Lines Matching refs:AES
295 select CRYPTO_AES # for AES S-box tables
302 select CRYPTO_AES # for AES S-box tables
309 select CRYPTO_AES # for AES S-box tables
450 for AES encryption.
470 The first 128, 192 or 256 bits in the key are used for AES and the
1025 tristate "AES cipher algorithms"
1028 AES cipher algorithms (FIPS-197). AES uses the Rijndael
1040 The AES specifies three key sizes: 128, 192 and 256 bits
1045 tristate "Fixed time AES cipher"
1048 This is a generic implementation of AES that attempts to eliminate
1062 tristate "AES cipher algorithms (i586)"
1067 AES cipher algorithms (FIPS-197). AES uses the Rijndael
1079 The AES specifies three key sizes: 128, 192 and 256 bits
1084 tristate "AES cipher algorithms (x86_64)"
1089 AES cipher algorithms (FIPS-197). AES uses the Rijndael
1101 The AES specifies three key sizes: 128, 192 and 256 bits
1106 tristate "AES cipher algorithms (AES-NI)"
1116 Use Intel AES-NI instructions for AES algorithm.
1118 AES cipher algorithms (FIPS-197). AES uses the Rijndael
1130 The AES specifies three key sizes: 128, 192 and 256 bits
1134 In addition to AES cipher algorithm support, the acceleration
1140 tristate "AES cipher algorithms (SPARC64)"
1145 Use SPARC64 crypto opcodes for AES algorithm.
1147 AES cipher algorithms (FIPS-197). AES uses the Rijndael
1159 The AES specifies three key sizes: 128, 192 and 256 bits
1163 In addition to AES cipher algorithm support, the acceleration
1168 tristate "AES cipher algorithms (PPC SPE)"
1171 AES cipher algorithms (FIPS-197). Additionally the acceleration
1174 without hardware AES acceleration (e.g. caam crypto). It reduces the
1175 size of the AES tables from 16KB to 8KB + 256 bytes and mitigates
1276 tristate "Camellia cipher algorithm (x86_64/AES-NI/AVX)"
1285 Camellia cipher algorithm module (x86_64/AES-NI/AVX).
1296 tristate "Camellia cipher algorithm (x86_64/AES-NI/AVX2)"
1301 Camellia cipher algorithm module (x86_64/AES-NI/AVX2).
1600 Speck may not be as secure as AES, and should only be used on systems
1601 where AES is not fast enough.
1631 Twofish was submitted as an AES (Advanced Encryption Standard)
1653 Twofish was submitted as an AES (Advanced Encryption Standard)
1669 Twofish was submitted as an AES (Advanced Encryption Standard)
1687 Twofish was submitted as an AES (Advanced Encryption Standard)
1710 Twofish was submitted as an AES (Advanced Encryption Standard)