Network Working Group                                         B. Kaliski
Request for Comments: 2898                              RSA Laboratories
Category: Informational                                   September 2000


          PKCS #5: Password-Based Cryptography Specification
                             Version 2.0

Status of this Memo

  This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does
  not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this
  memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000).  All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

  This memo represents a republication of PKCS #5 v2.0 from RSA
  Laboratories' Public-Key Cryptography Standards (PKCS) series, and
  change control is retained within the PKCS process.  The body of this
  document, except for the security considerations section, is taken
  directly from that specification.

  This document provides recommendations for the implementation of
  password-based cryptography, covering key derivation functions,
  encryption schemes, message-authentication schemes, and ASN.1 syntax
  identifying the techniques.

  The recommendations are intended for general application within
  computer and communications systems, and as such include a fair
  amount of flexibility. They are particularly intended for the
  protection of sensitive information such as private keys, as in PKCS
  #8 [25]. It is expected that application standards and implementation
  profiles based on these specifications may include additional
  constraints.

  Other cryptographic techniques based on passwords, such as password-
  based key entity authentication and key establishment protocols
  [4][5][26] are outside the scope of this document.  Guidelines for
  the selection of passwords are also outside the scope.








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Table of Contents

  1.   Introduction ...............................................  3
  2.   Notation ...................................................  3
  3.   Overview ...................................................  4
  4.   Salt and iteration count ...................................  6
      4.1  Salt ...................................................  6
      4.2  Iteration count ........................................  8
  5.   Key derivation functions ...................................  8
      5.1  PBKDF1 .................................................  9
      5.2  PBKDF2 .................................................  9
  6.   Encryption schemes ......................................... 11
      6.1  PBES1 .................................................. 12
           6.1.1  Encryption operation ............................ 12
           6.1.2  Decryption operation ............................ 13
      6.2  PBES2 .................................................. 14
           6.2.1  Encryption operation ............................ 14
           6.2.2  Decryption operation ............................ 15
  7.   Message authentication schemes ............................. 15
      7.1  PBMAC1 ................................................. 16
           7.1.1  MAC generation .................................. 16
           7.1.2  MAC verification ................................ 16
  8.   Security Considerations .................................... 17
  9.   Author's Address............................................ 17
  A.   ASN.1 syntax ............................................... 18
      A.1  PBKDF1 ................................................. 18
      A.2  PBKDF2 ................................................. 18
      A.3  PBES1 .................................................. 20
      A.4  PBES2 .................................................. 20
      A.5  PBMAC1 ................................................. 21
  B.   Supporting techniques ...................................... 22
      B.1  Pseudorandom functions ................................. 22
      B.2  Encryption schemes ..................................... 23
      B.3  Message authentication schemes ......................... 26
  C.   ASN.1 module ............................................... 26
  Intellectual Property Considerations ............................ 30
  Revision history ................................................ 30
  References ...................................................... 31
  Contact Information & About PKCS ................................ 33
  Full Copyright Statement ........................................ 34











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1. Introduction

  This document provides recommendations for the implementation of
  password-based cryptography, covering the following aspects:

  -  key derivation functions
  -  encryption schemes
  -  message-authentication schemes
  -  ASN.1 syntax identifying the techniques

  The recommendations are intended for general application within
  computer and communications systems, and as such include a fair
  amount of flexibility. They are particularly intended for the
  protection of sensitive information such as private keys, as in PKCS
  #8 [25]. It is expected that application standards and implementation
  profiles based on these specifications may include additional
  constraints.

  Other cryptographic techniques based on passwords, such as password-
  based key entity authentication and key establishment protocols
  [4][5][26] are outside the scope of this document.  Guidelines for
  the selection of passwords are also outside the scope.

  This document supersedes PKCS #5 version 1.5 [24], but includes
  compatible techniques.

2. Notation

  C       ciphertext, an octet string

  c       iteration count, a positive integer

  DK      derived key, an octet string

  dkLen   length in octets of derived key, a positive integer

  EM      encoded message, an octet string

  Hash    underlying hash function

  hLen    length in octets of pseudorandom function output, a positive
          integer

  l       length in blocks of derived key, a positive integer

  IV      initialization vector, an octet string

  K       encryption key, an octet string



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  KDF     key derivation function

  M       message, an octet string

  P       password, an octet string

  PRF     underlying pseudorandom function

  PS      padding string, an octet string

  psLen   length in octets of padding string, a positive integer

  S       salt, an octet string

  T       message authentication code, an octet string

  T_1, ..., T_l, U_1, ..., U_c
          intermediate values, octet strings

  01, 02, ..., 08
          octets with value 1, 2, ..., 8

  \xor    bit-wise exclusive-or of two octet strings

  ||  ||  octet length operator

  ||      concatenation operator

  <i..j>  substring extraction operator: extracts octets i through j,
          0 <= i <= j

3. Overview

  In many applications of public-key cryptography, user security is
  ultimately dependent on one or more secret text values or passwords.
  Since a password is not directly applicable as a key to any
  conventional cryptosystem, however, some processing of the password
  is required to perform cryptographic operations with it. Moreover, as
  passwords are often chosen from a relatively small space, special
  care is required in that processing to defend against search attacks.

  A general approach to password-based cryptography, as described by
  Morris and Thompson [8] for the protection of password tables, is to
  combine a password with a salt to produce a key. The salt can be
  viewed as an index into a large set of keys derived from the
  password, and need not be kept secret. Although it may be possible
  for an opponent to construct a table of possible passwords (a so-
  called "dictionary attack"), constructing a table of possible keys



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  will be difficult, since there will be many possible keys for each
  password.  An opponent will thus be limited to searching through
  passwords separately for each salt.

  Another approach to password-based cryptography is to construct key
  derivation techniques that are relatively expensive, thereby
  increasing the cost of exhaustive search. One way to do this is to
  include an iteration count in the key derivation technique,
  indicating how many times to iterate some underlying function by
  which keys are derived. A modest number of iterations, say 1000, is
  not likely to be a burden for legitimate parties when computing a
  key, but will be a significant burden for opponents.

  Salt and iteration count formed the basis for password-based
  encryption in PKCS #5 v1.5, and adopted here as well for the various
  cryptographic operations. Thus, password-based key derivation as
  defined here is a function of a password, a salt, and an iteration
  count, where the latter two quantities need not be kept secret.

  From a password-based key derivation function, it is straightforward
  to define password-based encryption and message authentication
  schemes. As in PKCS #5 v1.5, the password-based encryption schemes
  here are based on an underlying, conventional encryption scheme,
  where the key for the conventional scheme is derived from the
  password. Similarly, the password-based message authentication scheme
  is based on an underlying conventional scheme. This two-layered
  approach makes the password-based techniques modular in terms of the
  underlying techniques they can be based on.

  It is expected that the password-based key derivation functions may
  find other applications than just the encryption and message
  authentication schemes defined here. For instance, one might derive a
  set of keys with a single application of a key derivation function,
  rather than derive each key with a separate application of the
  function. The keys in the set would be obtained as substrings of the
  output of the key derivation function. This approach might be
  employed as part of key establishment in a session-oriented protocol.
  Another application is password checking, where the output of the key
  derivation function is stored (along with the salt and iteration
  count) for the purposes of subsequent verification of a password.

