And some code for LM hash:
<?php
function LMhash($string)
{
$string = strtoupper(substr($string,0,14));
$p1 = LMhash_DESencrypt(substr($string, 0, 7));
$p2 = LMhash_DESencrypt(substr($string, 7, 7));
return strtoupper($p1.$p2);
}
function LMhash_DESencrypt($string)
{
$key = array();
$tmp = array();
$len = strlen($string);
for ($i=0; $i<7; ++$i)
$tmp[] = $i < $len ? ord($string[$i]) : 0;
$key[] = $tmp[0] & 254;
$key[] = ($tmp[0] << 7) | ($tmp[1] >> 1);
$key[] = ($tmp[1] << 6) | ($tmp[2] >> 2);
$key[] = ($tmp[2] << 5) | ($tmp[3] >> 3);
$key[] = ($tmp[3] << 4) | ($tmp[4] >> 4);
$key[] = ($tmp[4] << 3) | ($tmp[5] >> 5);
$key[] = ($tmp[5] << 2) | ($tmp[6] >> 6);
$key[] = $tmp[6] << 1;
$is = mcrypt_get_iv_size(MCRYPT_DES, MCRYPT_MODE_ECB);
$iv = mcrypt_create_iv($is, MCRYPT_RAND);
$key0 = "";
foreach ($key as $k)
$key0 .= chr($k);
$crypt = mcrypt_encrypt(MCRYPT_DES, $key0, "KGS!@#$%", MCRYPT_MODE_ECB, $iv);
return bin2hex($crypt);
}
?>
Some optimization?
Mcrypt Encryption Functions
简介
This is an interface to the mcrypt library, which supports a wide variety of block algorithms such as DES, TripleDES, Blowfish (default), 3-WAY, SAFER-SK64, SAFER-SK128, TWOFISH, TEA, RC2 and GOST in CBC, OFB, CFB and ECB cipher modes. Additionally, it supports RC6 and IDEA which are considered "non-free".
需求
These functions work using » mcrypt. To use it, download libmcrypt-x.x.tar.gz from » http://mcrypt.sourceforge.net/ and follow the included installation instructions. Windows users will find all the needed compiled mcrypt binaries at » http://files.edin.dk/php/win32/mcrypt/.
As of PHP 5.0.0 you will need libmcrypt Version 2.5.6 or greater.
If you linked against libmcrypt 2.4.x or higher, the following additional block algorithms are supported: CAST, LOKI97, RIJNDAEL, SAFERPLUS, SERPENT and the following stream ciphers: ENIGMA (crypt), PANAMA, RC4 and WAKE. With libmcrypt 2.4.x or higher another cipher mode is also available; nOFB.
安装
You need to compile PHP with the --with-mcrypt[=DIR] parameter to enable this extension. DIR is the mcrypt install directory. Make sure you compile libmcrypt with the option --disable-posix-threads.
运行时配置
这些函数的行为受 php.ini 的影响。
| Name | Default | Changeable | Changelog |
|---|---|---|---|
| mcrypt.algorithms_dir | NULL | PHP_INI_ALL | Available since PHP 4.0.2. |
| mcrypt.modes_dir | NULL | PHP_INI_ALL | Available since PHP 4.0.2. |
资源类型
mcrypt_module_open() returns an encryption descriptor.
预定义常量
以下常量由本扩展模块定义,因此只有在本扩展模块被编译到 PHP 中,或者在运行时被动态加载后才有效。
Mcrypt can operate in four block cipher modes (CBC, OFB, CFB, and ECB). If linked against libmcrypt-2.4.x or higher the functions can also operate in the block cipher mode nOFB and in STREAM mode. Below you find a list with all supported encryption modes together with the constants that are defines for the encryption mode. For a more complete reference and discussion see Applied Cryptography by Schneier (ISBN 0-471-11709-9).
- MCRYPT_MODE_ECB (electronic codebook) is suitable for random data, such as encrypting other keys. Since data there is short and random, the disadvantages of ECB have a favorable negative effect.
- MCRYPT_MODE_CBC (cipher block chaining) is especially suitable for encrypting files where the security is increased over ECB significantly.
- MCRYPT_MODE_CFB (cipher feedback) is the best mode for encrypting byte streams where single bytes must be encrypted.
- MCRYPT_MODE_OFB (output feedback, in 8bit) is comparable to CFB, but can be used in applications where error propagation cannot be tolerated. It's insecure (because it operates in 8bit mode) so it is not recommended to use it.
- MCRYPT_MODE_NOFB (output feedback, in nbit) is comparable to OFB, but more secure because it operates on the block size of the algorithm.
- MCRYPT_MODE_STREAM is an extra mode to include some stream algorithms like WAKE or RC4.
Some other mode and random device constants:
Mcrypt ciphers
Here is a list of ciphers which are currently supported by the mcrypt extension. For a complete list of supported ciphers, see the defines at the end of mcrypt.h. The general rule with the mcrypt-2.2.x API is that you can access the cipher from PHP with MCRYPT_ciphername. With the libmcrypt-2.4.x and libmcrypt-2.5.x API these constants also work, but it is possible to specify the name of the cipher as a string with a call to mcrypt_module_open().
