For the latest stable version, please use Spring Security 6.3.3! |
For the latest stable version, please use Spring Security 6.3.3! |
The Spring Security Crypto module provides support for symmetric encryption, key generation, and password encoding. The code is distributed as part of the core module but has no dependencies on any other Spring Security (or Spring) code.
Encryptors
The Encryptors
class provides factory methods for constructing symmetric encryptors.
This class lets you create BytesEncryptor
instances to encrypt data in raw byte[]
form.
You can also construct TextEncryptor instances to encrypt text strings.
Encryptors are thread-safe.
Both |
BytesEncryptor
You can use the Encryptors.stronger
factory method to construct a BytesEncryptor
:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
Encryptors.stronger("password", "salt");
Encryptors.stronger("password", "salt")
The stronger
encryption method creates an encryptor by using 256-bit AES encryption with
Galois Counter Mode (GCM).
It derives the secret key by using PKCS #5’s PBKDF2 (Password-Based Key Derivation Function #2).
This method requires Java 6.
The password used to generate the SecretKey
should be kept in a secure place and should not be shared.
The salt is used to prevent dictionary attacks against the key in the event that your encrypted data is compromised.
A 16-byte random initialization vector is also applied so that each encrypted message is unique.
The provided salt should be in hex-encoded String form, be random, and be at least 8 bytes in length.
You can generate such a salt by using a KeyGenerator
:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
String salt = KeyGenerators.string().generateKey(); // generates a random 8-byte salt that is then hex-encoded
val salt = KeyGenerators.string().generateKey() // generates a random 8-byte salt that is then hex-encoded
You can also use the standard
encryption method, which is 256-bit AES in Cipher Block Chaining (CBC) Mode.
This mode is not authenticated and does not provide any
guarantees about the authenticity of the data.
For a more secure alternative, use Encryptors.stronger
.
TextEncryptor
You can use the Encryptors.text
factory method to construct a standard TextEncryptor:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
Encryptors.text("password", "salt");
Encryptors.text("password", "salt")
A TextEncryptor
uses a standard BytesEncryptor
to encrypt text data.
Encrypted results are returned as hex-encoded strings for easy storage on the filesystem or in a database.
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Key Generators
The KeyGenerators
class provides a number of convenience factory methods for constructing different types of key generators.
By using this class, you can create a BytesKeyGenerator
to generate byte[]
keys.
You can also construct a StringKeyGenerator` to generate string keys.
KeyGenerators
is a thread-safe class.
BytesKeyGenerator
You can use the KeyGenerators.secureRandom
factory methods to generate a BytesKeyGenerator
backed by a SecureRandom
instance:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
BytesKeyGenerator generator = KeyGenerators.secureRandom();
byte[] key = generator.generateKey();
val generator = KeyGenerators.secureRandom()
val key = generator.generateKey()
The default key length is 8 bytes.
A KeyGenerators.secureRandom
variant provides control over the key length:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
KeyGenerators.secureRandom(16);
KeyGenerators.secureRandom(16)
Use the KeyGenerators.shared
factory method to construct a BytesKeyGenerator that always returns the same key on every invocation:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
KeyGenerators.shared(16);
KeyGenerators.shared(16)
Password Encoding
The password package of the spring-security-crypto
module provides support for encoding passwords.
PasswordEncoder
is the central service interface and has the following signature:
public interface PasswordEncoder {
String encode(CharSequence rawPassword);
boolean matches(CharSequence rawPassword, String encodedPassword);
default boolean upgradeEncoding(String encodedPassword) {
return false;
}
}
The matches
method returns true if the rawPassword
, once encoded, equals the encodedPassword
.
This method is designed to support password-based authentication schemes.
The BCryptPasswordEncoder
implementation uses the widely supported “bcrypt” algorithm to hash the passwords.
Bcrypt uses a random 16-byte salt value and is a deliberately slow algorithm, to hinder password crackers.
You can tune the amount of work it does by using the strength
parameter, which takes a value from 4 to 31.
The higher the value, the more work has to be done to calculate the hash.
The default value is 10
.
You can change this value in your deployed system without affecting existing passwords, as the value is also stored in the encoded hash.
The following example uses the BCryptPasswordEncoder
:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
// Create an encoder with strength 16
BCryptPasswordEncoder encoder = new BCryptPasswordEncoder(16);
String result = encoder.encode("myPassword");
assertTrue(encoder.matches("myPassword", result));
// Create an encoder with strength 16
val encoder = BCryptPasswordEncoder(16)
val result: String = encoder.encode("myPassword")
assertTrue(encoder.matches("myPassword", result))
The Pbkdf2PasswordEncoder
implementation uses PBKDF2 algorithm to hash the passwords.
To defeat password cracking, PBKDF2 is a deliberately slow algorithm and should be tuned to take about .5 seconds to verify a password on your system.
The following system uses the Pbkdf2PasswordEncoder
:
-
Java
-
Kotlin
// Create an encoder with all the defaults
Pbkdf2PasswordEncoder encoder = Pbkdf2PasswordEncoder.defaultsForSpringSecurity_v5_8();
String result = encoder.encode("myPassword");
assertTrue(encoder.matches("myPassword", result));
// Create an encoder with all the defaults
val encoder = Pbkdf2PasswordEncoder.defaultsForSpringSecurity_v5_8()
val result: String = encoder.encode("myPassword")
assertTrue(encoder.matches("myPassword", result))