Provided by: libcrypt-cbc-perl_3.04-3_all bug

NAME

       Crypt::CBC - Encrypt Data with Cipher Block Chaining Mode

SYNOPSIS

         use Crypt::CBC;
         $cipher = Crypt::CBC->new( -pass   => 'my secret password',
                                    -cipher => 'Cipher::AES'
                                   );

         # one shot mode
         $ciphertext = $cipher->encrypt("This data is hush hush");
         $plaintext  = $cipher->decrypt($ciphertext);

         # stream mode
         $cipher->start('encrypting');
         open(F,"./BIG_FILE");
         while (read(F,$buffer,1024)) {
             print $cipher->crypt($buffer);
         }
         print $cipher->finish;

         # do-it-yourself mode -- specify key && initialization vector yourself
         $key    = Crypt::CBC->random_bytes(8);  # assuming a 8-byte block cipher
         $iv     = Crypt::CBC->random_bytes(8);
         $cipher = Crypt::CBC->new(-pbkdf       => 'none',
                                   -key         => $key,
                                   -iv          => $iv);

         $ciphertext = $cipher->encrypt("This data is hush hush");
         $plaintext  = $cipher->decrypt($ciphertext);

         # encrypting via a filehandle (requires Crypt::FileHandle>
         $fh = Crypt::CBC->filehandle(-pass => 'secret');
         open $fh,'>','encrypted.txt" or die $!
         print $fh "This will be encrypted\n";
         close $fh;

DESCRIPTION

       This module is a Perl-only implementation of the cryptographic cipher block chaining mode
       (CBC).  In combination with a block cipher such as AES or Blowfish, you can encrypt and
       decrypt messages of arbitrarily long length.  The encrypted messages are compatible with
       the encryption format used by the OpenSSL package.

       To use this module, you will first create a Crypt::CBC cipher object with new().  At the
       time of cipher creation, you specify an encryption key to use and, optionally, a block
       encryption algorithm.  You will then call the start() method to initialize the encryption
       or decryption process, crypt() to encrypt or decrypt one or more blocks of data, and
       lastly finish(), to pad and encrypt the final block.  For your convenience, you can call
       the encrypt() and decrypt() methods to operate on a whole data value at once.

   new()
         $cipher = Crypt::CBC->new( -pass   => 'my secret key',
                                    -cipher => 'Cipher::AES',
                                  );

         # or (for compatibility with versions prior to 2.0)
         $cipher = new Crypt::CBC('my secret key' => 'Cipher::AES');

       The new() method creates a new Crypt::CBC object. It accepts a list of -argument => value
       pairs selected from the following list:

         Argument        Description
         --------        -----------

         -pass,-key      The encryption/decryption passphrase. These arguments
                            are interchangeable, but -pass is preferred
                            ("key" is a misnomer, as it is not the literal
                            encryption key).

         -cipher         The cipher algorithm (defaults to Crypt::Cipher:AES), or
                            a previously created cipher object reference. For
                            convenience, you may omit the initial "Crypt::" part
                            of the classname and use the basename, e.g. "Blowfish"
                            instead of "Crypt::Blowfish".

         -keysize        Force the cipher keysize to the indicated number of bytes. This can be used
                            to set the keysize for variable keylength ciphers such as AES.

         -chain_mode     The block chaining mode to use. Current options are:
                            'cbc'  -- cipher-block chaining mode [default]
                            'pcbc' -- plaintext cipher-block chaining mode
                            'cfb'  -- cipher feedback mode
                            'ofb'  -- output feedback mode
                            'ctr'  -- counter mode

         -pbkdf         The passphrase-based key derivation function used to derive
                           the encryption key and initialization vector from the
                           provided passphrase. For backward compatibility, Crypt::CBC
                           will default to "opensslv1", but it is recommended to use
                           the standard "pbkdf2"algorithm instead. If you wish to interoperate
                           with OpenSSL, be aware that different versions of the software
                           support a series of derivation functions.

