CAST-128

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CAST-128
General
DesignersCarlisle Adams and Stafford Tavares
First published1996
SuccessorsCAST-256
Cipher detail
Key sizes40 to 128 bits
Block sizes64 bits
StructureFeistel network
Rounds12 or 16
Three rounds of the CAST-128 block cipher

In cryptography, CAST-128 (alternatively CAST5) is a symmetric-key block cipher used in a number of products, notably as the default cipher in some versions of GPG and PGP. It has also been approved for Government of Canada use by the Communications Security Establishment. The algorithm was created in 1996 by Carlisle Adams and Stafford Tavares using the CAST design procedure.[1]

Another member of the CAST family of ciphers, CAST-256 (a former AES candidate) was derived from CAST-128. According to some sources, the CAST name is based on the initials of its inventors, though Bruce Schneier reports the authors' claim that "the name should conjure up images of randomness".[2]

CAST-128 is a 12- or 16-round Feistel network with a 64-bit block size and a key size of between 40 and 128 bits (but only in 8-bit increments). The full 16 rounds are used when the key size is longer than 80 bits.[3]

Components include large 8×32-bit S-boxes based on bent functions, key-dependent rotations, modular addition and subtraction, and XOR operations. There are three alternating types of round function, but they are similar in structure and differ only in the choice of the exact operation (addition, subtraction or XOR) at various points.

Although Entrust holds a patent on the CAST design procedure, CAST-128 is available worldwide on a royalty-free basis for commercial and non-commercial uses.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Carlisle M. Adams (1997). "Constructing Symmetric Ciphers Using the CAST Design Procedure" (PDF). Designs, Codes, and Cryptography (12): 283–316.
  2. ^ Bruce Schneier (1996). Applied Cryptography (2nd ed.). John Wiley & Sons. pp. 334–335. ISBN 0-471-11709-9.
  3. ^ Carlisle M. Adams (1997-05-12). "CAST Design Procedure Addendum" (PDF). Entrust. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-07-14. Retrieved 2013-01-15.

External links[edit]