes data as 4 groups of 4 bytes (state)
• 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 multipy of groups)
– add round key (XOR state with key material)
• initial XOR key material & incomplete last round
• all operations can be combined into XOR and
table lookups - hence very fast & efficient
Rijndael
Byte Substitution
• a simple substitution of each byte
• uses one table of 16x16 bytes containing a
permutation of all 256 8-bit values
• each byte of state is replaced by byte in row (left
4-bits) & column (right 4-bits)
– eg. byte {95} is replaced by row 9 col 5 byte
– which is the value {2A}
• S-box is constructed using a defined
transformation of the values in GF(28)
• designed to be resistant to all known attacks
Shift Rows
• a circular byte shift in each each
– 1st row is unchanged
– 2nd row does 1 byte circular shift to left
– 3rd row does 2 byte circular shift to left
– 4th row does 3 byte circular shift to left
• decrypt does shifts to right
• since state is processed by columns, this
step permutes bytes between the columns
Mix Columns
• each column is processed separately
• each byte is replaced by a value
dependent on all 4 bytes in the column
• effectively a matrix multiplication in GF(28)
using prime poly m(x) =x8+x4+x3+x+1
Add Round Key
• XOR state with 128-bits of the round key
• again processed by column (though
effectively a series of byte operations)
• inverse for decryption is identical since
XOR is own inverse, just with correct
round key
• designed to be as simple as possible
AES Round
AES Key Expansion
• takes 128-bit (16-byte) key and expands
into array of 44/52/60 32-bit words
• start by copying key into first 4 words
• then loop creating words that depend on
values in previous & 4 places back
– in 3 of 4 cases just XOR these together
– every 4th has S-box + rotate + XOR constant
of previous before XOR together
• designed to resist known attacks
AES Decryption
• AES decryption is not identical to
encryption since steps done in reverse
• but can define an equivalent inverse
cipher with steps as for encryption
– but using inverses of each step
– with a different key schedule
• works since result is unchanged when
– swap byte substitution & shift rows
– swap mix columns & add (tweaked) round key
Implementation Aspects
• can efficiently implement on 8-bit CPU
– byte substitution works on bytes using a table
of 256 entries
– shift rows is simple byte shifting
– add round key works on byte XORs
– mix columns requires matrix multiply in GF(28)
which works on byte values, can be simplified
to use a table lookup
Implementation Aspects
• can efficiently implement on 32-bit CPU
– redefine steps to use 32-bit words
– can precompute 4 tables of 256-words
– then each column in each round can be
computed using 4 table lookups + 4 XORs
– at a cost of 16Kb to store tables
• designers believe this very efficient
implementation was a key factor in its
selection as the AES cipher
Summary
• have considered:
– the AES selection process
– the details of Rijndael – the AES cipher
– looked at the steps in each round
– the key expansion
– implementation aspects

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