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TEST BANK FOR Cryptography And Network Security 4th Edition By Williams Stallings

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Exam (elaborations) TEST BANK FOR Cryptography And Network Security 4th Edition By Williams Stallings SOLUTIONS MANUAL CRYPTOGRAPHY AND NETWORK SECURITY PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE FOURTH EDITION WILLIAM STALLINGS -5- TABLE OF CONTENTS Chapter 1: Introduction ..................................................................................................5 Chapter 2: Classical Encryption Techniques ...............................................................7 Chapter 3: Block Ciphers and the Date Encryption Standard ................................13 Chapter 4: Finite Fields .................................................................................................21 Chapter 5: Advanced Encryption Standard ..............................................................28 Chapter 6: More on Symmetric Ciphers ....................................................................33 Chapter 7: Confidentiality Using Symmetric Encryption .......................................38 Chapter 8: Introduction to Number Theory ..............................................................42 Chapter 9: Public-Key Cryptography and RSA ........................................................46 Chapter 10: Key Management; Other Public-Key Cryptosystems ...........................55 Chapter 11: Message Authentication and Hash Functions .......................................59 Chapter 12: Hash and MAC Algorithms .....................................................................62 Chapter 13: Digital Signatures and Authentication Protocols ..................................66 Chapter 14: Authentication Applications ....................................................................71 Chapter 15: Electronic Mail Security ............................................................................73 Chapter 16: IP Security ...................................................................................................76 Chapter 17: Web Security ...............................................................................................80 Chapter 18: Intruders ......................................................................................................83 Chapter 19: Malicious Software ....................................................................................87 Chapter 20: Firewalls ......................................................................................................89 -6- ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS 1.1 The OSI Security Architecture is a framework that provides a systematic way of defining the requirements for security and characterizing the approaches to satisfying those requirements. The document defines security attacks, mechanisms, and services, and the relationships among these categories. 1.2 Passive attacks have to do with eavesdropping on, or monitoring, transmissions. Electronic mail, file transfers, and client/server exchanges are examples of transmissions that can be monitored. Active attacks include the modification of transmitted data and attempts to gain unauthorized access to computer systems. 1.3 Passive attacks: release of message contents and traffic analysis. Active attacks: masquerade, replay, modification of messages, and denial of service. 1.4 Authentication: The assurance that the communicating entity is the one that it claims to be. Access control: The prevention of unauthorized use of a resource (i.e., this service controls who can have access to a resource, under what conditions access can occur, and what those accessing the resource are allowed to do). Data confidentiality: The protection of data from unauthorized disclosure. Data integrity: The assurance that data received are exactly as sent by an authorized entity (i.e., contain no modification, insertion, deletion, or replay). Nonrepudiation: Provides protection against denial by one of the entities involved in a communication of having participated in all or part of the communication. Availability service: The property of a system or a system resource being accessible and usable upon demand by an authorized system entity, according to performance specifications for the system (i.e., a system is available if it provides services according to the system design whenever users request them). 1.5 See Table 1.3. CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION -7- ANSWERS TO PROBLEMS 1.1 Release of message contents Traffic analysis Masquerade Replay Modification of messages Denial of service Peer entity authentication Y Data origin authentication Y Access control Y Confidentiality Y Traffic flow confidentiality Y Data integrity Y Y Non-repudiation Y Availability Y 1.2 Release of message contents Traffic analysis Masquerade Replay Modification of messages Denial of service Encipherment Y Digital signature Y Y Y Access control Y Y Y Y Y Data integrity Y Y Authentication exchange Y Y Y Y Traffic padding Y Routing control Y Y Y Notarization Y Y Y -8- ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS 2.1 Plaintext, encryption algorithm, secret key, ciphertext, decryption algorithm. 2.2 Permutation and substitution. 2.3 One key for symmetric ciphers, two keys for asymmetric ciphers. 2.4 A stream cipher is one that encrypts a digital data stream one bit or one byte at a time. A block cipher is one in which a block of plaintext is treated as a whole and used to produce a ciphertext block of equal length. 2.5 Cryptanalysis and brute force. 