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ENC(1)				    OpenSSL				ENC(1)

NAME
       openssl-enc, enc	- symmetric cipher routines

SYNOPSIS
       openssl enc -cipher [-help] [-list] [-ciphers] [-in filename] [-out
       filename] [-pass	arg] [-e] [-d] [-a] [-base64] [-A] [-k password]
       [-kfile filename] [-K key] [-iv IV] [-S salt] [-salt] [-nosalt] [-z]
       [-md digest] [-iter count] [-pbkdf2] [-p] [-P] [-bufsize	number]
       [-nopad]	[-debug] [-none] [-rand	file...]  [-writerand file] [-engine
       id]

       openssl [cipher]	[...]

DESCRIPTION
       The symmetric cipher commands allow data	to be encrypted	or decrypted
       using various block and stream ciphers using keys based on passwords or
       explicitly provided. Base64 encoding or decoding	can also be performed
       either by itself	or in addition to the encryption or decryption.

OPTIONS
       -help
	   Print out a usage message.

       -list
	   List	all supported ciphers.

       -ciphers
	   Alias of -list to display all supported ciphers.

       -in filename
	   The input filename, standard	input by default.

       -out filename
	   The output filename,	standard output	by default.

       -pass arg
	   The	password  source. For more information about the format	of arg
	   see "Pass Phrase Options" in	openssl(1).

       -e  Encrypt the input data: this	is the default.

       -d  Decrypt the input data.

       -a  Base64 process the data. This means that if	encryption  is	taking
	   place the data is base64 encoded after encryption. If decryption is
	   set then the	input data is base64 decoded before being decrypted.

       -base64
	   Same	as -a

       -A  If the -a option is set then	base64 process the data	on one line.

       -k password
	   The password	to derive the key from.	This is	for compatibility with
	   previous versions of	OpenSSL. Superseded by the -pass argument.

       -kfile filename
	   Read	 the  password	to  derive  the	 key  from  the	 first line of
	   filename.  This is for  compatibility  with	previous  versions  of
	   OpenSSL. Superseded by the -pass argument.

       -md digest
	   Use	the  specified	digest	to create the key from the passphrase.
	   The default algorithm is sha-256.

       -iter count
	   Use a given number of iterations on the password  in	 deriving  the
	   encryption  key.   High values increase the time required to	brute-
	   force the resulting file.  This option enables the  use  of	PBKDF2
	   algorithm to	derive the key.

       -pbkdf2
	   Use	PBKDF2 algorithm with default iteration	count unless otherwise
	   specified.

       -nosalt
	   Don't use a salt in the key derivation routines. This option	SHOULD
	   NOT be used except for test purposes	or compatibility with  ancient
	   versions of OpenSSL.

       -salt
	   Use	salt  (randomly	 generated  or	provide	 with  -S option) when
	   encrypting, this is the default.

       -S salt
	   The actual salt to use: this	must be	represented as a string	of hex
	   digits.

       -K key
	   The actual key to  use:  this  must	be  represented	 as  a	string
	   comprised  only of hex digits. If only the key is specified,	the IV
	   must	additionally specified using the -iv option. When both	a  key
	   and a password are specified, the key given with the	-K option will
	   be  used  and  the IV generated from	the password will be taken. It
	   does	not make much sense to specify both key	and password.

       -iv IV
	   The actual IV  to  use:  this  must	be  represented	 as  a	string
	   comprised  only of hex digits. When only the	key is specified using
	   the -K option, the IV must explicitly be defined. When  a  password
	   is  being  specified	 using	one  of	 the  other options, the IV is
	   generated from this password.

       -p  Print out the key and IV used.

       -P  Print out the key and IV used then immediately exit:	don't  do  any
	   encryption or decryption.

       -bufsize	number
	   Set the buffer size for I/O.

       -nopad
	   Disable standard block padding.

       -debug
	   Debug the BIOs used for I/O.

