If you're wondering about how Picocrypt handles cryptography, you've come to the right place! This page contains the technical details about the cryptographic algorithms and parameters used, as well as how cryptographic values are stored in the header format.
A Picocrypt volume's header is encoded with Reed-Solomon by default, since it is, after all, the most important part of the entire file. An encoded value will take up three times the size of the unencoded value.
Picocrypt allows the use of keyfiles as an additional form of authentication. Picocrypt's unique "Require correct order" feature enforces the user to drop keyfiles into the window in the exact same order as they did when encrypting, in order to decrypt the volume successfully. Here's how it works:
If "Require correct order" is not checked, Picocrypt will take the SHA3 hash of each file individually, and XOR the hashes together. Finally, the result is XORed with the master key. Because the XOR operation is both commutative and associative, the order in which the keyfile hashes are XORed with each other doesn't matter - the end result is the same.
If "Require correct order" is checked, Picocrypt will concatenate the files together in the order they were dropped into the window and take the SHA3 hash of the combined keyfiles. If the order is not correct, the keyfiles, when appended to each other, will result in a different file, and therefore a different hash. Thus, the correct order of keyfiles is required to successfully decrypt the volume.
By default, all Picocrypt volume headers are encoded with Reed-Solomon to improve resiliency against bit rot, etc. The header uses N+2N encoding, where N is the size of a particular header field such as the version number or the Argon2 salt. If Reed-Solomon is to be used with the input data itself, the data will be encoded using 128+8 encoding, with the data being read in chunks of 1 MiB, and the final set padded to 128 bytes using PKCS#7.