I have a 16 byte character that I would like to encrypt using openssl into a 16 byte encrypted string [in human readable format]
I believe you are looking for Format Preserving Encryption. I think the caveat is you have to start with a 16-byte human readable string. Phillip Rogaway has a paper on the technologies: Synopsis of
Format-Preserving Encryption. There's a lot to the paper, and it can't fit into a single paragraph on Stack Overflow.
If you can start with a shorter string and use a streaming mode like OCB, OFB or CTR, then you can Base64 encode the final string so that the result is 16-bytes and human readable. Base64 expands at a rate of 3 → 4 (3 un-encoded expands to 4 encoded), so you'd need a shorter string of length 12 characters to achieve 16 human readable characters.
As far as I know, there are no command line tools that do it natively. You may be able to use OpenSSL on the command line with AES/CTR and pipe it through base64
command. The following gets close, but it starts with 11 characters (and not 12):
$ echo 12345678901 | openssl enc -e -base64 -aes-128-ctr -nopad -nosalt -k secret_password
cSTzU8+UPQQwpRAq
Also, you really need to understand te -k
option (and -K
for that matter), and how it derives a key so you can do it outside of the OpenSSL command (if needed).
openssl
command? It is not an obvious task, and the user provides the context of his request.