Research
Security News
Quasar RAT Disguised as an npm Package for Detecting Vulnerabilities in Ethereum Smart Contracts
Socket researchers uncover a malicious npm package posing as a tool for detecting vulnerabilities in Etherium smart contracts.
@p0vidl0/crypto-js
Advanced tools
A cryptography algorithms library compatible with CommonJS, ES6 and TypeScript
A cryptography algorithms library compatible with CommonJS, ES6 and TypeScript
Installation:
yarn add crypto-es
In Node.js projects, we recommend you to use ECMAScript Modules insead of CommonJS:
// package.json
{
"type": "module"
}
# In same folder as above package.json
node --experimental-modules my-app.js # Runs as ES module
Then you can import CryptoES:
import CryptoES from 'crypto-es';
const rst = CryptoES.MD5("Message").toString();
Or partially import the function to reduce the package weight:
import { MD5 } from 'crypto-es/lib/md5.js';
const rst = MD5("Message").toString();
Make sure to add this entry to your tsconfig.json:
{
"compilerOptions": {
...
"skipLibCheck": true,
...
}
}
Just the same as CryptoJS
MD5
MD5 is a widely used hash function. It's been used in a variety of security applications and is also commonly used to check the integrity of files. Though, MD5 is not collision resistant, and it isn't suitable for applications like SSL certificates or digital signatures that rely on this property.
const hash = CryptoES.MD5("Message");
SHA-1
The SHA hash functions were designed by the National Security Agency (NSA). SHA-1 is the most established of the existing SHA hash functions, and it's used in a variety of security applications and protocols. Though, SHA-1's collision resistance has been weakening as new attacks are discovered or improved.
const hash = CryptoES.SHA1("Message");
SHA-2
SHA-256 is one of the four variants in the SHA-2 set. It isn't as widely used as SHA-1, though it appears to provide much better security.
const hash = CryptoES.SHA256("Message");
SHA-512 is largely identical to SHA-256 but operates on 64-bit words rather than 32.
const hash = CryptoES.SHA512("Message");
CryptoES also supports SHA-224 and SHA-384, which are largely identical but truncated versions of SHA-256 and SHA-512 respectively.
SHA-3
SHA-3 is the winner of a five-year competition to select a new cryptographic hash algorithm where 64 competing designs were evaluated.
NOTE: I made a mistake when I named this implementation SHA-3. It should be named Keccak[c=2d]. Each of the SHA-3 functions is based on an instance of the Keccak algorithm, which NIST selected as the winner of the SHA-3 competition, but those SHA-3 functions won't produce hashes identical to Keccak.
const hash = CryptoES.SHA3("Message");
SHA-3 can be configured to output hash lengths of one of 224, 256, 384, or 512 bits. The default is 512 bits.
const hash = CryptoES.SHA3("Message", { outputLength: 512 });
const hash = CryptoES.SHA3("Message", { outputLength: 384 });
const hash = CryptoES.SHA3("Message", { outputLength: 256 });
const hash = CryptoES.SHA3("Message", { outputLength: 224 });
RIPEMD-160
const hash = CryptoES.RIPEMD160("Message");
The hash algorithms accept either strings or instances of CryptoES.lib.WordArray. A WordArray object represents an array of 32-bit words. When you pass a string, it's automatically converted to a WordArray encoded as UTF-8.
The hash you get back isn't a string yet. It's a WordArray object. When you use a WordArray object in a string context, it's automatically converted to a hex string.
const hash = CryptoES.SHA256("Message");
alert(typeof hash); // object
alert(hash); // 2f77668a9dfbf8d5848b9eeb4a7145ca94c6ed9236e4a773f6dcafa5132b2f91
You can convert a WordArray object to other formats by explicitly calling the toString method and passing an encoder.
const hash = CryptoES.SHA256("Message");
alert(hash.toString(CryptoES.enc.Base64)); // L3dmip37+NWEi57rSnFFypTG7ZI25Kdz9tyvpRMrL5E= alert(hash.toString(CryptoES.enc.Latin1)); // /wf��ûøÕ���ëJqEÊ�Æí�6ä§söܯ¥+/�
alert(hash.toString(CryptoES.enc.Hex)); // 2f77668a9dfbf8d5848b9eeb4a7145ca94c6ed9236e4a773f6dcafa5132b2f91
const sha256 = CryptoES.algo.SHA256.create();
sha256.update("Message Part 1");
sha256.update("Message Part 2");
sha256.update("Message Part 3");
const hash = sha256.finalize();
Keyed-hash message authentication codes (HMAC) is a mechanism for message authentication using cryptographic hash functions.