2.6 Ciphertext only. One possible attack under these circumstances is the brute-force approach of trying all possible keys. If the key space is very large, this becomes impractical. Thus, the opponent must rely on an analysis of the ciphertext itself, generally applying various statistical tests to it. Known plaintext. The analyst may be able to capture one or more plaintext messages as well as their encryptions. With this knowledge, the analyst may be able to deduce the key on the basis of the way in which the known plaintext is transformed. Chosen plaintext. If the analyst is able to choose the messages to encrypt, the analyst may deliberately pick patterns that can be expected to reveal the structure of the key. 2.7 An encryption scheme is unconditionally secure if the ciphertext generated by the scheme does not contain enough information to determine uniquely the corresponding plaintext, no matter how much ciphertext is available. An encryption scheme is said to be computationally secure if: (1) the cost of breaking the cipher exceeds the value of the encrypted information, and (2) the time required to break the cipher exceeds the useful lifetime of the information. 2.8 The Caesar cipher involves replacing each letter of the alphabet with the letter standing k places further down the alphabet, for k in the range 1 through 25. 2.9 A monoalphabetic substitution cipher maps a plaintext alphabet to a ciphertext alphabet, so that each letter of the plaintext alphabet maps to a single unique letter of the ciphertext alphabet. CHAPTER 2 CLASSICAL ENCRYPTION TECHNIQUESR -9- 2.10 The Playfair algorithm is based on the use of a 5  5 matrix of letters constructed using a keyword. Plaintext is encrypted two letters at a time using this matrix. 2.11 A polyalphabetic substitution cipher uses a separate monoalphabetic substitution cipher for each successive letter of plaintext, depending on a key. 2.12 1. There is the practical problem of making large quantities of random keys. Any heavily used system might require millions of random characters on a regular basis. Supplying truly random characters in this volume is a significant task. 2. Even more daunting is the problem of key distribution and protection. For every message to be sent, a key of equal length is needed by both sender and receiver. Thus, a mammoth key distribution problem exists. 2.13 A transposition cipher involves a permutation of the plaintext letters. 2.14 Steganography involves concealing the existence of a message. ANSWERS TO PROBLEMS 2.1 a. No. A change in the value of b shifts the relationship between plaintext letters and ciphertext letters to the left or right uniformly, so that if the mapping is one-to-one it remains one-to-one. b. 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 13, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24. Any value of a larger than 25 is equivalent to a mod 26. c. The values of a and 26 must have no common positive integer factor other than 1. This is equivalent to saying that a and 26 are relatively prime, or that the greatest common divisor of a and 26 is 1. To see this, first note that E(a, p) = E(a, q) (0 ≤ p ≤ q < 26) if and only if a(p – q) is divisible by 26. 1. Suppose that a and 26 are relatively prime. Then, a(p – q) is not divisible by 26, because there is no way to reduce the fraction a/26 and (p – q) is less than 26. 2. Suppose that a and 26 have a common factor k > 1. Then E(a, p) = E(a, q), if q = p + m/k ≠ p. 2.2 There are 12 allowable values of a (1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, 15, 17, 19, 21, 23, 25). There are 26 allowable values of b, from 0 through 25). Thus the total number of distinct affine Caesar ciphers is 12  26 = 312. 2.3 Assume that the most frequent plaintext letter is e and the second most frequent letter is t. Note that the numerical values are e = 4; B = 1; t = 19; U = 20. Then we have the following equations: 1 = (4a + b) mod 26 20 = (19a + b) mod 26 Thus, 19 = 15a mod 26. By trial and error, we solve: a = 3. -10- Then 1 = (12 + b) mod 26. By observation, b = 15. 2.4 A good glass in the Bishop's hostel in the Devil's seat—twenty-one degrees and thirteen minutes—northeast and by north—main branch seventh limb east side—shoot from the left eye of the death's head— a bee line from the tree through the shot fifty feet out. (from The Gold Bug, by Edgar Allan Poe) 2.5 a. The first letter t corresponds to A, the second letter h corresponds to B, e is C, s is D, and so on. Second and subsequent occurrences of a letter in the key sentence are ignored. The result ciphertext: SIDKHKDM AF HCRKIABIE SHIMC KD LFEAILA plaintext: basilisk to leviathan blake is contact b. It is a monalphabetic cipher and so easily breakable. c. The last sentence may not contain all the letters of the alphabet. If the first sentence is used, the second and subsequent sentences may also be used until all 26 letters are encountered. 2.6 The cipher refers to the words in the page of a book. The first entry, 534, refers to page 534. The second entry, C2, refers to column two. The remaining numbers are words in that column. The names DOUGLAS and BIRLSTONE are simply words that do not appear on that page. Elementary! (from The Valley of Fear, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle) 2.7 a. 2 8 10 7 9 6 3 1 4 5 C R Y P T O G A H I B E A T T H E T H I R D P I L L A R F R O M T H E L E F T O U T S I D E T H E L Y C E U M T H E A T R E T O N I G H T A T S E V E N I F Y O U A R E D I S T R U S T F U L B R I N G T W O F R I E N D S 4 2 8 10 5 6 3 7 1 9 N E T W O R K S C U T R F H E H F T I N B R O U Y R T U S T E A E T H G I S R E H F T E A T Y R N D -11- I R O L T A O U G S H L L E T I N I B I T I H I U O V E U F E D M T C E S A T W T L E D M N E D L R A P T S E T E R F O ISRNG BUTLF RRAFR LIDLP FTIYO NVSEE TBEHI HTETA EYHAT TUCME HRGTA IOENT TUSRU IEADR FOETO LHMET NTEDS IFWRO HUTEL EITDS b. The two matrices are used in reverse order. First, the ciphertext is laid out in columns in the second matrix, taking into account the order dictated by the second memory word. Then, the contents of the second matrix are read left to right, top to bottom and laid out in columns in the first matrix, taking into account the order dictated by the first memory word. The plaintext is then read left to right, top to bottom. c. Although this is a weak method, it may have use with time-sensitive information and an adversary without immediate access to good cryptanalysis (e.g., tactical use). Plus it doesn't require anything more than paper and pencil, and can be easily remembered. 