Efficient Constructions of Variable-Input-Length Block Ciphers (original) (raw)
2004
Abstract
Existing block ciphers operate on a fixed-input-length (FIL) block size (e.g., 64-bits for DES). Often, one needs a variable-input-length (VIL) primitive that can operate on a different size input; it is, however, undesirable to construct this primitive from “scratch.” This paper contains two constructions that start with a fixed-input-length block cipher and show how to securely convert it to a variable-input-length block cipher without making any additional cryptographic assumptions. Both constructions model the FIL block cipher as a pseudorandom permutation (PRP) – that is, indistinguishable from a random permutation against adaptive chosen plaintext attack. The first construction converts it to a VIL PRP and is an efficiency improvement over the scheme of Bellare and Rogaway [4]. The second construction converts it to a VIL super pseudorandom permutation (SPRP) – that is, the resulting VIL block cipher is indistinguishable from a random permutation against adaptive chosen plaintext and ciphertext attack.
Zulfikar Ramzan hasn't uploaded this paper.
Let Zulfikar know you want this paper to be uploaded.
Ask for this paper to be uploaded.