HMAC can be used in combination with any iterated cryptographic hash function.
const hash = CryptoES.HmacMD5("Message", "Secret Passphrase");
const hash = CryptoES.HmacSHA1("Message", "Secret Passphrase");
const hash = CryptoES.HmacSHA256("Message", "Secret Passphrase");
const hash = CryptoES.HmacSHA512("Message", "Secret Passphrase");
const hmac = CryptoES.algo.HMAC.create(CryptoES.algo.SHA256, "Secret Passphrase");
hmac.update("Message Part 1");
hmac.update("Message Part 2");
hmac.update("Message Part 3");
const hash = hmac.finalize();
PBKDF2 is a password-based key derivation function. In many applications of cryptography, user security is ultimately dependent on a password, and because a password usually can't be used directly as a cryptographic key, some processing is required.
A salt provides a large set of keys for any given password, and an iteration count increases the cost of producing keys from a password, thereby also increasing the difficulty of attack.
const salt = CryptoES.lib.WordArray.random(128/8);
const key128Bits = CryptoES.PBKDF2("Secret Passphrase", salt, { keySize: 128/32 });
const key256Bits = CryptoES.PBKDF2("Secret Passphrase", salt, { keySize: 256/32 });
const key512Bits = CryptoES.PBKDF2("Secret Passphrase", salt, { keySize: 512/32 });
const key512Bits1000Iterations = CryptoES.PBKDF2("Secret Passphrase", salt, { keySize: 512/32, iterations: 1000 });
AES
The Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) is a U.S. Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS). It was selected after a 5-year process where 15 competing designs were evaluated.
const encrypted = CryptoES.AES.encrypt("Message", "Secret Passphrase");
const decrypted = CryptoES.AES.decrypt(encrypted, "Secret Passphrase");
CryptoES supports AES-128, AES-192, and AES-256. It will pick the variant by the size of the key you pass in. If you use a passphrase, then it will generate a 256-bit key.
DES, Triple DES
DES is a previously dominant algorithm for encryption, and was published as an official Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS). DES is now considered to be insecure due to the small key size.
const encrypted = CryptoES.DES.encrypt("Message", "Secret Passphrase");
const decrypted = CryptoES.DES.decrypt(encrypted, "Secret Passphrase");
Triple DES applies DES three times to each block to increase the key size. The algorithm is believed to be secure in this form.
const encrypted = CryptoES.TripleDES.encrypt("Message", "Secret Passphrase");
const decrypted = CryptoES.TripleDES.decrypt(encrypted, "Secret Passphrase");
Rabbit
Rabbit is a high-performance stream cipher and a finalist in the eSTREAM Portfolio. It is one of the four designs selected after a 3 1/2-year process where 22 designs were evaluated.
const encrypted = CryptoES.Rabbit.encrypt("Message", "Secret Passphrase");
const decrypted = CryptoES.Rabbit.decrypt(encrypted, "Secret Passphrase");
RC4, RC4Drop
RC4 is a widely-used stream cipher. It's used in popular protocols such as SSL and WEP. Although remarkable for its simplicity and speed, the algorithm's history doesn't inspire confidence in its security.
const encrypted = CryptoES.RC4.encrypt("Message", "Secret Passphrase");
const decrypted = CryptoES.RC4.decrypt(encrypted, "Secret Passphrase");
It was discovered that the first few bytes of keystream are strongly non-random and leak information about the key. We can defend against this attack by discarding the initial portion of the keystream. This modified algorithm is traditionally called RC4-drop.