2.8 SPUTNIK 2.9 PT BOAT ONE OWE NINE LOST IN ACTION IN BLACKETT STRAIT TWO MILES SW MERESU COVE X CREW OF TWELVE X REQUEST ANY INFORMATION 2.10 a. L A R G E S T B C D F H I/J K M N O P Q U V W X Y Z b. O C U R E N A B D F G H I/J K L M P Q S T V W X Y Z -12- 2.11 a. UZTBDLGZPNNWLGTGTUEROVLDBDUHFPERHWQSRZ b. UZTBDLGZPNNWLGTGTUEROVLDBDUHFPERHWQSRZ c. A cyclic rotation of rows and/or columns leads to equivalent substitutions. In this case, the matrix for part a of this problem is obtained from the matrix of Problem 2.10a, by rotating the columns by one step and the rows by three steps. 2.12 a. 25!  284 b. Given any 5x5 configuration, any of the four row rotations is equivalent, for a total of five equivalent configurations. For each of these five configurations, any of the four column rotations is equivalent. So each configuration in fact represents 25 equivalent configurations. Thus, the total number of unique keys is 25!/25 = 24! 2.13 A mixed Caesar cipher. The amount of shift is determined by the keyword, which determines the placement of letters in the matrix. 2.14 a. Difficulties are things that show what men are. b. Irrationally held truths may be more harmful than reasoned errors. 2.15 a. We need an even number of letters, so append a "q" to the end of the message. Then convert the letters into the corresponding alphabetic positions: M e e t m e a t t h e u s u a l 5 1 20 20 8 12 P l a c e a t t e n r a t h e r 16 12 1 3 5 18 1 20 8 5 18 T h a n e i g h t o c l o c k q 20 8 1 14 5 9 7 8 20 15 17 The calculations proceed two letters at a time. The first pair:  C1 C2       9 4 5 7       13 5      mod26  137 100      mod26  7 22       The first two ciphertext characters are alphabetic positions 7 and 22, which correspond to GV. The complete ciphertext: GVUIGVKODZYPUHEKJHUZWFZFWSJSDZMUDZMYCJQMFWWUQRKR b. We first perform a matrix inversion. Note that the determinate of the encryption matrix is (9  7) – (4  5) = 43. Using the matrix inversion formula from the book: -13-  9 4 5 7       1  1 43 7 4 5 9      mod26  23 7 4 5 9      mod26  161 92 115 9      mod26  5 12 15 25       Here we used the fact that (43)–1 = 23 in Z26. Once the inverse matrix has been determined, decryption can proceed. Source: [LEWA00]. 2.16 Consider the matrix K with elements kij to consist of the set of column vectors Kj, where: K  k11 k1n kn1 knn           and K j  k1j knj           The ciphertext of the following chosen plaintext n-grams reveals the columns of K: (B, A, A, …, A, A)  K1 (A, B, A, …, A, A)  K2  (A, A, A, …, A, B)  Kn 2.17 a. 7  134 b. 7  134 c. 134 d. 10  134 e. 24  132 f. 24  (132 – 1)  13 g. 37648 h. 23530 i. 2.18 key: legleglegle plaintext: explanation ciphertext: PBVWETLXOZR 2.19 a. s e n d m o r e m o n e y 13 4 24 9 0 1 7 23 2 8 9 1 4 14 10 9 15 12 7 B E C K J D M S X Z P M H -14- b. c a s h n o t n e e d e d 2 0 18 7 13 3 4 3 25 4 22 3 22 15 19 5 19 21 12 8 4 1 4 14 10 9 15 12 7 B E C K J D M S X Z P M H 2.20 your package ready Friday 21st room three Please destroy this immediately. 2.21 a. Lay the message out in a matrix 8 letters across. Each integer in the key tells you which letter to choose in the corresponding row. Result: He sitteth between the cherubims. The isles may be glad thereof. As the rivers in the south. b. Quite secure. In each row there is one of eight possibilities. So if the ciphertext is 8n letters in length, then the number of possible plaintexts is 8n. c. Not very secure. Lord Peter figured it out. (from The Nine Tailors) -15- ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS 3.1 Most symmetric block encryption algorithms in current use are based on the Feistel block cipher structure. Therefore, a study of the Feistel structure reveals the principles behind these more recent ciphers. 3.2 A stream cipher is one that encrypts a digital data stream one bit or one byte at a time. A block cipher is one in which a block of plaintext is treated as a whole and used to produce a ciphertext block of equal length. 3.3 If a small block size, such as n = 4, is used, then the system is equivalent to a classical substitution cipher. For small n, such systems are vulnerable to a statistical analysis of the plaintext. For a large block size, the size of the key, which is on the order of n  2n, makes the system impractical. 3.4 In a product cipher, two or more basic ciphers are performed in sequence in such a way that the final result or product is cryptographically stronger than any of the component ciphers. 3.5 In diffusion, the statistical structure of the plaintext is dissipated into long-range statistics of the ciphertext. This is achieved by having each plaintext digit affect the value of many ciphertext digits, which is equivalent to saying that each ciphertext digit is affected by many plaintext digits. Confusion seeks to make the relationship between the statistics of the ciphertext and the value of the encryption key as complex as possible, again to thwart attempts to discover the key. Thus, even if the attacker can get some handle on the statistics of the ciphertext, the way in which the key was used to produce that ciphertext is so complex as to make it difficult to deduce the key. This is achieved by the use of a complex substitution algorithm. 3.6 Block size: Larger block sizes mean greater security (all other things being equal) but reduced encryption/decryption speed. Key size: Larger key size means greater security but may decrease encryption/decryption speed. Number of rounds: The essence of the Feistel cipher is that a single round offers inadequate security but that multiple rounds offer increasing security. Subkey generation algorithm: Greater complexity in this algorithm should lead to greater difficulty of cryptanalysis. Round function: Again, greater complexity generally means greater CHAPTER 3 BLOCK CIPHERS AND THE DATA ENCRYPTION STANDARD -16- resistance to cryptanalysis. Fast