- MCRYPT_3DES
- MCRYPT_ARCFOUR_IV (libmcrypt > 2.4.x only)
- MCRYPT_ARCFOUR (libmcrypt > 2.4.x only)
- MCRYPT_BLOWFISH
- MCRYPT_CAST_128
- MCRYPT_CAST_256
- MCRYPT_CRYPT
- MCRYPT_DES
- MCRYPT_DES_COMPAT (libmcrypt 2.2.x only)
- MCRYPT_ENIGMA (libmcrypt > 2.4.x only, alias for MCRYPT_CRYPT)
- MCRYPT_GOST
- MCRYPT_IDEA (non-free)
- MCRYPT_LOKI97 (libmcrypt > 2.4.x only)
- MCRYPT_MARS (libmcrypt > 2.4.x only, non-free)
- MCRYPT_PANAMA (libmcrypt > 2.4.x only)
- MCRYPT_RIJNDAEL_128 (libmcrypt > 2.4.x only)
- MCRYPT_RIJNDAEL_192 (libmcrypt > 2.4.x only)
- MCRYPT_RIJNDAEL_256 (libmcrypt > 2.4.x only)
- MCRYPT_RC2
- MCRYPT_RC4 (libmcrypt 2.2.x only)
- MCRYPT_RC6 (libmcrypt > 2.4.x only)
- MCRYPT_RC6_128 (libmcrypt 2.2.x only)
- MCRYPT_RC6_192 (libmcrypt 2.2.x only)
- MCRYPT_RC6_256 (libmcrypt 2.2.x only)
- MCRYPT_SAFER64
- MCRYPT_SAFER128
- MCRYPT_SAFERPLUS (libmcrypt > 2.4.x only)
- MCRYPT_SERPENT(libmcrypt > 2.4.x only)
- MCRYPT_SERPENT_128 (libmcrypt 2.2.x only)
- MCRYPT_SERPENT_192 (libmcrypt 2.2.x only)
- MCRYPT_SERPENT_256 (libmcrypt 2.2.x only)
- MCRYPT_SKIPJACK (libmcrypt > 2.4.x only)
- MCRYPT_TEAN (libmcrypt 2.2.x only)
- MCRYPT_THREEWAY
- MCRYPT_TRIPLEDES (libmcrypt > 2.4.x only)
- MCRYPT_TWOFISH (for older mcrypt 2.x versions, or mcrypt > 2.4.x )
- MCRYPT_TWOFISH128 (TWOFISHxxx are available in newer 2.x versions, but not in the 2.4.x versions)
- MCRYPT_TWOFISH192
- MCRYPT_TWOFISH256
- MCRYPT_WAKE (libmcrypt > 2.4.x only)
- MCRYPT_XTEA (libmcrypt > 2.4.x only)
You must (in CFB and OFB mode) or can (in CBC mode) supply an initialization vector (IV) to the respective cipher function. The IV must be unique and must be the same when decrypting/encrypting. With data which is stored encrypted, you can take the output of a function of the index under which the data is stored (e.g. the MD5 key of the filename). Alternatively, you can transmit the IV together with the encrypted data (see chapter 9.3 of Applied Cryptography by Schneier (ISBN 0-471-11709-9) for a discussion of this topic).
范例
Mcrypt can be used to encrypt and decrypt using the above mentioned ciphers. If you linked against libmcrypt-2.2.x, the four important mcrypt commands (mcrypt_cfb(), mcrypt_cbc(), mcrypt_ecb(), and mcrypt_ofb()) can operate in both modes which are named MCRYPT_ENCRYPT and MCRYPT_DECRYPT, respectively.
Example#1 Encrypt an input value with TripleDES under 2.2.x in ECB mode
<?php
$key = "this is a secret key";
$input = "Let us meet at 9 o'clock at the secret place.";
$encrypted_data = mcrypt_ecb (MCRYPT_3DES, $key, $input, MCRYPT_ENCRYPT);
?>
If you linked against libmcrypt 2.4.x or 2.5.x, these functions are still available, but it is recommended that you use the advanced functions.