By default, 192 words (768 bytes) are dropped, but you can configure the algorithm to drop any number of words.
const encrypted = CryptoES.RC4Drop.encrypt("Message", "Secret Passphrase");
const encrypted = CryptoES.RC4Drop.encrypt("Message", "Secret Passphrase", { drop: 3072/4 });
const decrypted = CryptoES.RC4Drop.decrypt(encrypted, "Secret Passphrase", { drop: 3072/4 });
const key = CryptoES.enc.Hex.parse('000102030405060708090a0b0c0d0e0f');
const iv = CryptoES.enc.Hex.parse('101112131415161718191a1b1c1d1e1f');
const encrypted = CryptoES.AES.encrypt("Message", key, { iv: iv });
const encrypted = CryptoES.AES.encrypt("Message", "Secret Passphrase", { mode: CryptoES.mode.CFB, padding: CryptoES.pad.AnsiX923 });
CryptoES supports the following modes:
And CryptoES supports the following padding schemes:
For the plaintext message, the cipher algorithms accept either strings or instances of CryptoES.lib.WordArray.
For the key, when you pass a string, it's treated as a passphrase and used to derive an actual key and IV. Or you can pass a WordArray that represents the actual key. If you pass the actual key, you must also pass the actual IV.
For the ciphertext, the cipher algorithms accept either strings or instances of CryptoES.lib.CipherParams. A CipherParams object represents a collection of parameters such as the IV, a salt, and the raw ciphertext itself. When you pass a string, it's automatically converted to a CipherParams object according to a configurable format strategy.
The plaintext you get back after decryption is a WordArray object. See Hashers' Output for more detail.
The ciphertext you get back after encryption isn't a string yet. It's a CipherParams object. A CipherParams object gives you access to all the parameters used during encryption. When you use a CipherParams object in a string context, it's automatically converted to a string according to a format strategy. The default is an OpenSSL-compatible format.
const encrypted = CryptoES.AES.encrypt("Message", "Secret Passphrase"); alert(encrypted.key); // 74eb593087a982e2a6f5dded54ecd96d1fd0f3d44a58728cdcd40c55227522223
alert(encrypted.iv); // 7781157e2629b094f0e3dd48c4d786115
alert(encrypted.salt); // 7a25f9132ec6a8b34
alert(encrypted.ciphertext); // 73e54154a15d1beeb509d9e12f1e462a0
alert(encrypted); // U2FsdGVkX1+iX5Ey7GqLND5UFUoV0b7rUJ2eEvHkYqA=
You can define your own formats in order to be compatible with other crypto implementations. A format is an object with two methods—stringify and parse—that converts between CipherParams objects and ciphertext strings.
Here's how you might write a JSON formatter:
const JsonFormatter = {
stringify: function (cipherParams) { // create json object with ciphertext
const jsonObj = { ct: cipherParams.ciphertext.toString(CryptoES.enc.Base64) }; // optionally add iv and salt
if (cipherParams.iv) {
jsonObj.iv = cipherParams.iv.toString();
}
if (cipherParams.salt) {
jsonObj.s = cipherParams.salt.toString();
}
// stringify json object
return JSON.stringify(jsonObj);
},
parse: function (jsonStr) { // parse json string
const jsonObj = JSON.parse(jsonStr); // extract ciphertext from json object, and create cipher params object
const cipherParams = CryptoES.lib.CipherParams.create(
{ ciphertext: CryptoES.enc.Base64.parse(jsonObj.ct) },
); // optionally extract iv and salt
if (jsonObj.iv) {
cipherParams.iv = CryptoES.enc.Hex.parse(jsonObj.iv)
}
if (jsonObj.s) {
cipherParams.salt = CryptoES.enc.Hex.parse(jsonObj.s)
}
return cipherParams;
},
};
const encrypted = CryptoES.AES.encrypt(