  Throughout this document, a password is considered to be an octet
  string of arbitrary length whose interpretation as a text string is
  unspecified. In the interest of interoperability, however, it is
  recommended that applications follow some common text encoding rules.
  ASCII and UTF-8 [27] are two possibilities. (ASCII is a subset of
  UTF-8.)




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  Although the selection of passwords is outside the scope of this
  document, guidelines have been published [17] that may well be taken
  into account.

4. Salt and Iteration Count

  Inasmuch as salt and iteration count are central to the techniques
  defined in this document, some further discussion is warranted.

4.1 Salt

  A salt in password-based cryptography has traditionally served the
  purpose of producing a large set of keys corresponding to a given
  password, among which one is selected at random according to the
  salt. An individual key in the set is selected by applying a key
  derivation function KDF, as

                             DK = KDF (P, S)

  where DK is the derived key, P is the password, and S is the salt.
  This has two benefits:

     1. It is difficult for an opponent to precompute all the keys
        corresponding to a dictionary of passwords, or even the most
        likely keys. If the salt is 64 bits long, for instance, there
        will be as many as 2^64 keys for each password. An opponent is
        thus limited to searching for passwords after a password-based
        operation has been performed and the salt is known.

     2. It is unlikely that the same key will be selected twice.
        Again, if the salt is 64 bits long, the chance of "collision"
        between keys does not become significant until about 2^32 keys
        have been produced, according to the Birthday Paradox. This
        addresses some of the concerns about interactions between
        multiple uses of the same key, which may apply for some
        encryption and authentication techniques.

  In password-based encryption, the party encrypting a message can gain
  assurance that these benefits are realized simply by selecting a
  large and sufficiently random salt when deriving an encryption key
  from a password. A party generating a message authentication code can
  gain such assurance in a similar fashion.

  The party decrypting a message or verifying a message authentication
  code, however, cannot be sure that a salt supplied by another party
  has actually been generated at random. It is possible, for instance,
  that the salt may have been copied from another password-based
  operation, in an attempt to exploit interactions between multiple



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  uses of the same key. For instance, suppose two legitimate parties
  exchange a encrypted message, where the encryption key is an 80-bit
  key derived from a shared password with some salt. An opponent could
  take the salt from that encryption and provide it to one of the
  parties as though it were for a 40-bit key. If the party reveals the
  result of decryption with the 40-bit key, the opponent may be able to
  solve for the 40-bit key. In the case that 40-bit key is the first
  half of the 80-bit key, the opponent can then readily solve for the
  remaining 40 bits of the 80-bit key.

  To defend against such attacks, either the interaction between
  multiple uses of the same key should be carefully analyzed, or the
  salt should contain data that explicitly distinguishes between
  different operations.  For instance, the salt might have an
  additional, non-random octet that specifies whether the derived key
  is for encryption, for message authentication, or for some other
  operation.

  Based on this, the following is recommended for salt selection:

     1. If there is no concern about interactions between multiple uses
        of the same key (or a prefix of that key) with the password-
        based encryption and authentication techniques supported for a
        given password, then the salt may be generated at random and
        need not be checked for a particular format by the party
        receiving the salt. It should be at least eight octets (64
        bits) long.

     2. Otherwise, the salt should contain data that explicitly
        distinguishes between different operations and different key
        lengths, in addition to a random part that is at least eight
        octets long, and this data should be checked or regenerated by
        the party receiving the salt. For instance, the salt could have
        an additional non-random octet that specifies the purpose of
        the derived key. Alternatively, it could be the encoding of a
        structure that specifies detailed information about the derived
        key, such as the encryption or authentication technique and a
        sequence number among the different keys derived from the
        password.  The particular format of the additional data is left
        to the application.

  Note. If a random number generator or pseudorandom generator is not
  available, a deterministic alternative for generating the salt (or
  the random part of it) is to apply a password-based key derivation
  function to the password and the message M to be processed. For
  instance, the salt could be computed with a key derivation function
  as S = KDF (P, M). This approach is not recommended if the message M




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  is known to belong to a small message space (e.g., "Yes" or "No"),
  however, since then there will only be a small number of possible
  salts.

4.2 Iteration Count

  An iteration count has traditionally served the purpose of increasing
  the cost of producing keys from a password, thereby also increasing
  the difficulty of attack. For the methods in this document, a minimum
  of 1000 iterations is recommended. This will increase the cost of
  exhaustive search for passwords significantly, without a noticeable
  impact in the cost of deriving individual keys.

5. Key Derivation Functions

  A key derivation function produces a derived key from a base key and
  other parameters. In a password-based key derivation function, the
  base key is a password and the other parameters are a salt value and
  an iteration count, as outlined in Section 3.

  The primary application of the password-based key derivation
  functions defined here is in the encryption schemes in Section 6 and
  the message authentication scheme in Section 7. Other applications
  are certainly possible, hence the independent definition of these
  functions.

  Two functions are specified in this section: PBKDF1 and PBKDF2.
  PBKDF2 is recommended for new applications; PBKDF1 is included only
  for compatibility with existing applications, and is not recommended
  for new applications.

  A typical application of the key derivation functions defined here
  might include the following steps:

     1. Select a salt S and an iteration count c, as outlined in
        Section 4.

     2. Select a length in octets for the derived key, dkLen.

     3. Apply the key derivation function to the password, the salt,
        the iteration count and the key length to produce a derived
        key.

     4. Output the derived key.

  Any number of keys may be derived from a password by varying the
  salt, as described in Section 3.




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5.1 PBKDF1

  PBKDF1 applies a hash function, which shall be MD2 [6], MD5 [19] or
  SHA-1 [18], to derive keys. The length of the derived key is bounded
  by the length of the hash function output, which is 16 octets for MD2
  and MD5 and 20 octets for SHA-1. PBKDF1 is compatible with the key
  derivation process in PKCS #5 v1.5.

  PBKDF1 is recommended only for compatibility with existing
  applications since the keys it produces may not be large enough for
  some applications.

  PBKDF1 (P, S, c, dkLen)

  Options:        Hash       underlying hash function

  Input:          P          password, an octet string
                  S          salt, an eight-octet string
                  c          iteration count, a positive integer
                  dkLen      intended length in octets of derived key,
                             a positive integer, at most 16 for MD2 or
                             MD5 and 20 for SHA-1

  Output:         DK         derived key, a dkLen-octet string

  Steps:

     1. If dkLen > 16 for MD2 and MD5, or dkLen > 20 for SHA-1, output
        "derived key too long" and stop.

     2. Apply the underlying hash function Hash for c iterations to the
        concatenation of the password P and the salt S, then extract
        the first dkLen octets to produce a derived key DK:

                  T_1 = Hash (P || S) ,
                  T_2 = Hash (T_1) ,
                  ...
                  T_c = Hash (T_{c-1}) ,
                  DK = Tc<0..dkLen-1>

     3. Output the derived key DK.

5.2 PBKDF2

  PBKDF2 applies a pseudorandom function (see Appendix B.1 for an
  example) to derive keys. The length of the derived key is essentially
  unbounded. (However, the maximum effective search space for the




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  derived key may be limited by the structure of the underlying
  pseudorandom function. See Appendix B.1 for further discussion.)
  PBKDF2 is recommended for new applications.

