1CAST5_PP(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation CAST5_PP(3)
2
3
4
6 Crypt::CAST5_PP - CAST5 block cipher in pure Perl
7
9 use Crypt::CBC;
10
11 my $crypt = Crypt::CBC->new({
12 key => "secret key",
13 cipher => "CAST5_PP",
14 });
15
16 my $message = "All mimsy were the borogoves";
17 my $ciphertext = $crypt->encrypt($message);
18 print unpack("H*", $ciphertext), "\n";
19
20 my $plaintext = $crypt->decrypt($ciphertext);
21 print $plaintext, "\n";
22
24 This module provides a pure Perl implementation of the CAST5 block
25 cipher. CAST5 is also known as CAST-128. It is a product of the CAST
26 design procedure developed by C. Adams and S. Tavares.
27
28 The CAST5 cipher is available royalty-free.
29
31 blocksize
32 Returns the CAST5 block size, which is 8 bytes. This function exists so
33 that Crypt::CAST5_PP can work with Crypt::CBC.
34
35 keysize
36 Returns the maximum CAST5 key size, 16 bytes.
37
38 new
39 $cast5 = Crypt::CAST5_PP->new($key);
40
41 Create a new encryption object. If the optional key parameter is given,
42 it will be passed to the init() function.
43
44 init
45 $cast5->init($key);
46
47 Set or change the encryption key to be used. The key must be from 40
48 bits (5 bytes) to 128 bits (16 bytes) in length. Note that if the key
49 used is 80 bits or less, encryption and decryption will be somewhat
50 faster.
51
52 It is best for the key to be random binary data, not something
53 printable like a password. A message digest function may be useful for
54 converting a password to an encryption key; see Digest::SHA1 or
55 Digest::MD5. Note that Crypt::CBC runs the given "key" through MD5 to
56 get the actual encryption key.
57
58 encrypt
59 $ciphertext = $cast5->encrypt($plaintext);
60
61 Encrypt a block of plaintext using the current encryption key, and
62 return the corresponding ciphertext. The input must be 8 bytes long,
63 and the output has the same length. Note that the encryption is in ECB
64 mode, which means that it encrypts each block independently. That can
65 leave you vulnerable to dictionary attacks, so it is generally best to
66 use some form of chaining between blocks; see Crypt::CBC.
67
68 decrypt
69 $plaintext = $cast5->decrypt($ciphertext);
70
71 Decrypt the ciphertext and return the corresponding plaintext.
72
74 Always produces untainted output, even if the input is tainted, because
75 that's what perl's pack() function does.
76
78 RFC 2144, "The CAST-128 Encryption Algorithm", C. Adams, May 1997
79
80 Crypt::CBC
81
83 Bob Mathews, <bobmathews@alumni.calpoly.edu>
84
86 Copyright (c) 2006 Bob Mathews. All rights reserved. This program is
87 free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
88 terms as Perl itself.
89
90
91
92perl v5.30.1 2020-01-29 CAST5_PP(3)