Example#2 Encrypt an input value with TripleDES under 2.4.x and higher in ECB mode
<?php
$key = "this is a secret key";
$input = "Let us meet at 9 o'clock at the secret place.";
$td = mcrypt_module_open('tripledes', '', 'ecb', '');
$iv = mcrypt_create_iv (mcrypt_enc_get_iv_size($td), MCRYPT_RAND);
mcrypt_generic_init($td, $key, $iv);
$encrypted_data = mcrypt_generic($td, $input);
mcrypt_generic_deinit($td);
mcrypt_module_close($td);
?>
Table of Contents
- mcrypt_cbc — Encrypt/decrypt data in CBC mode
- mcrypt_cfb — Encrypt/decrypt data in CFB mode
- mcrypt_create_iv — Create an initialization vector (IV) from a random source
- mcrypt_decrypt — Decrypts crypttext with given parameters
- mcrypt_ecb — Deprecated: Encrypt/decrypt data in ECB mode
- mcrypt_enc_get_algorithms_name — Returns the name of the opened algorithm
- mcrypt_enc_get_block_size — Returns the blocksize of the opened algorithm
- mcrypt_enc_get_iv_size — Returns the size of the IV of the opened algorithm
- mcrypt_enc_get_key_size — Returns the maximum supported keysize of the opened mode
- mcrypt_enc_get_modes_name — Returns the name of the opened mode
- mcrypt_enc_get_supported_key_sizes — Returns an array with the supported keysizes of the opened algorithm
- mcrypt_enc_is_block_algorithm_mode — Checks whether the encryption of the opened mode works on blocks
- mcrypt_enc_is_block_algorithm — Checks whether the algorithm of the opened mode is a block algorithm
- mcrypt_enc_is_block_mode — Checks whether the opened mode outputs blocks
- mcrypt_enc_self_test — This function runs a self test on the opened module
- mcrypt_encrypt — Encrypts plaintext with given parameters
- mcrypt_generic_deinit — This function deinitializes an encryption module
- mcrypt_generic_end — This function terminates encryption
- mcrypt_generic_init — This function initializes all buffers needed for encryption
- mcrypt_generic — This function encrypts data
- mcrypt_get_block_size — Get the block size of the specified cipher
- mcrypt_get_cipher_name — Get the name of the specified cipher
- mcrypt_get_iv_size — Returns the size of the IV belonging to a specific cipher/mode combination
- mcrypt_get_key_size — Get the key size of the specified cipher
- mcrypt_list_algorithms — Get an array of all supported ciphers
- mcrypt_list_modes — Get an array of all supported modes
- mcrypt_module_close — Close the mcrypt module
- mcrypt_module_get_algo_block_size — Returns the blocksize of the specified algorithm
- mcrypt_module_get_algo_key_size — Returns the maximum supported keysize of the opened mode
- mcrypt_module_get_supported_key_sizes — Returns an array with the supported keysizes of the opened algorithm
- mcrypt_module_is_block_algorithm_mode — Returns if the specified module is a block algorithm or not
- mcrypt_module_is_block_algorithm — This function checks whether the specified algorithm is a block algorithm
- mcrypt_module_is_block_mode — Returns if the specified mode outputs blocks or not
- mcrypt_module_open — Opens the module of the algorithm and the mode to be used
- mcrypt_module_self_test — This function runs a self test on the specified module
- mcrypt_ofb — Encrypt/decrypt data in OFB mode
- mdecrypt_generic — Decrypt data
mcrypt
30-May-2008 03:25
09-May-2008 01:58
mre's aes_128_decrypt function was outputting trash at the end. here's my fix.
function aes_128_decrypt($encrypted_text,$password)
{
$size = mcrypt_get_iv_size(MCRYPT_RIJNDAEL_128, MCRYPT_MODE_CBC);
$iv = mcrypt_create_iv($size, MCRYPT_DEV_RANDOM);
preg_match('/([\x20-\x7E]*)/',mcrypt_decrypt(MCRYPT_RIJNDAEL_128, $password, pack("H*", $encrypted_text), MCRYPT_MODE_ECB, $iv), $a);
return $a[0];
} // End of function
21-Apr-2008 01:21
Using the decrypt funciont of the Pear class Crypt_Blowfish, the decrypted text must be cleaned from null characters (this happen when the text size is not a multiple of the cbc block size). So the correct code should be like:
11 $plaintext = $bf->decrypt($encrypted);
12 if (PEAR::isError($plaintext)) {
13 echo $plaintext->getMessage();
14 exit;
15 }
16 // Encrypted text is padded prior to encryption
17 // so you may need to trim the decrypted result.
18 echo 'plain text: ' . trim($plaintext,"\0");
01-Feb-2008 05:18
The Pear class Crypt/Blowfish.php will use the mcrypt module if available but the mcrypt module is not required.
Some very easy Pear and example pseudocode to protect your data by encrypting your databases with a one-way hash and blowfish symmetric encryption.
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Cryptography/Database_protection
Using a one-way hash and blowfish symmetric encryption.
1. Insert a record of John Doe in an encrypted database.
2. Get the encrypted record of user John Doe and decrypt the data.
1. Insert a record of John Doe in an encrypted database.
<?php
require_once("Crypt/Blowfish.php"); // a Pear class
$aRecord['email'] = "johndoe@anisp.localhost"; // The Primary key
$aRecord['name'] = "John Doe";
$aRecord['creditnr'] = "0192733652342" ;
// crypt - one-way encryption
$cipher_key = crypt( $aRecord['email'] , "AN_SECRET_COMPANY_SALT");
$bf = new Crypt_Blowfish('ecb');
$bf->setKey( $cipher_key );
// crypt_blowfish symmetric encryption to encrypt the data
$aRecord['email'] = $bf->encrypt( $aRecord['email'] );
$aRecord['name'] = $bf->encrypt( $aRecord['name'] );
$aRecord['creditnr'] = $bf->encrypt( $aRecord['creditnr'] );
$result = sqlInsert( $aRecord ) ;
?>
2. Get the encrypted record of user John Doe and decrypt the data.
<?php
require_once("Crypt/Blowfish.php"); // a Pear class
$primary_key = "johndoe@anisp.localhost";
// crypt - one-way encryption
$cipher_key = crypt( $primary_key , "AN_SECRET_COMPANY_SALT");
$bf = new Crypt_Blowfish('ecb');
$bf->setKey( $cipher_key );
// crypt_blowfish symmetric encryption to ecrypt the primary key for a sql select
$select_key = $bf->encrypt( $primary_key ) ;
$aRecord = sqlSelectWithPKEY( $select_key );
// crypt_blowfish symmetric encryption to decrypt the data
$aRecord['email'] = $bf->decrypt( $aRecord['email'] );
$aRecord['name'] = $bf->decrypt( $aRecord['name'] );
$aRecord['creditnr'] = $bf->decrypt( $aRecord['creditnr'] );
?>
Thanks for reading this.
