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Demystifying Cryptography with OpenSSL 3.0

You're reading from   Demystifying Cryptography with OpenSSL 3.0 Discover the best techniques to enhance your network security with OpenSSL 3.0

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800560345
Length 342 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Alexei Khlebnikov Alexei Khlebnikov
Author Profile Icon Alexei Khlebnikov
Alexei Khlebnikov
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Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Introduction
2. Chapter 1: OpenSSL and Other SSL/TLS Libraries FREE CHAPTER 3. Part 2: Symmetric Cryptography
4. Chapter 2: Symmetric Encryption and Decryption 5. Chapter 3: Message Digests 6. Chapter 4: MAC and HMAC 7. Chapter 5: Derivation of an Encryption Key from a Password 8. Part 3: Asymmetric Cryptography and Certificates
9. Chapter 6: Asymmetric Encryption and Decryption 10. Chapter 7: Digital Signatures and Their Verification 11. Chapter 8: X.509 Certificates and PKI 12. Part 4: TLS Connections and Secure Communication
13. Chapter 9: Establishing TLS Connections and Sending Data over Them 14. Chapter 10: Using X.509 Certificates in TLS 15. Chapter 11: Special Usages of TLS 16. Part 5: Running a Mini-CA
17. Chapter 12: Running a Mini-CA 18. Index 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

How to encrypt and decrypt with AES on the command line

We are going to encrypt a file using the openssl command-line tool.

Let’s generate a sample file:

$ seq 1000 >somefile.txt

Using our knowledge of the symmetric encryption concepts, we are choosing the following parameters for our encryption:

  • Cipher: AES-256
  • Operation mode: CBC (we should have chosen GCM, but that mode is not supported by the command-line tool)
  • Padding type: standard block padding

How can we find out how to encrypt the command line from the documentation? We can begin with the openssl tool man page:

$ man openssl

On that man page, we can see different subcommands that the openssl tool supports. From the man page, we can figure out that we need the enc subcommand. We can then refer to the openssl-enc man page for documentation on the enc subcommand:

$ man openssl-enc

From the openssl-enc man page, we can figure out which parameters the subcommand needs. We see...

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