/* 
 * Fast, portable, and easy-to-use Twofish implementation,  
 * Version 0.3. 
 * Copyright (c) 2002 by Niels Ferguson.  
 * (See further down for the almost-unrestricted licensing terms.) 
 * 
 * -------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
 * There are two files for this implementation: 
 * - twofish.h, the header file. 
 * - twofish.c, the code file. 
 * 
 * To incorporate this code into your program you should: 
 * - Check the licensing terms further down in this comment. 
 * - Fix the two type definitions in twofish.h to suit your platform. 
 * - Fix a few definitions in twofish.c in the section marked  
 *   PLATFORM FIXES. There is one important ones that affects  
 *   functionality, and then a few definitions that you can optimise  
 *   for efficiency but those have no effect on the functionality.  
 *   Don't change anything else. 
 * - Put the code in your project and compile it. 
 * 
 * To use this library you should: 
 * - Call Twofish_initialise() in your program before any other function in 
 *   this library. 
 * - Use Twofish_prepare_key(...) to convert a key to internal form. 
 * - Use Twofish_encrypt(...) and Twofish_decrypt(...) to encrypt and decrypt 
 *   data. 
 * See the comments in the header file for details on these functions. 
 * -------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
 *  
 * There are many Twofish implementation available for free on the web. 
 * Most of them are hard to integrate into your own program. 
 * As we like people to use our cipher, I thought I would make it easier.  
 * Here is a free and easy-to-integrate Twofish implementation in C. 
 * The latest version is always available from my personal home page at 
 *    http://niels.ferguson.net/ 
 * 
 * Integrating library code into a project is difficult because the library 
 * header files interfere with the project's header files and code.  
 * And of course the project's header files interfere with the library code. 
 * I've tried to resolve these problems here.  
 * The header file of this implementation is very light-weight.  
 * It contains two typedefs, a structure, and a few function declarations. 
 * All names it defines start with "Twofish_".  
 * The header file is therefore unlikely to cause problems in your project. 
 * The code file of this implementation doesn't need to include the header 
 * files of the project. There is thus no danger of the project interfering 
 * with all the definitions and macros of the Twofish code. 
 * In most situations, all you need to do is fill in a few platform-specific 
 * definitions in the header file and code file,  
 * and you should be able to run the Twofish code in your project. 
 * I estimate it should take you less than an hour to integrate this code 
 * into your project, most of it spent reading the comments telling you what 
 * to do. 
 * 
 * For people using C++: it is very easy to wrap this library into a 
 * TwofishKey class. One of the big advantages is that you can automate the 
 * wiping of the key material in the destructor. I have not provided a C++ 
 * class because the interface depends too much on the abstract base class  
 * you use for block ciphers in your program, which I don't know about. 
 * 
 * This implementation is designed for use on PC-class machines. It uses the  
 * Twofish 'full' keying option which uses large tables. Total table size is  
 * around 5-6 kB for static tables plus 4.5 kB for each pre-processed key. 
 * If you need an implementation that uses less memory, 
 * take a look at Brian Gladman's code on his web site: 
 *     http://fp.gladman.plus.com/cryptography_technology/aes/ 
 * He has code for all AES candidates. 
 * His Twofish code has lots of options trading off table size vs. speed. 
 * You can also take a look at the optimised code by Doug Whiting on the 
 * Twofish web site 
 *      http://www.counterpane.com/twofish.html 
 * which has loads of options. 
 * I believe these existing implementations are harder to re-use because they 
 * are not clean libraries and they impose requirements on the environment.  
 * This implementation is very careful to minimise those,  
 * and should be easier to integrate into any larger program. 
 * 
 * The default mode of this implementation is fully portable as it uses no 
 * behaviour not defined in the C standard. (This is harder than you think.) 
 * If you have any problems porting the default mode, please let me know 
 * so that I can fix the problem. (But only if this code is at fault, I  
 * don't fix compilers.) 
 * Most of the platform fixes are related to non-portable but faster ways  
 * of implementing certain functions. 
 * 
 * In general I've tried to make the code as fast as possible, at the expense 
 * of memory and code size. However, C does impose limits, and this  
 * implementation will be slower than an optimised assembler implementation. 
 * But beware of assembler implementations: a good Pentium implementation 
 * uses completely different code than a good Pentium II implementation. 
 * You basically have to re-write the assembly code for every generation of 
 * processor. Unless you are severely pressed for speed, stick with C. 
 * 
 * The initialisation routine of this implementation contains a self-test. 
 * If initialisation succeeds without calling the fatal routine, then 
 * the implementation works. I don't think you can break the implementation 
 * in such a way that it still passes the tests, unless you are malicious. 
 * In other words: if the initialisation routine returns,  
 * you have successfully ported the implementation.  
 * (Or not implemented the fatal routine properly, but that is your problem.) 
 * 
 * I'm indebted to many people who helped me in one way or another to write 
 * this code. During the design of Twofish and the AES process I had very  
 * extensive discussions of all implementation issues with various people. 
 * Doug Whiting in particular provided a wealth of information. The Twofish  
 * team spent untold hours discussion various cipher features, and their  
 * implementation. Brian Gladman implemented all AES candidates in C,  
 * and we had some fruitful discussions on how to implement Twofish in C. 
 * Jan Nieuwenhuizen tested this code on Linux using GCC. 
 * 
 * Now for the license: 
 * The author hereby grants a perpetual license to everybody to 
 * use this code for any purpose as long as the copyright message is included 
 * in the source code of this or any derived work. 
 *  
 * Yes, this means that you, your company, your club, and anyone else 
 * can use this code anywhere you want. You can change it and distribute it 
 * under the GPL, include it in your commercial product without releasing 
 * the source code, put it on the web, etc.  
 * The only thing you cannot do is remove my copyright message,  
 * or distribute any source code based on this implementation that does not  
 * include my copyright message.  
 *  
 * I appreciate a mention in the documentation or credits,  
 * but I understand if that is difficult to do. 
 * I also appreciate it if you tell me where and why you used my code. 
 * 
 * Please send any questions or comments to niels@ferguson.net 
 * 
 * Have Fun! 
 * 
 * Niels 
 */ 
 
/* 
 * DISCLAIMER: As I'm giving away my work for free, I'm of course not going 
 * to accept any liability of any form. This code, or the Twofish cipher, 
 * might very well be flawed; you have been warned. 
 * This software is provided as-is, without any kind of warrenty or 
 * guarantee. And that is really all you can expect when you download  
 * code for free from the Internet.  
 * 
 * I think it is really sad that disclaimers like this seem to be necessary. 
 * If people only had a little bit more common sense, and didn't come 
 * whining like little children every time something happens.... 
 */ 
  
/* 
 * Version history: 
 * Version 0.0, 2002-08-30 
 *      First written. 
 * Version 0.1, 2002-09-03 
 *      Added disclaimer. Improved self-tests. 
 * Version 0.2, 2002-09-09 
 *      Removed last non-portabilities. Default now works completely within 
 *      the C standard. UInt32 can be larger than 32 bits without problems. 
 * Version 0.3, 2002-09-28 
 *      Bugfix: use  instead of  to adhere to ANSI/ISO. 
 *      Rename BIG_ENDIAN macro to CPU_IS_BIG_ENDIAN. The gcc library  
 *      header  already defines BIG_ENDIAN, even though it is not  
 *      supposed to. 
 */ 
 
 
/*  
 * Minimum set of include files. 
 * You should not need any application-specific include files for this code.  
 * In fact, adding you own header files could break one of the many macros or 
 * functions in this file. Be very careful. 
 * Standard include files will probably be ok. 
 */ 
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
/* #include      * for memset(), memcpy(), and memcmp() */ 
#include "twofish.h" 
 
 
/* 
 * PLATFORM FIXES 
 * ============== 
 * 
 * Fix the type definitions in twofish.h first! 
 *  
 * The following definitions have to be fixed for each particular platform  
 * you work on. If you have a multi-platform program, you no doubt have  
 * portable definitions that you can substitute here without changing the  
 * rest of the code. 
 */ 
 
 
/*  
 * Function called if something is fatally wrong with the implementation.  
 * This fatal function is called when a coding error is detected in the 
 * Twofish implementation, or when somebody passes an obviously erroneous 
 * parameter to this implementation. There is not much you can do when 
 * the code contains bugs, so we just stop. 
 *  
 * The argument is a string. Ideally the fatal function prints this string 
 * as an error message. Whatever else this function does, it should never 
 * return. A typical implementation would stop the program completely after 
 * printing the error message. 
 * 
 * This default implementation is not very useful,  
 * but does not assume anything about your environment.  
 * It will at least let you know something is wrong.... 
 * I didn't want to include any libraries to print and error or so, 
 * as this makes the code much harder to integrate in a project. 
 * 
 * Note that the Twofish_fatal function may not return to the caller. 
 * Unfortunately this is not something the self-test can test for, 
 * so you have to make sure of this yourself. 
 * 
 * If you want to call an external function, be careful about including 
 * your own header files here. This code uses a lot of macros, and your 
 * header file could easily break it. Maybe the best solution is to use 
 * a separate extern statement for your fatal function. 
 */ 
/* #define Twofish_fatal(pmsgx) { fprintf(stderr, pmsgx); exit(1); } */
#define Twofish_fatal(pmsgx, code) { return(code); } 
 