                           'none'       -- The value provided in -pass/-key is used directly.
                                             This is the same as passing true to -literal_key.
                                             You must also manually specify the IV with -iv.
                                             The key and the IV must match the keylength
                                             and blocklength of the chosen cipher.
                           'randomiv'   -- Use insecure key derivation method found
                                            in prehistoric versions of OpenSSL (dangerous)
                           'opensslv1'  -- [default] Use the salted MD5 method that was default
                                            in versions of OpenSSL through v1.0.2.
                           'opensslv2'  -- [better] Use the salted SHA-256 method that was
                                            the default in versions of OpenSSL through v1.1.0.
                           'pbkdf2'     -- [best] Use the PBKDF2 method that was first
                                            introduced in OpenSSL v1.1.1.

                            More derivation functions may be added in the future. To see the
                            supported list, use the command
                              perl -MCrypt::CBC::PBKDF -e 'print join "\n",Crypt::CBC::PBKDF->list'

         -iter           If the 'pbkdf2' key derivation algorithm is used, this specifies the number of
                            hashing cycles to be applied to the passphrase+salt (longer is more secure).
                            [default 10,000]

         -hasher         If the 'pbkdf2' key derivation algorithm is chosen, you can use this to provide
                            an initialized Crypt::PBKDF2::Hash object.
                            [default HMACSHA2 for OpenSSL compatability]

         -header         What type of header to prepend to the ciphertext. One of
                           'salt'     -- use OpenSSL-compatible salted header (default)
                           'randomiv' -- Randomiv-compatible "RandomIV" header
                           'none'     -- prepend no header at all
                                         (compatible with prehistoric versions
                                          of OpenSSL)

         -iv             The initialization vector (IV). If not provided, it will be generated
                             by the key derivation function.

         -salt           The salt passed to the key derivation function. If not provided, will be
                             generated randomly (recommended).

         -padding        The padding method, one of "standard" (default),
                            "space", "oneandzeroes", "rijndael_compat",
                            "null", or "none" (default "standard").

         -literal_key    [deprected, use -pbkdf=>'none']
                             If true, the key provided by "-key" or "-pass" is used
                             directly for encryption/decryption without salting or
                             hashing. The key must be the right length for the chosen
                             cipher.
                             [default false)

         -pcbc           [deprecated, use -chaining_mode=>'pcbc']
                           Whether to use the PCBC chaining algorithm rather than
                           the standard CBC algorithm (default false).

         -add_header     [deprecated; use -header instead]
                          Whether to add the salt and IV to the header of the output
                           cipher text.

         -regenerate_key [deprecated; use -literal_key instead]
                         Whether to use a hash of the provided key to generate
                           the actual encryption key (default true)

         -prepend_iv     [deprecated; use -header instead]
                         Whether to prepend the IV to the beginning of the
                           encrypted stream (default true)

       Crypt::CBC requires three pieces of information to do its job. First it needs the name of
       the block cipher algorithm that will encrypt or decrypt the data in blocks of fixed length
       known as the cipher's "blocksize." Second, it needs an encryption/decryption key to pass
       to the block cipher. Third, it needs an initialization vector (IV) that will be used to
       propagate information from one encrypted block to the next. Both the key and the IV must
       be exactly the same length as the chosen cipher's blocksize.

       Crypt::CBC can derive the key and the IV from a passphrase that you provide, or can let
       you specify the true key and IV manually. In addition, you have the option of embedding
       enough information to regenerate the IV in a short header that is emitted at the start of
       the encrypted stream, or outputting a headerless encryption stream. In the first case,
       Crypt::CBC will be able to decrypt the stream given just the original key or passphrase.
       In the second case, you will have to provide the original IV as well as the
       key/passphrase.

       The -cipher option specifies which block cipher algorithm to use to encode each section of
       the message.  This argument is optional and will default to the secure Crypt::Cipher::AES
       algorithm.  You may use any compatible block encryption algorithm that you have installed.
       Currently, this includes Crypt::Cipher::AES, Crypt::DES, Crypt::DES_EDE3, Crypt::IDEA,
       Crypt::Blowfish, Crypt::CAST5 and Crypt::Rijndael. You may refer to them using their full
       names ("Crypt::IDEA") or in abbreviated form ("IDEA").