  PBKDF2 (P, S, c, dkLen)

  Options:        PRF        underlying pseudorandom function (hLen
                             denotes the length in octets of the
                             pseudorandom function output)

  Input:          P          password, an octet string
                  S          salt, an octet string
                  c          iteration count, a positive integer
                  dkLen      intended length in octets of the derived
                             key, a positive integer, at most
                             (2^32 - 1) * hLen

  Output:         DK         derived key, a dkLen-octet string

  Steps:

     1. If dkLen > (2^32 - 1) * hLen, output "derived key too long" and
        stop.

     2. Let l be the number of hLen-octet blocks in the derived key,
        rounding up, and let r be the number of octets in the last
        block:

                  l = CEIL (dkLen / hLen) ,
                  r = dkLen - (l - 1) * hLen .

        Here, CEIL (x) is the "ceiling" function, i.e. the smallest
        integer greater than, or equal to, x.

     3. For each block of the derived key apply the function F defined
        below to the password P, the salt S, the iteration count c, and
        the block index to compute the block:

                  T_1 = F (P, S, c, 1) ,
                  T_2 = F (P, S, c, 2) ,
                  ...
                  T_l = F (P, S, c, l) ,

        where the function F is defined as the exclusive-or sum of the
        first c iterates of the underlying pseudorandom function PRF
        applied to the password P and the concatenation of the salt S
        and the block index i:




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                  F (P, S, c, i) = U_1 \xor U_2 \xor ... \xor U_c

        where

                  U_1 = PRF (P, S || INT (i)) ,
                  U_2 = PRF (P, U_1) ,
                  ...
                  U_c = PRF (P, U_{c-1}) .

        Here, INT (i) is a four-octet encoding of the integer i, most
        significant octet first.

     4. Concatenate the blocks and extract the first dkLen octets to
        produce a derived key DK:

                  DK = T_1 || T_2 ||  ...  || T_l<0..r-1>

     5. Output the derived key DK.

  Note. The construction of the function F follows a "belt-and-
  suspenders" approach. The iterates U_i are computed recursively to
  remove a degree of parallelism from an opponent; they are exclusive-
  ored together to reduce concerns about the recursion degenerating
  into a small set of values.

6. Encryption Schemes

  An encryption scheme, in the symmetric setting, consists of an
  encryption operation and a decryption operation, where the encryption
  operation produces a ciphertext from a message under a key, and the
  decryption operation recovers the message from the ciphertext under
  the same key. In a password-based encryption scheme, the key is a
  password.

  A typical application of a password-based encryption scheme is a
  private-key protection method, where the message contains private-key
  information, as in PKCS #8. The encryption schemes defined here would
  be suitable encryption algorithms in that context.

  Two schemes are specified in this section: PBES1 and PBES2. PBES2 is
  recommended for new applications; PBES1 is included only for
  compatibility with existing applications, and is not recommended for
  new applications.








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6.1   PBES1

  PBES1 combines the PBKDF1 function (Section 5.1) with an underlying
  block cipher, which shall be either DES [15] or RC2(tm) [21] in CBC
  mode [16]. PBES1 is compatible with the encryption scheme in PKCS #5
  v1.5.

  PBES1 is recommended only for compatibility with existing
  applications, since it supports only two underlying encryption
  schemes, each of which has a key size (56 or 64 bits) that may not be
  large enough for some applications.

6.1.1   Encryption Operation

  The encryption operation for PBES1 consists of the following steps,
  which encrypt a message M under a password P to produce a ciphertext
  C:

     1. Select an eight-octet salt S and an iteration count c, as
        outlined in Section 4.

     2. Apply the PBKDF1 key derivation function (Section 5.1) to the
        password P, the salt S, and the iteration count c to produce at
        derived key DK of length 16 octets:

                DK = PBKDF1 (P, S, c, 16) .

     3. Separate the derived key DK into an encryption key K consisting
        of the first eight octets of DK and an initialization vector IV
        consisting of the next eight octets:

                K   = DK<0..7> ,
                IV  = DK<8..15> .

     4. Concatenate M and a padding string PS to form an encoded
        message EM:

                EM = M || PS ,

        where the padding string PS consists of 8-(||M|| mod 8) octets
        each with value 8-(||M|| mod 8). The padding string PS will
        satisfy one of the following statements:

                PS = 01, if ||M|| mod 8 = 7 ;
                PS = 02 02, if ||M|| mod 8 = 6 ;
                ...
                PS = 08 08 08 08 08 08 08 08, if ||M|| mod 8 = 0.




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        The length in octets of the encoded message will be a multiple
        of eight and it will be possible to recover the message M
        unambiguously from the encoded message. (This padding rule is
        taken from RFC 1423 [3].)

     5. Encrypt the encoded message EM with the underlying block cipher
        (DES or RC2) in cipher block chaining mode under the encryption
        key K with initialization vector IV to produce the ciphertext
        C. For DES, the key K shall be considered as a 64-bit encoding
        of a 56-bit DES key with parity bits ignored (see [9]). For
        RC2, the "effective key bits" shall be 64 bits.

     6.   Output the ciphertext C.

  The salt S and the iteration count c may be conveyed to the party
  performing decryption in an AlgorithmIdentifier value (see Appendix
  A.3).

6.1.2 Decryption Operation

  The decryption operation for PBES1 consists of the following steps,
  which decrypt a ciphertext C under a password P to recover a message
  M:

     1. Obtain the eight-octet salt S and the iteration count c.

     2. Apply the PBKDF1 key derivation function (Section 5.1) to the
        password P, the salt S, and the iteration count c to produce a
        derived key DK of length 16 octets:

                DK = PBKDF1 (P, S, c, 16)

     3. Separate the derived key DK into an encryption key K consisting
        of the first eight octets of DK and an initialization vector IV
        consisting of the next eight octets:

                K = DK<0..7> ,
                IV  = DK<8..15> .

     4. Decrypt the ciphertext C with the underlying block cipher (DES
        or RC2) in cipher block chaining mode under the encryption key
        K with initialization vector IV to recover an encoded message
        EM. If the length in octets of the ciphertext C is not a
        multiple of eight, output "decryption error" and stop.

     5. Separate the encoded message EM into a message M and a padding
        string PS:




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                EM = M || PS ,

        where the padding string PS consists of some number psLen
        octets each with value psLen, where psLen is between 1 and 8.
        If it is not possible to separate the encoded message EM in
        this manner, output "decryption error" and stop.

     6. Output the recovered message M.

6.2 PBES2

  PBES2 combines a password-based key derivation function, which shall
  be PBKDF2 (Section 5.2) for this version of PKCS #5, with an
  underlying encryption scheme (see Appendix B.2 for examples). The key
  length and any other parameters for the underlying encryption scheme
  depend on the scheme.

