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I was looking for examples how to encode stuff in C using DES cypher and openssl headers and I found this one: http://www.codealias.info/technotes/des_encryption_using_openssl_a_simple_example

The code is almost perfect but I'm not so expert in this stuff and my C knowledge in C is not so big since I use it on PIC and AVR micro controllers...

Anyway in the code:

printf("Clear text\t : %s \n",clear);
memcpy(encrypted,Encrypt(key,clear,sizeof(clear)), sizeof(clear));
printf("Encrypted text\t : %s \n",encrypted);
memcpy(decrypted,Decrypt(key,encrypted,sizeof(clear)), sizeof(clear));
printf("Decrypted text\t : %s \n",decrypted);

As you can see, sizeof(clear) is used as the size of the string... the problem is that on the example we know the size of the text string... but when I'm sending this text over the network the other computer don't know it...

How can solve this issue... I don't understand so well why I need to have the size of the original string to decrypt :S

Thanks!!

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    I'd just like to mention that ppl shouldn't really be using DES... it's broken. 3DES (triple DES) is a much better choice. Aug 16, 2011 at 21:20
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    @Jeremy 3DES is actually the same good old DES applied 3 times. DES isn't broken, just 64 bit (or actually 56 bit) keys are too short these days, but double-length 3DES keys are still ok. One cannot implement 3DES without implementing DES.
    – qrdl
    Aug 16, 2011 at 21:28
  • @qrdl 3DES is DES applied, then applied in reverse, and then reapplied, and is considerably stronger than DES. DES is not approved in any regulated industry requiring transmission of secure data, whereas 3DES is approved in most. It is not the strongest, but it should be considered the minimum data encryption standard for all new work. Aug 16, 2011 at 21:35

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The world is full of bad security systems designed by people who read Applied Cryptography.

Don't send your own 'encryptyed' stuff on wire. You're missing an HMAC, you're missing a key exchange protocol, you're missing a wire frame protocol (which is exactly the answer to your question 'how do I know the size'). Just use an off-the-shelf protocol like TLS/SSL. gnu-tls offers a easy to use API for SSL/TLS, openssl also supports it but is notoriously cumbersome to use. Whatever you do, don't start writing your own protocol, you'll come up with yet another broken 'encryption' protocol because of a bad key exchange or a 'optimized nonce' or a missing frame signature or whatever.

Here is a simple example using gnu-tls: Simple client example using the C++ API

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  • I'm writing the program in C so use C++ stuff becomes a pain now... anyway, I don't need an overkill security the data is not so important here... but basic security (in C) to encrypt some data and send it back would be useful...
    – TCB13
    Aug 16, 2011 at 21:55
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    There are plenty of C examples available too, like gnu.org/software/gnutls/manual/html_node/…. 'basic security to encrypt some data ad send back' = you need SSL/TLS. There isn't anything simpler than that. Aug 16, 2011 at 22:00
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In the implementations I have seen of DES, I only ever recall seeing plaintext and ciphertext of the same size. Wikipedia seems to confirm this. Since DES works on 64-bit chunks, that would make since as long as the code implementing DES properly pads the input to match those 64-bit boundaries. In fact, that's pretty much the definition of a block cipher (which is what DES is).

Thus I would wager you will see it work flawlessly with the other computer using the size of the encrypted text. A few tests of your own should be able to confirm this absolutely.

Also, I firmly agree with the Jeremy's comment that DES is a poor choice of encryption algorithm for most situations. Triple DES or AES are much better options.

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