简体   繁体   中英

How do I encrypt and decrypt a string in python?

I have been looking for sometime on how to encrypt and decrypt a string. But most of it is in 2.7 and anything that is using 3.2 is not letting me print it or add it to a string.

So what I'm trying to do is the following:

mystring = "Hello stackoverflow!"
encoded = encode(mystring,"password")
print(encoded)

jgAKLJK34t3g (a bunch of random letters)

decoded = decode(encoded,"password")
print(decoded)

Hello stackoverflow!

Is there anyway of doing this, using python 3.X and when the string is encoded it's still a string, not any other variable type.

I had troubles compiling all the most commonly mentioned cryptography libraries on my Windows 7 system and for Python 3.5.

This is the solution that finally worked for me.

from cryptography.fernet import Fernet
key = Fernet.generate_key() #this is your "password"
cipher_suite = Fernet(key)
encoded_text = cipher_suite.encrypt(b"Hello stackoverflow!")
decoded_text = cipher_suite.decrypt(encoded_text)

Take a look at PyCrypto . It supports Python 3.2 and does exactly what you want.

From their pip website:

>>> from Crypto.Cipher import AES
>>> obj = AES.new('This is a key123', AES.MODE_CFB, 'This is an IV456')
>>> message = "The answer is no"
>>> ciphertext = obj.encrypt(message)
>>> ciphertext
'\xd6\x83\x8dd!VT\x92\xaa`A\x05\xe0\x9b\x8b\xf1'
>>> obj2 = AES.new('This is a key123', AES.MODE_CFB, 'This is an IV456')
>>> obj2.decrypt(ciphertext)
'The answer is no'

If you want to encrypt a message of an arbitrary size use AES.MODE_CFB instead of AES.MODE_CBC .

Try this:

Python Cryptography Toolkit ( pycrypto ) is required

$ pip install pycrypto

Code:

from Crypto.Cipher import AES
from base64 import b64encode, b64decode


class Crypt:

    def __init__(self, salt='SlTKeYOpHygTYkP3'):
        self.salt = salt.encode('utf8')
        self.enc_dec_method = 'utf-8'

    def encrypt(self, str_to_enc, str_key):
        try:
            aes_obj = AES.new(str_key, AES.MODE_CFB, self.salt)
            hx_enc = aes_obj.encrypt(str_to_enc.encode('utf8'))
            mret = b64encode(hx_enc).decode(self.enc_dec_method)
            return mret
        except ValueError as value_error:
            if value_error.args[0] == 'IV must be 16 bytes long':
                raise ValueError('Encryption Error: SALT must be 16 characters long')
            elif value_error.args[0] == 'AES key must be either 16, 24, or 32 bytes long':
                raise ValueError('Encryption Error: Encryption key must be either 16, 24, or 32 characters long')
            else:
                raise ValueError(value_error)

    def decrypt(self, enc_str, str_key):
        try:
            aes_obj = AES.new(str_key.encode('utf8'), AES.MODE_CFB, self.salt)
            str_tmp = b64decode(enc_str.encode(self.enc_dec_method))
            str_dec = aes_obj.decrypt(str_tmp)
            mret = str_dec.decode(self.enc_dec_method)
            return mret
        except ValueError as value_error:
            if value_error.args[0] == 'IV must be 16 bytes long':
                raise ValueError('Decryption Error: SALT must be 16 characters long')
            elif value_error.args[0] == 'AES key must be either 16, 24, or 32 bytes long':
                raise ValueError('Decryption Error: Encryption key must be either 16, 24, or 32 characters long')
            else:
                raise ValueError(value_error)

Usage:

        test_crpt = Crypt()
        test_text = """Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod
tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam,
quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo
consequat. Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse
cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla pariatur. Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non
proident, sunt in culpa qui officia deserunt mollit anim id est laborum.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod
tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam,
quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo
consequat. Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse
cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla pariatur. Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non
proident, sunt in culpa qui officia deserunt mollit anim id est laborum.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod
tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam,
quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo
consequat. Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse
cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla pariatur. Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non
proident, sunt in culpa qui officia deserunt mollit anim id est laborum."""

        test_key = 'MyKey4TestingYnP'
        test_enc_text = test_crpt.encrypt(test_text, test_key)
        test_dec_text = test_crpt.decrypt(test_enc_text, test_key)
        print(f'Encrypted:{test_enc_text}  Decrypted:{test_dec_text}')

You can do this easily by using the library cryptocode . Here is how you install:

pip install cryptocode

Encrypting a message (example code):

import cryptocode

encoded = cryptocode.encrypt("mystring","mypassword")
## And then to decode it:
decoded = cryptocode.decrypt(encoded, "mypassword")

Documentation can be found here

Although its very old, but I thought of sharing another idea to do this:

from Crypto.Cipher import AES    
from Crypto.Hash import SHA256

password = ("anything")    
hash_obj = SHA256.new(password.encode('utf-8'))    
hkey = hash_obj.digest()

def encrypt(info):
    msg = info
    BLOCK_SIZE = 16
    PAD = "{"
    padding = lambda s: s + (BLOCK_SIZE - len(s) % BLOCK_SIZE) * PAD
    cipher = AES.new(hkey, AES.MODE_ECB)
    result = cipher.encrypt(padding(msg).encode('utf-8'))
    return result  

msg = "Hello stackoverflow!"
cipher_text = encrypt(msg)
print(cipher_text)

def decrypt(info):
    msg = info
    PAD = "{"
    decipher = AES.new(hkey, AES.MODE_ECB)
    pt = decipher.decrypt(msg).decode('utf-8')
    pad_index = pt.find(PAD)
    result = pt[: pad_index]
    return result

plaintext = decrypt(cipher_text)
print(plaintext)

Outputs:

> b'\xcb\x0b\x8c\xdc#\n\xdd\x80\xa6|\xacu\x1dEg;\x8e\xa2\xaf\x80\xea\x95\x80\x02\x13\x1aem\xcb\xf40\xdb'

> Hello stackoverflow!

