-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On Wednesday 19 December 2001 14:29, Jerome Etienne wrote: > On Wed, Dec 19, 2001 at 11:51:43AM +0100, Gisle S{lensminde wrote: > > Yes, this is a problem with loopback crypto. The problem is that > > the loopback interface assume that it's length preserving, > > can you explain the rationnal behind such assumption ? Loopback transforms are block transformations. They act upon the blocks of a block device. You cannot alter the size of blocks Well, theoretically, you could make the input block size different from the output block size, but since both the HD's and the linux kernel have hard-coded (a minimum of) 512 byte blocks, you could only increase or decrease those sizes by an amount of at least 512 bytes. Worse: block sizes are assumed to be powers of 2 (except in special cases like audio CD's which aren't handled by the normal block device layers, AFAIK). So you can't go and take e.g. 32k clusters and append to each one a 512 byte block to hold the MAC. Marc - -- The road is still long. Thank you everybody. Thanks to all who make an effort on behalf of democracy in China. They have come. Goodbye. -- last EMail of Huang Qi, webmaster of 6-4tianwang.com, sentenced in China for posting Party-critical texts. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.0.6 (GNU/Linux) Comment: For info see http://www.gnupg.org iD8DBQE8IKHC3oWD+L2/6DgRAiRkAKDg48bAwRYjycpfdtZHh0xlL+czpgCgz3fp TMyvDtepyZXp7sEJDONAmv0= =CHPi -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- - Linux-crypto: cryptography in and on the Linux system Archive: http://mail.nl.linux.org/linux-crypto/