MARS (cipher): Difference between revisions

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It uses a variant of the [[Feistel cipher | Feistel structure]] which they call a "type 3 Feistel network"; the 128-bit block is treated as four 32-bit sub-blocks; each round uses one sub-block as input and modifies all of the other three sub-blocks. Like RC6, it uses data-dependent rotations. One 9*32 S-box is used; for some operations it is treated as two 8*32 S-boxes.
It uses a variant of the [[Feistel cipher | Feistel structure]] which they call a "type 3 Feistel network"; the 128-bit block is treated as four 32-bit sub-blocks; each round uses one sub-block as input and modifies all of the other three sub-blocks. Like RC6, it uses data-dependent rotations. One 9*32 S-box is used; for some operations it is treated as two 8*32 S-boxes.


The cipher is now freely available.  It has a home page; see [[Block_cipher/External_Links#Homepages_for_block_ciphers | external links]].
The cipher is now freely available.  It has a [http://domino.research.ibm.com/comm/research_projects.nsf/pages/security.mars.html home page].

Revision as of 09:44, 3 December 2009

This article is a stub and thus not approved.
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This editable Main Article is under development and subject to a disclaimer.

MARS is a block cipher designed by IBM as a candidate for the AES competition; it was chosen as a finalist, but did not win. Like all AES candidates, it uses 128-bit blocks and supports key sizes of 128, 192 or 256 bits.

It uses a variant of the Feistel structure which they call a "type 3 Feistel network"; the 128-bit block is treated as four 32-bit sub-blocks; each round uses one sub-block as input and modifies all of the other three sub-blocks. Like RC6, it uses data-dependent rotations. One 9*32 S-box is used; for some operations it is treated as two 8*32 S-boxes.

The cipher is now freely available. It has a home page.