       -z  Compress  or	 decompress encrypted data using zlib after encryption
	   or before decryption.  This	option	exists	only  if  OpenSSL  was
	   compiled with the zlib or zlib-dynamic option.

       -none
	   Use NULL cipher (no encryption or decryption	of input).

       -rand file...
	   A  file  or	files  containing  random data used to seed the	random
	   number generator.  Multiple files can be specified separated	by  an
	   OS-dependent	 character.   The separator is ; for MS-Windows, , for
	   OpenVMS, and	: for all others.

       [-writerand file]
	   Writes random data to the specified file upon exit.	 This  can  be
	   used	with a subsequent -rand	flag.

NOTES
       The  program  can  be  called  either  as openssl cipher	or openssl enc
       -cipher.	The first form	doesn't	 work  with  engine-provided  ciphers,
       because	this  form  is processed before	the configuration file is read
       and any ENGINEs loaded.	 Use  the  list	 command  to  get  a  list  of
       supported ciphers.

       Engines	which  provide entirely	new encryption algorithms (such	as the
       ccgost engine which provides gost89 algorithm) should be	configured  in
       the  configuration  file.  Engines  specified on	the command line using
       -engine options can only	be used	for hardware-assisted  implementations
       of  ciphers  which  are supported by the	OpenSSL	core or	another	engine
       specified in the	configuration file.

       When the	enc command  lists  supported  ciphers,	 ciphers  provided  by
       engines,	specified in the configuration files are listed	too.

       A password will be prompted for to derive the key and IV	if necessary.

       The -salt option	should ALWAYS be used if the key is being derived from
       a  password  unless  you	 want  compatibility with previous versions of
       OpenSSL.

       Without the -salt option	it is possible to perform efficient dictionary
       attacks on the password and to attack stream cipher encrypted data. The
       reason for this is that without	the  salt  the	same  password	always
       generates  the  same  encryption	 key.  When the	salt is	being used the
       first eight bytes of the	encrypted data are reserved for	the  salt:  it
       is  generated  at  random  when	encrypting  a  file  and read from the
       encrypted file when it is decrypted.

       Some of the ciphers do not have large keys  and	others	have  security
       implications if not used	correctly. A beginner is advised to just use a
       strong block cipher, such as AES, in CBC	mode.

       All  the	 block	ciphers	 normally  use	PKCS#5	padding, also known as
       standard	block padding. This allows a rudimentary integrity or password
       check to	be performed. However, since the chance	of random data passing
       the test	is better than 1 in 256	it isn't a very	good test.

       If padding is disabled then the input data must be a  multiple  of  the
       cipher block length.

       All RC2 ciphers have the	same key and effective key length.

       Blowfish	and RC5	algorithms use a 128 bit key.

SUPPORTED CIPHERS
       Note  that  some	 of  these ciphers can be disabled at compile time and
       some are	available only if an appropriate engine	is configured  in  the
       configuration file. The output of the enc command run with the -ciphers
       option  (that  is  openssl  enc	-ciphers)  produces a list of ciphers,
       supported by your  version  of  OpenSSL,	 including  ones  provided  by
       configured engines.

       The  enc	 program  does not support authenticated encryption modes like
       CCM and GCM, and	will not support such modes in the  future.   The  enc
       interface  by  necessity	must begin streaming output (e.g., to standard
       output when -out	is not used) before the	authentication	tag  could  be
       validated,  leading  to	the  usage  of	enc  in	 pipelines  that begin
       processing untrusted data and are not  capable  of  rolling  back  upon
       authentication  failure.	  The  AEAD modes currently in common use also
       suffer from catastrophic	failure	of  confidentiality  and/or  integrity
       upon  reuse  of key/iv/nonce, and since enc places the entire burden of
       key/iv/nonce management upon the	user, the risk of exposing AEAD	 modes
       is  too	great  to  allow.   These  key/iv/nonce	management issues also
       affect other modes currently exposed in enc, but	the failure modes  are
       less  extreme  in  these	cases, and the functionality cannot be removed
       with a stable release branch.  For bulk	encryption  of	data,  whether
       using   authenticated  encryption  modes	 or  other  modes,  cms(1)  is
       recommended, as it provides a standard data  format  and	 performs  the
       needed key/iv/nonce management.