       Instead of passing the name of a cipher class, you may pass an already-created block
       cipher object. This allows you to take advantage of cipher algorithms that have
       parameterized new() methods, such as Crypt::Eksblowfish:

         my $eksblowfish = Crypt::Eksblowfish->new(8,$salt,$key);
         my $cbc         = Crypt::CBC->new(-cipher=>$eksblowfish);

       The -pass argument provides a passphrase to use to generate the encryption key or the
       literal value of the block cipher key. If used in passphrase mode (which is the default),
       -pass can be any number of characters; the actual key will be derived by passing the
       passphrase through a series of hashing operations. To take full advantage of a given block
       cipher, the length of the passphrase should be at least equal to the cipher's blocksize.
       For backward compatibility, you may also refer to this argument using -key.

       To skip this hashing operation and specify the key directly, provide the actual key as a
       string to -key and specify a key derivation function of "none" to the -pbkdf argument.
       Alternatively, you may pass a true value to the -literal_key argument. When you manually
       specify the key in this way, should choose a key of length exactly equal to the cipher's
       key length. You will also have to specify an IV equal in length to the cipher's blocksize.
       These choices imply a header mode of "none."

       If you pass an existing Crypt::* object to new(), then the -pass/-key argument is ignored
       and the module will generate a warning.

       The -pbkdf argument specifies the algorithm used to derive the true key and IV from the
       provided passphrase (PBKDF stands for "passphrase-based key derivation function"). Valid
       values are:

          "opensslv1" -- [default] A fast algorithm that derives the key by
                         combining a random salt values with the passphrase via
                         a series of MD5 hashes.

          "opensslv2" -- an improved version that uses SHA-256 rather
                         than MD5, and has been OpenSSL's default since v1.1.0.
                         However, it has been deprecated in favor of pbkdf2
                         since OpenSSL v1.1.1.

          "pbkdf2"    -- a better algorithm implemented in OpenSSL v1.1.1,
                         described in RFC 2898 L<https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2898>

          "none"      -- don't use a derivation function, but treat the passphrase
                         as the literal key. This is the same as B<-literal_key> true.

          "nosalt"    -- an insecure key derivation method used by prehistoric versions
                         of OpenSSL, provided for backward compatibility. Don't use.

       "opensslv1" was OpenSSL's default key derivation algorithm through version 1.0.2, but is
       susceptible to dictionary attacks and is no longer supported. It remains the default for
       Crypt::CBC in order to avoid breaking compatibility with previously-encrypted messages.
       Using this option will issue a deprecation warning when initiating encryption. You can
       suppress the warning by passing a true value to the -nodeprecate option.

       It is recommended to specify the "pbkdf2" key derivation algorithm when compatibility with
       older versions of Crypt::CBC is not needed. This algorithm is deliberately computationally
       expensive in order to make dictionary-based attacks harder. As a result, it introduces a
       slight delay before an encryption or decryption operation starts.

       The -iter argument is used in conjunction with the "pbkdf2" key derivation option. Its
       value indicates the number of hashing cycles used to derive the key. Larger values are
       more secure, but impose a longer delay before encryption/decryption starts. The default is
       10,000 for compatibility with OpenSSL's default.

       The -hasher argument is used in conjunction with the "pbkdf2" key derivation option to
       pass the reference to an initialized Crypt::PBKDF2::Hash object. If not provided, it
       defaults to the OpenSSL-compatible hash function HMACSHA2 initialized with its default
       options (SHA-256 hash).

       The -header argument specifies what type of header, if any, to prepend to the beginning of
       the encrypted data stream. The header allows Crypt::CBC to regenerate the original IV and
       correctly decrypt the data without your having to provide the same IV used to encrypt the
       data. Valid values for the -header are:

        "salt" -- Combine the passphrase with an 8-byte random value to
                  generate both the block cipher key and the IV from the
                  provided passphrase. The salt will be appended to the
                  beginning of the data stream allowing decryption to
                  regenerate both the key and IV given the correct passphrase.
                  This method is compatible with current versions of OpenSSL.

        "randomiv" -- Generate the block cipher key from the passphrase, and
                  choose a random 8-byte value to use as the IV. The IV will
                  be prepended to the data stream. This method is compatible
                  with ciphertext produced by versions of the library prior to
                  2.17, but is incompatible with block ciphers that have non
                  8-byte block sizes, such as Rijndael. Crypt::CBC will exit
                  with a fatal error if you try to use this header mode with a
                  non 8-byte cipher. This header type is NOT secure and NOT
                  recommended.

