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/usr/include/twofish.h is in libtwofish-dev 0.3-3.

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/*
 * Fast, portable, and easy-to-use Twofish implementation, 
 * Version 0.3.
 * Copyright (c) 2002 by Niels Ferguson.
 *
 * See the twofish.c file for the details of the how and why of this code.
 *
 * The author hereby grants a perpetual license to everybody to
 * use this code for any purpose as long as the copyright message is included
 * in the source code of this or any derived work.
 */


/*
 * PLATFORM FIXES
 * ==============
 *
 * The following definitions have to be fixed for each particular platform 
 * you work on. If you have a multi-platform program, you no doubt have 
 * portable definitions that you can substitute here without changing 
 * the rest of the code.
 *
 * The defaults provided here should work on most PC compilers.
 */


/* 
 * A Twofish_Byte must be an unsigned 8-bit integer.
 * It must also be the elementary data size of your C platform,
 * i.e. sizeof( Twofish_Byte ) == 1.
 */
typedef unsigned char   Twofish_Byte;

/* 
 * A Twofish_UInt32 must be an unsigned integer of at least 32 bits. 
 * 
 * This type is used only internally in the implementation, so ideally it
 * would not appear in the header file, but it is used inside the
 * Twofish_key structure which means it has to be included here.
 */
typedef unsigned int    Twofish_UInt32;


/*
 * END OF PLATFORM FIXES
 * =====================
 * 
 * You should not have to touch the rest of this file, but the code
 * in twofish.c has a few things you need to fix too.
 */


/*
 * Structure that contains a prepared Twofish key.
 * A cipher key is used in two stages. In the first stage it is converted
 * form the original form to an internal representation. 
 * This internal form is then used to encrypt and decrypt data. 
 * This structure contains the internal form. It is rather large: 4256 bytes
 * on a platform with 32-bit unsigned values.
 *
 * Treat this as an opague structure, and don't try to manipulate the
 * elements in it. I wish I could hide the inside of the structure,
 * but C doesn't allow that.
 */
typedef 
    struct 
        {
        Twofish_UInt32 s[4][256];   /* pre-computed S-boxes */
        Twofish_UInt32 K[40];       /* Round key words */
        }
    Twofish_key;


/*
 * Initialise and test the Twofish implementation. 
 * 
 * This function MUST be called before any other function in the 
 * Twofish implementation is called.
 * It only needs to be called once.
 * 
 * Apart from initialising the implementation it performs a self test.
 * If the Twofish_fatal function is not called, the code passed the test.
 * (See the twofish.c file for details on the Twofish_fatal function.)
 */
extern void Twofish_initialise();


/*
 * Convert a cipher key to the internal form used for 
 * encryption and decryption.
 * 
 * The cipher key is an array of bytes; the Twofish_Byte type is 
 * defined above to a type suitable on your platform. 
 *
 * Any key must be converted to an internal form in the Twofisk_key structure
 * before it can be used.
 * The encryption and decryption functions only work with the internal form.
 * The conversion to internal form need only be done once for each key value.
 *
 * Be sure to wipe all key storage, including the Twofish_key structure, 
 * once you are done with the key data. 
 * A simple memset( TwofishKey, 0, sizeof( TwofishKey ) ) will do just fine.
 *
 * Unlike most implementations, this one allows any key size from 0 bytes 
 * to 32 bytes. According to the Twofish specifications, 
 * irregular key sizes are handled by padding the key with zeroes at the end 
 * until the key size is 16, 24, or 32 bytes, whichever
 * comes first. Note that each key of irregular size is equivalent to exactly
 * one key of 16, 24, or 32 bytes.
 *
 * WARNING: Short keys have low entropy, and result in low security.
 * Anything less than 8 bytes is utterly insecure. For good security
 * use at least 16 bytes. I prefer to use 32-byte keys to prevent
 * any collision attacks on the key.
 *
 * The key length argument key_len must be in the proper range.
 * If key_len is not in the range 0,...,32 this routine attempts to generate 
 * a fatal error (depending on the code environment), 
 * and at best (or worst) returns without having done anything.
 *
 * Arguments:
 * key      Array of key bytes
 * key_len  Number of key bytes, must be in the range 0,1,...,32. 
 * xkey     Pointer to an Twofish_key structure that will be filled 
 *             with the internal form of the cipher key.
 */
extern void Twofish_prepare_key( 
                                Twofish_Byte key[],
                                int key_len, 
                                Twofish_key * xkey  
                                );


/*
 * Encrypt a single block of data.
 *
 * This function encrypts a single block of 16 bytes of data.
 * If you want to encrypt a larger or variable-length message, 
 * you will have to use a cipher mode, such as CBC or CTR. 
 * These are outside the scope of this implementation.
 *
 * The xkey structure is not modified by this routine, and can be
 * used for further encryption and decryption operations.
 *
 * Arguments:
 * xkey     pointer to Twofish_key, internal form of the key
 *              produces by Twofish_prepare_key()
 * p        Plaintext to be encrypted
 * c        Place to store the ciphertext
 */
extern void Twofish_encrypt( 
                            Twofish_key * xkey,
                            Twofish_Byte p[16], 
                            Twofish_Byte c[16]
                            );


/*
 * Decrypt a single block of data.
 *
 * This function decrypts a single block of 16 bytes of data.
 * If you want to decrypt a larger or variable-length message, 
 * you will have to use a cipher mode, such as CBC or CTR. 
 * These are outside the scope of this implementation.
 *
 * The xkey structure is not modified by this routine, and can be
 * used for further encryption and decryption operations.
 *
 * Arguments:
 * xkey     pointer to Twofish_key, internal form of the key
 *              produces by Twofish_prepare_key()
 * c        Ciphertext to be decrypted
 * p        Place to store the plaintext
 */
extern void Twofish_decrypt( 
                            Twofish_key * xkey,
                            Twofish_Byte c[16], 
                            Twofish_Byte p[16]
                            );