CNS - Notes - Unit 2
CNS - Notes - Unit 2
Formula:
Encryption Process:
Decryption Process:
Decryption
Process:
CIPHER FEED BACK MODE
DECRYPTION PROCESS:
OUTPUT FEED BACK MODE
Formula:
Encryption Process:
Decryption Process:
COUNTER MODE
FORMULA
ENCRYPTION PROCESS:
DECRYPTION PROCESS
FEISTEL STRUCTURE:
1. DIVIDE THE PLAIN TEXT INTO TWO half
2. NO OF ROUNDS
3. NO OF SUB KEY
4. SWAPPING
B1 B2 B3 BN
64 BITS - 32 + 32
PLAIN TEXT:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32
33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40
41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48
49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56
57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64
INITIAL PERMUTATION:
58 50 42 34 26 18 10 2
60 52 44 36 28 20 12 4
62 54 46 38 30 22 14 6
64 56 48 40 32 24 16 8
57 49 41 33 25 17 9 1
59 51 43 35 27 19 11 3
61 53 45 37 29 21 13 5
63 55 47 39 31 23 15 7
INVERSE PERMUTATION
40 8 48 16 56 24 64 32
39 7 47 15 55 23 63 31
38 6 46 14 54 22 62 30
37 5 45 13 53 21 61 29
36 4 44 12 52 20 60 28
35 3 43 11 51 19 59 27
34 2 42 10 50 18 58 26
33 1 41 9 49 17 57 25
EXPANSION TABLE:
32 1 2 3 4 5
4 5 6 7 8 9
8 9 10 11 12 13
12 13 14 15 16 17
16 17 18 19 20 21
20 21 22 23 24 25
24 25 26 27 28 29
28 29 30 31 32 1
9,18,22,25,35,38,43,54
1
0
0
1
1
0
10-
ROW -
2ND
ROW
0011-
3RD
COLUMN
M = 0000 0001 0010 0011 0100 0101 0110 0111 1000 1001 1010 1011 1100 1101 1110 1111
0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1
0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0
0 1 0 1 0 1 1 1
0 1 1 1 1 0 0 1
1 0 0 1 1 0 1 1
1 0 1 1 1 1 0 0
1 1 0 1 1 1 1 1
1 1 1 1 0 0 0 1
PC-1
57 49 41 33 25 17 9
1 58 50 42 34 26 18
10 2 59 51 43 35 27
19 11 3 60 52 44 36
63 55 47 39 31 23 15
7 62 54 46 38 30 22
14 6 61 53 45 37 29
21 13 5 28 20 12 4
1 1 1 1 0 0 0
0 1 1 0 0 1 1
0 0 1 0 1 0 1
0 1 0 1 1 1 1
0 1 0 1 0 1 0
1 0 1 1 0 0 1
1 0 0 1 1 1 1
0 0 0 1 1 1 1
Convert the left shift new key into 48 bits according to the PC – 2
PC - 2
14 17 11 24 1 5
3 28 15 6 21 10
23 19 12 4 26 8
16 7 27 20 13 2
41 52 31 37 47 55
30 40 51 45 33 48
44 49 39 56 34 53
46 42 50 36 29 32
IP
58 50 42 34 26 18 10 2
60 52 44 36 28 20 12 4
62 54 46 38 30 22 14 6
64 56 48 40 32 24 16 8
57 49 41 33 25 17 9 1
59 51 43 35 27 19 11 3
61 53 45 37 29 21 13 5
63 55 47 39 31 23 15 7
IP = 1100 1100 0000 0000 1100 1100 1111 1111 1111 0000 1010 1010 1111 0000 1010 1010
Expand the plaintext 32 bits to 48 bits bcoz the key size is 48. Theh only we
can do XOR
E BIT-SELECTION TABLE
32 1 2 3 4 5
4 5 6 7 8 9
8 9 10 11 12 13
12 13 14 15 16 17
16 17 18 19 20 21
20 21 22 23 24 25
24 25 26 27 28 29
28 29 30 31 32 1
Again we have to convert the 48 bit to 32 bit. Bcoz the plain text size is 32 bits according to the
S-Box table.