        "none"   -- Do not generate a header. To decrypt a stream encrypted
                  in this way, you will have to provide the true key and IV
                  manually.

       The "salt" header is now the default as of Crypt::CBC version 2.17. In all earlier
       versions "randomiv" was the default.

       When using a "salt" header, you may specify your own value of the salt, by passing the
       desired 8-byte character string to the -salt argument. Otherwise, the module will generate
       a random salt for you. Crypt::CBC will generate a fatal error if you specify a salt value
       that isn't exactly 8 bytes long. For backward compatibility reasons, passing a value of
       "1" will generate a random salt, the same as if no -salt argument was provided.

       The -padding argument controls how the last few bytes of the encrypted stream are dealt
       with when they not an exact multiple of the cipher block length. The default is
       "standard", the method specified in PKCS#5.

       The -chaining_mode argument will select among several different block chaining modes.
       Values are:

         'cbc'  -- [default] traditional Cipher-Block Chaining mode. It has
                     the property that if one block in the ciphertext message
                     is damaged, only that block and the next one will be
                     rendered un-decryptable.

         'pcbc' -- Plaintext Cipher-Block Chaining mode. This has the property
                     that one damaged ciphertext block will render the
                     remainder of the message unreadable

         'cfb'  -- Cipher Feedback Mode. In this mode, both encryption and decryption
                     are performed using the block cipher's "encrypt" algorithm.
                     The error propagation behaviour is similar to CBC's.

         'ofb'  -- Output Feedback Mode. Similar to CFB, the block cipher's encrypt
                     algorithm is used for both encryption and decryption. If one bit
                     of the plaintext or ciphertext message is damaged, the damage is
                     confined to a single block of the corresponding ciphertext or
                     plaintext, and error correction algorithms can be used to reconstruct
                     the damaged part.

          'ctr' -- Counter Mode. This mode uses a one-time "nonce" instead of
                     an IV. The nonce is incremented by one for each block of
                     plain or ciphertext, encrypted using the chosen
                     algorithm, and then applied to the block of text. If one
                     bit of the input text is damaged, it only affects 1 bit
                     of the output text. To use CTR mode you will need to
                     install the Perl Math::Int128 module. This chaining method
                     is roughly half the speed of the others due to integer
                     arithmetic.

       Passing a -pcbc argument of true will have the same effect as -chaining_mode=>'pcbc', and
       is included for backward compatibility. [deprecated].

       For more information on chaining modes, see
       <http://www.crypto-it.net/eng/theory/modes-of-block-ciphers.html>.

       The -keysize argument can be used to force the cipher's keysize. This is useful for
       several of the newer algorithms, including AES, ARIA, Blowfish, and CAMELLIA. If -keysize
       is not specified, then Crypt::CBC will use the value returned by the cipher's
       max_keylength() method. Note that versions of CBC::Crypt prior to 2.36 could also allow
       you to set the blocksie, but this was never supported by any ciphers and has been removed.

       For compatibility with earlier versions of this module, you can provide new() with a
       hashref containing key/value pairs. The key names are the same as the arguments described
       earlier, but without the initial hyphen.  You may also call new() with one or two
       positional arguments, in which case the first argument is taken to be the key and the
       second to be the optional block cipher algorithm.

   start()
          $cipher->start('encrypting');
          $cipher->start('decrypting');

       The start() method prepares the cipher for a series of encryption or decryption steps,
       resetting the internal state of the cipher if necessary.  You must provide a string
       indicating whether you wish to encrypt or decrypt.  "E" or any word that begins with an
       "e" indicates encryption.  "D" or any word that begins with a "d" indicates decryption.

   crypt()
          $ciphertext = $cipher->crypt($plaintext);

       After calling start(), you should call crypt() as many times as necessary to encrypt the
       desired data.

   finish()
          $ciphertext = $cipher->finish();

       The CBC algorithm must buffer data blocks internally until they are even multiples of the
       encryption algorithm's blocksize (typically 8 bytes).  After the last call to crypt() you
       should call finish().  This flushes the internal buffer and returns any leftover
       ciphertext.

