In cryptography, ARIA is a block cipher designed in 2003 by a large group of South Korean researchers.
In 2004, the Korean Agency for Technology and Standards selected it as a standard cryptographic technique.
The algorithm uses a substitution–permutation network structure based on AES.
The interface is the same as AES: 128-bit block size with key size of 128, 192, or 256 bits.
The number of rounds is 12, 14, or 16, depending on the key size.
ARIA uses two 8×8-bit S-boxes and their inverses in alternate rounds; one of these is the Rijndael S-box.
The key schedule processes the key using a 3-round 256-bit Feistel cipher, with the binary expansion of 1/ as a source of "nothing up my sleeve numbers".
Implementations
The reference source code of ARIA cipher implemented in C, C++, and Java can be downloaded from KISA's cryptography use activation webpage.
Standardization
KATS
KS X 1213:2004
IETF
Algorithm
: A Description of the ARIA Encryption Algorithm
TLS/SSL
: Addition of the ARIA Cipher Suites to Transport Layer Security (TLS)
SRTP
: The ARIA Algorithm and Its Use with the Secure Real-Time Transport Protocol (SRTP)
Security
References
External links
ARIA home
Lazarus/Delphi port of ARIA