011000
The permutation P is defined in the following table. P yields a 32-bit output from a 32-bit input
by permuting the bits of the input block.
16 7 20 21
29 12 28 17
1 15 23 26
5 18 31 10
2 8 24 14
32 27 3 9
19 13 30 6
22 11 4 25
R1 = L0 + f(R0 , K1 )
M = 0000 0001 0010 0011 0100 0101 0110 0111 1000 1001 1010 1011 1100
1101 1110 1111
The first bit of M is "0". The last bit is "1". We read from left to right.
DES operates on the 64-bit blocks using key sizes of 56- bits. The keys are
actually stored as being 64 bits long, but every 8th bit in the key is not used
(i.e. bits numbered 8, 16, 24, 32, 40, 48, 56, and 64). However, we will
nevertheless number the bits from 1 to 64, going left to right, in the following
calculations. But, as you will see, the eight bits just mentioned get eliminated
when we create subkeys.
57 49 41 33 25 17 9
1 58 50 42 34 26 18
10 2 59 51 43 35 27
19 11 3 60 52 44 36
63 55 47 39 31 23 15
7 62 54 46 38 30 22
14 6 61 53 45 37 29
21 13 5 28 20 12 4
Next, split this key into left and right halves, C0 and D0, where each half has
28 bits.
C0 =1111000011001100101010101111
D0 = 0101010 1011001 1001111 0001111
With C0 and D0 defined, we now create sixteen blocks Cn and Dn, 1<=n<=16.
Each pair of blocks Cn and Dn is formed from the previous pair Cn-1 and Dn-1,
respectively, for n = 1, 2, ..., 16, using the following schedule of "left shifts"
of the previous block. To do a left shift, move each bit one place to the left,
except for the first bit, which is cycled to the end of the block.
Iteration Number of
Number Left Shifts
1 1
2 1
3 2
4 2
5 2
6 2
7 2
8 2
9 1
10 2
11 2
12 2
13 2
14 2
15 2
16 1
This means, for example, C3 and D3 are obtained from C2 and D2,
respectively, by two left shifts, and C16 and D16 are obtained
from C15 and D15, respectively, by one left shift. In all cases, by a single left
shift is meant a rotation of the bits one place to the left, so that after one left
shift the bits in the 28 positions are the bits that were previously in positions
2, 3,..., 28, 1.
C0 =1111000011001100101010101111
D0 =0101010101100110011110001111
C1 =1110000110011001010101011111
D1 =1010101011001100111100011110
C2 =1100001100110010101010111111
D2 = 101010110011001111000111101
C3 =0000110011001010101011111111
D3 =0101011001100111100011110101
C4 =0011001100101010101111111100
D4 =0101100110011110001111010101
C5 =1100110010101010111111110000
D5 = 0110011001111000111101010101
C6 =0011001010101011111111000011
D6 = 001100111100011110101010101
C7 =1100101010101111111100001100
D7 =0110011110001111010101010110
C8 =0010101010111111110000110011
D8 =1001111000111101010101011001
C9 =0101010101111111100001100110
D9 =0011110001111010101010110011
C10 =0101010111111110000110011001
D10 =1111000111101010101011001100
C11 =0101011111111000011001100101
D11 =1100011110101010101100110011
C12 =0101111111100001100110010101
D12 =0001111010101010110011001111
C13 =0111111110000110011001010101
D13 =0111101010101011001100111100
C14 =1111111000011001100101010101
D14 =1110101010101100110011110001
C15 =1111100001100110010101010111
D15 =1010101010110011001111000111
C16 =1111000011001100101010101111
D16 =0101010101100110011110001111
We now form the keys Kn, for 1<=n<=16, by applying the following
permutation table to each of the concatenated pairs CnDn. Each pair has 56
bits, but PC-2 only uses 48 of these.