 
/* 
 * The rest of the settings are not important for the functionality 
 * of this Twofish implementation. That is, their default settings 
 * work on all platforms. You can change them to improve the  
 * speed of the implementation on your platform. Erroneous settings 
 * will result in erroneous implementations, but the self-test should 
 * catch those. 
 */ 
 
 
/*  
 * Macros to rotate a Twofish_UInt32 value left or right by the  
 * specified number of bits. This should be a 32-bit rotation,  
 * and not rotation of, say, 64-bit values. 
 * 
 * Every encryption or decryption operation uses 32 of these rotations, 
 * so it is a good idea to make these macros efficient. 
 * 
 * This fully portable definition has one piece of tricky stuff. 
 * The UInt32 might be larger than 32 bits, so we have to mask 
 * any higher bits off. The simplest way to do this is to 'and' the 
 * value first with 0xffffffff and then shift it right. An optimising 
 * compiler that has a 32-bit type can optimise this 'and' away. 
 *  
 * Unfortunately there is no portable way of writing the constant 
 * 0xffffffff. You don't know which suffix to use (U, or UL?) 
 * The UINT32_MASK definition uses a bit of trickery. Shift-left 
 * is only defined if the shift amount is strictly less than the size 
 * of the UInt32, so we can't use (1<<32). The answer it to take the value 
 * 2, cast it to a UInt32, shift it left 31 positions, and subtract one. 
 * Another example of how to make something very simple extremely difficult. 
 * I hate C. 
 *  
 * The rotation macros are straightforward. 
 * They are only applied to UInt32 values, which are _unsigned_ 
 * so the >> operator must do a logical shift that brings in zeroes. 
 * On most platforms you will only need to optimise the ROL32 macro; the 
 * ROR32 macro is not inefficient on an optimising compiler as all rotation 
 * amounts in this code are known at compile time. 
 * 
 * On many platforms there is a faster solution. 
 * For example, MS compilers have the __rotl and __rotr functions 
 * that generate x86 rotation instructions. 
 */ 
#define UINT32_MASK    ( (((Twofish_UInt32)2)<<31) - 1 ) 
 
#ifndef _MSC_VER 
#define ROL32(x,n) ( (x)<<(n) | ((x) & UINT32_MASK) >> (32-(n)) ) 
#define ROR32(x,n) ( (x)>>(n) | ((x) & UINT32_MASK) << (32-(n)) ) 
#else 
#define ROL32(x,n) (_lrotl((x), (n))) 
#define ROR32(x,n) (_lrotr((x), (n))) 
#endif 
 
/* 
 * Select data type for q-table entries.  
 * 
 * Larger entry types cost more memory (1.5 kB), and might be faster  
 * or slower depending on the CPU and compiler details. 
 * 
 * This choice only affects the static data size and the key setup speed. 
 * Functionality, expanded key size, or encryption speed are not affected. 
 * Define to 1 to get large q-table entries. 
 */ 
#define LARGE_Q_TABLE   0    /* default = 0 */ 
 
 
/* 
 * Method to select a single byte from a UInt32. 
 * WARNING: non-portable code if set; might not work on all platforms. 
 * 
 * Inside the inner loop of Twofish it is necessary to access the 4  
 * individual bytes of a UInt32. This can be done using either shifts 
 * and masks, or memory accesses. 
 * 
 * Set to 0 to use shift and mask operations for the byte selection. 
 * This is more ALU intensive. It is also fully portable.  
 *  
 * Set to 1 to use memory accesses. The UInt32 is stored in memory and 
 * the individual bytes are read from memory one at a time. 
 * This solution is more memory-intensive, and not fully portable. 
 * It might be faster on your platform, or not. If you use this option, 
 * make sure you set the CPU_IS_BIG_ENDIAN flag appropriately. 
 *  
 * This macro does not affect the conversion of the inputs and outputs 
 * of the cipher. See the CONVERT_USING_CASTS macro for that. 
 */ 
#define SELECT_BYTE_FROM_UINT32_IN_MEMORY    0    /* default = 0 */ 
 
 
/* 
 * Method used to read the input and write the output. 
 * WARNING: non-portable code if set; might not work on all platforms. 
 * 
 * Twofish operates on 32-bit words. The input to the cipher is 
 * a byte array, as is the output. The portable method of doing the 
 * conversion is a bunch of rotate and mask operations, but on many  
 * platforms it can be done faster using a cast. 
 * This only works if your CPU allows UInt32 accesses to arbitrary Byte 
 * addresses. 
 *  
 * Set to 0 to use the shift and mask operations. This is fully 
 * portable. . 
 * 
 * Set to 1 to use a cast. The Byte * is cast to a UInt32 *, and a 
 * UInt32 is read. If necessary (as indicated by the CPU_IS_BIG_ENDIAN  
 * macro) the byte order in the UInt32 is swapped. The reverse is done 
 * to write the output of the encryption/decryption. Make sure you set 
 * the CPU_IS_BIG_ENDIAN flag appropriately. 
 * This option does not work unless a UInt32 is exactly 32 bits. 
 * 
 * This macro only changes the reading/writing of the plaintext/ciphertext. 
 * See the SELECT_BYTE_FROM_UINT32_IN_MEMORY to affect the way in which 
 * a UInt32 is split into 4 bytes for the S-box selection. 
 */ 
#define CONVERT_USING_CASTS    0    /* default = 0 */ 
 
 
/*  
 * Endianness switch. 
 * Only relevant if SELECT_BYTE_FROM_UINT32_IN_MEMORY or 
 * CONVERT_USING_CASTS is set. 
 * 
 * Set to 1 on a big-endian machine, and to 0 on a little-endian machine.  
 * Twofish uses the little-endian convention (least significant byte first) 
 * and big-endian machines (using most significant byte first)  
 * have to do a few conversions.  
 * 
 * CAUTION: This code has never been tested on a big-endian machine,  
 * because I don't have access to one. Feedback appreciated. 
 */ 
#define CPU_IS_BIG_ENDIAN    0 
 
 
/*  
 * Macro to reverse the order of the bytes in a UInt32. 
 * Used to convert to little-endian on big-endian machines. 
 * This macro is always tested, but only used in the encryption and 
 * decryption if CONVERT_USING_CASTS, and CPU_IS_BIG_ENDIAN 
 * are both set. In other words: this macro is only speed-critical if 
 * both these flags have been set. 
 * 
 * This default definition of SWAP works, but on many platforms there is a  
 * more efficient implementation.  
 */ 
#define BSWAP(x) ((ROL32((x),8)&0x00ff00ff) | (ROR32((x),8) & 0xff00ff00)) 
 
 
/* 
 * END OF PLATFORM FIXES 
 * ===================== 
 *  
 * You should not have to touch the rest of this file. 
 */ 
 
 
/* 
 * Convert the external type names to some that are easier to use inside 
 * this file. I didn't want to use the names Byte and UInt32 in the 
 * header file, because many programs already define them and using two 
 * conventions at once can be very difficult. 
 * Don't change these definitions! Change the originals  
 * in twofish.h instead.  
 */ 
/* A Byte must be an unsigned integer, 8 bits long. */ 
/* typedef Twofish_Byte    Byte; */
/* A UInt32 must be an unsigned integer at least 32 bits long. */ 
/* typedef Twofish_UInt32  UInt32; */
 
 
/*  
 * Define a macro ENDIAN_CONVERT. 
 * 
 * We define a macro ENDIAN_CONVERT that performs a BSWAP on big-endian 
 * machines, and is the identity function on little-endian machines. 
 * The code then uses this macro without considering the endianness. 
 */ 
 
#if CPU_IS_BIG_ENDIAN 
#define ENDIAN_CONVERT(x)    BSWAP(x) 
#else 
#define ENDIAN_CONVERT(x)    (x) 
#endif 
 
 
/*  
 * Compute byte offset within a UInt32 stored in memory. 
 * 
 * This is only used when SELECT_BYTE_FROM_UINT32_IN_MEMORY is set. 
 *  
 * The input is the byte number 0..3, 0 for least significant. 
 * Note the use of sizeof() to support UInt32 types that are larger 
 * than 4 bytes. 
 */ 
#if CPU_IS_BIG_ENDIAN 
#define BYTE_OFFSET( n )  (sizeof(Twofish_UInt32) - 1 - (n) ) 
#else 
#define BYTE_OFFSET( n )  (n) 
#endif 
 
 
/* 
 * Macro to get Byte no. b from UInt32 value X. 
 * We use two different definition, depending on the settings. 
 */ 
#if SELECT_BYTE_FROM_UINT32_IN_MEMORY 
    /* Pick the byte from the memory in which X is stored. */ 
#define SELECT_BYTE( X, b ) (((Twofish_Byte *)(&(X)))[BYTE_OFFSET(b)]) 
#else 
    /* Portable solution: Pick the byte directly from the X value. */ 
#define SELECT_BYTE( X, b ) (((X) >> (8*(b))) & 0xff) 
#endif 
 
 
/* Some shorthands because we use byte selection in large formulae. */ 
#define b0(X)   SELECT_BYTE((X),0) 
#define b1(X)   SELECT_BYTE((X),1) 
#define b2(X)   SELECT_BYTE((X),2) 
#define b3(X)   SELECT_BYTE((X),3) 
 