Encrypt Data

First, we need to install the cryptography library:

pip3 install cryptography
  • From the cryptography library, we need to import Fernet and start generating a key - this key is required for symmetric encryption/decryption.

  • To generate a key, we call the generate_key() method.

    • We only need to execute the above method once to generate a key.

    You need to keep this key in a safe place. If you lose the key, you won't be able to decrypt the data that was encrypted with this key.

  • Once we have generated a key, we need to load the key with load_key()

Encrypt a Message

This is a three step process:

  1. encode the message
  2. initialize the Fernet class
  3. pass the encoded message to encrypt() method

Below is a full working example of encrypting a message :

from cryptography.fernet import Fernet

def generate_key():
    """
    Generates a key and save it into a file
    """
    key = Fernet.generate_key()
    with open("secret.key", "wb") as key_file:
        key_file.write(key)

def load_key():
    """
    Load the previously generated key
    """
    return open("secret.key", "rb").read()

def encrypt_message(message):
    """
    Encrypts a message
    """
    key = load_key()
    encoded_message = message.encode()
    f = Fernet(key)
    encrypted_message = f.encrypt(encoded_message)

    print(encrypted_message)

if __name__ == "__main__":
    # generate_key() # execute only once 
    encrypt_message("Hello stackoverflow!")

output:

b'gAAAAABgLX7Zj-kn-We2BI_c9NQhEtfJEnHUVhVqtiqjkDi5dgJafj-_8QUDyeNS2zsJTdBWg6SntRJOjOM1U5mIxxsGny7IEGqpVVdHwheTnwzSBlgpb80='

Decrypt Data

To decrypt the message, we just call the decrypt() method from the Fernet library. Remember, we also need to load the key as well, because the key is needed to decrypt the message.

from cryptography.fernet import Fernet

def load_key():
    """
    Load the previously generated key
    """
    return open("secret.key", "rb").read()

def decrypt_message(encrypted_message):
    """
    Decrypts an encrypted message
    """
    key = load_key()
    f = Fernet(key)
    decrypted_message = f.decrypt(encrypted_message)

    print(decrypted_message.decode())

if __name__ == "__main__":
    decrypt_message(b'gAAAAABgLX7Zj-kn-We2BI_c9NQhEtfJEnHUVhVqtiqjkDi5dgJafj-_8QUDyeNS2zsJTdBWg6SntRJOjOM1U5mIxxsGny7IEGqpVVdHwheTnwzSBlgpb80=')

output:

Hello stackoverflow!


Your password is in the secret.key in a form similar to the password below:

B8wtXqwBA_zb2Iaz5pW8CIQIwGSYSFoBiLsVz-vTqzw=

You may use Fernet as follows:

from cryptography.fernet import Fernet
key = Fernet.generate_key()
f = Fernet(key)
encrypt_value = f.encrypt(b"YourString")
f.decrypt(encrypt_value)

Here's a simple algorithm akin to a one time pad...for illustrative purposes how you might use one str to encrypt another and then decrypt the cipher text.

def explact(secret: str, key: str) -> str:
    """use one secret (key) to encrypt another (secret)"""
    explacted_secret_arr = []
    for idx, c in enumerate(secret):
        explacted_secret_arr.append(chr(ord(c) + ord(key[idx % len(key)])))

    return "".join(explacted_secret_arr)


def unexplact(explacted_secret: str, key: str) -> str:
    """use one secret (key) to decrypt another (explacted_secret)"""
    secret_arr = []
    for idx, c in enumerate(explacted_secret):
        secret_arr.append(chr(ord(c) - ord(key[idx % len(key)])))

    return "".join(secret_arr)

assert unexplact(explact("secret", "key"), "key") == "secret"

For Encryption

  def encrypt(my_key=KEY, my_iv=IV, my_plain_text=PLAIN_TEXT): 

       key = binascii.unhexlify('ce975de9294067470d1684442555767fcb007c5a3b89927714e449c3f66cb2a4')
       iv = binascii.unhexlify('9aaecfcf7e82abb8118d8e567d42ee86')

       padder = PKCS7Padder()
       padded_text = padder.encode(my_plain_text)

      encryptor = AES.new(key, AES.MODE_CBC, iv, segment_size=128)  # Initialize encryptor
      result = encryptor.encrypt(padded_text)  

     return {
         "plain": my_plain_text,
         "key": binascii.hexlify(key),
         "iv": binascii.hexlify(iv),
         "ciphertext": result
}

For Decryption:

     def decrypt(my_key=KEY, my_iv=IV, encryptText=encrypttext):

        key = binascii.unhexlify(my_key)
        iv = binascii.unhexlify(my_iv)
        encryptor = AES.new(key, AES.MODE_CBC, iv, segment_size=128)  # Initialize encryptor
        result = encryptor.decrypt(binascii.a2b_hex(encryptText))
        padder = PKCS7Padder()
        decryptText=padder.decode(result)  

           return {
          "plain": encryptText,
          "key": binascii.hexlify(key),
          "iv": binascii.hexlify(iv),
          "decryptedTest": decryptText
}

The technical post webpages of this site follow the CC BY-SA 4.0 protocol. If you need to reprint, please indicate the site URL or the original address.Any question please contact:yoyou2525@163.com.

 
粤ICP备18138465号  © 2020-2024 STACKOOM.COM