| \section{Built-in Module \module{rotor}} |
| \label{module-rotor} |
| \bimodindex{rotor} |
| |
| This module implements a rotor-based encryption algorithm, contributed by |
| Lance Ellinghouse\index{Ellinghouse, Lance}. The design is derived |
| from the Enigma device\indexii{Enigma}{device}, a machine |
| used during World War II to encipher messages. A rotor is simply a |
| permutation. For example, if the character `A' is the origin of the rotor, |
| then a given rotor might map `A' to `L', `B' to `Z', `C' to `G', and so on. |
| To encrypt, we choose several different rotors, and set the origins of the |
| rotors to known positions; their initial position is the ciphering key. To |
| encipher a character, we permute the original character by the first rotor, |
| and then apply the second rotor's permutation to the result. We continue |
| until we've applied all the rotors; the resulting character is our |
| ciphertext. We then change the origin of the final rotor by one position, |
| from `A' to `B'; if the final rotor has made a complete revolution, then we |
| rotate the next-to-last rotor by one position, and apply the same procedure |
| recursively. In other words, after enciphering one character, we advance |
| the rotors in the same fashion as a car's odometer. Decoding works in the |
| same way, except we reverse the permutations and apply them in the opposite |
| order. |
| \indexii{Enigma}{cipher} |
| |
| The available functions in this module are: |
| |
| \begin{funcdesc}{newrotor}{key\optional{, numrotors}} |
| Return a rotor object. \var{key} is a string containing the encryption key |
| for the object; it can contain arbitrary binary data. The key will be used |
| to randomly generate the rotor permutations and their initial positions. |
| \var{numrotors} is the number of rotor permutations in the returned object; |
| if it is omitted, a default value of 6 will be used. |
| \end{funcdesc} |
| |
| Rotor objects have the following methods: |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[rotor]{setkey}{key} |
| Sets the rotor's key to \var{key}. |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[rotor]{encrypt}{plaintext} |
| Reset the rotor object to its initial state and encrypt \var{plaintext}, |
| returning a string containing the ciphertext. The ciphertext is always the |
| same length as the original plaintext. |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[rotor]{encryptmore}{plaintext} |
| Encrypt \var{plaintext} without resetting the rotor object, and return a |
| string containing the ciphertext. |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[rotor]{decrypt}{ciphertext} |
| Reset the rotor object to its initial state and decrypt \var{ciphertext}, |
| returning a string containing the ciphertext. The plaintext string will |
| always be the same length as the ciphertext. |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| \begin{methoddesc}[rotor]{decryptmore}{ciphertext} |
| Decrypt \var{ciphertext} without resetting the rotor object, and return a |
| string containing the ciphertext. |
| \end{methoddesc} |
| |
| An example usage: |
| \begin{verbatim} |
| >>> import rotor |
| >>> rt = rotor.newrotor('key', 12) |
| >>> rt.encrypt('bar') |
| '\2534\363' |
| >>> rt.encryptmore('bar') |
| '\357\375$' |
| >>> rt.encrypt('bar') |
| '\2534\363' |
| >>> rt.decrypt('\2534\363') |
| 'bar' |
| >>> rt.decryptmore('\357\375$') |
| 'bar' |
| >>> rt.decrypt('\357\375$') |
| 'l(\315' |
| >>> del rt |
| \end{verbatim} |
| |
| The module's code is not an exact simulation of the original Enigma |
| device; it implements the rotor encryption scheme differently from the |
| original. The most important difference is that in the original |
| Enigma, there were only 5 or 6 different rotors in existence, and they |
| were applied twice to each character; the cipher key was the order in |
| which they were placed in the machine. The Python \module{rotor} |
| module uses the supplied key to initialize a random number generator; |
| the rotor permutations and their initial positions are then randomly |
| generated. The original device only enciphered the letters of the |
| alphabet, while this module can handle any 8-bit binary data; it also |
| produces binary output. This module can also operate with an |
| arbitrary number of rotors. |
| |
| The original Enigma cipher was broken in 1944. % XXX: Is this right? |
| The version implemented here is probably a good deal more difficult to crack |
| (especially if you use many rotors), but it won't be impossible for |
| a truly skilful and determined attacker to break the cipher. So if you want |
| to keep the NSA out of your files, this rotor cipher may well be unsafe, but |
| for discouraging casual snooping through your files, it will probably be |
| just fine, and may be somewhat safer than using the \UNIX{} \program{crypt} |
| command. |
| \index{NSA} |
| \index{National Security Agency} |