 
/* 
 * We need macros to load and store UInt32 from/to byte arrays 
 * using the least-significant-byte-first convention. 
 * 
 * GET32( p ) gets a UInt32 in lsb-first form from four bytes pointed to 
 * by p. 
 * PUT32( v, p ) writes the UInt32 value v at address p in lsb-first form. 
 */ 
#if CONVERT_USING_CASTS 
 
    /* Get UInt32 from four bytes pointed to by p. */ 
#define GET32( p )    ENDIAN_CONVERT( *((Twofish_UInt32 *)(p)) ) 
    /* Put UInt32 into four bytes pointed to by p */ 
#define PUT32( v, p ) *((Twofish_UInt32 *)(p)) = ENDIAN_CONVERT(v) 
 
#else 
 
    /* Get UInt32 from four bytes pointed to by p. */ 
#define GET32( p ) \
    ( \
      (Twofish_UInt32)((p)[0])     \
    | (Twofish_UInt32)((p)[1])<< 8 \
    | (Twofish_UInt32)((p)[2])<<16 \
    | (Twofish_UInt32)((p)[3])<<24 \
    ) 
    /* Put UInt32 into four bytes pointed to by p */ 
#define PUT32( v, p ) \
    (p)[0] = (Twofish_Byte)(((v)      ) & 0xff); \
    (p)[1] = (Twofish_Byte)(((v) >>  8) & 0xff); \
    (p)[2] = (Twofish_Byte)(((v) >> 16) & 0xff); \
    (p)[3] = (Twofish_Byte)(((v) >> 24) & 0xff)
 
#endif 

#ifdef ANDROID
/**
 * Dummy function to disable some compiler optimizations.
 * 
 * See comment in Twofish_cfb128_encrypt().
 */
void Two_debugDummy(Twofish_Byte* in, Twofish_Byte* out, Twofish_Byte* ivec)
{
}
#endif
/* 
 * Test the platform-specific macros. 
 * This function tests the macros defined so far to make sure the  
 * definitions are appropriate for this platform. 
 * If you make any mistake in the platform configuration, this should detect 
 * that and inform you what went wrong. 
 * Somewhere, someday, this is going to save somebody a lot of time, 
 * because misbehaving macros are hard to debug. 
 */ 
static int test_platform() 
    { 
    /* Buffer with test values. */ 
    Twofish_Byte buf[] = {0x12, 0x34, 0x56, 0x78, 0x9a, 0xbc, 0xde, 0}; 
    Twofish_UInt32 C; 
    Twofish_UInt32 x,y; 
    int i; 
 
    /*  
     * Some sanity checks on the types that can't be done in compile time.  
     * A smart compiler will just optimise these tests away. 
     * The pre-processor doesn't understand different types, so we cannot 
     * do these checks in compile-time. 
     * 
     * I hate C. 
     * 
     * The first check in each case is to make sure the size is correct. 
     * The second check is to ensure that it is an unsigned type. 
     */ 
    if( ((Twofish_UInt32)((Twofish_UInt32)1 << 31) == 0) || ((Twofish_UInt32)-1 < 0 ))  
        { 
	  Twofish_fatal( "Twofish code: Twofish_UInt32 type not suitable", ERR_UINT32 ); 
        } 
    if( (sizeof( Twofish_Byte ) != 1) || (((Twofish_Byte)-1) < 0) )  
        { 
	  Twofish_fatal( "Twofish code: Twofish_Byte type not suitable", ERR_BYTE ); 
        } 
 
    /*  
     * Sanity-check the endianness conversions.  
     * This is just an aid to find problems. If you do the endianness 
     * conversion macros wrong you will fail the full cipher test, 
     * but that does not help you find the error. 
     * Always make it easy to find the bugs!  
     * 
     * Detail: There is no fully portable way of writing UInt32 constants, 
     * as you don't know whether to use the U or UL suffix. Using only U you 
     * might only be allowed 16-bit constants. Using UL you might get 64-bit 
     * constants which cannot be stored in a UInt32 without warnings, and 
     * which generally behave subtly different from a true UInt32. 
     * As long as we're just comparing with the constant,  
     * we can always use the UL suffix and at worst lose some efficiency.  
     * I use a separate '32-bit constant' macro in most of my other code. 
     * 
     * I hate C. 
     * 
     * Start with testing GET32. We test it on all positions modulo 4  
     * to make sure we can handly any position of inputs. (Some CPUs 
     * do not allow non-aligned accesses which we would do if you used 
     * the CONVERT_USING_CASTS option. 
     */ 
    if( (GET32( buf ) != 0x78563412UL) || (GET32(buf+1) != 0x9a785634UL)  
        || (GET32( buf+2 ) != 0xbc9a7856UL) || (GET32(buf+3) != 0xdebc9a78UL) ) 
        { 
	  Twofish_fatal( "Twofish code: GET32 not implemented properly", ERR_GET32 ); 
        } 
 
    /*  
     * We can now use GET32 to test PUT32. 
     * We don't test the shifted versions. If GET32 can do that then 
     * so should PUT32. 
     */ 
    C = GET32( buf ); 
    PUT32( 3*C, buf ); 
    if( GET32( buf ) != 0x69029c36UL ) 
        { 
	  Twofish_fatal( "Twofish code: PUT32 not implemented properly", ERR_PUT32 ); 
        } 
 
 
    /* Test ROL and ROR */ 
    for( i=1; i<32; i++ )  
        { 
        /* Just a simple test. */ 
        x = ROR32( C, i ); 
        y = ROL32( C, i ); 
        x ^= (C>>i) ^ (C<<(32-i)); 
        /*y ^= (C<>(32-i));  */
        y ^= (C<<i) ^ (C>>(32-i));
        x |= y; 
        /*  
         * Now all we check is that x is zero in the least significant 
         * 32 bits. Using the UL suffix is safe here, as it doesn't matter 
         * if we get a larger type. 
         */ 
	if( (x & 0xffffffffUL) != 0 ) 
            { 
	      Twofish_fatal( "Twofish ROL or ROR not properly defined.", ERR_ROLR ); 
            } 
        } 
 
    /* Test the BSWAP macro */ 
    if( BSWAP(C) != 0x12345678UL ) 
        { 
        /* 
         * The BSWAP macro should always work, even if you are not using it. 
         * A smart optimising compiler will just remove this entire test. 
         */ 
	  Twofish_fatal( "BSWAP not properly defined.", ERR_BSWAP ); 
        } 
 
    /* And we can test the b macros which use SELECT_BYTE. */ 
    if( (b0(C)!=0x12) || (b1(C) != 0x34) || (b2(C) != 0x56) || (b3(C) != 0x78) ) 
        { 
        /* 
         * There are many reasons why this could fail. 
         * Most likely is that CPU_IS_BIG_ENDIAN has the wrong value.  
         */ 
	  Twofish_fatal( "Twofish code: SELECT_BYTE not implemented properly", ERR_SELECTB ); 
        }
    return SUCCESS;
    } 
 
 
/* 
 * Finally, we can start on the Twofish-related code. 
 * You really need the Twofish specifications to understand this code. The 
 * best source is the Twofish book: 
 *     "The Twofish Encryption Algorithm", by Bruce Schneier, John Kelsey, 
 *     Doug Whiting, David Wagner, Chris Hall, and Niels Ferguson. 
 * you can also use the AES submission document of Twofish, which is  
 * available from my list of publications on my personal web site at  
 *    http://niels.ferguson.net/. 
 * 
 * The first thing we do is write the testing routines. This is what the  
 * implementation has to satisfy in the end. We only test the external 
 * behaviour of the implementation of course. 
 */ 
 
 
/* 
 * Perform a single self test on a (plaintext,ciphertext,key) triple. 
 * Arguments: 
 *  key     array of key bytes 
 *  key_len length of key in bytes 
 *  p       plaintext 
 *  c       ciphertext 
 */ 
static int test_vector( Twofish_Byte key[], int key_len, Twofish_Byte p[16], Twofish_Byte c[16] ) 
    { 
    Twofish_Byte tmp[16];               /* scratch pad. */ 
    Twofish_key xkey;           /* The expanded key */ 
    int i; 
 
 
    /* Prepare the key */ 
    if ((i = Twofish_prepare_key( key, key_len, &xkey)) < 0)
	return i; 
 
    /*  
     * We run the test twice to ensure that the xkey structure 
     * is not damaged by the first encryption.  
     * Those are hideous bugs to find if you get them in an application. 
     */ 
    for( i=0; i<2; i++ )  
        { 
        /* Encrypt and test */ 
        Twofish_encrypt( &xkey, p, tmp ); 
        if( memcmp( c, tmp, 16 ) != 0 )  
            { 
	      Twofish_fatal( "Twofish encryption failure", ERR_TEST_ENC ); 
            } 
 
        /* Decrypt and test */ 
        Twofish_decrypt( &xkey, c, tmp ); 
        if( memcmp( p, tmp, 16 ) != 0 )  
            { 
	      Twofish_fatal( "Twofish decryption failure", ERR_TEST_DEC ); 
            } 
        } 
 
    /* The test keys are not secret, so we don't need to wipe xkey. */
    return SUCCESS;
    }
 
