Crate aes[−][src]
Expand description
Pure Rust implementation of the Advanced Encryption Standard (a.k.a. Rijndael)
Supported backends
This crate provides multiple backends including a portable pure Rust backend as well as ones based on CPU intrinsics.
By default, it performs runtime detection of CPU intrinsics and uses them if they are available.
“soft” portable backend
As a baseline implementation, this crate provides a constant-time pure Rust implementation based on fixslicing, a more advanced form of bitslicing implemented entirely in terms of bitwise arithmetic with no use of any lookup tables or data-dependent branches.
Enabling the compact
Cargo feature will reduce the code size of this
backend at the cost of decreased performance (using a modified form of
the fixslicing technique called “semi-fixslicing”).
ARMv8 intrinsics (nightly-only)
On aarch64
targets including aarch64-apple-darwin
(Apple M1) and Linux
targets such as aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu
and aarch64-unknown-linux-musl
,
support for using AES intrinsics provided by the ARMv8 Cryptography Extensions
is available when using the nightly compiler, and can be enabled using the
armv8
crate feature.
On Linux and macOS, when the armv8
feature is enabled support for AES
intrinsics is autodetected at runtime. On other platforms the aes
target feature must be enabled via RUSTFLAGS.
x86
/x86_64
intrinsics (AES-NI)
By default this crate uses runtime detection on i686
/x86_64
targets
in order to determine if AES-NI is available, and if it is not, it will
fallback to using a constant-time software implementation.
Passing RUSTFLAGS=-Ctarget-feature=+aes,+ssse3
explicitly at compile-time
will override runtime detection and ensure that AES-NI is always used.
Programs built in this manner will crash with an illegal instruction on
CPUs which do not have AES-NI enabled.
Note: runtime detection is not possible on SGX targets. Please use the
afforementioned RUSTFLAGS
to leverage AES-NI on these targets.
Usage example
use aes::{Aes128, Block, ParBlocks};
use aes::cipher::{
BlockCipher, BlockEncrypt, BlockDecrypt, NewBlockCipher,
generic_array::GenericArray,
};
let key = GenericArray::from_slice(&[0u8; 16]);
let mut block = Block::default();
let mut block8 = ParBlocks::default();
// Initialize cipher
let cipher = Aes128::new(&key);
let block_copy = block.clone();
// Encrypt block in-place
cipher.encrypt_block(&mut block);
// And decrypt it back
cipher.decrypt_block(&mut block);
assert_eq!(block, block_copy);
// We can encrypt 8 blocks simultaneously using
// instruction-level parallelism
let block8_copy = block8.clone();
cipher.encrypt_par_blocks(&mut block8);
cipher.decrypt_par_blocks(&mut block8);
assert_eq!(block8, block8_copy);
For implementations of block cipher modes of operation see
block-modes
crate.
Re-exports
pub use cipher;
Structs
AES-128 block cipher instance
ctr
AES-128 in CTR mode
AES-192 block cipher instance
ctr
AES-192 in CTR mode
AES-256 block cipher instance
ctr
AES-256 in CTR mode
Constants
Size of an AES block (128-bits; 16-bytes)
Traits
Trait which marks a type as being a block cipher.
Decrypt-only functionality for block ciphers.
Encrypt-only functionality for block ciphers.
Instantiate a BlockCipher
algorithm.