This library implements the Blowfish cipher, which was invented and
described by Counterpane (see
http://www.counterpane.com/blowfish.html ).
Blowfish is a block cipher that operates on 64 bit (8 byte) blocks of
data. It uses a variable size key, but typically, 128 bit (16 byte)
keys are considered good for strong encryption. Blowfish can be used
in the same modes as DES (see des_modes(7)). Blowfish is
currently one of the faster block ciphers. It is quite a bit faster
than DES, and much faster than IDEA or RC2.
Blowfish consists of a key setup phase and the actual encryption or
decryption phase.
BF_set_key() sets up the BF_KEYkey using the len bytes long key at data.
BF_ecb_encrypt() is the basic Blowfish encryption and decryption
function. It encrypts or decrypts the first 64 bits of in using the key key, putting the result in out. enc
decides if encryption (BF_ENCRYPT)
or decryption (BF_DECRYPT) shall be
performed. The vector pointed at by in and out
must be 64 bits in length, no less. If they are larger, everything
after the first 64 bits is ignored.
The mode functions BF_cbc_encrypt(), BF_cfb64_encrypt() and
BF_ofb64_encrypt() all operate on variable length data. They all
take an initialization vector ivec
which needs to be passed along into the next call of the same
function for the same message. ivec
may be initialized with anything, but the recipient needs to know
what it was initialized with, or it won't be able to decrypt. Some
programs and protocols simplify this, like SSH, where ivec is simply initialized to zero.
BF_cbc_encrypt() operates on data that is a multiple of 8 bytes long,
while BF_cfb64_encrypt() and BF_ofb64_encrypt() are used to encrypt
an variable number of bytes (the amount does not have to be an exact
multiple of 8). The purpose of the latter two is to simulate stream
ciphers, and therefore, they need the parameter num, which is a pointer to an integer where
the current offset in ivec is stored
between calls. This integer must be initialized to zero when
ivec is initialized.
BF_cbc_encrypt() is the Cipher Block Chaining function for Blowfish.
It encrypts or decrypts the 64 bits chunks of in using the key schedule, putting the result in out. enc
decides if encryption (BF_ENCRYPT) or decryption (BF_DECRYPT) shall
be performed. ivec must point at an
8 byte long initialization vector.
BF_cfb64_encrypt() is the CFB mode for Blowfish with 64 bit feedback.
It encrypts or decrypts the bytes in in using the key schedule, putting the result in out. enc
decides if encryption (BF_ENCRYPT)
or decryption (BF_DECRYPT) shall be
performed. ivec must point at an 8
byte long initialization vector. num
must point at an integer which must be initially zero.
BF_ofb64_encrypt() is the OFB mode for Blowfish with 64 bit feedback.
It uses the same parameters as BF_cfb64_encrypt(), which must be
initialized the same way.
BF_encrypt() and BF_decrypt() are the lowest level functions for
Blowfish encryption. They encrypt/decrypt the first 64 bits of the
vector pointed by data, using the
key key. These functions should not
be used unless you implement 'modes' of Blowfish. The alternative is
to use BF_ecb_encrypt(). If you still want to use these functions,
you should be aware that they take each 32-bit chunk in host-byte
order, which is little-endian on little-endian platforms and
big-endian on big-endian ones.
RETURN VALUES
None of the functions presented here return any value.
NOTE
Applications should use the higher level functions EVP_EncryptInit(3) etc.
instead of calling the blowfish functions directly.