 
/* 
 * Check implementation using three (key,plaintext,ciphertext) 
 * test vectors, one for each major key length. 
 *  
 * This is an absolutely minimal self-test.  
 * This routine does not test odd-sized keys. 
 */ 
static int test_vectors() 
    { 
    /* 
     * We run three tests, one for each major key length. 
     * These test vectors come from the Twofish specification. 
     * One encryption and one decryption using randomish data and key 
     * will detect almost any error, especially since we generate the 
     * tables ourselves, so we don't have the problem of a single 
     * damaged table entry in the source. 
     */ 
 
    /* 128-bit test is the I=3 case of section B.2 of the Twofish book. */ 
    static Twofish_Byte k128[] = { 
        0x9F, 0x58, 0x9F, 0x5C, 0xF6, 0x12, 0x2C, 0x32,  
        0xB6, 0xBF, 0xEC, 0x2F, 0x2A, 0xE8, 0xC3, 0x5A, 
        }; 
    static Twofish_Byte p128[] = { 
        0xD4, 0x91, 0xDB, 0x16, 0xE7, 0xB1, 0xC3, 0x9E,  
        0x86, 0xCB, 0x08, 0x6B, 0x78, 0x9F, 0x54, 0x19 
        }; 
    static Twofish_Byte c128[] = { 
        0x01, 0x9F, 0x98, 0x09, 0xDE, 0x17, 0x11, 0x85,  
        0x8F, 0xAA, 0xC3, 0xA3, 0xBA, 0x20, 0xFB, 0xC3 
        }; 
 
    /* 192-bit test is the I=4 case of section B.2 of the Twofish book. */ 
    static Twofish_Byte k192[] = { 
        0x88, 0xB2, 0xB2, 0x70, 0x6B, 0x10, 0x5E, 0x36,  
        0xB4, 0x46, 0xBB, 0x6D, 0x73, 0x1A, 0x1E, 0x88,  
        0xEF, 0xA7, 0x1F, 0x78, 0x89, 0x65, 0xBD, 0x44 
        }; 
    static Twofish_Byte p192[] = { 
        0x39, 0xDA, 0x69, 0xD6, 0xBA, 0x49, 0x97, 0xD5, 
        0x85, 0xB6, 0xDC, 0x07, 0x3C, 0xA3, 0x41, 0xB2 
        }; 
    static Twofish_Byte c192[] = { 
        0x18, 0x2B, 0x02, 0xD8, 0x14, 0x97, 0xEA, 0x45, 
        0xF9, 0xDA, 0xAC, 0xDC, 0x29, 0x19, 0x3A, 0x65 
        }; 
 
    /* 256-bit test is the I=4 case of section B.2 of the Twofish book. */ 
    static Twofish_Byte k256[] = { 
        0xD4, 0x3B, 0xB7, 0x55, 0x6E, 0xA3, 0x2E, 0x46,  
        0xF2, 0xA2, 0x82, 0xB7, 0xD4, 0x5B, 0x4E, 0x0D, 
        0x57, 0xFF, 0x73, 0x9D, 0x4D, 0xC9, 0x2C, 0x1B, 
        0xD7, 0xFC, 0x01, 0x70, 0x0C, 0xC8, 0x21, 0x6F 
        }; 
    static Twofish_Byte p256[] = { 
        0x90, 0xAF, 0xE9, 0x1B, 0xB2, 0x88, 0x54, 0x4F, 
        0x2C, 0x32, 0xDC, 0x23, 0x9B, 0x26, 0x35, 0xE6 
        }; 
    static Twofish_Byte c256[] = { 
        0x6C, 0xB4, 0x56, 0x1C, 0x40, 0xBF, 0x0A, 0x97, 
        0x05, 0x93, 0x1C, 0xB6, 0xD4, 0x08, 0xE7, 0xFA 
        }; 

    int ret;

    /* Run the actual tests. */ 
    if ((ret = test_vector( k128, 16, p128, c128 )) < 0)
      return ret; 
    if ((ret = test_vector( k192, 24, p192, c192 )) < 0)
      return ret; 
    if ((ret = test_vector( k256, 32, p256, c256 )) < 0)
      return ret;
    return SUCCESS;
    }    
 
 
/* 
 * Perform extensive test for a single key size. 
 *  
 * Test a single key size against the test vectors from section 
 * B.2 in the Twofish book. This is a sequence of 49 encryptions 
 * and decryptions. Each plaintext is equal to the ciphertext of 
 * the previous encryption. The key is made up from the ciphertext 
 * two and three encryptions ago. Both plaintext and key start 
 * at the zero value.  
 * We should have designed a cleaner recurrence relation for 
 * these tests, but it is too late for that now. At least we learned 
 * how to do it better next time. 
 * For details see appendix B of the book. 
 * 
 * Arguments: 
 * key_len      Number of bytes of key 
 * final_value  Final plaintext value after 49 iterations 
 */ 
static int test_sequence( int key_len, Twofish_Byte final_value[] ) 
    { 
    Twofish_Byte buf[ (50+3)*16 ];      /* Buffer to hold our computation values. */ 
    Twofish_Byte tmp[16];               /* Temp for testing the decryption. */ 
    Twofish_key xkey;           /* The expanded key */ 
    int i, ret;
    Twofish_Byte * p; 
 
    /* Wipe the buffer */ 
    memset( buf, 0, sizeof( buf ) ); 
 
    /* 
     * Because the recurrence relation is done in an inconvenient manner 
     * we end up looping backwards over the buffer. 
     */ 
 
    /* Pointer in buffer points to current plaintext. */ 
    p = &buf[50*16]; 
    for( i=1; i<50; i++ ) 
        { 
        /*  
         * Prepare a key. 
         * This automatically checks that key_len is valid. 
         */ 
	  if ((ret = Twofish_prepare_key( p+16, key_len, &xkey)) < 0)
	    return ret; 
 
        /* Compute the next 16 bytes in the buffer */ 
        Twofish_encrypt( &xkey, p, p-16 ); 
 
        /* Check that the decryption is correct. */ 
        Twofish_decrypt( &xkey, p-16, tmp ); 
        if( memcmp( tmp, p, 16 ) != 0 ) 
            { 
	      Twofish_fatal( "Twofish decryption failure in sequence", ERR_SEQ_DEC ); 
            } 
        /* Move on to next 16 bytes in the buffer. */ 
        p -= 16; 
        } 
 
    /* And check the final value. */ 
    if( memcmp( p, final_value, 16 ) != 0 )  
        { 
	  Twofish_fatal( "Twofish encryption failure in sequence", ERR_SEQ_ENC ); 
        } 
 
    /* None of the data was secret, so there is no need to wipe anything. */
    return SUCCESS;
    } 
 
 
/*  
 * Run all three sequence tests from the Twofish test vectors.  
 * 
 * This checks the most extensive test vectors currently available  
 * for Twofish. The data is from the Twofish book, appendix B.2. 
 */ 
static int test_sequences() 
    { 
    static Twofish_Byte r128[] = { 
        0x5D, 0x9D, 0x4E, 0xEF, 0xFA, 0x91, 0x51, 0x57, 
        0x55, 0x24, 0xF1, 0x15, 0x81, 0x5A, 0x12, 0xE0 
        }; 
    static Twofish_Byte r192[] = { 
        0xE7, 0x54, 0x49, 0x21, 0x2B, 0xEE, 0xF9, 0xF4, 
        0xA3, 0x90, 0xBD, 0x86, 0x0A, 0x64, 0x09, 0x41 
        }; 
    static Twofish_Byte r256[] = { 
        0x37, 0xFE, 0x26, 0xFF, 0x1C, 0xF6, 0x61, 0x75, 
        0xF5, 0xDD, 0xF4, 0xC3, 0x3B, 0x97, 0xA2, 0x05 
        }; 
 
    /* Run the three sequence test vectors */
    int ret;
    if ((ret = test_sequence( 16, r128)) < 0)
      return ret; 
    if ((ret = test_sequence( 24, r192)) < 0)
      return ret; 
    if ((ret = test_sequence( 32, r256)) < 0)
      return ret;
    return SUCCESS;
    } 
 
 
/* 
 * Test the odd-sized keys. 
 * 
 * Every odd-sized key is equivalent to a one of 128, 192, or 256 bits. 
 * The equivalent key is found by padding at the end with zero bytes 
 * until a regular key size is reached. 
 * 
 * We just test that the key expansion routine behaves properly. 
 * If the expanded keys are identical, then the encryptions and decryptions 
 * will behave the same. 
 */ 
static int test_odd_sized_keys() 
    { 
    Twofish_Byte buf[32]; 
    Twofish_key xkey; 
    Twofish_key xkey_two; 
    int i, ret;
 
    /*  
     * We first create an all-zero key to use as PRNG key.  
     * Normally we would not have to fill the buffer with zeroes, as we could 
     * just pass a zero key length to the Twofish_prepare_key function. 
     * However, this relies on using odd-sized keys, and those are just the 
     * ones we are testing here. We can't use an untested function to test  
     * itself.  
     */ 
    memset( buf, 0, sizeof( buf ) ); 
    if ((ret = Twofish_prepare_key( buf, 16, &xkey)) < 0)
      return ret; 
 