24-Jan-2008 01:37
Solved Problem:
when compiling php --with-mcrypt, phpinfo() says, that mcrypt ist enabled, but
"Supported ciphers none" and
"Supported modes none"
In order to get mcrypt to work in php, you have to configure and compile the libmcrypt source package with the following options:
./configure --disable-posix-threads --enable-dynamic-loading
26-Oct-2007 09:25
Here are my functions to do a 128 bit aes encryption which is transmitted
to the dachser parcel tracking system via url. They expect a true aes
128 bit encryption an process the reqest by a java script. The decrypt
function is just a giveaway.
function aes_128_encrypt($text,$password) {
$size = mcrypt_get_iv_size(MCRYPT_RIJNDAEL_128, MCRYPT_MODE_CBC);
$iv = mcrypt_create_iv($size, MCRYPT_DEV_RANDOM);
// The following line was needed because I didn't get the same hex value as expected by forwarding agency
// I think its their bug
// Try to remove the line. If it works, too - fine!
$text .= chr(3).chr(3).chr(3);
return bin2hex(mcrypt_encrypt(MCRYPT_RIJNDAEL_128, $password, $text, MCRYPT_MODE_ECB, $iv));
} // End of function
function aes_128_decrypt($encrypted_text,$password) {
$size = mcrypt_get_iv_size(MCRYPT_RIJNDAEL_128, MCRYPT_MODE_CBC);
$iv = mcrypt_create_iv($size, MCRYPT_DEV_RANDOM);
return mcrypt_decrypt(MCRYPT_RIJNDAEL_128, $password, pack("H*", $encrypted_text), MCRYPT_MODE_ECB, $iv);
} // End of function
06-Oct-2007 07:15
Interop Between PHP and Java URLs has changed to:
http://propaso.com/blog/?p=7 (Part 4) it is linked to Part 1, 2 and 3.
28-Apr-2007 10:03
To enable mcrypt extension under Windows you need to:
1) uncomment line "extension=php_mcrypt.dll" in php.ini
2) download libmcrypt.dll from http://files.edin.dk/php/win32/mcrypt/ and put it to System32 directory (for example C:\Windows\System32).
Tested on Windows XP+Apache 1.3.37+PHP 4.4.6 (as SAPI module!!!)
P.S.
I wrote this because I got "Cannot load mcrypt extension. Please check your PHP configuration." from phpMyAdmin when I simply uncommented "extension=php_mcrypt.dll" line.
12-Mar-2007 07:51
I posted a link to my blog on AES encryption using PHP and decrypt using Java. Just wrote a sequel to it to work the other way around (encrypt with Java and decrypt with PHP).
Interop Between PHP and Java using AES:
Part 1 - Encrypt Using PHP / Decrypt Using Java
http://www.propaso.com/blog/
2007/01/27/aes-interop-between-php-and-java/
Part 2 - Encrypt Using Java / Decrypt Using PHP
http://www.propaso.com/blog/
2007/03/12/aes-interop-between-php-and-java
-part-2-working-the-other-way-around/
P/S: sorry to break the lines for the URL again.
09-Jan-2007 12:00
To have the same result in Java and PHP with the BouncyCastle library :
/*********
Java
**********/
import java.security.*;
import javax.crypto.*;
import javax.crypto.spec.SecretKeySpec;
public class tester {
public static void crypter(String password) {
try {
// -- Install jar "bcprov-jdk14-135.jar" in <install_jdk>/jre/lib/ext/
//
Security.addProvider(new org.bouncycastle.jce.provider.BouncyCastleProvider());
Cipher cipher = Cipher.getInstance("Blowfish/ECB/ZeroBytePadding");
// -- Substring is used to have no problem with key length
SecretKeySpec keySpec = new SecretKeySpec(password.substring(0,8).getBytes(), "Blowfish");
cipher.init(Cipher.ENCRYPT_MODE, keySpec);
byte[] outText = cipher.doFinal(password.getBytes());
System.out.println(asHex(outText));
}
catch (Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
public static String asHex (byte buf[]) {
StringBuffer strbuf = new StringBuffer(buf.length * 2);
int i;
for (i = 0; i < buf.length; i++) {
if (((int) buf[i] & 0xff) < 0x10)
strbuf.append("0");
strbuf.append(Long.toString((int) buf[i] & 0xff, 16));
}
return strbuf.toString();
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
try {
crypter("password");
}
catch (Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
/********
PHP
*********/
<?php
header("Content-Type: text/plain");
$data = "password";
echo substr($data, 0,8)."\n";
$encrypted_data = mcrypt_ecb(MCRYPT_BLOWFISH, substr($data, 0,8), $data, MCRYPT_ENCRYPT);
echo bin2hex($encrypted_data);
?>
05-Jan-2007 08:56
>coz AT metamule D0T com
>04-Nov-2005 02:15
>Make sure when you create your database to set the >encoding to SQL_ASCII because you won't be able to store >this data in a database that uses UNICODE
Not really necessary, simply store the enrypted data in a BYTEA column and it will work fine.