	base64		   Base	64

	bf-cbc		   Blowfish in CBC mode
	bf		   Alias for bf-cbc
	blowfish	   Alias for bf-cbc
	bf-cfb		   Blowfish in CFB mode
	bf-ecb		   Blowfish in ECB mode
	bf-ofb		   Blowfish in OFB mode

	cast-cbc	   CAST	in CBC mode
	cast		   Alias for cast-cbc
	cast5-cbc	   CAST5 in CBC	mode
	cast5-cfb	   CAST5 in CFB	mode
	cast5-ecb	   CAST5 in ECB	mode
	cast5-ofb	   CAST5 in OFB	mode

	chacha20	   ChaCha20 algorithm

	des-cbc		   DES in CBC mode
	des		   Alias for des-cbc
	des-cfb		   DES in CFB mode
	des-ofb		   DES in OFB mode
	des-ecb		   DES in ECB mode

	des-ede-cbc	   Two key triple DES EDE in CBC mode
	des-ede		   Two key triple DES EDE in ECB mode
	des-ede-cfb	   Two key triple DES EDE in CFB mode
	des-ede-ofb	   Two key triple DES EDE in OFB mode

	des-ede3-cbc	   Three key triple DES	EDE in CBC mode
	des-ede3	   Three key triple DES	EDE in ECB mode
	des3		   Alias for des-ede3-cbc
	des-ede3-cfb	   Three key triple DES	EDE CFB	mode
	des-ede3-ofb	   Three key triple DES	EDE in OFB mode

	desx		   DESX	algorithm.

	gost89		   GOST	28147-89 in CFB	mode (provided by ccgost engine)
	gost89-cnt	  `GOST	28147-89 in CNT	mode (provided by ccgost engine)

	idea-cbc	   IDEA	algorithm in CBC mode
	idea		   same	as idea-cbc
	idea-cfb	   IDEA	in CFB mode
	idea-ecb	   IDEA	in ECB mode
	idea-ofb	   IDEA	in OFB mode

	rc2-cbc		   128 bit RC2 in CBC mode
	rc2		   Alias for rc2-cbc
	rc2-cfb		   128 bit RC2 in CFB mode
	rc2-ecb		   128 bit RC2 in ECB mode
	rc2-ofb		   128 bit RC2 in OFB mode
	rc2-64-cbc	   64 bit RC2 in CBC mode
	rc2-40-cbc	   40 bit RC2 in CBC mode

	rc4		   128 bit RC4
	rc4-64		   64 bit RC4
	rc4-40		   40 bit RC4

	rc5-cbc		   RC5 cipher in CBC mode
	rc5		   Alias for rc5-cbc
	rc5-cfb		   RC5 cipher in CFB mode
	rc5-ecb		   RC5 cipher in ECB mode
	rc5-ofb		   RC5 cipher in OFB mode

	seed-cbc	   SEED	cipher in CBC mode
	seed		   Alias for seed-cbc
	seed-cfb	   SEED	cipher in CFB mode
	seed-ecb	   SEED	cipher in ECB mode
	seed-ofb	   SEED	cipher in OFB mode

	sm4-cbc		   SM4 cipher in CBC mode
	sm4		   Alias for sm4-cbc
	sm4-cfb		   SM4 cipher in CFB mode
	sm4-ctr		   SM4 cipher in CTR mode
	sm4-ecb		   SM4 cipher in ECB mode
	sm4-ofb		   SM4 cipher in OFB mode