"Message",
"Secret Passphrase",
{ format: JsonFormatter },
);
alert(encrypted); // {"ct":"tZ4MsEnfbcDOwqau68aOrQ==","iv":"8a8c8fd8fe33743d3638737ea4a00698","s":"ba06373c8f57179c"}
const decrypted = CryptoES.AES.decrypt(
encrypted,
"Secret Passphrase",
{ format: JsonFormatter },
);
alert(decrypted.toString(CryptoES.enc.Utf8)); // Message
const key = CryptoES.enc.Hex.parse('000102030405060708090a0b0c0d0e0f');
const iv = CryptoES.enc.Hex.parse('101112131415161718191a1b1c1d1e1f');
const aesEncryptor = CryptoES.algo.AES.createEncryptor(key, { iv: iv });
const ciphertextPart1 = aesEncryptor.process("Message Part 1");
const ciphertextPart2 = aesEncryptor.process("Message Part 2");
const ciphertextPart3 = aesEncryptor.process("Message Part 3");
const ciphertextPart4 = aesEncryptor.finalize();
const aesDecryptor = CryptoES.algo.AES.createDecryptor(key, { iv: iv });
const plaintextPart1 = aesDecryptor.process(ciphertextPart1);
const plaintextPart2 = aesDecryptor.process(ciphertextPart2);
const plaintextPart3 = aesDecryptor.process(ciphertextPart3);
const plaintextPart4 = aesDecryptor.process(ciphertextPart4);
const plaintextPart5 = aesDecryptor.finalize();
With OpenSSL
Encrypt with OpenSSL:
openssl enc -aes-256-cbc -in infile -out outfile -pass pass:"Secret Passphrase" -e -base64
Decrypt with CryptoES:
const decrypted = CryptoES.AES.decrypt(openSSLEncrypted, "Secret Passphrase");
CryptoES can convert from encoding formats such as Base64, Latin1 or Hex to WordArray objects and vica versa.
const words = CryptoES.enc.Base64.parse('SGVsbG8sIFdvcmxkIQ==');
const base64 = CryptoES.enc.Base64.stringify(words);
const words = CryptoES.enc.Latin1.parse('Hello, World!');
const latin1 = CryptoES.enc.Latin1.stringify(words);
const words = CryptoES.enc.Hex.parse('48656c6c6f2c20576f726c6421');
const hex = CryptoES.enc.Hex.stringify(words);
const words = CryptoES.enc.Utf8.parse('𤭢');
const utf8 = CryptoES.enc.Utf8.stringify(words);
const words = CryptoES.enc.Utf16.parse('Hello, World!');
const utf16 = CryptoES.enc.Utf16.stringify(words);
const words = CryptoES.enc.Utf16LE.parse('Hello, World!');
const utf16 = CryptoES.enc.Utf16LE.stringify(words);
WordArray creator could recive an ArrayBuffer or TypedArray so that CryptoES algorisms could apply to them:
const words = CryptoES.lib.WordArray.create(new ArrayBuffer(8));
const rst = CryptoES.AES.encrypt(words, 'Secret Passphrase')
NOTE: ArrayBuffer could not directly passed to algorisms, you should change them to WordArray first.
With this, encrypting files would be easier:
const fileInput = document.getElementById('fileInput');
const file = fileInput.files[0];
const reader = new FileReader();
reader.readAsArrayBuffer(file);
reader.onload = function () {
const arrayBuffer = reader.result;
const words = CryptoES.lib.WordArray.create(arrayBuffer);
const rst = CryptoES.AES.encrypt(words, 'Secret Passphrase')
...
};
FAQs
A cryptography algorithms library compatible with CommonJS, ES6 and TypeScript
We found that @p0vidl0/crypto-js demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Research
Security News
Socket researchers uncover a malicious npm package posing as a tool for detecting vulnerabilities in Etherium smart contracts.
Security News
Research
A supply chain attack on Rspack's npm packages injected cryptomining malware, potentially impacting thousands of developers.
Research
Security News
Socket researchers discovered a malware campaign on npm delivering the Skuld infostealer via typosquatted packages, exposing sensitive data.