Delphi ActiveX
Delphi ActiveX
Twofish Encryption - 128-bit, 192-bit, 256-bit
See more Encryption Examples
Twofish encryption. The Chilkat encryption component supports 128-bit, 192-bit, and 256-bit Twofish encryption in both ECB (Electronic Cookbook) and CBC (Cipher-Block Chaining) modes.Chilkat Delphi ActiveX Downloads
uses
Winapi.Windows, Winapi.Messages, System.SysUtils, System.Variants, System.Classes, Vcl.Graphics,
Vcl.Controls, Vcl.Forms, Vcl.Dialogs, Vcl.StdCtrls, Chilkat_TLB;
...
procedure TForm1.Button1Click(Sender: TObject);
var
crypt: TChilkatCrypt2;
ivHex: WideString;
keyHex: WideString;
encStr: WideString;
decStr: WideString;
begin
// This example assumes the Chilkat API to have been previously unlocked.
// See Global Unlock Sample for sample code.
crypt := TChilkatCrypt2.Create(Self);
// Set the encryption algorithm = "twofish"
crypt.CryptAlgorithm := 'twofish';
// CipherMode may be "ecb" or "cbc"
crypt.CipherMode := 'cbc';
// KeyLength may be 128, 192, 256
crypt.KeyLength := 256;
// The padding scheme determines the contents of the bytes
// that are added to pad the result to a multiple of the
// encryption algorithm's block size. Twofish has a block
// size of 16 bytes, so encrypted output is always
// a multiple of 16.
crypt.PaddingScheme := 0;
// EncodingMode specifies the encoding of the output for
// encryption, and the input for decryption.
// It may be "hex", "url", "base64", or "quoted-printable".
crypt.EncodingMode := 'hex';
// An initialization vector is required if using CBC mode.
// ECB mode does not use an IV.
// The length of the IV is equal to the algorithm's block size.
// It is NOT equal to the length of the key.
ivHex := '000102030405060708090A0B0C0D0E0F';
crypt.SetEncodedIV(ivHex,'hex');
// The secret key must equal the size of the key. For
// 256-bit encryption, the binary secret key is 32 bytes.
// For 128-bit encryption, the binary secret key is 16 bytes.
keyHex := '000102030405060708090A0B0C0D0E0F101112131415161718191A1B1C1D1E1F';
crypt.SetEncodedKey(keyHex,'hex');
// Encrypt a string...
// The input string is 44 ANSI characters (i.e. 44 bytes), so
// the output should be 48 bytes (a multiple of 16).
// Because the output is a hex string, it should
// be 96 characters long (2 chars per byte).
encStr := crypt.EncryptStringENC('The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.');
Memo1.Lines.Add(encStr);
// Now decrypt:
decStr := crypt.DecryptStringENC(encStr);
Memo1.Lines.Add(decStr);
end;