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, SOLUTIONS MANUAL

CRYPTOGRAPHY AND NETWORK
SECURITY
PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE
FOURTH EDITION




WILLIAM STALLINGS

, TABLE OF CONTENTS




Chapter 1: Introduction ..................................................................................................5
Chapter 2: Classical Encryption Techniques ...............................................................7
Chapter 3: Block Ciphers and the Date Encryption Standard ................................13
Chapter 4: Finite Fields .................................................................................................21
Chapter 5: Advanced Encryption Standard ..............................................................28
Chapter 6: More on Symmetric Ciphers ....................................................................33
Chapter 7: Confidentiality Using Symmetric Encryption .......................................38
Chapter 8: Introduction to Number Theory ..............................................................42
Chapter 9: Public-Key Cryptography and RSA ........................................................46
Chapter 10: Key Management; Other Public-Key Cryptosystems ...........................55
Chapter 11: Message Authentication and Hash Functions .......................................59
Chapter 12: Hash and MAC Algorithms .....................................................................62
Chapter 13: Digital Signatures and Authentication Protocols ..................................66
Chapter 14: Authentication Applications ....................................................................71
Chapter 15: Electronic Mail Security ............................................................................73
Chapter 16: IP Security ...................................................................................................76
Chapter 17: Web Security ...............................................................................................80
Chapter 18: Intruders ......................................................................................................83
Chapter 19: Malicious Software ....................................................................................87
Chapter 20: Firewalls ......................................................................................................89




-5-

, CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION

ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS
1.1 The OSI Security Architecture is a framework that provides a systematic way of defining
the requirements for security and characterizing the approaches to satisfying those
requirements. The document defines security attacks, mechanisms, and services, and the
relationships among these categories.

1.2 Passive attacks have to do with eavesdropping on, or monitoring, transmissions.
Electronic mail, file transfers, and client/server exchanges are examples of
transmissions that can be monitored. Active attacks include the modification of
transmitted data and attempts to gain unauthorized access to computer systems.

1.3 Passive attacks: release of message contents and traffic analysis. Active attacks:
masquerade, replay, modification of messages, and denial of service.

1.4 Authentication: The assurance that the communicating entity is the one that it claims to be.
Access control: The prevention of unauthorized use of a resource (i.e., this service controls
who can have access to a resource, under what conditions access can occur, and what those
accessing the resource are allowed to do).
Data confidentiality: The protection of data from unauthorized disclosure.
Data integrity: The assurance that data received are exactly as sent by an authorized entity
(i.e., contain no modification, insertion, deletion, or replay).
Nonrepudiation: Provides protection against denial by one of the entities involved in a
communication of having participated in all or part of the communication.
Availability service: The property of a system or a system resource being accessible and
usable upon demand by an authorized system entity, according to performance
specifications for the system (i.e., a system is available if it provides services according to
the system design whenever users request them).

1.5 See Table 1.3.




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