	aes-[128|192|256]-cbc  128/192/256 bit AES in CBC mode
	aes[128|192|256]       Alias for aes-[128|192|256]-cbc
	aes-[128|192|256]-cfb  128/192/256 bit AES in 128 bit CFB mode
	aes-[128|192|256]-cfb1 128/192/256 bit AES in 1	bit CFB	mode
	aes-[128|192|256]-cfb8 128/192/256 bit AES in 8	bit CFB	mode
	aes-[128|192|256]-ctr  128/192/256 bit AES in CTR mode
	aes-[128|192|256]-ecb  128/192/256 bit AES in ECB mode
	aes-[128|192|256]-ofb  128/192/256 bit AES in OFB mode

	aria-[128|192|256]-cbc	128/192/256 bit	ARIA in	CBC mode
	aria[128|192|256]	Alias for aria-[128|192|256]-cbc
	aria-[128|192|256]-cfb	128/192/256 bit	ARIA in	128 bit	CFB mode
	aria-[128|192|256]-cfb1	128/192/256 bit	ARIA in	1 bit CFB mode
	aria-[128|192|256]-cfb8	128/192/256 bit	ARIA in	8 bit CFB mode
	aria-[128|192|256]-ctr	128/192/256 bit	ARIA in	CTR mode
	aria-[128|192|256]-ecb	128/192/256 bit	ARIA in	ECB mode
	aria-[128|192|256]-ofb	128/192/256 bit	ARIA in	OFB mode

	camellia-[128|192|256]-cbc  128/192/256	bit Camellia in	CBC mode
	camellia[128|192|256]	    Alias for camellia-[128|192|256]-cbc
	camellia-[128|192|256]-cfb  128/192/256	bit Camellia in	128 bit	CFB mode
	camellia-[128|192|256]-cfb1 128/192/256	bit Camellia in	1 bit CFB mode
	camellia-[128|192|256]-cfb8 128/192/256	bit Camellia in	8 bit CFB mode
	camellia-[128|192|256]-ctr  128/192/256	bit Camellia in	CTR mode
	camellia-[128|192|256]-ecb  128/192/256	bit Camellia in	ECB mode
	camellia-[128|192|256]-ofb  128/192/256	bit Camellia in	OFB mode

EXAMPLES
       Just base64 encode a binary file:

	openssl	base64 -in file.bin -out file.b64

       Decode the same file

	openssl	base64 -d -in file.b64 -out file.bin

       Encrypt	a  file	using AES-128 using a prompted password	and PBKDF2 key
       derivation:

	openssl	enc -aes128 -pbkdf2 -in	file.txt -out file.aes128

       Decrypt a file using a supplied password:

	openssl	enc -aes128 -pbkdf2 -d -in file.aes128 -out file.txt \
	   -pass pass:<password>

       Encrypt a file then base64 encode it (so	it can be sent	via  mail  for
       example)	using AES-256 in CTR mode and PBKDF2 key derivation:

	openssl	enc -aes-256-ctr -pbkdf2 -a -in	file.txt -out file.aes256

       Base64  decode  a  file	then decrypt it	using a	password supplied in a
       file:

	openssl	enc -aes-256-ctr -pbkdf2 -d -a -in file.aes256 -out file.txt \
	   -pass file:<passfile>

BUGS
       The -A option when used with large files	doesn't	work properly.

       The enc program only supports a fixed number of algorithms with certain
       parameters. So if, for example, you want	to use RC2 with	a 76  bit  key
       or RC4 with an 84 bit key you can't use this program.

HISTORY
       The default digest was changed from MD5 to SHA256 in OpenSSL 1.1.0.

       The -list option	was added in OpenSSL 1.1.1e.

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright 2000-2021 The OpenSSL Project Authors.	All Rights Reserved.

       Licensed	 under	the  OpenSSL license (the "License").  You may not use
       this file except	in compliance with the License.	 You can obtain	a copy
       in   the	  file	 LICENSE   in	the   source   distribution   or    at
       <https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>.

1.1.1w				  2023-09-11				ENC(1)

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