  PBES2 is recommended for new applications.

6.2.1   Encryption Operation

  The encryption operation for PBES2 consists of the following steps,
  which encrypt a message M under a password P to produce a ciphertext
  C, applying a selected key derivation function KDF and a selected
  underlying encryption scheme:

     1. Select a salt S and an iteration count c, as outlined in
        Section 4.

     2. Select the length in octets, dkLen, for the derived key for the
        underlying encryption scheme.

     3. Apply the selected key derivation function to the password P,
        the salt S, and the iteration count c to produce a derived key
        DK of length dkLen octets:

                DK = KDF (P, S, c, dkLen) .

     4. Encrypt the message M with the underlying encryption scheme
        under the derived key DK to produce a ciphertext C. (This step
        may involve selection of parameters such as an initialization
        vector and padding, depending on the underlying scheme.)

     5. Output the ciphertext C.







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  The salt S, the iteration count c, the key length dkLen, and
  identifiers for the key derivation function and the underlying
  encryption scheme may be conveyed to the party performing decryption
  in an AlgorithmIdentifier value (see Appendix A.4).

6.2.2   Decryption Operation

  The decryption operation for PBES2 consists of the following steps,
  which decrypt a ciphertext C under a password P to recover a message
  M:

     1. Obtain the salt S for the operation.

     2. Obtain the iteration count c for the key derivation function.

     3. Obtain the key length in octets, dkLen, for the derived key for
        the underlying encryption scheme.

     4. Apply the selected key derivation function to the password P,
        the salt S, and the iteration count c to produce a derived key
        DK of length dkLen octets:

                DK = KDF (P, S, c, dkLen) .

     5. Decrypt the ciphertext C with the underlying encryption scheme
        under the derived key DK to recover a message M. If the
        decryption function outputs "decryption error," then output
        "decryption error" and stop.

     6. Output the recovered message M.

7. Message Authentication Schemes

  A message authentication scheme consists of a MAC (message
  authentication code) generation operation and a MAC verification
  operation, where the MAC generation operation produces a message
  authentication code from a message under a key, and the MAC
  verification operation verifies the message authentication code under
  the same key. In a password-based message authentication scheme, the
  key is a password.

  One scheme is specified in this section: PBMAC1.









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7.1 PBMAC1

  PBMAC1 combines a password-based key derivation function, which shall
  be PBKDF2  (Section 5.2) for this version of PKCS #5, with an
  underlying message authentication scheme (see Appendix B.3 for an
  example). The key length and any other parameters for the underlying
  message authentication scheme depend on the scheme.

7.1.1 MAC Generation

  The MAC generation operation for PBMAC1 consists of the following
  steps, which process a message M under a password P to generate a
  message authentication code T, applying a selected key derivation
  function KDF and a selected underlying message authentication scheme:

     1. Select a salt S and an iteration count c, as outlined in
        Section 4.

     2. Select a key length in octets, dkLen, for the derived key for
        the underlying message authentication function.

     3. Apply the selected key derivation function to the password P,
        the salt S, and the iteration count c to produce a derived key
        DK of length dkLen octets:

                DK = KDF (P, S, c, dkLen) .

     4. Process the message M with the underlying message
        authentication scheme under the derived key DK to generate a
        message authentication code T.

     5. Output the message authentication code T.

  The salt S, the iteration count c, the key length dkLen, and
  identifiers for the key derivation function and underlying message
  authentication scheme may be conveyed to the party performing
  verification in an AlgorithmIdentifier value (see Appendix A.5).

7.1.2   MAC Verification

  The MAC verification operation for PBMAC1 consists of the following
  steps, which process a message M under a password P to verify a
  message authentication code T:

     1. Obtain the salt S and the iteration count c.

     2. Obtain the key length in octets, dkLen, for the derived key for
        the underlying message authentication scheme.



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     3. Apply the selected key derivation function to the password P,
        the salt S, and the iteration count c to produce a derived key
        DK of length dkLen octets:

                DK = KDF (P, S, c, dkLen) .

     4. Process the message M with the underlying message
        authentication scheme under the derived key DK to verify the
        message authentication code T.

     5. If the message authentication code verifies, output "correct";
        else output "incorrect."

8. Security Considerations

  Password-based cryptography is generally limited in the security that
  it can provide, particularly for methods such as those defined in
  this document where off-line password search is possible. While the
  use of salt and iteration count can increase the complexity of attack
  (see Section 4 for recommendations), it is essential that passwords
  are selected well, and relevant guidelines (e.g., [17]) should be
  taken into account. It is also important that passwords be protected
  well if stored.

  In general, different keys should be derived from a password for
  different uses to minimize the possibility of unintended
  interactions. For password-based encryption with a single algorithm,
  a random salt is sufficient to ensure that different keys will be
  produced. In certain other situations, as outlined in Section 4, a
  structured salt is necessary. The recommendations in Section 4 should
  thus be taken into account when selecting the salt value.

9. Author's Address

  Burt Kaliski
  RSA Laboratories
  20 Crosby Drive
  Bedford, MA 01730 USA

  EMail: [email protected]











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APPENDICES

A. ASN.1 Syntax

  This section defines ASN.1 syntax for the key derivation functions,
  the encryption schemes, the message authentication scheme, and
  supporting techniques. The intended application of these definitions
  includes PKCS #8 and other syntax for key management, encrypted data,
  and integrity-protected data. (Various aspects of ASN.1 are specified
  in several ISO/IEC standards [9][10][11][12][13][14].)

  The object identifier pkcs-5 identifies the arc of the OID tree from
  which the PKCS #5-specific OIDs in this section are derived:

  rsadsi OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) 113549}
  pkcs OBJECT IDENTIFIER   ::= {rsadsi 1}
  pkcs-5 OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {pkcs 5}

A.1   PBKDF1

  No object identifier is given for PBKDF1, as the object identifiers
  for PBES1 are sufficient for existing applications and PBKDF2 is
  recommended for new applications.

A.2   PBKDF2

  The object identifier id-PBKDF2 identifies the PBKDF2 key derivation
  function (Section 5.2).

  id-PBKDF2 OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {pkcs-5 12}

  The parameters field associated with this OID in an
  AlgorithmIdentifier shall have type PBKDF2-params:

  PBKDF2-params ::= SEQUENCE {
      salt CHOICE {
          specified OCTET STRING,
          otherSource AlgorithmIdentifier {{PBKDF2-SaltSources}}
      },
      iterationCount INTEGER (1..MAX),
      keyLength INTEGER (1..MAX) OPTIONAL,
      prf AlgorithmIdentifier {{PBKDF2-PRFs}} DEFAULT
      algid-hmacWithSHA1 }

  The fields of type PKDF2-params have the following meanings:






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  -  salt specifies the salt value, or the source of the salt value.
     It shall either be an octet string or an algorithm ID with an OID
     in the set PBKDF2-SaltSources, which is reserved for future
     versions of PKCS #5.