21-Sep-2006 03:56
For those of you that need to use PKCS#5 padding, the mcrypt API's for PHP do not support it. However, you can DIY using the following:
<?
function encrypt_something($input)
{
$size = mcrypt_get_block_size('des', 'ecb');
$input = pkcs5_pad($input, $size);
$key = 'YOUR SECRET KEY HERE';
$td = mcrypt_module_open('des', '', 'ecb', '');
$iv = mcrypt_create_iv (mcrypt_enc_get_iv_size($td), MCRYPT_RAND);
mcrypt_generic_init($td, $key, $iv);
$data = mcrypt_generic($td, $input);
mcrypt_generic_deinit($td);
mcrypt_module_close($td);
$data = base64_encode($data);
return $data;
}
function pkcs5_pad ($text, $blocksize)
{
$pad = $blocksize - (strlen($text) % $blocksize);
return $text . str_repeat(chr($pad), $pad);
}
function pkcs5_unpad($text)
{
$pad = ord($text{strlen($text)-1});
if ($pad > strlen($text)) return false;
if (strspn($text, chr($pad), strlen($text) - $pad) != $pad) return false;
return substr($text, 0, -1 * $pad);
}
?>
10-Sep-2006 02:40
Most of the ciphers here are badly broken, and there are a few cases where the manual says things that are outright incorrect, such as that it's "safe to transmit the initialization vector in plaintext" (this is incorrect: see Ciphers By Ritter for details. http://www.ciphersbyritter.com/GLOSSARY.HTM#IV )
For a *safe* PHP mcrypt wrapper, see Stone PHP SafeCrypt.
http://blog.sc.tri-bit.com/archives/101
07-Sep-2006 09:49
For those looking for a mysql_aes_decrypt, I created this method, referencing rolf's aes_encrypt below. Since the aes_encrypt right-pads N * blocksize with any chr( 0 ) to chr( 16 ) (random based on the input string length) we first decrypt the text, then RTrim chr(0 .. 16) depending on its trailing ord() value.
mysql AES_DECRYPT() compatibly function for PHP :
<?
function mysql_aes_decrypt( $val, $ky )
{
$mode = MCRYPT_MODE_ECB;
$enc = MCRYPT_RIJNDAEL_128;
$dec = @mcrypt_decrypt($enc, $ky, $val, $mode, @mcrypt_create_iv( @mcrypt_get_iv_size($enc, $mode), MCRYPT_DEV_URANDOM ) );
return rtrim( $dec, ( ( ord(substr( $dec, strlen( $dec )-1, 1 )) >= 0 and ord(substr( $dec, strlen( $dec )-1, 1 ) ) <= 16 ) ? chr(ord(substr( $dec, strlen( $dec )-1, 1 ))): null) );
}
?>
Please note that if the strlen($ky)>16 then this function will not be compatible.
11-Mar-2006 04:19
mysql AES_ENCRYPT() compatibly function for PHP :
function mysql_aes_encrypt($val,$ky) {
$mode=MCRYPT_MODE_ECB;
$enc=MCRYPT_RIJNDAEL_128;
$val=str_pad($val, (16*(floor(strlen($val) / 16)+(strlen($val) % 16==0?2:1))), chr(16-(strlen($val) % 16)));
return mcrypt_encrypt($enc, $ky, $val, $mode, mcrypt_create_iv( mcrypt_get_iv_size($enc, $mode), MCRYPT_DEV_URANDOM));
}
Please note that if the strlen($ky)>16 then this function will not be compatible.
02-Mar-2006 05:55
If you plan to use Mcrypt Encryption to store encrypted data (e.g. passwords) in a (MySQL) database make sure to set the column to BLOB rather than VARCHAR. Otherwise the data may change which can give unexpected results if you decrypt the value.
17-Feb-2006 02:23
After benchmarking AES in 256-bit operation, I've concluded that CBC is far faster than OFB. Using a 14.9 MiB file, on average...
Encrypt in CBC: 1.9 seconds
Encrypt in OFB: 45.7 seconds (same as CFB)
Just reading the file: ~.53 seconds
After some research, I've concluded that OFB and CFB are slightly more secure than CBC, however I believe the performance difference to be due to an implementation issue.
As a side note on ECB: As stated in the wiki linked to below, ECB is wholly inadequate. It not use an IV (whether it was supplied ot MCrypt or not), meaning the same key and plaintext always produce the same ciphertext and it doesn't hide patterns. The site shows an excellent example of this.
Very useful info:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Block_cipher_mode_of_operation
05-Feb-2006 07:28
Regarding storing the result on a postgres DB that uses Unicode (follow up to a post below).
You don't need to change the DB's encoding to ASCII.
Simply use BASE64 to encode the result, it's perfectly safe.
use base64_decode before you decrypt.
-- Tomer Levinboim
09-Nov-2005 06:23
To get encryption/decryption working between Delphi and PHP, we used the code available on http://www.cityinthesky.co.uk/cryptography.html . Very helpful.
04-Nov-2005 09:15
If you're going to encrypt data with something like this and store it in postgres.
function encrypt($string, $key){
$result = '';
for($i=1; $i<=strlen($string); $i++){
$char = substr($string, $i-1, 1);
$keychar = substr($key, ($i % strlen($key))-1, 1);
$char = chr(ord($char)+ord($keychar));
$result.=$char;
}
return $result;
}
Make sure when you create your database to set the encoding to SQL_ASCII because you won't be able to store this data in a database that uses UNICODE
31-Oct-2005 09:22
A further note for those doing interop between PHP and Java:
If you're using the BouncyCastle library on the Java side, then you can use the ZeroBytePadding mode now available in it. Mcrypt pads the data with Nulls rather than spaces....
I've sucessfully done interop using Blowfish/CBC/ZeroBytePadding between PHP and Java this way.
