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Tiny AES in C

This is a small and portable implementation of the AES ECB and CBC encryption algorithms written in C.

You can override the default block-size of 128 bit with 192 or 256 bit by defining the symbols AES192 or AES256 in aes.h.

The API is very simple and looks like this (I am using C99 <stdint.h>-style annotated types):

void AES_ECB_encrypt(uint8_t* input, const uint8_t* key, uint8_t* output);
void AES_ECB_decrypt(uint8_t* input, const uint8_t* key, uint8_t* output);
void AES_CBC_encrypt_buffer(uint8_t* output, uint8_t* input, uint32_t length, const uint8_t* key, const uint8_t* iv);
void AES_CBC_decrypt_buffer(uint8_t* output, uint8_t* input, uint32_t length, const uint8_t* key, const uint8_t* iv);

You can choose to use one or both of the modes-of-operation, by defining the symbols CBC and ECB. See the header file for clarification.

There is no built-in error checking or protection from out-of-bounds memory access errors as a result of malicious input. The two functions AES_ECB_xxcrypt() do most of the work, and they expect inputs of 128 bit length.

The module uses less than 200 bytes of RAM and 2.3K ROM when compiled for ARM (<2K for Thumb but YMMV).

It is one of the smallest implementation in C I've seen yet, but do contact me if you know of something smaller (or have improvements to the code here).

I've successfully used the code on 64bit x86, 32bit ARM and 8 bit AVR platforms.

GCC size output when only ECB mode is compiled for ARM (using 128 bit block size):

$ arm-none-eabi-gcc -Os -c aes.c -DCBC=0
$ size aes.o
   text    data     bss     dec     hex filename
   2071       0     184    2255     8cf aes.o

.. and when compiling for the THUMB instruction set, we end up just above 1.7K in code size.

$ arm-none-eabi-gcc -mthumb -Os -c aes.c -DCBC=0
$ size aes.o
   text    data     bss     dec     hex filename
   1551       0     184    1735     6c7 aes.o

I am using the Free Software Foundation, ARM GCC compiler:

$ arm-none-eabi-gcc --version
arm-none-eabi-gcc (4.8.4-1+11-1) 4.8.4 20141219 (release)
Copyright (C) 2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions.  There is NO
warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

This implementation is verified against the data in:

National Institute of Standards and Technology Special Publication 800-38A 2001 ED Appendix F: Example Vectors for Modes of Operation of the AES.

A heartfelt thank-you to all the nice people out there who have contributed to this project.

All material in this repository is in the public domain.

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