     The salt-source approach is intended to indicate how the salt
     value is to be generated as a function of parameters in the
     algorithm ID, application data, or both. For instance, it may
     indicate that the salt value is produced from the encoding of a
     structure that specifies detailed information about the derived
     key as suggested in Section 4.1. Some of the information may be
     carried elsewhere, e.g., in the encryption algorithm ID. However,
     such facilities are deferred to a future version of PKCS #5.

     In this version, an application may achieve the benefits mentioned
     in Section 4.1 by choosing a particular interpretation of the salt
     value in the specified alternative.

  PBKDF2-SaltSources ALGORITHM-IDENTIFIER ::= { ... }

  -  iterationCount specifies the iteration count. The maximum
     iteration count allowed depends on the implementation. It is
     expected that implementation profiles may further constrain the
     bounds.

  -  keyLength, an optional field, is the length in octets of the
     derived key. The maximum key length allowed depends on the
     implementation; it is expected that implementation profiles may
     further constrain the bounds. The field is provided for
     convenience only; the key length is not cryptographically
     protected. If there is concern about interaction between
     operations with different key lengths for a given salt (see
     Section 4.1), the salt should distinguish among the different key
     lengths.

  -  prf identifies the underlying pseudorandom function. It shall be
     an algorithm ID with an OID in the set PBKDF2-PRFs, which for this
     version of PKCS #5 shall consist of id-hmacWithSHA1 (see Appendix
     B.1.1) and any other OIDs defined by the application.

     PBKDF2-PRFs ALGORITHM-IDENTIFIER ::=
         { {NULL IDENTIFIED BY id-hmacWithSHA1}, ... }

     The default pseudorandom function is HMAC-SHA-1:

     algid-hmacWithSHA1 AlgorithmIdentifier {{PBKDF2-PRFs}} ::=
         {algorithm id-hmacWithSHA1, parameters NULL : NULL}




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A.3 PBES1

  Different object identifiers identify the PBES1 encryption scheme
  (Section 6.1) according to the underlying hash function in the key
  derivation function and the underlying block cipher, as summarized in
  the following table:

       Hash Function  Block Cipher      OID
            MD2           DES         pkcs-5.1
            MD2           RC2         pkcs-5.4
            MD5           DES         pkcs-5.3
            MD5           RC2         pkcs-5.6
           SHA-1          DES         pkcs-5.10
           SHA-1          RC2         pkcs-5.11

  pbeWithMD2AndDES-CBC OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {pkcs-5 1}
  pbeWithMD2AndRC2-CBC OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {pkcs-5 4}
  pbeWithMD5AndDES-CBC OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {pkcs-5 3}
  pbeWithMD5AndRC2-CBC OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {pkcs-5 6}
  pbeWithSHA1AndDES-CBC OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {pkcs-5 10}
  pbeWithSHA1AndRC2-CBC OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {pkcs-5 11}

  For each OID, the parameters field associated with the OID in an
  AlgorithmIdentifier shall have type PBEParameter:

  PBEParameter ::= SEQUENCE {
      salt OCTET STRING (SIZE(8)),
      iterationCount INTEGER }

  The fields of type PBEParameter have the following meanings:

  -  salt specifies the salt value, an eight-octet string.

  -  iterationCount specifies the iteration count.

A.4 PBES2

  The object identifier id-PBES2 identifies the PBES2 encryption scheme
  (Section 6.2).

  id-PBES2 OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {pkcs-5 13}

  The parameters field associated with this OID in an
  AlgorithmIdentifier shall have type PBES2-params:

  PBES2-params ::= SEQUENCE {
      keyDerivationFunc AlgorithmIdentifier {{PBES2-KDFs}},
      encryptionScheme AlgorithmIdentifier {{PBES2-Encs}} }



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  The fields of type PBES2-params have the following meanings:

  -  keyDerivationFunc identifies the underlying key derivation
     function. It shall be an algorithm ID with an OID in the set
     PBES2-KDFs, which for this version of PKCS #5 shall consist of
     id-PBKDF2 (Appendix A.2).

  PBES2-KDFs ALGORITHM-IDENTIFIER ::=
      { {PBKDF2-params IDENTIFIED BY id-PBKDF2}, ... }

  -  encryptionScheme identifies the underlying encryption scheme. It
     shall be an algorithm ID with an OID in the set PBES2-Encs, whose
     definition is left to the application. Example underlying
     encryption schemes are given in Appendix B.2.

  PBES2-Encs ALGORITHM-IDENTIFIER ::= { ... }

A.5 PBMAC1

  The object identifier id-PBMAC1 identifies the PBMAC1 message
  authentication scheme (Section 7.1).

  id-PBMAC1 OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {pkcs-5 14}

  The parameters field associated with this OID in an
  AlgorithmIdentifier shall have type PBMAC1-params:

  PBMAC1-params ::=  SEQUENCE {
      keyDerivationFunc AlgorithmIdentifier {{PBMAC1-KDFs}},
      messageAuthScheme AlgorithmIdentifier {{PBMAC1-MACs}} }

  The keyDerivationFunc field has the same meaning as the corresponding
  field of PBES2-params (Appendix A.4) except that the set of OIDs is
  PBMAC1-KDFs.

  PBMAC1-KDFs ALGORITHM-IDENTIFIER ::=
      { {PBKDF2-params IDENTIFIED BY id-PBKDF2}, ... }

  The messageAuthScheme field identifies the underlying message
  authentication scheme. It shall be an algorithm ID with an OID in the
  set PBMAC1-MACs, whose definition is left to the application. Example
  underlying encryption schemes are given in Appendix B.3.

  PBMAC1-MACs ALGORITHM-IDENTIFIER ::= { ... }







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B. Supporting Techniques

  This section gives several examples of underlying functions and
  schemes supporting the password-based schemes in Sections 5, 6 and 7.

  While these supporting techniques are appropriate for applications to
  implement, none of them is required to be implemented. It is
  expected, however, that profiles for PKCS #5 will be developed that
  specify particular supporting techniques.

  This section also gives object identifiers for the supporting
  techniques.  The object identifiers digestAlgorithm and
  encryptionAlgorithm identify the arcs from which certain algorithm
  OIDs referenced in this section are derived:

  digestAlgorithm OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {rsadsi 2}
  encryptionAlgorithm OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {rsadsi 3}

B.1 Pseudorandom functions

  An example pseudorandom function for PBKDF2 (Section 5.2) is HMAC-
  SHA-1.

B.1.1 HMAC-SHA-1

  HMAC-SHA-1 is the pseudorandom function corresponding to the HMAC
  message authentication code [7] based on the SHA-1 hash function
  [18].  The pseudorandom function is the same function by which the
  message authentication code is computed, with a full-length output.
  (The first argument to the pseudorandom function PRF serves as HMAC's
  "key," and the second serves as HMAC's "text." In the case of PBKDF2,
  the "key" is thus the password and the "text" is the salt.)  HMAC-
  SHA-1 has a variable key length and a 20-octet (160-bit) output
  value.