    /* Fill buffer with pseudo-random data derived from two encryptions */ 
    Twofish_encrypt( &xkey, buf, buf ); 
    Twofish_encrypt( &xkey, buf, buf+16 ); 
 
    /* Create all possible shorter keys that are prefixes of the buffer. */ 
    for( i=31; i>=0; i-- ) 
        { 
        /* Set a byte to zero. This is the new padding byte */ 
        buf[i] = 0; 
 
        /* Expand the key with only i bytes of length */ 
        if ((ret = Twofish_prepare_key( buf, i, &xkey)) < 0)
	  return ret; 
 
        /* Expand the corresponding padded key of regular length */ 
        if ((ret = Twofish_prepare_key( buf, i<=16 ? 16 : (i<= 24 ? 24 : 32), &xkey_two )) < 0)
	  return ret; 
 
        /* Compare the two */ 
        if( memcmp( &xkey, &xkey_two, sizeof( xkey ) ) != 0 ) 
            { 
	      Twofish_fatal( "Odd sized keys do not expand properly", ERR_ODD_KEY ); 
            } 
        } 
 
    /* None of the key values are secret, so we don't need to wipe them. */
    return SUCCESS;
    } 
 
 
/* 
 * Test the Twofish implementation. 
 * 
 * This routine runs all the self tests, in order of importance. 
 * It is called by the Twofish_initialise routine. 
 *  
 * In almost all applications the cost of running the self tests during 
 * initialisation is insignificant, especially 
 * compared to the time it takes to load the application from disk.  
 * If you are very pressed for initialisation performance,  
 * you could remove some of the tests. Make sure you did run them 
 * once in the software and hardware configuration you are using. 
 */ 
static int self_test() 
    {
      int ret;
    /* The three test vectors form an absolute minimal test set. */ 
      if ((ret = test_vectors()) < 0)
	return ret;
 
    /*  
     * If at all possible you should run these tests too. They take 
     * more time, but provide a more thorough coverage. 
     */ 
      if ((ret = test_sequences()) < 0)
	return ret;
 
    /* Test the odd-sized keys. */ 
      if ((ret = test_odd_sized_keys()) < 0)
	return ret;
      return SUCCESS;
    } 
 
 
/* 
 * And now, the actual Twofish implementation. 
 * 
 * This implementation generates all the tables during initialisation.  
 * I don't like large tables in the code, especially since they are easily  
 * damaged in the source without anyone noticing it. You need code to  
 * generate them anyway, and this way all the code is close together. 
 * Generating them in the application leads to a smaller executable  
 * (the code is smaller than the tables it generates) and a  
 * larger static memory footprint. 
 * 
 * Twofish can be implemented in many ways. I have chosen to  
 * use large tables with a relatively long key setup time. 
 * If you encrypt more than a few blocks of data it pays to pre-compute  
 * as much as possible. This implementation is relatively inefficient for  
 * applications that need to re-key every block or so. 
 */ 
 
/*  
 * We start with the t-tables, directly from the Twofish definition.  
 * These are nibble-tables, but merging them and putting them two nibbles  
 * in one byte is more work than it is worth. 
 */ 
static Twofish_Byte t_table[2][4][16] = { 
    { 
        {0x8,0x1,0x7,0xD,0x6,0xF,0x3,0x2,0x0,0xB,0x5,0x9,0xE,0xC,0xA,0x4}, 
        {0xE,0xC,0xB,0x8,0x1,0x2,0x3,0x5,0xF,0x4,0xA,0x6,0x7,0x0,0x9,0xD}, 
        {0xB,0xA,0x5,0xE,0x6,0xD,0x9,0x0,0xC,0x8,0xF,0x3,0x2,0x4,0x7,0x1}, 
        {0xD,0x7,0xF,0x4,0x1,0x2,0x6,0xE,0x9,0xB,0x3,0x0,0x8,0x5,0xC,0xA} 
    }, 
    { 
        {0x2,0x8,0xB,0xD,0xF,0x7,0x6,0xE,0x3,0x1,0x9,0x4,0x0,0xA,0xC,0x5}, 
        {0x1,0xE,0x2,0xB,0x4,0xC,0x3,0x7,0x6,0xD,0xA,0x5,0xF,0x9,0x0,0x8}, 
        {0x4,0xC,0x7,0x5,0x1,0x6,0x9,0xA,0x0,0xE,0xD,0x8,0x2,0xB,0x3,0xF}, 
        {0xB,0x9,0x5,0x1,0xC,0x3,0xD,0xE,0x6,0x4,0x7,0xF,0x2,0x0,0x8,0xA} 
    } 
}; 
 
 
/* A 1-bit rotation of 4-bit values. Input must be in range 0..15 */ 
#define ROR4BY1( x ) (((x)>>1) | (((x)<<3) & 0x8) ) 
 
/* 
 * The q-boxes are only used during the key schedule computations.  
 * These are 8->8 bit lookup tables. Some CPUs prefer to have 8->32 bit  
 * lookup tables as it is faster to load a 32-bit value than to load an  
 * 8-bit value and zero the rest of the register. 
 * The LARGE_Q_TABLE switch allows you to choose 32-bit entries in  
 * the q-tables. Here we just define the Qtype which is used to store  
 * the entries of the q-tables. 
 */ 
#if LARGE_Q_TABLE 
typedef Twofish_UInt32      Qtype; 
#else 
typedef Twofish_Byte        Qtype; 
#endif 
 
/*  
 * The actual q-box tables.  
 * There are two q-boxes, each having 256 entries. 
 */ 
static Qtype q_table[2][256]; 
 
 
/* 
 * Now the function that converts a single t-table into a q-table. 
 * 
 * Arguments: 
 * t[4][16] : four 4->4bit lookup tables that define the q-box 
 * q[256]   : output parameter: the resulting q-box as a lookup table. 
 */ 
static void make_q_table( Twofish_Byte t[4][16], Qtype q[256] ) 
    { 
    int ae,be,ao,bo;        /* Some temporaries. */ 
    int i; 
    /* Loop over all input values and compute the q-box result. */ 
    for( i=0; i<256; i++ ) { 
        /*  
         * This is straight from the Twofish specifications.  
         *  
         * The ae variable is used for the a_i values from the specs 
         * with even i, and ao for the odd i's. Similarly for the b's. 
         */ 
        ae = i>>4; be = i&0xf; 
        ao = ae ^ be; bo = ae ^ ROR4BY1(be) ^ ((ae<<3)&8); 
        ae = t[0][ao]; be = t[1][bo]; 
        ao = ae ^ be; bo = ae ^ ROR4BY1(be) ^ ((ae<<3)&8); 
        ae = t[2][ao]; be = t[3][bo]; 
 
        /* Store the result in the q-box table, the cast avoids a warning. */ 
        q[i] = (Qtype) ((be<<4) | ae); 
        } 
    } 
 
 
/*  
 * Initialise both q-box tables.  
 */ 
static void initialise_q_boxes() { 
    /* Initialise each of the q-boxes using the t-tables */ 
    make_q_table( t_table[0], q_table[0] ); 
    make_q_table( t_table[1], q_table[1] ); 
    } 
 
 
/* 
 * Next up is the MDS matrix multiplication. 
 * The MDS matrix multiplication operates in the field 
 * GF(2)[x]/p(x) with p(x)=x^8+x^6+x^5+x^3+1. 
 * If you don't understand this, read a book on finite fields. You cannot 
 * follow the finite-field computations without some background. 
 *  
 * In this field, multiplication by x is easy: shift left one bit  
 * and if bit 8 is set then xor the result with 0x169.  
 * 
 * The MDS coefficients use a multiplication by 1/x, 
 * or rather a division by x. This is easy too: first make the 
 * value 'even' (i.e. bit 0 is zero) by xorring with 0x169 if necessary,  
 * and then shift right one position.  
 * Even easier: shift right and xor with 0xb4 if the lsbit was set. 
 * 
 * The MDS coefficients are 1, EF, and 5B, and we use the fact that 
 *   EF = 1 + 1/x + 1/x^2 
 *   5B = 1       + 1/x^2 
 * in this field. This makes multiplication by EF and 5B relatively easy. 
 * 
 * This property is no accident, the MDS matrix was designed to allow 
 * this implementation technique to be used. 
 * 
 * We have four MDS tables, each mapping 8 bits to 32 bits. 
 * Each table performs one column of the matrix multiplication.  
 * As the MDS is always preceded by q-boxes, each of these tables 
 * also implements the q-box just previous to that column. 
 */ 
 
/* The actual MDS tables. */ 
static Twofish_UInt32 MDS_table[4][256]; 
 
/* A small table to get easy conditional access to the 0xb4 constant. */ 
static Twofish_UInt32 mds_poly_divx_const[] = {0,0xb4}; 
 
/* Function to initialise the MDS tables. */ 
static void initialise_mds_tables() 
    { 
    int i; 
    Twofish_UInt32 q,qef,q5b;       /* Temporary variables. */ 
 
    /* Loop over all 8-bit input values */ 
    for( i=0; i<256; i++ )  
        { 
        /*  
         * To save some work during the key expansion we include the last 
         * of the q-box layers from the h() function in these MDS tables. 
         */ 
 
