HardenedBSD/secure/lib/libdes
1996-05-04 07:25:54 +00:00
..
t
cbc3_enc.c
cbc_cksm.c
cbc_enc.c
cfb64ede.c
cfb64enc.c
cfb_enc.c
COPYRIGHT
des_crypt.man
des_locl.h
des_locl.org
des.c
des.doc
des.h
des.man
des.pl
DES.pm
DES.pod
DES.xs
destest.c
doIP
doPC1
doPC2
ecb3_enc.c
ecb_enc.c
ede_enc.c
enc_read.c
enc_writ.c
fcrypt.c
FILES
GNUmakefile
Imakefile
INSTALL
KERBEROS
Makefile
makefile.bc
Makefile.PL
Makefile.ssl
Makefile.uni
MODES.DES
ncbc_enc.c
new_rkey.c
ofb64ede.c
ofb64enc.c
ofb_enc.c
PC1
PC2
pcbc_enc.c
podd.h
qud_cksm.c
rand_key.c
read_pwd.c
README
rpc_des.h
rpc_enc.c
rpw.c
set_key.c
shifts.pl
sk.h
speed.c
spr.h
str2key.c
supp.c
testdes.pl
times
typemap
VERSION
version.h
vms.com

		libdes, Version 3.21 21/11/95

		Copyright (c) 1995, Eric Young
			  All rights reserved.

    This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
    it under the terms specified in COPYRIGHT.
    
--
The primary ftp site for this library is
ftp://ftp.psy.uq.oz.au/pub/Crypto/DES/libdes-x.xx.tar.gz
libdes is now also shipped with SSLeay.  Primary ftp site of
ftp://ftp.psy.uq.oz.au/pub/Crypto/SSL/SSLeay-x.xx.tar.gz

The best way to build this library is to build it as part of SSLeay.

This kit builds a DES encryption library and a DES encryption program.
It supports ecb, cbc, ofb, cfb, triple ecb, triple cbc, triple ofb,
triple cfb, and MIT's pcbc encryption modes and also has a fast
implementation of crypt(3).
It contains support routines to read keys from a terminal,
generate a random key, generate a key from an arbitrary length string,
read/write encrypted data from/to a file descriptor.

The implementation was written so as to conform with the manual entry
for the des_crypt(3) library routines from MIT's project Athena.

destest should be run after compilation to test the des routines.
rpw should be run after compilation to test the read password routines.
The des program is a replacement for the sun des command.  I believe it
conforms to the sun version.

The Imakefile is setup for use in the kerberos distribution.

These routines are best compiled with gcc or any other good
optimising compiler.
Just turn you optimiser up to the highest settings and run destest
after the build to make sure everything works.

I believe these routines are close to the fastest and most portable DES
routines that use small lookup tables (4.5k) that are publicly available.
The fcrypt routine is faster than ufc's fcrypt (when compiling with
gcc2 -O2) on the sparc 2 (1410 vs 1270) but is not so good on other machines
(on a sun3/260 168 vs 336).  It is a function of CPU on chip cache size.

Eric Young (eay@mincom.oz.au or eay@psych.psy.uq.oz.au)