  Although the length of the key to HMAC-SHA-1 is essentially
  unbounded, the effective search space for pseudorandom function
  outputs may be limited by the structure of the function. In
  particular, when the key is longer than 512 bits, HMAC-SHA-1 will
  first hash it to 160 bits. Thus, even if a long derived key
  consisting of several pseudorandom function outputs is produced from
  a key, the effective search space for the derived key will be at most
  160 bits. Although the specific limitation for other key sizes
  depends on details of the HMAC construction, one should assume, to be
  conservative, that the effective search space is limited to 160 bits
  for other key sizes as well.





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  (The 160-bit limitation should not generally pose a practical
  limitation in the case of password-based cryptography, since the
  search space for a password is unlikely to be greater than 160 bits.)

  The object identifier id-hmacWithSHA1 identifies the HMAC-SHA-1
  pseudorandom function:

  id-hmacWithSHA1 OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {digestAlgorithm 7}

  The parameters field associated with this OID in an
  AlgorithmIdentifier shall have type NULL. This object identifier is
  employed in the object set PBKDF2-PRFs (Appendix A.2).

  Note. Although HMAC-SHA-1 was designed as a message authentication
  code, its proof of security is readily modified to accommodate
  requirements for a pseudorandom function, under stronger assumptions.

  A hash function may also meet the requirements of a pseudorandom
  function under certain assumptions. For instance, the direct
  application of a hash function to to the concatenation of the "key"
  and the "text" may be appropriate, provided that "text" has
  appropriate structure to prevent certain attacks. HMAC-SHA-1 is
  preferable, however, because it treats "key" and "text" as separate
  arguments and does not require "text" to have any structure.

B.2 Encryption Schemes

  Example pseudorandom functions for PBES2 (Section 6.2) are DES-CBC-
  Pad, DES-EDE2-CBC-Pad, RC2-CBC-Pad, and RC5-CBC-Pad.

  The object identifiers given in this section are intended to be
  employed in the object set PBES2-Encs (Appendix A.4).

B.2.1 DES-CBC-Pad

  DES-CBC-Pad is single-key DES [15] in CBC mode [16] with the RFC 1423
  padding operation (see Section 6.1.1). DES-CBC-Pad has an eight-octet
  encryption key and an eight-octet initialization vector.  The key is
  considered as a 64-bit encoding of a 56-bit DES key with parity bits
  ignored.

  The object identifier desCBC (defined in the NIST/OSI Implementors'
  Workshop agreements) identifies the DES-CBC-Pad encryption scheme:

  desCBC OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=
      {iso(1) identified-organization(3) oiw(14) secsig(3)
       algorithms(2) 7}




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  The parameters field associated with this OID in an
  AlgorithmIdentifier shall have type OCTET STRING (SIZE(8)),
  specifying the initialization vector for CBC mode.

B.2.2 DES-EDE3-CBC-Pad

  DES-EDE3-CBC-Pad is three-key triple-DES in CBC mode [1] with the RFC
  1423 padding operation. DES-EDE3-CBC-Pad has a 24-octet encryption
  key and an eight-octet initialization vector. The key is considered
  as the concatenation of three eight-octet keys, each of which is a
  64-bit encoding of a 56-bit DES key with parity bits ignored.

  The object identifier des-EDE3-CBC identifies the DES-EDE3-CBC-Pad
  encryption scheme:

  des-EDE3-CBC OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {encryptionAlgorithm 7}

  The parameters field associated with this OID in an
  AlgorithmIdentifier shall have type OCTET STRING (SIZE(8)),
  specifying the initialization vector for CBC mode.

  Note. An OID for DES-EDE3-CBC without padding is given in ANSI X9.52
  [1]; the one given here is preferred since it specifies padding.

B.2.3 RC2-CBC-Pad

  RC2-CBC-Pad is the RC2(tm) encryption algorithm [21] in CBC mode with
  the RFC 1423 padding operation. RC2-CBC-Pad has a variable key
  length, from one to 128 octets, a separate "effective key bits"
  parameter from one to 1024 bits that limits the effective search
  space independent of the key length, and an eight-octet
  initialization vector.

  The object identifier rc2CBC identifies the RC2-CBC-Pad encryption
  scheme:

  rc2CBC OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {encryptionAlgorithm 2}

  The parameters field associated with OID in an AlgorithmIdentifier
  shall have type RC2-CBC-Parameter:

  RC2-CBC-Parameter ::= SEQUENCE {
      rc2ParameterVersion INTEGER OPTIONAL,
      iv OCTET STRING (SIZE(8)) }







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  The fields of type RC2-CBCParameter have the following meanings:

  -  rc2ParameterVersion is a proprietary RSA Security Inc. encoding of
     the "effective key bits" for RC2. The following encodings are
     defined:

        Effective Key Bits         Encoding
                40                    160
                64                    120
               128                     58
              b >= 256                  b

  If the rc2ParameterVersion field is omitted, the "effective key bits"
  defaults to 32. (This is for backward compatibility with certain very
  old implementations.)

  -  iv is the eight-octet initialization vector.

B.2.4 RC5-CBC-Pad

  RC5-CBC-Pad is the RC5(tm) encryption algorithm [20] in CBC mode with
  a generalization of the RFC 1423 padding operation. This scheme is
  fully specified in [2]. RC5-CBC-Pad has a variable key length, from 0
  to 256 octets, and supports both a 64-bit block size and a 128-bit
  block size. For the former, it has an eight-octet initialization
  vector, and for the latter, a 16-octet initialization vector.
  RC5-CBC-Pad also has a variable number of "rounds" in the encryption
  operation, from 8 to 127.

  Note: The generalization of the padding operation is as follows. For
  RC5 with a 64-bit block size, the padding string is as defined in RFC
  1423. For RC5 with a 128-bit block size, the padding string consists
  of 16-(||M|| mod 16) octets each with value 16-(||M|| mod 16).

  The object identifier rc5-CBC-PAD [2] identifies RC5-CBC-Pad
  encryption scheme:

  rc5-CBC-PAD OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {encryptionAlgorithm 9}

  The parameters field associated with this OID in an
  AlgorithmIdentifier shall have type RC5-CBC-Parameters:

  RC5-CBC-Parameters ::= SEQUENCE {
      version INTEGER {v1-0(16)} (v1-0),
      rounds INTEGER (8..127),
      blockSizeInBits INTEGER (64 | 128),
      iv OCTET STRING OPTIONAL }




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  The fields of type RC5-CBC-Parameters have the following meanings:

  -  version is the version of the algorithm, which shall be v1-0.

  -  rounds is the number of rounds in the encryption operation, which
     shall be between 8 and 127.

  -  blockSizeInBits is the block size in bits, which shall be 64 or
     128.

  -  iv is the initialization vector, an eight-octet string for 64-bit
     RC5 and a 16-octet string for 128-bit RC5. The default is a string
     of the appropriate length consisting of zero octets.

B.3 Message Authentication Schemes

  An example message authentication scheme for PBMAC1 (Section 7.1) is
  HMAC-SHA-1.