PC-2
14 17 11 24 1 5
3 28 15 6 21 10
23 19 12 4 26 8
16 7 27 20 13 2
41 52 31 37 47 55
30 40 51 45 33 48
44 49 39 56 34 53
46 42 50 36 29 32
Therefore, the first bit of Kn is the 14th bit of CnDn, the second bit the 17th,
and so on, ending with the 48th bit of Kn being the 32th bit of CnDn.
Example: For the first key we have C1D1 = 1110000 1100110 0101010
1011111 1010101 0110011 0011110 0011110
IP
58 50 42 34 26 18 10 2
60 52 44 36 28 20 12 4
62 54 46 38 30 22 14 6
64 56 48 40 32 24 16 8
57 49 41 33 25 17 9 1
59 51 43 35 27 19 11 3
61 53 45 37 29 21 13 5
63 55 47 39 31 23 15 7
M = 0000 0001 0010 0011 0100 0101 0110 0111 1000 1001 1010 1011 1100
1101 1110 1111
IP = 1100 1100 0000 0000 1100 1100 1111 1111 1111 0000 1010 1010 1111
0000 1010 1010
Here the 58th bit of M is "1", which becomes the first bit of IP. The 50th bit
of M is "1", which becomes the second bit of IP. The 7th bit of M is "0",
which becomes the last bit of IP.
Next divide the permuted block IP into a left half L0 of 32 bits, and a right
half R0 of 32 bits.
Ln = Rn-1
Rn = Ln-1 + f(Rn-1,Kn)
This results in a final block, for n = 16, of L16R16. That is, in each iteration,
we take the right 32 bits of the previous result and make them the left 32 bits
of the current step. For the right 32 bits in the current step, we XOR the left
32 bits of the previous step with the calculation f .
Let E be such that the 48 bits of its output, written as 8 blocks of 6 bits each,
are obtained by selecting the bits in its inputs in order according to the
following table:
E BIT-SELECTION TABLE
32 1 2 3 4 5
4 5 6 7 8 9
8 9 10 11 12 13
12 13 14 15 16 17
16 17 18 19 20 21
20 21 22 23 24 25
24 25 26 27 28 29
28 29 30 31 32 1
Thus the first three bits of E(Rn-1) are the bits in positions 32, 1 and 2 of Rn-
1 while the last 2 bits of E(Rn-1) are the bits in positions 32 and 1.
(Note that each block of 4 original bits has been expanded to a block of 6
output bits.)
Next in the f calculation, we XOR the output E(Rn-1) with the key Kn:
Kn + E(Rn-1).
We have not yet finished calculating the function f . To this point we have
expanded Rn-1 from 32 bits to 48 bits, using the selection table, and XORed
the result with the key Kn . We now have 48 bits, or eight groups of six bits.
We now do something strange with each group of six bits: we use them as
addresses in tables called "S boxes". Each group of six bits will give us an
address in a different S box. Located at that address will be a 4 bit number.
This 4 bit number will replace the original 6 bits. The net result is that the
eight groups of 6 bits are transformed into eight groups of 4 bits (the 4-bit
outputs from the S boxes) for 32 bits total.
