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author | Kyle Farris <kylefarris@kylefarris.gotdns.org> | 2011-10-14 21:43:25 +0200 |
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committer | Kyle Farris <kylefarris@kylefarris.gotdns.org> | 2011-10-14 21:43:25 +0200 |
commit | ad17f4b932b3728c1e299b48f28b3ae0dbdd6b0b (patch) | |
tree | fdb357433e76000bdef60c4d18e5ab0540b07aeb /user_guide_src/source/libraries/encryption.rst | |
parent | db46d02ac23b8e0bc2416e197494d3b795b57530 (diff) | |
parent | a2125a5d830fd390b4cf35f77e9bb0558cfa2dd7 (diff) |
Merged with development
Diffstat (limited to 'user_guide_src/source/libraries/encryption.rst')
-rw-r--r-- | user_guide_src/source/libraries/encryption.rst | 179 |
1 files changed, 179 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/user_guide_src/source/libraries/encryption.rst b/user_guide_src/source/libraries/encryption.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..80b45e4d7 --- /dev/null +++ b/user_guide_src/source/libraries/encryption.rst @@ -0,0 +1,179 @@ +################ +Encryption Class +################ + +The Encryption Class provides two-way data encryption. It uses a scheme +that either compiles the message using a randomly hashed bitwise XOR +encoding scheme, or is encrypted using the Mcrypt library. If Mcrypt is +not available on your server the encoded message will still provide a +reasonable degree of security for encrypted sessions or other such +"light" purposes. If Mcrypt is available, you'll be provided with a high +degree of security appropriate for storage. + +Setting your Key +================ + +A *key* is a piece of information that controls the cryptographic +process and permits an encrypted string to be decoded. In fact, the key +you chose will provide the **only** means to decode data that was +encrypted with that key, so not only must you choose the key carefully, +you must never change it if you intend use it for persistent data. + +It goes without saying that you should guard your key carefully. Should +someone gain access to your key, the data will be easily decoded. If +your server is not totally under your control it's impossible to ensure +key security so you may want to think carefully before using it for +anything that requires high security, like storing credit card numbers. + +To take maximum advantage of the encryption algorithm, your key should +be 32 characters in length (128 bits). The key should be as random a +string as you can concoct, with numbers and uppercase and lowercase +letters. Your key should **not** be a simple text string. In order to be +cryptographically secure it needs to be as random as possible. + +Your key can be either stored in your **application/config/config.php**, or +you can design your own storage mechanism and pass the key dynamically +when encoding/decoding. + +To save your key to your **application/config/config.php**, open the file +and set:: + + $config['encryption_key'] = "YOUR KEY"; + +Message Length +============== + +It's important for you to know that the encoded messages the encryption +function generates will be approximately 2.6 times longer than the +original message. For example, if you encrypt the string "my super +secret data", which is 21 characters in length, you'll end up with an +encoded string that is roughly 55 characters (we say "roughly" because +the encoded string length increments in 64 bit clusters, so it's not +exactly linear). Keep this information in mind when selecting your data +storage mechanism. Cookies, for example, can only hold 4K of +information. + +Initializing the Class +====================== + +Like most other classes in CodeIgniter, the Encryption class is +initialized in your controller using the **$this->load->library** function:: + + $this->load->library('encrypt'); + +Once loaded, the Encrypt library object will be available using: +$this->encrypt + +$this->encrypt->encode() +======================== + +Performs the data encryption and returns it as a string. Example:: + + $msg = 'My secret message'; + + $encrypted_string = $this->encrypt->encode($msg); + + +You can optionally pass your encryption key via the second parameter if +you don't want to use the one in your config file:: + + $msg = 'My secret message'; + $key = 'super-secret-key'; + + $encrypted_string = $this->encrypt->encode($msg, $key); + +$this->encrypt->decode() +======================== + +Decrypts an encoded string. Example:: + + $encrypted_string = 'APANtByIGI1BpVXZTJgcsAG8GZl8pdwwa84'; + + $plaintext_string = $this->encrypt->decode($encrypted_string); + +You can optionally pass your encryption key via the second parameter if +you don't want to use the one in your config file:: + + $msg = 'My secret message'; + $key = 'super-secret-key'; + + $encrypted_string = $this->encrypt->decode($msg, $key); + +$this->encrypt->set_cipher(); +============================== + +Permits you to set an Mcrypt cipher. By default it uses +**MCRYPT_RIJNDAEL_256**. Example:: + + $this->encrypt->set_cipher(MCRYPT_BLOWFISH); + +Please visit php.net for a list of `available +ciphers <http://php.net/mcrypt>`_. + +If you'd like to manually test whether your server supports Mcrypt you +can use:: + + echo ( ! function_exists('mcrypt_encrypt')) ? 'Nope' : 'Yup'; + +$this->encrypt->set_mode(); +============================ + +Permits you to set an Mcrypt mode. By default it uses **MCRYPT_MODE_CBC**. +Example:: + + $this->encrypt->set_mode(MCRYPT_MODE_CFB); + +Please visit php.net for a list of `available +modes <http://php.net/mcrypt>`_. + +$this->encrypt->sha1(); +======================= + +SHA1 encoding function. Provide a string and it will return a 160 bit +one way hash. Note: SHA1, just like MD5 is non-decodable. Example:: + + $hash = $this->encrypt->sha1('Some string'); + +Many PHP installations have SHA1 support by default so if all you need +is to encode a hash it's simpler to use the native function:: + + $hash = sha1('Some string'); + +If your server does not support SHA1 you can use the provided function. + +$this->encrypt->encode_from_legacy($orig_data, $legacy_mode = MCRYPT_MODE_ECB, $key = ''); +========================================================================================== + +Enables you to re-encode data that was originally encrypted with +CodeIgniter 1.x to be compatible with the Encryption library in +CodeIgniter 2.x. It is only necessary to use this method if you have +encrypted data stored permanently such as in a file or database and are +on a server that supports Mcrypt. "Light" use encryption such as +encrypted session data or transitory encrypted flashdata require no +intervention on your part. However, existing encrypted Sessions will be +destroyed since data encrypted prior to 2.x will not be decoded. + +.. important:: + **Why only a method to re-encode the data instead of maintaining legacy + methods for both encoding and decoding?** The algorithms in the + Encryption library have improved in CodeIgniter 2.x both for performance + and security, and we do not wish to encourage continued use of the older + methods. You can of course extend the Encryption library if you wish and + replace the new methods with the old and retain seamless compatibility + with CodeIgniter 1.x encrypted data, but this a decision that a + developer should make cautiously and deliberately, if at all. + +:: + + $new_data = $this->encrypt->encode_from_legacy($old_encrypted_string); + +====================== =============== ======================================================================= +Parameter Default Description +====================== =============== ======================================================================= +**$orig_data** n/a The original encrypted data from CodeIgniter 1.x's Encryption library +**$legacy_mode** MCRYPT_MODE_ECB The Mcrypt mode that was used to generate the original encrypted data. + CodeIgniter 1.x's default was MCRYPT_MODE_ECB, and it will assume that + to be the case unless overridden by this parameter. +**$key** n/a The encryption key. This it typically specified in your config file as + outlined above. +====================== =============== =======================================================================
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