Twofish (cipher): Difference between revisions
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Except for the name, and using key-dependent S-boxes, it has little relationship to [[Blowfish (cipher)| Blowfish]]; Twofish was a new design. It uses [[pseudo-Hadamard transform]]s in the round function. It has a successor named "Threefish", used in the [[Skein (hash algorithm) | Skein]] hash algorithm, a candidate in the [[Advanced Hash Standard]] contest. That is another new design. | Except for the name, and using key-dependent S-boxes, it has little relationship to [[Blowfish (cipher)| Blowfish]]; Twofish was a new design. It uses [[pseudo-Hadamard transform]]s in the round function. It has a successor named "Threefish", used in the [[Skein (hash algorithm) | Skein]] hash algorithm, a candidate in the [[Advanced Hash Standard]] contest. That is another new design. | ||
The cipher is freely available for any use. It has a home page | The cipher is freely available for any use. It has a [http://www.schneier.com/twofish.html home page]. | ||
== References == | == References == | ||
{{reflist|2}} | {{reflist|2}} |
Revision as of 16:56, 3 December 2009
Twofish [1] is a block cipher from Bruce Schneier's company Counterpane. It was designed as a candidate cipher for the AES competition, and was a finalist though not the winner. Like all candidates, it uses 128-bit blocks and supports key sizes of 128, 192 or 256 bits. It is a 16-round Feistel cipher using four key-dependent 8*8 S-boxes.
Except for the name, and using key-dependent S-boxes, it has little relationship to Blowfish; Twofish was a new design. It uses pseudo-Hadamard transforms in the round function. It has a successor named "Threefish", used in the Skein hash algorithm, a candidate in the Advanced Hash Standard contest. That is another new design.
The cipher is freely available for any use. It has a home page.
References
- ↑ Bruce Schneier, John Kelsey, Doug Whiting, David Wagner, Chris Hall, Niels Ferguson (1998), Twofish: A 128-Bit Block Cipher