Kn + E(Rn-1) =B1B2B3B4B5B6B7B8,
S1(B1)S2(B2)S3(B3)S4(B4)S5(B5)S6(B6)S7(B7)S8(B8)
To repeat, each of the functions S1, S2,..., S8, takes a 6-bit block as input and
yields a 4-bit block as output. The table to determine S1 is shown and
explained below:
S1
Column Number
Row
No. 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
0 14 4 13 1 2 15 11 8 3 10 6 12 5 9 0 7
1 0 15 7 4 14 2 13 1 10 6 12 11 9 5 3 8
2 4 1 14 8 13 6 2 11 15 12 9 7 3 10 5 0
3 15 12 8 2 4 9 1 7 5 11 3 14 10 0 6 13
S1
14 4 13 1 2 15 11 8 3 10 6 12 5 9 0 7
0 15 7 4 14 2 13 1 10 6 12 11 9 5 3 8
4 1 14 8 13 6 2 11 15 12 9 7 3 10 5 0
15 12 8 2 4 9 1 7 5 11 3 14 10 0 6 13
S2
15 1 8 14 6 11 3 4 9 7 2 13 12 0 5 10
3 13 4 7 15 2 8 14 12 0 1 10 6 9 11 5
0 14 7 11 10 4 13 1 5 8 12 6 9 3 2 15
13 8 10 1 3 15 4 2 11 6 7 12 0 5 14 9
S3
10 0 9 14 6 3 15 5 1 13 12 7 11 4 2 8
13 7 0 9 3 4 6 10 2 8 5 14 12 11 15 1
13 6 4 9 8 15 3 0 11 1 2 12 5 10 14 7
1 10 13 0 6 9 8 7 4 15 14 3 11 5 2 12
S4
7 13 14 3 0 6 9 10 1 2 8 5 11 12 4 15
13 8 11 5 6 15 0 3 4 7 2 12 1 10 14 9
10 6 9 0 12 11 7 13 15 1 3 14 5 2 8 4
3 15 0 6 10 1 13 8 9 4 5 11 12 7 2 14
S5
2 12 4 1 7 10 11 6 8 5 3 15 13 0 14 9
14 11 2 12 4 7 13 1 5 0 15 10 3 9 8 6
4 2 1 11 10 13 7 8 15 9 12 5 6 3 0 14
11 8 12 7 1 14 2 13 6 15 0 9 10 4 5 3
S6
12 1 10 15 9 2 6 8 0 13 3 4 14 7 5 11
10 15 4 2 7 12 9 5 6 1 13 14 0 11 3 8
9 14 15 5 2 8 12 3 7 0 4 10 1 13 11 6
4 3 2 12 9 5 15 10 11 14 1 7 6 0 8 13
S7
4 11 2 14 15 0 8 13 3 12 9 7 5 10 6 1
13 0 11 7 4 9 1 10 14 3 5 12 2 15 8 6
1 4 11 13 12 3 7 14 10 15 6 8 0 5 9 2
6 11 13 8 1 4 10 7 9 5 0 15 14 2 3 12
S8
13 2 8 4 6 15 11 1 10 9 3 14 5 0 12 7
1 15 13 8 10 3 7 4 12 5 6 11 0 14 9 2
7 11 4 1 9 12 14 2 0 6 10 13 15 3 5 8
2 1 14 7 4 10 8 13 15 12 9 0 3 5 6 11
Example: For the first round, we obtain as the output of the eight S boxes:
f = P(S1(B1)S2(B2)...S8(B8))
The permutation P is defined in the following table. P yields a 32-bit output
from a 32-bit input by permuting the bits of the input block.
16 7 20 21
29 12 28 17
1 15 23 26
5 18 31 10
2 8 24 14
32 27 3 9
19 13 30 6
22 11 4 25
we get
R1 = L0 + f(R0 , K1 )
In the next round, we will have L2 = R1, which is the block we just
calculated, and then we must calculate R2 =L1 + f(R1, K2), and so on for 16
rounds. At the end of the sixteenth round we have the blocks L16 and R16. We
then reverse the order of the two blocks into the 64-bit block
R16L16
IP-1
40 8 48 16 56 24 64 32
39 7 47 15 55 23 63 31
38 6 46 14 54 22 62 30
37 5 45 13 53 21 61 29
36 4 44 12 52 20 60 28
35 3 43 11 51 19 59 27
34 2 42 10 50 18 58 26
33 1 41 9 49 17 57 25
That is, the output of the algorithm has bit 40 of the preoutput block as its
first bit, bit 8 as its second bit, and so on, until bit 25 of the preoutput block
is the last bit of the output.
We reverse the order of these two blocks and apply the final permutation to
85E813540F0AB405.