Disk Encryption for Low-End Hardware
Unfortunately, they were not able to find any existing encryption algorithm that was both fast and secure, and that would work with existing Linux kernel infrastructure. They, therefore, designed the Adiantum encryption mode, which they described in a light, easy-to-read and completely non-mathematical way.
Essentially, Adiantum is not a new form of encryption; it relies on the ChaCha stream cipher developed by D. J. Bernstein in 2008. As Eric put it, "Adiantum is a construction, not a primitive. Its security is reducible to that of XChaCha12 and AES-256, subject to a security bound; the proof is in Section 5 of our paper. Therefore, one need not 'trust' Adiantum; they only need trust XChaCha12 and AES-256."
Eric reported that Adiantum offered a 20% speed improvement over his and Paul's earlier HPolyC encryption mode, and it offered a very slight improvement in actual security.
Eric posted some patches, adding Adiantum to the Linux kernel's crypto API. He remarked, "Some of these patches conflict with the new 'Zinc' crypto library. But I don't know when Zinc will be merged, so for now, I've continued to base this patchset on the current 'cryptodev'."
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