       In a typical application you will read the plaintext from a file or input stream and write
       the result to standard output in a loop that might look like this:

         $cipher = new Crypt::CBC('hey jude!');
         $cipher->start('encrypting');
         print $cipher->crypt($_) while <>;
         print $cipher->finish();

   encrypt()
         $ciphertext = $cipher->encrypt($plaintext)

       This convenience function runs the entire sequence of start(), crypt() and finish() for
       you, processing the provided plaintext and returning the corresponding ciphertext.

   decrypt()
         $plaintext = $cipher->decrypt($ciphertext)

       This convenience function runs the entire sequence of start(), crypt() and finish() for
       you, processing the provided ciphertext and returning the corresponding plaintext.

   encrypt_hex(), decrypt_hex()
         $ciphertext = $cipher->encrypt_hex($plaintext)
         $plaintext  = $cipher->decrypt_hex($ciphertext)

       These are convenience functions that operate on ciphertext in a hexadecimal
       representation.  encrypt_hex($plaintext) is exactly equivalent to
       unpack('H*',encrypt($plaintext)).  These functions can be useful if, for example, you wish
       to place the encrypted in an email message.

   filehandle()
       This method returns a filehandle for transparent encryption or decryption using
       Christopher Dunkle's excellent Crypt::FileHandle module. This module must be installed in
       order to use this method.

       filehandle() can be called as a class method using the same arguments as new():

         $fh = Crypt::CBC->filehandle(-cipher=> 'Blowfish',
                                      -pass  => "You'll never guess");

       or on a previously-created Crypt::CBC object:

          $cbc = Crypt::CBC->new(-cipher=> 'Blowfish',
                                 -pass  => "You'll never guess");
          $fh  = $cbc->filehandle;

       The filehandle can then be opened using the familiar open() syntax.  Printing to a
       filehandle opened for writing will encrypt the data. Filehandles opened for input will be
       decrypted.

       Here is an example:

         # transparent encryption
         open $fh,'>','encrypted.out' or die $!;
         print $fh "You won't be able to read me!\n";
         close $fh;

         # transparent decryption
         open $fh,'<','encrypted.out' or die $!;
         while (<$fh>) { print $_ }
         close $fh;

   get_initialization_vector()
         $iv = $cipher->get_initialization_vector()

       This function will return the IV used in encryption and or decryption.  The IV is not
       guaranteed to be set when encrypting until start() is called, and when decrypting until
       crypt() is called the first time. Unless the IV was manually specified in the new() call,
       the IV will change with every complete encryption operation.

   set_initialization_vector()
         $cipher->set_initialization_vector('76543210')

       This function sets the IV used in encryption and/or decryption. This function may be
       useful if the IV is not contained within the ciphertext string being decrypted, or if a
       particular IV is desired for encryption.  Note that the IV must match the chosen cipher's
       blocksize bytes in length.

   iv()
         $iv = $cipher->iv();
         $cipher->iv($new_iv);

       As above, but using a single method call.

   key()
         $key = $cipher->key();
         $cipher->key($new_key);

       Get or set the block cipher key used for encryption/decryption.  When encrypting, the key
       is not guaranteed to exist until start() is called, and when decrypting, the key is not
       guaranteed to exist until after the first call to crypt(). The key must match the length
       required by the underlying block cipher.

       When salted headers are used, the block cipher key will change after each complete
       sequence of encryption operations.

   salt()
         $salt = $cipher->salt();
         $cipher->salt($new_salt);

       Get or set the salt used for deriving the encryption key and IV when in OpenSSL
       compatibility mode.

   passphrase()
         $passphrase = $cipher->passphrase();
         $cipher->passphrase($new_passphrase);

       This gets or sets the value of the passphrase passed to new() when literal_key is false.

   $data = random_bytes($numbytes)
       Return $numbytes worth of random data. On systems that support the "/dev/urandom" device
       file, this data will be read from the device. Otherwise, it will be generated by repeated
       calls to the Perl rand() function.

   cipher(), pbkdf(), padding(), keysize(), blocksize(), chain_mode()
       These read-only methods return the identity of the chosen block cipher algorithm, the key
       derivation function (e.g. "opensslv1"), padding method, key and block size of the chosen
       block cipher, and what chaining mode ("cbc", "ofb" ,etc) is being used.

   Padding methods
       Use the 'padding' option to change the padding method.

