pgadmin4/web/pgadmin/utils/crypto.py

107 lines
2.7 KiB
Python

##########################################################################
#
# pgAdmin 4 - PostgreSQL Tools
#
# Copyright (C) 2013 - 2016, The pgAdmin Development Team
# This software is released under the PostgreSQL Licence
#
#########################################################################
"""This File Provides Cryptography."""
from Crypto.Cipher import AES
from Crypto import Random
import base64
import hashlib
padding_string = b'}'
def encrypt(plaintext, key):
"""
Encrypt the plaintext with AES method.
Parameters:
plaintext -- String to be encrypted.
key -- Key for encryption.
"""
iv = Random.new().read(AES.block_size)
cipher = AES.new(pad(key), AES.MODE_CFB, iv)
excrypted = base64.b64encode(iv + cipher.encrypt(plaintext))
return excrypted
def decrypt(ciphertext, key):
"""
Decrypt the AES encrypted string.
Parameters:
ciphertext -- Encrypted string with AES method.
key -- key to decrypt the encrypted string.
"""
global padding_string
ciphertext = base64.b64decode(ciphertext)
iv = ciphertext[:AES.block_size]
cipher = AES.new(pad(key), AES.MODE_CFB, iv)
decrypted = cipher.decrypt(ciphertext[AES.block_size:])
return decrypted
def pad(str):
"""Add padding to the key."""
global padding_string
str_len = len(str)
# Key must be maximum 32 bytes long, so take first 32 bytes
if str_len > 32:
return str[:32]
# If key size id 16, 24 or 32 bytes then padding not require
if str_len == 16 or str_len == 24 or str_len == 32:
return str
# Add padding to make key 32 bytes long
return str + ((32 - len(str) % 32) * padding_string)
def pqencryptpassword(password, user):
"""
pqencryptpassword -- to encrypt a password
This is intended to be used by client applications that wish to send
commands like ALTER USER joe PASSWORD 'pwd'. The password need not
be sent in cleartext if it is encrypted on the client side. This is
good because it ensures the cleartext password won't end up in logs,
pg_stat displays, etc. We export the function so that clients won't
be dependent on low-level details like whether the enceyption is MD5
or something else.
Arguments are the cleartext password, and the SQL name of the user it
is for.
Return value is "md5" followed by a 32-hex-digit MD5 checksum..
Args:
password:
user:
Returns:
"""
m = hashlib.md5()
# Place salt at the end because it may be known by users trying to crack
# the MD5 output.
m.update(password.encode())
m.update(user.encode())
return "md5" + m.hexdigest()