Robert Haas <robertmh...@gmail.com> writes: > On Mon, Jun 18, 2018 at 10:12 AM, Joe Conway <m...@joeconway.com> wrote: >> Not necessarily. Our pages probably have enough predictable bytes to aid >> cryptanalysis, compared to user data in a column which might not be very >> predicable.
> Really? I would guess that the amount of entropy in a page is WAY > higher than in an individual column value. Depending on the specifics of the encryption scheme, having some amount of known (or guessable) plaintext may allow breaking the cipher, even if much of the plaintext is not known. This is cryptology 101, really. At the same time, having to have a bunch of independently-decipherable short field values is not real secure either, especially if they're known to all be encrypted with the same key. But what you know or can guess about the plaintext in such cases would be target-specific, rather than an attack that could be built once and used against any PG database. regards, tom lane