I have been working on trying to implement an encryption mechanism for passing secure information on my website. My host charges extra for SSL, and I am not ready for the extra monetary commitment.
I tried to use pidCrypt to encrypt the values on the client side via javascript. Then, I have tried several techniques for unencrypting on the PHP side. For some reason, the data just gets garbled.
Can someone point out what I am doing wrong? Or, should I use a different javascript library for the encryption? Any advice?
Here's the javascript code that pulls the text to encrypt from an input on the page and the public key from a hidden text area on the page.
$(document).ready(function() {
$('button').click(function() {
var dataToSend = new Object();
var input = $('input[name=textToEncrypt]').val();
var public_key = $('textarea[name=publicKey]').val();
var params = certParser(public_key);
var key = pidCryptUtil.decodeBase64(params.b64);
//new RSA instance
var rsa = new pidCrypt.RSA();
//RSA encryption
//ASN1 parsing
var asn = pidCrypt.ASN1.decode(pidCryptUtil.toByteArray(key));
var tree = asn.toHexTree();
//setting the public key for encryption
rsa.setPublicKeyFromASN(tree);
var t = new Date(); // timer
crypted = rsa.encrypt(input);
dataToSend.unencrypted = input;
dataToSend.textToDecrypt = pidCryptUtil.fragment(pidCryptUtil.encodeBase64(pidCryptUtil.convertFromHex(crypted)),64);
$('body').append(dataToSend.textToDecrypt);
$.getJSON('engine.php', dataToSend, function(data) {
var items = [];
$.each(data, function(key, val) {
items.push('<li id="' + key + '">' + key + ': ' + val + '</li>');
});
$('<ul/>', {
'class': 'my-new-list',
html: items.join('')
}).appendTo('body');
});
});
});
This is my engine.php code that is supposed to decrypt the value. Notice that I have tried several different ways from different examples.
<?php
require_once 'private/keys.php';
function EncryptData($source)
{
/*
* NOTE: Here you use the $pub_key value (converted, I guess)
*/
$key = $DEkeys->pubKey;
openssl_public_encrypt($source,$crypttext,$key);
return(base64_encode($crypttext));
}
function DecryptData($source)
{
/*
* NOTE: Here you use the returned resource value
*/
$decoded_source = base64_decode($source);
openssl_private_decrypt($decoded_source,$newsource,$DEkeys->privKey);
return($newsource);
}
function EncryptData2($source)
{
$fp=fopen("/pathtokey/public.pem","r");
$pub_key=fread($fp,8192);
fclose($fp);
openssl_get_publickey($pub_key);
/*
* NOTE: Here you use the $pub_key value (converted, I guess)
*/
openssl_public_encrypt($source,$crypttext,$pub_key);
return(base64_encode($crypttext));
}
function DecryptData2($source)
{
#print("number : $number");
$fp=fopen("/pathtokey/private.pem","r");
$priv_key=fread($fp,8192);
fclose($fp);
// $passphrase is required if your key is encoded (suggested)
$res = openssl_get_privatekey($priv_key);
/*
* NOTE: Here you use the returned resource value
*/
$decoded_source = base64_decode($source);
openssl_private_decrypt($decoded_source,$newsource,$res);
return($newsource);
}
$out = new stdClass;
$out->hello = 'hello, world!';
if(!empty($_GET["textToDecrypt"])) {
$out->raw = $_GET['textToDecrypt'];
$out->unencrypted = $_GET['unencrypted'];
if($DEkeys->privKey == false) {
$out->error = 'Could not read private key';
}
$out->success = openssl_private_decrypt(base64_decode($out->raw), $decrypted, $DEkeys->privKey);
$out->decrypted = $decrypted;
$out->dec2 = DecryptData2($out->raw);
$out->test1 = EncryptData2('testing');
$out->test2 = DecryptData2($out->test1);
} else {
$out->nondata = $_GET['textToDecrypt'];
}
echo json_encode($out);
When I enter "test" for the value to decrypt, the PHP shows: - decrypted: dGVzdA== - dec2: dGVzdA==
So, neither the openssl_private_decrypt() nor the DecryptData2() functions will correctly decrypt the values. The EncryptData2() and DecryptData2() will work together though.
Is it possible I am missing something small? Any advice?
Edit: Here are the commands I used to create the keys --
This creates the private key:
openssl genrsa -out private.pem 1024
This creates the public key:
openssl rsa -in private.pem -pubout > public.pem
I ended up using Open ID. It's not secure, but at least it is a little better than nothing. The specific implementation that I found was LightOpenID.
I will be choosing a different web host when it is time to renew that will allow me to use SSL in an affordable fashion.
I never did figure out why my encryption code would not work.