27-Oct-2005 01:55
As regards the whole one-time-pad discussion below, I would also add that any one-time pad scheme which involves the key passing through a computer in any fashion is blown from the very beginning. At best, you have to rely on a less-secure cipher for key transmission; at (far-from-uncommon) worst, your key has been written in the clear to some sectors of the disk (for example, by being swapped out of memory), and awaits only someone with a sector-scanning tool to reveal it.
If you're thinking about Internet security, considering a one-time pad at all, unless you're planning to use one to protect another cipher system's keys for transmission (and probably even then!), is a waste of your time.
16-Sep-2005 05:28
There seems to be an error on the list of ciphers supported by the mcrypt extension.
MCRYPT_3DES should be MCRYPT_TRIPLEDES
13-Jul-2005 11:33
I've spent the majority of the day attempting to get mcrypt to work under IIS6 with Windows Server 2003 (Web Edition) and PHP 5.0.4
There seems to be some incompatability with enabling certain extensions (mcrypt being one) when you are running PHP as ISAPI in this environment.
The way to solve the problem (the error will be that it cannot load php_mcrypt.dll - access is denied) is to run in CGI. While this isn't supposed to be as good performance wise, if you need the mcrypt support (or Oracle support, too, I believe) then this is the only way I've found to do it.
24-Jun-2005 06:59
Master [thilo-at-hardtware.de], (First Post)
Much thanks by you script.
Now i happy. :-)
Maybe - lines:
<?php
function you($string,$key,$a){
if(empty($a))$string=base64_decode($string);
$salida='';
for($i=0;$i<strlen($string);$i++){
$char=substr($string,$i,1);
$keychar=substr($key,($i%strlen($key))-1,1);
if($a)$char=chr(ord($char)+ord($keychar));
else $char=chr(ord($char)-ord($keychar));
$salida.=$char;
}if($a)$salida=base64_encode($salida);
return $salida;}
$a='thilo-at-hardtware.de';
echo you($a,'xs:a/55p;',1);
$b='r+DcptBclqmdo9nlntWmlqfVadzY';
echo '<hr>';
echo you($b,'xs:a/55p;',0);
exit;
?>Thanks newly.
Regards from CO
21-May-2005 03:02
Please, mind that a XOR Encryption can't compete with a block cipher like AES or IDEA, but if you really want to use a stream cipher the more secure RC4 is the right alternative.
A XOR Encryption is only a bit useful if you encrypt data for private use, otherwise it is a frankly a security risk.
29-Apr-2005 03:37
I have modified the xor-encryption of Anonymous. It is now returning and eating base64-encoded strings. That's much better for saving and transporting (e.g. saving in a database) the encrypted string.
<?php
function encrypt($string, $key) {
$result = '';
for($i=0; $i<strlen($string); $i++) {
$char = substr($string, $i, 1);
$keychar = substr($key, ($i % strlen($key))-1, 1);
$char = chr(ord($char)+ord($keychar));
$result.=$char;
}
return base64_encode($result);
}
function decrypt($string, $key) {
$result = '';
$string = base64_decode($string);
for($i=0; $i<strlen($string); $i++) {
$char = substr($string, $i, 1);
$keychar = substr($key, ($i % strlen($key))-1, 1);
$char = chr(ord($char)-ord($keychar));
$result.=$char;
}
return $result;
}
?>
24-Mar-2005 06:13
Re: Just a followup note about mcrypt<-->java interop (have a php app encrypting a string and a java app decrypting it - and vice-versa!)
Sorry, the PHP had a bug and should have been the following:
$dlen = strlen($data);
$pad = 16 - fmod($dlen, 16); //change here
if ($pad > 0) {
$i = (int)$pad;
while ($i > 0) {
$data.=" ";
$i--;
}
}
24-Mar-2005 05:12
Just a followup note about mcrypt<-->java interop (have a php app encrypting a string and a java app decrypting it - and vice-versa!)
it seems that mcrypt pads with nulls (0x00) instead of spaces so to allow the interop to work properly (where both java and php/mcrypt encode strings to the same value) - I padded the PHP strings with spaces first before encrypting and did the same on the Java side - thus the padding was the same on each side and the interop is complete. Here's sample PHP for padding:
$dlen = strlen($data);
$pad = fmod($dlen, 16);
if ($pad > 0) {
$i = (int)$pad;
while ($i > 0) {
$data.=" ";
$i--;
}
}
and here's the Java padding:
public static String PadString(String in) {
int slen = (in.length() % 16);
int i = (16 - slen);
if ((i > 0) && (i < 16)){
StringBuffer buf = new StringBuffer(in.length() + i);
buf.insert(0, in);
for (i = (16 - slen); i > 0; i--) {
buf.append(" ");
}
return buf.toString();
}
else {
return in;
}
}
With trimming on each side for decryption ... all works well.
19-Mar-2005 12:37
I was creating a cross-platform (unix + windows) application and ran into some issues with different versions of mcrypt (2.4.x vs 2.5.x) not working with Windows. After further investigation, I found the following:
Libmcrypt 2.5.7 is not usable with PHP 4.x.
The reason is a very Windows-specific issue. DLLs are Windows' way of providing shared code - things get loaded once into RAM and are guaranteed identical across all applications that use them. When an application references a routine/function in a DLL, it may do so either by function name or by reference number. Referring to a routine by name is considered slow by some people and does slow down the startup of applications that use large numbers of routines in DLLs (applications such as PHP). Referring to a routine by reference number is very quick but breaks if a new DLL version changes the reference number assignments for its routines.
