AES-192-CFB8 ENCRYPTION TOOL

Other Crypto Algorithms

AES-128-CBC AES-128-CBC-CTS AES-128-CBC-HMAC-SHA1 AES-128-CBC-HMAC-SHA256 AES-128-CCM AES-128-CFB AES-128-CFB1 AES-128-CFB8 AES-128-CTR AES-128-ECB AES-128-GCM AES-128-GCM-SIV AES-128-OCB AES-128-OFB AES-128-SIV AES-128-WRAP AES-128-WRAP-INV AES-128-WRAP-PAD AES-128-WRAP-PAD-INV AES-128-XTS AES-192-CBC AES-192-CBC-CTS AES-192-CCM AES-192-CFB AES-192-CFB1 AES-192-CFB8 AES-192-CTR AES-192-ECB AES-192-GCM AES-192-GCM-SIV AES-192-OCB AES-192-OFB AES-192-SIV AES-192-WRAP AES-192-WRAP-INV AES-192-WRAP-PAD AES-192-WRAP-PAD-INV AES-256-CBC AES-256-CBC-CTS AES-256-CBC-HMAC-SHA1 AES-256-CBC-HMAC-SHA256 AES-256-CCM AES-256-CFB AES-256-CFB1 AES-256-CFB8 AES-256-CTR AES-256-ECB AES-256-GCM AES-256-GCM-SIV AES-256-OCB AES-256-OFB AES-256-SIV AES-256-WRAP AES-256-WRAP-INV AES-256-WRAP-PAD AES-256-WRAP-PAD-INV AES-256-XTS ARIA-128-CBC ARIA-128-CCM ARIA-128-CFB ARIA-128-CFB1 ARIA-128-CFB8 ARIA-128-CTR ARIA-128-ECB ARIA-128-GCM ARIA-128-OFB ARIA-192-CBC ARIA-192-CCM ARIA-192-CFB ARIA-192-CFB1 ARIA-192-CFB8 ARIA-192-CTR ARIA-192-ECB ARIA-192-GCM ARIA-192-OFB ARIA-256-CBC ARIA-256-CCM ARIA-256-CFB ARIA-256-CFB1 ARIA-256-CFB8 ARIA-256-CTR ARIA-256-ECB ARIA-256-GCM ARIA-256-OFB CAMELLIA-128-CBC CAMELLIA-128-CBC-CTS CAMELLIA-128-CFB CAMELLIA-128-CFB1 CAMELLIA-128-CFB8 CAMELLIA-128-CTR CAMELLIA-128-ECB CAMELLIA-128-OFB CAMELLIA-192-CBC CAMELLIA-192-CBC-CTS CAMELLIA-192-CFB CAMELLIA-192-CFB1 CAMELLIA-192-CFB8 CAMELLIA-192-CTR CAMELLIA-192-ECB CAMELLIA-192-OFB CAMELLIA-256-CBC CAMELLIA-256-CBC-CTS CAMELLIA-256-CFB CAMELLIA-256-CFB1 CAMELLIA-256-CFB8 CAMELLIA-256-CTR CAMELLIA-256-ECB CAMELLIA-256-OFB CHACHA20 CHACHA20-POLY1305 DES-EDE-CBC DES-EDE-CFB DES-EDE-ECB DES-EDE-OFB DES-EDE3-CBC DES-EDE3-CFB DES-EDE3-CFB1 DES-EDE3-CFB8 DES-EDE3-ECB DES-EDE3-OFB DES3-WRAP 

Key Expansion

The 192-bit key undergoes a key schedule to generate a series of round keys. AES-192 uses 12 rounds of transformation for encryption and decryption. The key expansion process applies a combination of word rotation, substitution using the Rijndael S-box, and round constant addition. This ensures diffusion and resistance to linear and differential cryptanalysis.

Encryption Process

Encryption begins by dividing the plaintext into 128-bit blocks. In CFB8 mode, each byte of plaintext is XORed with the most significant byte of the AES-encrypted feedback register. The resulting ciphertext byte is then fed back into the register, updating it for the next byte of encryption. This feedback mechanism ensures that even identical plaintext bytes produce different ciphertext outputs depending on their position within the data stream.

Decryption Process

Decryption mirrors the encryption process. The ciphertext byte is XORed with the AES-encrypted feedback register to recover the original plaintext byte. The feedback register is then updated with the ciphertext byte. CFB8 mode ensures that decryption can process data continuously and does not require full blocks, supporting stream-like decryption scenarios.

Security Considerations

AES-192-CFB8 provides strong confidentiality against brute-force attacks due to the 192-bit key length. The mode also maintains data integrity against simple repetition attacks, as the feedback mechanism introduces dependency between sequential bytes. Initialization vectors (IVs) are required to ensure unique encryption sequences for identical plaintexts across different sessions.

Applications

This algorithm is widely applied in secure communications, real-time data encryption, and embedded systems where data arrives in small increments. Its ability to encrypt and decrypt one byte at a time allows low-latency transmission without buffering large blocks of data.