        /* We first do the inputs that are mapped through the q0 table. */ 
        q = q_table[0][i]; 
        /* 
         * Here we divide by x, note the table to get 0xb4 only if the  
         * lsbit is set.  
         * This sets qef = (1/x)*q in the finite field 
         */ 
        qef = (q >> 1) ^ mds_poly_divx_const[ q & 1 ]; 
        /* 
         * Divide by x again, and add q to get (1+1/x^2)*q.  
         * Note that (1+1/x^2) =  5B in the field, and addition in the field 
         * is exclusive or on the bits. 
         */ 
        q5b = (qef >> 1) ^ mds_poly_divx_const[ qef & 1 ] ^ q; 
        /*  
         * Add q5b to qef to set qef = (1+1/x+1/x^2)*q. 
         * Again, (1+1/x+1/x^2) = EF in the field. 
         */ 
        qef ^= q5b; 
 
        /*  
         * Now that we have q5b = 5B * q and qef = EF * q  
         * we can fill two of the entries in the MDS matrix table.  
         * See the Twofish specifications for the order of the constants. 
         */ 
        MDS_table[1][i] = (q  <<24) | (q5b<<16) | (qef<<8) | qef; 
        MDS_table[3][i] = (q5b<<24) | (qef<<16) | (q  <<8) | q5b; 
 
        /* Now we do it all again for the two columns that have a q1 box. */ 
        q = q_table[1][i]; 
        qef = (q >> 1) ^ mds_poly_divx_const[ q & 1 ]; 
        q5b = (qef >> 1) ^ mds_poly_divx_const[ qef & 1 ] ^ q; 
        qef ^= q5b; 
 
        /* The other two columns use the coefficient in a different order. */ 
        MDS_table[0][i] = (qef<<24) | (qef<<16) | (q5b<<8) | q  ; 
        MDS_table[2][i] = (qef<<24) | (q  <<16) | (qef<<8) | q5b; 
        } 
    } 
 
 
/* 
 * The h() function is the heart of the Twofish cipher.  
 * It is a complicated sequence of q-box lookups, key material xors,  
 * and finally the MDS matrix. 
 * We use lots of macros to make this reasonably fast. 
 */ 
 
/* First a shorthand for the two q-tables */ 
#define q0  q_table[0] 
#define q1  q_table[1] 
 
/* 
 * Each macro computes one column of the h for either 2, 3, or 4 stages. 
 * As there are 4 columns, we have 12 macros in all. 
 *  
 * The key bytes are stored in the Byte array L at offset  
 * 0,1,2,3,  8,9,10,11,  [16,17,18,19,   [24,25,26,27]] as this is the 
 * order we get the bytes from the user. If you look at the Twofish  
 * specs, you'll see that h() is applied to the even key words or the 
 * odd key words. The bytes of the even words appear in this spacing, 
 * and those of the odd key words too. 
 * 
 * These macros are the only place where the q-boxes and the MDS table 
 * are used. 
 */ 
#define H02( y, L )  MDS_table[0][q0[q0[y]^L[ 8]]^L[0]] 
#define H12( y, L )  MDS_table[1][q0[q1[y]^L[ 9]]^L[1]] 
#define H22( y, L )  MDS_table[2][q1[q0[y]^L[10]]^L[2]] 
#define H32( y, L )  MDS_table[3][q1[q1[y]^L[11]]^L[3]] 
#define H03( y, L )  H02( q1[y]^L[16], L ) 
#define H13( y, L )  H12( q1[y]^L[17], L ) 
#define H23( y, L )  H22( q0[y]^L[18], L ) 
#define H33( y, L )  H32( q0[y]^L[19], L ) 
#define H04( y, L )  H03( q1[y]^L[24], L ) 
#define H14( y, L )  H13( q0[y]^L[25], L ) 
#define H24( y, L )  H23( q0[y]^L[26], L ) 
#define H34( y, L )  H33( q1[y]^L[27], L ) 
 
/* 
 * Now we can define the h() function given an array of key bytes.  
 * This function is only used in the key schedule, and not to pre-compute 
 * the keyed S-boxes. 
 * 
 * In the key schedule, the input is always of the form k*(1+2^8+2^16+2^24) 
 * so we only provide k as an argument. 
 * 
 * Arguments: 
 * k        input to the h() function. 
 * L        pointer to array of key bytes at  
 *          offsets 0,1,2,3, ... 8,9,10,11, [16,17,18,19, [24,25,26,27]] 
 * kCycles  # key cycles, 2, 3, or 4. 
 */ 
static Twofish_UInt32 h( int k, Twofish_Byte L[], int kCycles ) 
    { 
    switch( kCycles ) { 
        /* We code all 3 cases separately for speed reasons. */ 
    case 2: 
        return H02(k,L) ^ H12(k,L) ^ H22(k,L) ^ H32(k,L); 
    case 3: 
        return H03(k,L) ^ H13(k,L) ^ H23(k,L) ^ H33(k,L); 
    case 4: 
        return H04(k,L) ^ H14(k,L) ^ H24(k,L) ^ H34(k,L); 
    default:  
        /* This is always a coding error, which is fatal. */ 
      Twofish_fatal( "Twofish h(): Illegal argument", ERR_ILL_ARG ); 
      return ERR_ILL_ARG;
        } 
    } 
 
 
/* 
 * Pre-compute the keyed S-boxes. 
 * Fill the pre-computed S-box array in the expanded key structure. 
 * Each pre-computed S-box maps 8 bits to 32 bits. 
 * 
 * The S argument contains half the number of bytes of the full key, but is 
 * derived from the full key. (See Twofish specifications for details.) 
 * S has the weird byte input order used by the Hxx macros. 
 * 
 * This function takes most of the time of a key expansion. 
 * 
 * Arguments: 
 * S        pointer to array of 8*kCycles Bytes containing the S vector. 
 * kCycles  number of key words, must be in the set {2,3,4} 
 * xkey     pointer to Twofish_key structure that will contain the S-boxes. 
 */ 
static int fill_keyed_sboxes( Twofish_Byte S[], int kCycles, Twofish_key * xkey ) 
    { 
    int i; 
    switch( kCycles ) { 
        /* We code all 3 cases separately for speed reasons. */ 
    case 2: 
        for( i=0; i<256; i++ ) 
            { 
            xkey->s[0][i]= H02( i, S ); 
            xkey->s[1][i]= H12( i, S ); 
            xkey->s[2][i]= H22( i, S ); 
            xkey->s[3][i]= H32( i, S ); 
            } 
        break; 
    case 3: 
        for( i=0; i<256; i++ ) 
            { 
            xkey->s[0][i]= H03( i, S ); 
            xkey->s[1][i]= H13( i, S ); 
            xkey->s[2][i]= H23( i, S ); 
            xkey->s[3][i]= H33( i, S ); 
            } 
        break; 
    case 4: 
        for( i=0; i<256; i++ ) 
            { 
            xkey->s[0][i]= H04( i, S ); 
            xkey->s[1][i]= H14( i, S ); 
            xkey->s[2][i]= H24( i, S ); 
            xkey->s[3][i]= H34( i, S ); 
            } 
        break; 
    default:  
        /* This is always a coding error, which is fatal. */ 
      Twofish_fatal( "Twofish fill_keyed_sboxes(): Illegal argument", ERR_ILL_ARG ); 
        }
    return SUCCESS;
    }
 
 
/* A flag to keep track of whether we have been initialised or not. */ 
static int Twofish_initialised = 0; 
 
/* 
 * Initialise the Twofish implementation. 
 * This function must be called before any other function in the 
 * Twofish implementation is called. 
 * This routine also does some sanity checks, to make sure that 
 * all the macros behave, and it tests the whole cipher. 
 */ 
int Twofish_initialise() 
    {
      int ret;
    /* First test the various platform-specific definitions. */ 
      if ((ret = test_platform()) < 0)
	return ret;
 
    /* We can now generate our tables, in the right order of course. */ 
    initialise_q_boxes(); 
    initialise_mds_tables(); 
 
    /* We're finished with the initialisation itself. */ 
    Twofish_initialised = 1; 
 
    /*  
     * And run some tests on the whole cipher.  
     * Yes, you need to do this every time you start your program.  
     * It is called assurance; you have to be certain that your program 
     * still works properly.  
     */ 
    return self_test(); 
    } 
 
 
/* 
 * The Twofish key schedule uses an Reed-Solomon code matrix multiply. 
 * Just like the MDS matrix, the RS-matrix is designed to be easy 
 * to implement. Details are below in the code.  
 * 
 * These constants make it easy to compute in the finite field used  
 * for the RS code. 
 * 
 * We use Bytes for the RS computation, but these are automatically 
 * widened to unsigned integers in the expressions. Having unsigned 
 * ints in these tables therefore provides the fastest access. 
 */ 
static unsigned int rs_poly_const[] = {0, 0x14d}; 
static unsigned int rs_poly_div_const[] = {0, 0xa6 }; 
 
/*
 * memset_volatile is a volatile pointer to the memset function.
 * You can call (*memset_volatile)(buf, val, len) or even
 * memset_volatile(buf, val, len) just as you would call
 * memset(buf, val, len), but the use of a volatile pointer
 * guarantees that the compiler will not optimise the call away.
 */
static void * (*volatile memset_volatile)(void *, int, size_t) = memset;

