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Change some URLs from author dirs to dist dirs. The example in the porter's handbook didn't have the trailing slash; mea culpa for not having caught that when it went in.
24 lines
1.2 KiB
Plaintext
24 lines
1.2 KiB
Plaintext
This is Encrypted MAC (EMAC), formerly known as Double MAC (DMAC).
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Unlike HMAC, which reuses an existing one-way hash function, such as
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MD5, SHA-1 or RIPEMD-160, EMAC reuses an existing block cipher to
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produce a secure message authentication code (MAC).
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Using the block cipher, a message is encrypted in CBC mode. The last
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block is taken as the MAC of the message. For fixed-length messages,
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this method is provably secure. In reality, however, messages have
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arbitrary lengths, and this method is not secure. To make secure MACs
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for variable length messages, the last block is encrypted once again
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with a different key. The security of this construction has been proved
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in the paper, ``CBC MAC for Real-Time Data Sources'' by Erez Petrank
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and Charles Rackoff. The security can be proved on the assumption that
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the underlying block cipher is pseudo-random.
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The performance and key-agility of EMAC are reasonable. EMAC is
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preferable for short messages because the block length is smaller
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compared to the schemes based on a hash function. EMAC is also chosen
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as one of the NESSIE winners for Message Authentication Codes, along
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with UMAC, TTMAC and HMAC. The current NESSIE specification chooses the
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AES as block cipher.
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WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Digest-EMAC/
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