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TLS Cryptography In-Depth

You're reading from  TLS Cryptography In-Depth

Product type Book
Published in Jan 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804611951
Pages 712 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Authors (2):
Dr. Paul Duplys Dr. Paul Duplys
Profile icon Dr. Paul Duplys
Dr. Roland Schmitz Dr. Roland Schmitz
Profile icon Dr. Roland Schmitz
View More author details

Table of Contents (30) Chapters

Preface 1. Part I Getting Started
2. Chapter 1: The Role of Cryptography in the Connected World 3. Chapter 2: Secure Channel and the CIA Triad 4. Chapter 3: A Secret to Share 5. Chapter 4: Encryption and Decryption 6. Chapter 5: Entity Authentication 7. Chapter 6: Transport Layer Security at a Glance 8. Part II Shaking Hands
9. Chapter 7: Public-Key Cryptography 10. Chapter 8: Elliptic Curves 11. Chapter 9: Digital Signatures 12. Chapter 10: Digital Certificates and Certification Authorities 13. Chapter 11: Hash Functions and Message Authentication Codes 14. Chapter 12: Secrets and Keys in TLS 1.3 15. Chapter 13: TLS Handshake Protocol Revisited 16. Part III Off the Record
17. Chapter 14: Block Ciphers and Their Modes of Operation 18. Chapter 15: Authenticated Encryption 19. Chapter 16: The Galois Counter Mode 20. Chapter 17: TLS Record Protocol Revisited 21. Chapter 18: TLS Cipher Suites 22. Part IV Bleeding Hearts and Biting Poodles
23. Chapter 19: Attacks on Cryptography 24. Chapter 20: Attacks on the TLS Handshake Protocol 25. Chapter 21: Attacks on the TLS Record Protocol 26. Chapter 22: Attacks on TLS Implementations 27. Bibliography
28. Index
29. Other Books You Might Enjoy

14.4 Modes of operation

In the previous sections, we have discussed in detail how a block cipher encrypts a single block of plaintext data. But how should we proceed when faced with a large number of blocks? There are several possible answers to this question, each coming with its own advantages and disadvantages. The different approaches for encrypting a large number of blocks using a certain block cipher are called modes of operation.

As of the writing of this book, the following block cipher modes are approved by NIST:

  • The modes ECB, CBC, OFB, CFB, CTR, XTS-AES, FF1, and FF3, which can be used to achieve confidentiality

  • CMAC mode, which can be used to achieve authentication

  • The CCM, GCM, KW, KWP, and TKW modes, which combine confidentiality and message authentication

14.4.1 ECB mode

The Electronic Code Book (ECB) mode, shown in Figure 14.6, is the most straightforward mode of operation, where the ciphertext is obtained by directly applying the block cipher to the plaintext...

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