/* 
 * Prepare a key for use in encryption and decryption. 
 * Like most block ciphers, Twofish allows the key schedule  
 * to be pre-computed given only the key.  
 * Twofish has a fairly 'heavy' key schedule that takes a lot of time  
 * to compute. The main work is pre-computing the S-boxes used in the  
 * encryption and decryption. We feel that this makes the cipher much  
 * harder to attack. The attacker doesn't even know what the S-boxes  
 * contain without including the entire key schedule in the analysis.  
 * 
 * Unlike most Twofish implementations, this one allows any key size from 
 * 0 to 32 bytes. Odd key sizes are defined for Twofish (see the  
 * specifications); the key is simply padded with zeroes to the next real  
 * key size of 16, 24, or 32 bytes. 
 * Each odd-sized key is thus equivalent to a single normal-sized key. 
 * 
 * Arguments: 
 * key      array of key bytes 
 * key_len  number of bytes in the key, must be in the range 0,...,32. 
 * xkey     Pointer to an Twofish_key structure that will be filled  
 *             with the internal form of the cipher key. 
 */ 
int Twofish_prepare_key( Twofish_Byte key[], int key_len, Twofish_key * xkey ) 
    { 
    /* We use a single array to store all key material in,  
     * to simplify the wiping of the key material at the end. 
     * The first 32 bytes contain the actual (padded) cipher key. 
     * The next 32 bytes contain the S-vector in its weird format, 
     * and we have 4 bytes of overrun necessary for the RS-reduction. 
     */ 
    Twofish_Byte K[32+32+4];  
 
    int kCycles;        /* # key cycles, 2,3, or 4. */ 
 
    int i; 
    Twofish_UInt32 A, B;        /* Used to compute the round keys. */ 
 
    Twofish_Byte * kptr;        /* Three pointers for the RS computation. */ 
    Twofish_Byte * sptr; 
    Twofish_Byte * t; 
 
    Twofish_Byte b,bx,bxx;      /* Some more temporaries for the RS computation. */ 
 
    /* Check that the Twofish implementation was initialised. */ 
    if( Twofish_initialised == 0 ) 
        { 
        /*  
         * You didn't call Twofish_initialise before calling this routine. 
         * This is a programming error, and therefore we call the fatal 
         * routine.  
         * 
         * I could of course call the initialisation routine here, 
         * but there are a few reasons why I don't. First of all, the  
         * self-tests have to be done at startup. It is no good to inform 
         * the user that the cipher implementation fails when he wants to 
         * write his data to disk in encrypted form. You have to warn him 
         * before he spends time typing his data. Second, the initialisation 
         * and self test are much slower than a single key expansion. 
         * Calling the initialisation here makes the performance of the 
         * cipher unpredictable. This can lead to really weird problems  
         * if you use the cipher for a real-time task. Suddenly it fails  
         * once in a while the first time you try to use it. Things like  
         * that are almost impossible to debug. 
         */ 
	  /* Twofish_fatal( "Twofish implementation was not initialised.", ERR_INIT ); */
         
        /* 
         * There is always a danger that the Twofish_fatal routine returns, 
         * in spite of the specifications that it should not.  
         * (A good programming rule: don't trust the rest of the code.) 
         * This would be disasterous. If the q-tables and MDS-tables have 
         * not been initialised, they are probably still filled with zeroes. 
         * Suppose the MDS-tables are all zero. The key expansion would then 
         * generate all-zero round keys, and all-zero s-boxes. The danger 
         * is that nobody would notice as the encry
         * mangles the input, and the decryption still 'decrypts' it, 
         * but now in a completely key-independent manner.  
         * To stop such security disasters, we use blunt force. 
         * If your program hangs here: fix the fatal routine! 
         */ 
        for(;;);        /* Infinite loop, which beats being insecure. */ 
        } 
 
    /* Check for valid key length. */ 
    if( key_len < 0 || key_len > 32 ) 
        { 
        /*  
         * This can only happen if a programmer didn't read the limitations 
         * on the key size.  
         */ 
	  Twofish_fatal( "Twofish_prepare_key: illegal key length", ERR_KEY_LEN ); 
        /*  
         * A return statement just in case the fatal macro returns. 
         * The rest of the code assumes that key_len is in range, and would 
         * buffer-overflow if it wasn't.  
         * 
         * Why do we still use a programming language that has problems like 
         * buffer overflows, when these problems were solved in 1960 with 
         * the development of Algol? Have we not leared anything? 
         */ 
        return ERR_KEY_LEN; 
        } 
 
    /* Pad the key with zeroes to the next suitable key length. */ 
    memcpy( K, key, key_len ); 
    memset( K+key_len, 0, sizeof(K)-key_len ); 
 
    /*  
     * Compute kCycles: the number of key cycles used in the cipher.  
     * 2 for 128-bit keys, 3 for 192-bit keys, and 4 for 256-bit keys. 
     */ 
    kCycles = (key_len + 7) >> 3; 
    /* Handle the special case of very short keys: minimum 2 cycles. */ 
    if( kCycles < 2 ) 
        { 
        kCycles = 2; 
        } 
 
    /*  
     * From now on we just pretend to have 8*kCycles bytes of  
     * key material in K. This handles all the key size cases.  
     */ 
 
    /*  
     * We first compute the 40 expanded key words,  
     * formulas straight from the Twofish specifications. 
     */ 
    for( i=0; i<40; i+=2 ) 
        { 
        /*  
         * Due to the byte spacing expected by the h() function  
         * we can pick the bytes directly from the key K. 
         * As we use bytes, we never have the little/big endian 
         * problem. 
         * 
         * Note that we apply the rotation function only to simple 
         * variables, as the rotation macro might evaluate its argument 
         * more than once. 
         */ 
        A = h( i  , K  , kCycles ); 
        B = h( i+1, K+4, kCycles ); 
        B = ROL32( B, 8 ); 
 
        /* Compute and store the round keys. */ 
        A += B; 
        B += A; 
        xkey->K[i]   = A; 
        xkey->K[i+1] = ROL32( B, 9 ); 
        } 
 
    /* Wipe variables that contained key material. */ 
    A=B=0; 
 
    /*  
     * And now the dreaded RS multiplication that few seem to understand. 
     * The RS matrix is not random, and is specially designed to compute the 
     * RS matrix multiplication in a simple way. 
     * 
     * We work in the field GF(2)[x]/x^8+x^6+x^3+x^2+1. Note that this is a 
     * different field than used for the MDS matrix.  
     * (At least, it is a different representation because all GF(2^8)  
     * representations are equivalent in some form.) 
     *  
     * We take 8 consecutive bytes of the key and interpret them as  
     * a polynomial k_0 + k_1 y + k_2 y^2 + ... + k_7 y^7 where  
     * the k_i bytes are the key bytes and are elements of the finite field. 
     * We multiply this polynomial by y^4 and reduce it modulo 
     *     y^4 + (x + 1/x)y^3 + (x)y^2 + (x + 1/x)y + 1.  
     * using straightforward polynomial modulo reduction. 
     * The coefficients of the result are the result of the RS 
     * matrix multiplication. When we wrote the Twofish specification,  
     * the original RS definition used the polynomials,  
     * but that requires much more mathematical knowledge.  
     * We were already using matrix multiplication in a finite field for  
     * the MDS matrix, so I re-wrote the RS operation as a matrix  
     * multiplication to reduce the difficulty of understanding it.  
     * Some implementors have not picked up on this simpler method of 
     * computing the RS operation, even though it is mentioned in the 
     * specifications. 
     * 
     * It is possible to perform these computations faster by using 32-bit  
     * word operations, but that is not portable and this is not a speed- 
     * critical area. 
     * 
     * We explained the 1/x computation when we did the MDS matrix.  
     * 
     * The S vector is stored in K[32..64]. 
     * The S vector has to be reversed, so we loop cross-wise. 
     * 
     * Note the weird byte spacing of the S-vector, to match the even  
     * or odd key words arrays. See the discussion at the Hxx macros for 
     * details. 
     */ 
    kptr = K + 8*kCycles;           /* Start at end of key */ 
    sptr = K + 32;                  /* Start at start of S */ 
 
    /* Loop over all key material */ 
    while( kptr > K )  
        { 
        kptr -= 8; 
        /*  
         * Initialise the polynimial in sptr[0..12] 
         * The first four coefficients are 0 as we have to multiply by y^4. 
         * The next 8 coefficients are from the key material. 
         */ 
        memset( sptr, 0, 4 ); 
        memcpy( sptr+4, kptr, 8 ); 
 
        /*  
         * The 12 bytes starting at sptr are now the coefficients of 
         * the polynomial we need to reduce. 
         */ 
 
        /* Loop over the polynomial coefficients from high to low */ 
        t = sptr+11; 
        /* Keep looping until polynomial is degree 3; */ 
        while( t > sptr+3 ) 
            { 
            /* Pick up the highest coefficient of the poly. */ 
            b = *t; 
 