B.3.1 HMAC-SHA-1

  HMAC-SHA-1 is the HMAC message authentication scheme [7] based on the
  SHA-1 hash function [18]. HMAC-SHA-1 has a variable key length and a
  20-octet (160-bit) message authentication code.

  The object identifier id-hmacWithSHA1 (see Appendix B.1.1) identifies
  the HMAC-SHA-1 message authentication scheme. (The object identifier
  is the same for both the pseudorandom function and the message
  authentication scheme; the distinction is to be understood by
  context.) This object identifier is intended to be employed in the
  object set PBMAC1-Macs (Appendix A.5).

C. ASN.1 Module

  For reference purposes, the ASN.1 syntax in the preceding sections is
  presented as an ASN.1 module here.

  -- PKCS #5 v2.0 ASN.1 Module
  -- Revised March 25, 1999

  -- This module has been checked for conformance with the
  -- ASN.1 standard by the OSS ASN.1 Tools

  PKCS5v2-0 {iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) rsadsi(113549)
      pkcs(1) pkcs-5(5) modules(16) pkcs5v2-0(1)}

  DEFINITIONS ::= BEGIN




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  -- Basic object identifiers

  rsadsi OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {iso(1) member-body(2) us(840) 113549}
  pkcs OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {rsadsi 1}

  pkcs-5 OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {pkcs 5}

  -- Basic types and classes

  AlgorithmIdentifier { ALGORITHM-IDENTIFIER:InfoObjectSet } ::=
    SEQUENCE {
      algorithm ALGORITHM-IDENTIFIER.&id({InfoObjectSet}),
      parameters ALGORITHM-IDENTIFIER.&Type({InfoObjectSet}
      {@algorithm}) OPTIONAL
  }

  ALGORITHM-IDENTIFIER ::= TYPE-IDENTIFIER

  -- PBKDF2

  PBKDF2Algorithms ALGORITHM-IDENTIFIER ::=
      { {PBKDF2-params IDENTIFIED BY id-PBKDF2}, ...}

  id-PBKDF2 OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {pkcs-5 12}

  algid-hmacWithSHA1 AlgorithmIdentifier {{PBKDF2-PRFs}} ::=
      {algorithm id-hmacWithSHA1, parameters NULL : NULL}

  PBKDF2-params ::= SEQUENCE {
      salt CHOICE {
        specified OCTET STRING,
        otherSource AlgorithmIdentifier {{PBKDF2-SaltSources}}
      },
      iterationCount INTEGER (1..MAX),
      keyLength INTEGER (1..MAX) OPTIONAL,
      prf AlgorithmIdentifier {{PBKDF2-PRFs}} DEFAULT
      algid-hmacWithSHA1
  }

  PBKDF2-SaltSources ALGORITHM-IDENTIFIER ::= { ... }

  PBKDF2-PRFs ALGORITHM-IDENTIFIER ::=
      { {NULL IDENTIFIED BY id-hmacWithSHA1}, ... }

  -- PBES1


  PBES1Algorithms ALGORITHM-IDENTIFIER ::= {



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RFC 2898              Password-Based Cryptography         September 2000


      {PBEParameter IDENTIFIED BY pbeWithMD2AndDES-CBC}  |
      {PBEParameter IDENTIFIED BY pbeWithMD2AndRC2-CBC}  |
      {PBEParameter IDENTIFIED BY pbeWithMD5AndDES-CBC}  |
      {PBEParameter IDENTIFIED BY pbeWithMD5AndRC2-CBC}  |
      {PBEParameter IDENTIFIED BY pbeWithSHA1AndDES-CBC} |
      {PBEParameter IDENTIFIED BY pbeWithSHA1AndRC2-CBC},
      ...
  }

  pbeWithMD2AndDES-CBC OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {pkcs-5 1}
  pbeWithMD2AndRC2-CBC OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {pkcs-5 4}
  pbeWithMD5AndDES-CBC OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {pkcs-5 3}
  pbeWithMD5AndRC2-CBC OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {pkcs-5 6}
  pbeWithSHA1AndDES-CBC OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {pkcs-5 10}
  pbeWithSHA1AndRC2-CBC OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {pkcs-5 11}

  PBEParameter ::= SEQUENCE {
      salt OCTET STRING (SIZE(8)),
      iterationCount INTEGER
  }

  -- PBES2

  PBES2Algorithms ALGORITHM-IDENTIFIER ::=
      { {PBES2-params IDENTIFIED BY id-PBES2}, ...}

  id-PBES2 OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {pkcs-5 13}

  PBES2-params ::= SEQUENCE {
      keyDerivationFunc AlgorithmIdentifier {{PBES2-KDFs}},
      encryptionScheme AlgorithmIdentifier {{PBES2-Encs}}
  }

  PBES2-KDFs ALGORITHM-IDENTIFIER ::=
      { {PBKDF2-params IDENTIFIED BY id-PBKDF2}, ... }

  PBES2-Encs ALGORITHM-IDENTIFIER ::= { ... }

  -- PBMAC1

  PBMAC1Algorithms ALGORITHM-IDENTIFIER ::=
      { {PBMAC1-params IDENTIFIED BY id-PBMAC1}, ...}

  id-PBMAC1 OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {pkcs-5 14}

  PBMAC1-params ::=  SEQUENCE {
      keyDerivationFunc AlgorithmIdentifier {{PBMAC1-KDFs}},
      messageAuthScheme AlgorithmIdentifier {{PBMAC1-MACs}}



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  }

  PBMAC1-KDFs ALGORITHM-IDENTIFIER ::=
      { {PBKDF2-params IDENTIFIED BY id-PBKDF2}, ... }

  PBMAC1-MACs ALGORITHM-IDENTIFIER ::= { ... }

  -- Supporting techniques

  digestAlgorithm OBJECT IDENTIFIER     ::= {rsadsi 2}
  encryptionAlgorithm OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {rsadsi 3}

  SupportingAlgorithms ALGORITHM-IDENTIFIER ::= {
      {NULL IDENTIFIED BY id-hmacWithSHA1} |
      {OCTET STRING (SIZE(8)) IDENTIFIED BY desCBC} |
      {OCTET STRING (SIZE(8)) IDENTIFIED BY des-EDE3-CBC} |
      {RC2-CBC-Parameter IDENTIFIED BY rc2CBC} |
      {RC5-CBC-Parameters IDENTIFIED BY rc5-CBC-PAD},
      ...
  }

  id-hmacWithSHA1 OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {digestAlgorithm 7}

  desCBC OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=
      {iso(1) identified-organization(3) oiw(14) secsig(3)
       algorithms(2) 7} -- from OIW

  des-EDE3-CBC OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {encryptionAlgorithm 7}

  rc2CBC OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {encryptionAlgorithm 2}

  RC2-CBC-Parameter ::= SEQUENCE {
      rc2ParameterVersion INTEGER OPTIONAL,
      iv OCTET STRING (SIZE(8))
  }

  rc5-CBC-PAD OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {encryptionAlgorithm 9}

  RC5-CBC-Parameters ::= SEQUENCE {
      version INTEGER {v1-0(16)} (v1-0),
      rounds INTEGER (8..127),
      blockSizeInBits INTEGER (64 | 128),
      iv OCTET STRING OPTIONAL
  }

  END





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RFC 2898              Password-Based Cryptography         September 2000


Intellectual Property Considerations

  RSA Security makes no patent claims on the general constructions
  described in this document, although specific underlying techniques
  may be covered. Among the underlying techniques, the RC5 encryption
  algorithm (Appendix B.2.4) is protected by U.S. Patents 5,724,428
  [22] and 5,835,600 [23].