Libmcrypt 2.5.6 & 7's DLLs do not have the same reference number assignments as old Libmcrypt.dll files did. Specifically, function 148 (mdecrypt_generic) has been moved in 2.5.6/7 to number 149 due to the addition of the mcrypt_mutex_register function which moved everything above it alphebetically up a reference number. PHP's php_mcrypt.dll, which provides the PHP language bindings to the low-level Libmcrypt.dll, refers to Libmcrypt.dll's functions by number instead of name. PHP 4.x's php_mcrypt.dll refers to function 148 while PHP 5.0's php_mcrypt.dll refers to function 149 and notes that PHP 5.0 under Windows can only work with Libmcrypt 2.5.6 and higher (because function 149 in old Libmcrypt is actually the Panama encryption algorithm, not the expected mcrypt_generic routine).
So, unless you can find a PHP 4.x php_mcrypt.dll that has been compiled for Libmcrypt 2.5.6 and higher, PHP 4.x won't be able to decrypt data with Libmcrypt 2.5.7 under Windows.
05-Mar-2005 07:58
TO:
16-Feb-2005 01:53
No key is ever truely random, thus it is breakable.
16-Feb-2005 09:53
amiller of connext point net is correct. The 'one-time pad' is unbreakable, if used correctly. Correct use requires that:
1. the key length equals or exceeds the data length
2. the key must not be used more than once to encrypt data
3. the key must be truly random.
The last point is a bit of a problem. "Random Number Generator" algorithms are only pseudo-random. Once the attacker finds out which PRNG was used, breaking the encryption becomes easy. Hardware solutions for the generation of random data (like, sampling noise via the sound card input and taking the LSB) have also proven to be of dubious quality.
Violation of point 2 makes the encryption worthless. A known-plaintext attack will reveal the key at once.
21-Dec-2004 02:03
"Anonymous'" comment of Nov 19th refers to an encryption scheme known as a 'one-time pad'. Anonymous forgot to mention that, while it's true the one-time pad is secure as long as the key's kept secret, it's also necessary to avoid reusing keys -- multiple plaintexts encrypted using a single key are insecure, too, because of collisions, and that's why it's called a 'one-time pad'. Hope this helps --
23-Nov-2004 05:20
Attention when using keys longer than the actual key size (i.e. 160 bit instead of 128 bit).
It will work inbetween PHP scripts, but might cause problems when using openssl or other packages with this integration of mcrypt. Cut them always to the supported size (mcrypt_enc_get_key_size) to avoid sleepless hours.
20-Nov-2004 12:18
Or, if you don't have the mcrypt library, you can just use these functions:
<?php
function Encrypt($string, $key)
{
$result = '';
for($i=1; $i<=strlen($string); $i++)
{
$char = substr($string, $i-1, 1);
$keychar = substr($key, ($i % strlen($key))-1, 1);
$char = chr(ord($char)+ord($keychar));
$result.=$char;
}
return $result;
}
function Decrypt($string, $key)
{
$result = '';
for($i=1; $i<=strlen($string); $i++)
{
$char = substr($string, $i-1, 1);
$keychar = substr($key, ($i % strlen($key))-1, 1);
$char = chr(ord($char)-ord($keychar));
$result.=$char;
}
return $result;
}
?>
It's very simple encryption, but as long as the key stays secret, very powerful.
06-Nov-2004 12:37
Just a note about mcrypt<-->java interop (have a php app encrypting a string and a java app decrypting it)
php mcrypt pads the plaintext with spaces until the plaintext is a multiple of the block size (e.g 16 for most symmetric ciphers). These spaces have to be stripped on when decrypting on the java side. Seems to be no other way of using a sensible padding (e.g. with PKCS #5) on the mcrypt side.
The following php and java will interop
$cipher = "rijndael-128";
$mode = "cbc";
echo "CIPHER: $cipher | MODE: $mode\n";
// data,key, iv
$data = "blah";
$key = "01234567890abcdef";
$iv = "fedcba9876543210";
// set up and encyrpt
$td = mcrypt_module_open($cipher, "", $mode, $iv);
mcrypt_generic_init($td, $key, $iv);
$encrypted_data = mcrypt_generic($td, $data);
echo bin2hex($encrypted_data);
// tear down
mcrypt_generic_deinit($td);
mcrypt_module_close($td);
Java side
Cipher cipher = Cipher.getInstance("AES/CBC/NoPadding");
SecretKeySpec keySpec = new SecretKeySpec("01234567890abcdef".getBytes(), "AES");
IvParameterSpec ivSpec = new IvParameterSpec("fedcba9876543210".getBytes());
cipher.init(Cipher.DECRYPT_MODE, keySpec, ivSpec);
byte[] outText = cipher.doFinal(fromHexString(input));
System.out.println(new String(outText).trim());
16-Oct-2004 09:24
Sometimes mcrypt library is not aviable e.g. commercial hosting, customer restrictions, etc. Because of these conditions I wrote alternative free synchronous encryption library in pure PHP. It is not so complex as mcrypt, but it is sufficient. Everything including detailed documentation and API description is avaiable at http://www.yan.cz/brutuslib/. Hoping it helps somebody.
24-Aug-2004 07:48
This is a modified version of a previous script that test the algorithms and modes of mcrypt dll. This new script prints out the result in a table and avoid warnings to be printed.
