Kalyna (Ukrainian: Калина, Viburnum opulus) is a symmetric block cipher. It supports block sizes of 128, 256 or 512 bits; the key length is either equal to or double the block size.
Kalyna was adopted as the national encryption standard of Ukraine in 2015 (standard DSTU 7624:2014) after holding Ukrainian national cryptographic competition. Kalyna is a substitution–permutation network and its design is based on the Rijndael (AES) encryption function having quite different key schedule, another set of four different S-boxes and increased MDS matrix size.
Kalyna has 10 rounds for 128-bit keys, 14 rounds for 256-bit keys and 18 rounds for 512-bit keys. Independent researchers proposed some attacks on reduced-round variants of Kalyna, but all of them have a very high complexity and none of them are practical.
Word size
Block size
Key size
Identification
Rounds
64 bits
128 bits
1×128 = 128 bits
Kalyna-128/128
10
2×128 = 256 bits
Kalyna-128/256
14
256 bits
1×256 = 256 bits
Kalyna-256/256
2×256 = 512 bits
Kalyna-256/512
18
512 bits
1×512 = 512 bits
Kalyna-512/512
References
Roman Oliynykov, Ivan Gorbenko, Oleksandr Kazymyrov, Victor Ruzhentsev, Oleksandr Kuznetsov, Yurii Gorbenko, Oleksandr Dyrda, Viktor Dolgov, Andrii Pushkaryov, Ruslan Mordvinov, Dmytro Kaidalov. A New Encryption Standard of Ukraine: The Kalyna Block Cipher. IACR Cryptology ePrint Archive, p650 (2015) https://eprint.iacr.org/2015/650
Akshima, Donghoon Chang, Mohona Ghosh, Aarushi Goel, Somitra Kumar Sanadhya. Single Key Recovery Attacks on 9-Round Kalyna-128/256 and Kalyna-256/512. Volume 9558 of the series Lecture Notes in Computer Science, pp. 119–135. https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-319-30840-1_8
Riham Altawy, Ahmed Abdelkhalek, Amr M. Youssef. A Meet-in-the-Middle Attack on Reduced-Round Kalyna-b/2b. IEICE Transactions on Information and Systems, Vol. E99-D, No.4, pp. 1246–1250. http://search.ieice.org/bin/summary.php?id=e99-d_4_1246