       When the last block of plaintext is shorter than the block size, it must be padded.
       Padding methods include: "standard" (i.e., PKCS#5), "oneandzeroes", "space",
       "rijndael_compat", "null", and "none".

          standard: (default) Binary safe
             pads with the number of bytes that should be truncated. So, if
             blocksize is 8, then "0A0B0C" will be padded with "05", resulting
             in "0A0B0C0505050505". If the final block is a full block of 8
             bytes, then a whole block of "0808080808080808" is appended.

          oneandzeroes: Binary safe
             pads with "80" followed by as many "00" necessary to fill the
             block. If the last block is a full block and blocksize is 8, a
             block of "8000000000000000" will be appended.

          rijndael_compat: Binary safe, with caveats
             similar to oneandzeroes, except that no padding is performed if
             the last block is a full block. This is provided for
             compatibility with Crypt::Rijndael's buit-in MODE_CBC.
             Note that Crypt::Rijndael's implementation of CBC only
             works with messages that are even multiples of 16 bytes.

          null: text only
             pads with as many "00" necessary to fill the block. If the last
             block is a full block and blocksize is 8, a block of
             "0000000000000000" will be appended.

          space: text only
             same as "null", but with "20".

          none:
             no padding added. Useful for special-purpose applications where
             you wish to add custom padding to the message.

       Both the standard and oneandzeroes paddings are binary safe.  The space and null paddings
       are recommended only for text data.  Which type of padding you use depends on whether you
       wish to communicate with an external (non Crypt::CBC library).  If this is the case, use
       whatever padding method is compatible.

       You can also pass in a custom padding function.  To do this, create a function that takes
       the arguments:

          $padded_block = function($block,$blocksize,$direction);

       where $block is the current block of data, $blocksize is the size to pad it to, $direction
       is "e" for encrypting and "d" for decrypting, and $padded_block is the result after
       padding or depadding.

       When encrypting, the function should always return a string of <blocksize> length, and
       when decrypting, can expect the string coming in to always be that length. See
       _standard_padding(), _space_padding(), _null_padding(), or _oneandzeroes_padding() in the
       source for examples.

       Standard and oneandzeroes padding are recommended, as both space and null padding can
       potentially truncate more characters than they should.

Comparison to Crypt::Mode::CBC

       The CryptX modules Crypt::Mode::CBC, Crypt::Mode::OFB, Crypt::Mode::CFB, and
       Crypt::Mode::CTR provide fast implementations of the respective cipherblock chaining modes
       (roughly 5x the speed of Crypt::CBC). Crypt::CBC was designed to encrypt and decrypt
       messages in a manner compatible with OpenSSL's "enc" function. Hence it handles the
       derivation of the key and IV from a passphrase using the same conventions as OpenSSL, and
       it writes out an OpenSSL-compatible header in the encrypted message in a manner that
       allows the key and IV to be regenerated during decryption.

       In contrast, the CryptX modules do not automatically derive the key and IV from a
       passphrase or write out an encrypted header. You will need to derive and store the key and
       IV by other means (e.g. with CryptX's Crypt::KeyDerivation module, or with Crypt::PBKDF2).

EXAMPLES

       Three examples, aes.pl, des.pl and idea.pl can be found in the eg/ subdirectory of the
       Crypt-CBC distribution.  These implement command-line DES and IDEA encryption algorithms
       using default parameters, and should be compatible with recent versions of OpenSSL. Note
       that aes.pl uses the "pbkdf2" key derivation function to generate its keys. The other two
       were distributed with pre-PBKDF2 versions of Crypt::CBC, and use the older "opensslv1"
       algorithm.

LIMITATIONS

       The encryption and decryption process is about a tenth the speed of the equivalent OpenSSL
       tool and about a fifth of the Crypt::Mode::CBC module (both which use compiled C).

BUGS

       Please report them.

AUTHOR

       Lincoln Stein, lstein@cshl.org

       This module is distributed under the ARTISTIC LICENSE v2 using the same terms as Perl
       itself.

SEE ALSO

       perl(1), CryptX, Crypt::FileHandle, Crypt::Cipher::AES, Crypt::Blowfish, Crypt::CAST5,
       Crypt::DES, Crypt::IDEA, Crypt::Rijndael