<?PHP
/* run a self-test through every listed cipher and mode */
function mcrypt_check_sanity() {
$modes = mcrypt_list_modes();
$algorithms = mcrypt_list_algorithms();
echo "<table border=1>";
echo "<tr><td align=center><strong>Algorithm</strong></td align=center><td><strong>Status</strong></td>";
foreach ($modes as $mode) echo "<td align=center><strong>".strtoupper($mode)."</strong></td>";
echo "</tr>";
foreach ($algorithms as $cipher) {
echo "<tr><td bgcolor=f0f0ff align=left>".strtoupper($cipher)."</td>";
if(mcrypt_module_self_test($cipher)) {
print "<td bgcolor=green align=center>OK</td>";
} else {
print "<td bgcolor=red align=center>NOT OK</td>";
}
foreach ($modes as $mode) {
if($mode == 'stream') {
$result = "<td bgcolor=gray align=center>NOT TESTED</td>";
} else if(mcrypt_test_module_mode($cipher,$mode)) {
$result = "<td bgcolor=green align=center><strong>OK</strong></td>";
} else {
$result = "<td bgcolor=red align=center>NOT OK</td>";
}
print $result;
}
echo "</tr>";
}
echo "</table>";
}
// a variant on the example posted in mdecrypt_generic
function mcrypt_test_module_mode($module,$mode) {
/* Data */
$key = 'this is a very long key, even too long for the cipher';
$plain_text = 'very important data';
/* Open module, and create IV */
$td = mcrypt_module_open($module, '',$mode, '');
$key = substr($key, 0, mcrypt_enc_get_key_size($td));
$iv_size = mcrypt_enc_get_iv_size($td);
$iv = mcrypt_create_iv($iv_size, MCRYPT_RAND);
/* Initialize encryption handle */
if (mcrypt_generic_init($td, $key, $iv) != -1) {
/* Encrypt data */
$c_t = mcrypt_generic($td, $plain_text);
mcrypt_generic_deinit($td);
// close the module
mcrypt_module_close($td);
/* Reinitialize buffers for decryption */
/* Open module */
$td = mcrypt_module_open($module, '', $mode, '');
$key = substr($key, 0, mcrypt_enc_get_key_size($td));
mcrypt_generic_init($td, $key, $iv);
$p_t = trim(mdecrypt_generic($td, $c_t)); //trim to remove padding
/* Clean up */
mcrypt_generic_end($td);
mcrypt_module_close($td);
}
if (strncmp($p_t, $plain_text, strlen($plain_text)) == 0) {
return TRUE;
} else {
return FALSE;
}
}
// function call:
@mcrypt_check_sanity();
?>
17-Aug-2004 12:38
I have another comment to the script submitted by robert at peakepro dot com. He uses deprecated function mcrypt_generic_end which also closes the module. Subsequent mcrypt_module_close then complains about invalid resource. Moreover, not all combinations of algorith and mode are compatible. It is necessary to check the return value from mcrypt_module_open in order to find whether the module can be open for selected combination. My script also displays some useful information. You can find the full source at my site http://icebearsoft.euweb.cz/php/
11-Aug-2004 10:54
Changing the function as such seems to greatly help.
<?php
function encrypt($encrypt) {
global $key;
srand((double) microtime() * 1000000); //for sake of MCRYPT_RAND
$iv = mcrypt_create_iv(mcrypt_get_iv_size(MCRYPT_RIJNDAEL_256, MCRYPT_MODE_ECB), MCRYPT_RAND);
$passcrypt = mcrypt_encrypt(MCRYPT_RIJNDAEL_256, $key, $encrypt, MCRYPT_MODE_ECB, $iv);
$encode = base64_encode($passcrypt);
return $encode;
}
?>
by adding:
<?php
srand((double) microtime() * 1000000); //for sake of MCRYPT_RAND
?>
which I guess seeds the encryption routine differently everytime.
Thanks to robert at peakepro dot com sourced from
http://www.php.net/manual/en/function.mcrypt-create-iv.php
Cheers,
Wil
11-Aug-2004 10:16
The Algorithm posted by:
Mike Zaccari
29-Jun-2004 03:54
"I'm running PHP 4.3.7 on Apache 2.0.49 on an Xp machine, and after many hours of googling over the internet I found that the easiest way to use the mcrypt function was to do this:"
Thanks for posting this Mike but there seems to be a problem
with your implementation.
On my machine and I suspect others, the output is independent
of the key. I can change the key and this has no effect on
the resulting crypted data. So the input is always encrypted the
same way irregardless of the key and therefore decrypted
with any key.
This would only be secure if an attacker knew nothing about the
algorithm which seems unlikely from an experienced attacker.
I am looking into a fix and will post if resolved.
Does anybody else have this problem? I want to make sure my install is good.
I am running on a gentoo linux box.
Thanks,
Wil
Here is the code I am using to test the algorithm:
<head><title>Encryption</title>
</head>
<body>
<?php print_debug_header(1); ?>
<form name=form method=post action='encrypt.php'>
<table align=center>
<TR><TD>Source Text:</TD><TD><input type=text name=input value=<?php echo $_REQUEST['input']; ?>></TD></TR>
<TR><TD>Key:</TD><TD><input type=text name=key value=<?php echo $_REQUEST['key']; ?>></TD></TR>
</table>
<input type=submit>
</form>
<?php
if(!empty($_REQUEST['input'])){
