Book Image

TLS Cryptography In-Depth

By : Dr. Paul Duplys, Dr. Roland Schmitz
Book Image

TLS Cryptography In-Depth

By: Dr. Paul Duplys, Dr. Roland Schmitz

Overview of this book

TLS is the most widely used cryptographic protocol today, enabling e-commerce, online banking, and secure online communication. Written by Dr. Paul Duplys, Security, Privacy & Safety Research Lead at Bosch, and Dr. Roland Schmitz, Internet Security Professor at Stuttgart Media University, this book will help you gain a deep understanding of how and why TLS works, how past attacks on TLS were possible, and how vulnerabilities that enabled them were addressed in the latest TLS version 1.3. By exploring the inner workings of TLS, you’ll be able to configure it and use it more securely. Starting with the basic concepts, you’ll be led step by step through the world of modern cryptography, guided by the TLS protocol. As you advance, you’ll be learning about the necessary mathematical concepts from scratch. Topics such as public-key cryptography based on elliptic curves will be explained with a view on real-world applications in TLS. With easy-to-understand concepts, you’ll find out how secret keys are generated and exchanged in TLS, and how they are used to creating a secure channel between a client and a server. By the end of this book, you’ll have the knowledge to configure TLS servers securely. Moreover, you’ll have gained a deep knowledge of the cryptographic primitives that make up TLS.
Table of Contents (30 chapters)
1
Part I Getting Started
8
Part II Shaking Hands
16
Part III Off the Record
22
Part IV Bleeding Hearts and Biting Poodles
27
Bibliography
28
Index

14.2 General principles

A block cipher is an encryption function eK that maps plaintext blocks of fixed size b onto ciphertext blocks of the same size b:

ek : {0,1 }b → {0,1}b

As indicated by the subscript k, a block cipher is a symmetric algorithm, taking a shared key k ∈𝒦 as a parameter, where 𝒦 is the keyspace (see also Chapter 4, Encryption and Decryption). In TLS, the shared key is agreed between client Bob and server Alice during the Handshake protocol, using public-key cryptography. Naturally, a block cipher must be a bijective function, or bijection for short (see Section 4.1 in Chapter 4, Encryption and Decryption), meaning that there is some inverse function ek−1 that reverses the action of ek and is used for decryption. Therefore, instead of writing ek−1, we will often use dk for the inverse function.

A block cipher processes the plaintext block by block, as opposed to stream ciphers, which process the plaintext bit by bit and which we met already...