            /*  
             * Compute x and (x+1/x) times this coefficient.  
             * See the MDS matrix implementation for a discussion of  
             * multiplication by x and 1/x. We just use different  
             * constants here as we are in a  
             * different finite field representation. 
             * 
             * These two statements set  
             * bx = (x) * b  
             * bxx= (x + 1/x) * b 
             */ 
            bx = (Twofish_Byte)((b<<1) ^ rs_poly_const[ b>>7 ]); 
            bxx= (Twofish_Byte)((b>>1) ^ rs_poly_div_const[ b&1 ] ^ bx); 
 
            /* 
             * Subtract suitable multiple of  
             * y^4 + (x + 1/x)y^3 + (x)y^2 + (x + 1/x)y + 1  
             * from the polynomial, except that we don't bother 
             * updating t[0] as it will become zero anyway. 
             */ 
            t[-1] ^= bxx; 
            t[-2] ^= bx; 
            t[-3] ^= bxx; 
            t[-4] ^= b; 
             
            /* Go to the next coefficient. */ 
            t--; 
            } 
 
        /* Go to next S-vector word, obeying the weird spacing rules. */ 
        sptr += 8; 
        } 
 
    /* Wipe variables that contained key material. */ 
    b = bx = bxx = 0; 
 
    /* And finally, we can compute the key-dependent S-boxes. */ 
    fill_keyed_sboxes( &K[32], kCycles, xkey ); 
 
    /* Wipe array that contained key material. */ 
    (*memset_volatile)( K, 0, sizeof( K ) );
    return SUCCESS;
    } 
 
 
/* 
 * We can now start on the actual encryption and decryption code. 
 * As these are often speed-critical we will use a lot of macros. 
 */ 
 
/* 
 * The g() function is the heart of the round function. 
 * We have two versions of the g() function, one without an input 
 * rotation and one with. 
 * The pre-computed S-boxes make this pretty simple. 
 */ 
#define g0(X,xkey) \
 (xkey->s[0][b0(X)]^xkey->s[1][b1(X)]^xkey->s[2][b2(X)]^xkey->s[3][b3(X)]) 
 
#define g1(X,xkey) \
 (xkey->s[0][b3(X)]^xkey->s[1][b0(X)]^xkey->s[2][b1(X)]^xkey->s[3][b2(X)]) 
 
/* 
 * A single round of Twofish. The A,B,C,D are the four state variables, 
 * T0 and T1 are temporaries, xkey is the expanded key, and r the  
 * round number. 
 * 
 * Note that this macro does not implement the swap at the end of the round. 
 */ 
#define ENCRYPT_RND( A,B,C,D, T0, T1, xkey, r ) \
    T0 = g0(A,xkey); T1 = g1(B,xkey);\
    C ^= T0+T1+xkey->K[8+2*(r)]; C = ROR32(C,1);\
    D = ROL32(D,1); D ^= T0+2*T1+xkey->K[8+2*(r)+1] 
 
/* 
 * Encrypt a single cycle, consisting of two rounds. 
 * This avoids the swapping of the two halves.  
 * Parameter r is now the cycle number. 
 */ 
#define ENCRYPT_CYCLE( A, B, C, D, T0, T1, xkey, r ) \
    ENCRYPT_RND( A,B,C,D,T0,T1,xkey,2*(r)   );\
    ENCRYPT_RND( C,D,A,B,T0,T1,xkey,2*(r)+1 )
 
/* Full 16-round encryption */ 
#define ENCRYPT( A,B,C,D,T0,T1,xkey ) \
    ENCRYPT_CYCLE( A,B,C,D,T0,T1,xkey, 0 );\
    ENCRYPT_CYCLE( A,B,C,D,T0,T1,xkey, 1 );\
    ENCRYPT_CYCLE( A,B,C,D,T0,T1,xkey, 2 );\
    ENCRYPT_CYCLE( A,B,C,D,T0,T1,xkey, 3 );\
    ENCRYPT_CYCLE( A,B,C,D,T0,T1,xkey, 4 );\
    ENCRYPT_CYCLE( A,B,C,D,T0,T1,xkey, 5 );\
    ENCRYPT_CYCLE( A,B,C,D,T0,T1,xkey, 6 );\
    ENCRYPT_CYCLE( A,B,C,D,T0,T1,xkey, 7 )
 
/* 
 * A single round of Twofish for decryption. It differs from 
 * ENCRYTP_RND only because of the 1-bit rotations. 
 */ 
#define DECRYPT_RND( A,B,C,D, T0, T1, xkey, r ) \
    T0 = g0(A,xkey); T1 = g1(B,xkey);\
    C = ROL32(C,1); C ^= T0+T1+xkey->K[8+2*(r)];\
    D ^= T0+2*T1+xkey->K[8+2*(r)+1]; D = ROR32(D,1)
 
/* 
 * Decrypt a single cycle, consisting of two rounds.  
 * This avoids the swapping of the two halves.  
 * Parameter r is now the cycle number. 
 */ 
#define DECRYPT_CYCLE( A, B, C, D, T0, T1, xkey, r ) \
    DECRYPT_RND( A,B,C,D,T0,T1,xkey,2*(r)+1 );\
    DECRYPT_RND( C,D,A,B,T0,T1,xkey,2*(r)   )
 
/* Full 16-round decryption. */ 
#define DECRYPT( A,B,C,D,T0,T1, xkey ) \
    DECRYPT_CYCLE( A,B,C,D,T0,T1,xkey, 7 );\
    DECRYPT_CYCLE( A,B,C,D,T0,T1,xkey, 6 );\
    DECRYPT_CYCLE( A,B,C,D,T0,T1,xkey, 5 );\
    DECRYPT_CYCLE( A,B,C,D,T0,T1,xkey, 4 );\
    DECRYPT_CYCLE( A,B,C,D,T0,T1,xkey, 3 );\
    DECRYPT_CYCLE( A,B,C,D,T0,T1,xkey, 2 );\
    DECRYPT_CYCLE( A,B,C,D,T0,T1,xkey, 1 );\
    DECRYPT_CYCLE( A,B,C,D,T0,T1,xkey, 0 ) 

/* 
 * A macro to read the state from the plaintext and do the initial key xors. 
 * The koff argument allows us to use the same macro  
 * for the decryption which uses different key words at the start. 
 */ 
#define GET_INPUT( src, A,B,C,D, xkey, koff ) \
    A = GET32(src   )^xkey->K[  koff]; B = GET32(src+ 4)^xkey->K[1+koff]; \
    C = GET32(src+ 8)^xkey->K[2+koff]; D = GET32(src+12)^xkey->K[3+koff]
 
/* 
 * Similar macro to put the ciphertext in the output buffer. 
 * We xor the keys into the state variables before we use the PUT32  
 * macro as the macro might use its argument multiple times. 
 */ 
#define PUT_OUTPUT( A,B,C,D, dst, xkey, koff ) \
    A ^= xkey->K[  koff]; B ^= xkey->K[1+koff]; \
    C ^= xkey->K[2+koff]; D ^= xkey->K[3+koff]; \
    PUT32( A, dst   ); PUT32( B, dst+ 4 ); \
    PUT32( C, dst+8 ); PUT32( D, dst+12 )
 
 
/* 
 * Twofish block encryption 
 * 
 * Arguments: 
 * xkey         expanded key array 
 * p            16 bytes of plaintext 
 * c            16 bytes in which to store the ciphertext 
 */ 
void Twofish_encrypt( Twofish_key * xkey, Twofish_Byte p[16], Twofish_Byte c[16]) 
    { 
    Twofish_UInt32 A,B,C,D,T0,T1;       /* Working variables */ 
 
    /* Get the four plaintext words xorred with the key */ 
    GET_INPUT( p, A,B,C,D, xkey, 0 ); 
 
    /* Do 8 cycles (= 16 rounds) */ 
    ENCRYPT( A,B,C,D,T0,T1,xkey ); 
 
    /* Store them with the final swap and the output whitening. */ 
    PUT_OUTPUT( C,D,A,B, c, xkey, 4 ); 
    } 
 
 
/* 
 * Twofish block decryption. 
 * 
 * Arguments: 
 * xkey         expanded key array 
 * p            16 bytes of plaintext 
 * c            16 bytes in which to store the ciphertext 
 */ 
void Twofish_decrypt( Twofish_key * xkey, Twofish_Byte c[16], Twofish_Byte p[16]) 
    { 
    Twofish_UInt32 A,B,C,D,T0,T1;       /* Working variables */ 
 
    /* Get the four plaintext words xorred with the key */ 
    GET_INPUT( c, A,B,C,D, xkey, 4 ); 
 
    /* Do 8 cycles (= 16 rounds) */ 
    DECRYPT( A,B,C,D,T0,T1,xkey ); 
 
    /* Store them with the final swap and the output whitening. */ 
    PUT_OUTPUT( C,D,A,B, p, xkey, 0 ); 
    } 
 
/* 
 * Using the macros it is easy to make special routines for 
 * CBC mode, CTR mode etc. The only thing you might want to 
 * add is a XOR_PUT_OUTPUT which xors the outputs into the 
 * destinationa instead of overwriting the data. This requires 
 * a XOR_PUT32 macro as well, but that should all be trivial. 
 * 
 * I thought about including routines for the separate cipher 
 * modes here, but it is unclear which modes should be included, 
 * and each encryption or decryption routine takes up a lot of code space. 
 * Also, I don't have any test vectors for any cipher modes 
 * with Twofish. 
 */