  RC2 and RC5 are trademarks of RSA Security.

  License to copy this document is granted provided that it is
  identified as RSA Security Inc. Public-Key Cryptography Standards
  (PKCS) in all material mentioning or referencing this document.

  RSA Security makes no representations regarding intellectual property
  claims by other parties. Such determination is the responsibility of
  the user.

Revision history

  Versions 1.0-1.3

     Versions 1.0-1.3 were distributed to participants in RSA Data
     Security Inc.'s Public-Key Cryptography Standards meetings in
     February and March 1991.

  Version 1.4

     Version 1.4 was part of the June 3, 1991 initial public release of
     PKCS. Version 1.4 was published as NIST/OSI Implementors' Workshop
     document SEC-SIG-91-20.

  Version 1.5

     Version 1.5 incorporated several editorial changes, including
     updates to the references and the addition of a revision history.

  Version 2.0

     Version 2.0 incorporates major editorial changes in terms of the
     document structure, and introduces the PBES2 encryption scheme,
     the PBMAC1 message authentication scheme, and independent
     password-based key derivation functions. This version continues to
     support the encryption process in version 1.5.







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RFC 2898              Password-Based Cryptography         September 2000


References

  [1]  American National Standard X9.52 - 1998, Triple Data Encryption
       Algorithm Modes of Operation. Working draft, Accredited
       Standards Committee X9, July 27, 1998.

  [2]  Baldwin, R. and R. Rivest, "The RC5, RC5-CBC, RC5-CBC-Pad, and
       RC5-CTS Algorithms", RFC 2040, October 1996.

  [3]  Balenson, D., "Privacy Enhancement for Internet Electronic Mail:
       Part III: Algorithms, Modes, and Identifiers", RFC 1423,
       February 1993.

  [4]  S.M. Bellovin and M. Merritt. Encrypted key exchange:
       Password-based protocols secure against dictionary attacks. In
       Proceedings of the 1992 IEEE Computer Society Conference on
       Research in Security and Privacy, pages 72-84, IEEE Computer
       Society, 1992.

  [5]  D. Jablon. Strong password-only authenticated key exchange. ACM
       Computer Communications Review, October 1996.

  [6]  Kaliski, B., "The MD2 Message-Digest Algorithm", RFC 1319, April
       1992.

  [7]  Krawczyk, H., Bellare, M. and R. Canetti, "HMAC: Keyed-Hashing
       for Message Authentication", RFC 2104, February 1997.

  [8]  Robert Morris and Ken Thompson. Password security: A case
       history.  Communications of the ACM, 22(11):594-597, November
       1979.

  [9]  ISO/IEC 8824-1:1995: Information technology - Abstract Syntax
       Notation One (ASN.1) - Specification of basic notation. 1995.

  [10] ISO/IEC 8824-1:1995/Amd.1:1995 Information technology - Abstract
       Syntax Notation One (ASN.1) - Specification of basic notation -
       Amendment 1 - Rules of extensibility. 1995.

  [11] ISO/IEC 8824-2:1995 Information technology - Abstract Syntax
       Notation One (ASN.1) - Information object specification. 1995.

  [12] ISO/IEC 8824-2:1995/Amd.1:1995 Information technology - Abstract
       Syntax Notation One (ASN.1) - Information object specification -
       Amendment 1 - Rules of extensibility. 1995.

  [13] ISO/IEC 8824-3:1995 Information technology - Abstract Syntax
       Notation One (ASN.1) - Constraint specification. 1995.



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RFC 2898              Password-Based Cryptography         September 2000


  [14] ISO/IEC 8824-4:1995 Information technology - Abstract Syntax
       Notation One (ASN.1) - Parameterization of ASN.1 specifications.
       1995.

  [15] National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). FIPS PUB
       46-2: Data Encryption Standard. December 30, 1993.

  [16] National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). FIPS PUB
       81: DES Modes of Operation. December 2, 1980.

  [17] National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). FIPS PUB
       112: Password Usage. May 30, 1985.

  [18] National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). FIPS PUB
       180-1: Secure Hash Standard. April 1994.

  [19] Rivest, R., "The MD5 Message-Digest Algorithm", RFC 1321, April
       1992.

  [20] R.L. Rivest. The RC5 encryption algorithm. In Proceedings of the
       Second International Workshop on Fast Software Encryption, pages
       86-96, Springer-Verlag, 1994.

  [21] Rivest, R., "A Description of the RC2(r) Encryption Algorithm",
       RFC 2268, March 1998.

  [22] R.L. Rivest. Block-Encryption Algorithm with Data-Dependent
       Rotations. U.S. Patent No. 5,724,428, March 3, 1998.

  [23] R.L. Rivest. Block Encryption Algorithm with Data-Dependent
       Rotations. U.S. Patent No. 5,835,600, November 10, 1998.

  [24] RSA Laboratories. PKCS #5: Password-Based Encryption Standard.
       Version 1.5, November 1993.

  [25] RSA Laboratories. PKCS #8: Private-Key Information Syntax
       Standard.  Version 1.2, November 1993.

  [26] T. Wu. The Secure Remote Password protocol. In Proceedings of
       the 1998 Internet Society Network and Distributed System
       Security Symposium, pages 97-111, Internet Society, 1998.

  [27] Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO 10646", RFC
       2279, January 1998.







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RFC 2898              Password-Based Cryptography         September 2000


Contact Information & About PKCS

  The Public-Key Cryptography Standards are specifications produced by
  RSA Laboratories in cooperation with secure systems developers
  worldwide for the purpose of accelerating the deployment of public-
  key cryptography. First published in 1991 as a result of meetings
  with a small group of early adopters of public-key technology, the
  PKCS documents have become widely referenced and implemented.
  Contributions from the PKCS series have become part of many formal
  and de facto standards, including ANSI X9 documents, PKIX, SET,
  S/MIME, and SSL.

  Further development of PKCS occurs through mailing list discussions
  and occasional workshops, and suggestions for improvement are
  welcome. For more information, contact:

       PKCS Editor
       RSA Laboratories
       20 Crosby Drive
       Bedford, MA  01730  USA
       [email protected]
       http://www.rsalabs.com/pkcs/





























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Full Copyright Statement

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000).  All Rights Reserved.

  This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
  others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
  or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
  and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
  kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
  included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this
  document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
  the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
  Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
  developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
  copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
  followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
  English.

  The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
  revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.

  This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
  "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
  TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
  BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
  HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
  MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

Acknowledgement

  Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
  Internet Society.



















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