4

Before you mark this as a duplicate, please read the full question.

I've looked through countless questions here about this problem, and every answer said to install JCE. However, if I want to send the program to someone else, another computer, virtually anything off the development computer, they have to install JCE too.

Is there a way I can use a smaller keysize without having to install anything?

My encryption method;

public static String encrypt(String in) throws NoSuchAlgorithmException,
   NoSuchPaddingException, InvalidKeyException, InvalidAlgorithmParameterException,
   IllegalBlockSizeException, BadPaddingException, IOException {

    String out = " ";

    // generate a key
    KeyGenerator keygen = KeyGenerator.getInstance("AES");
    keygen.init(128);
    byte[] key = keygen.generateKey().getEncoded();
    SecretKeySpec skeySpec = new SecretKeySpec(key, "AES");

    // build the initialization vector
    SecureRandom random = new SecureRandom();
    byte iv[] = new byte[16]; //generate random 16 byte IV. AES is always 16bytes
    random.nextBytes(iv);
    IvParameterSpec ivspec = new IvParameterSpec(iv);

    saveKey(key, iv); //<-- save to file

    // initialize the cipher for encrypt mode
    Cipher cipher = Cipher.getInstance("AES/CBC/PKCS5Padding");
    cipher.init(Cipher.ENCRYPT_MODE, skeySpec, ivspec);

    byte[] encrypted = cipher.doFinal(in.getBytes());

    out = asHex(encrypted);

    return out;
}

And my decrypt method:

public static String decrypt(String in) throws NoSuchAlgorithmException,
  NoSuchPaddingException, InvalidKeyException, InvalidAlgorithmParameterException,
  IllegalBlockSizeException, BadPaddingException, IOException, KeyFileNotFoundException, UnknownKeyException {

    String out = " ";

    byte[] key = readKey("key").clone(); //<--from file
    SecretKeySpec skeySpec = new SecretKeySpec(key, "AES");

    byte[] iv = readKey("iv"); //<-- from file
    IvParameterSpec ivspec = new IvParameterSpec(iv);

    //initialize the cipher for decryption
    Cipher cipher = Cipher.getInstance("AES/CBC/PKCS5Padding");
    cipher.init(Cipher.DECRYPT_MODE, skeySpec, ivspec);

    // decrypt the message
    byte[] decrypted = cipher.doFinal(in.getBytes());

    out = asHex(decrypted);

    return out;
}

My saveKey() method:

private static void saveKey(byte[] key, byte[] iv) throws FileNotFoundException, IOException {

    File keyFile = new File(Logging.getCurrentDir() + "\\cikey.key");

    keys.setProperty("key", asHex(key));
    keys.setProperty("iv", asHex(iv));

    keys.store(new FileOutputStream(keyFile.getAbsolutePath(), false), null);
}

My readKey() method:

 private static byte[] readKey(String request) throws KeyFileNotFoundException, UnknownKeyException, FileNotFoundException, IOException {

    File keyFile = new File(Logging.getCurrentDir() + "\\cikey.key");
    byte[] storage;

    keys.load(new FileInputStream(keyFile));

    if (!keyFile.exists())
        throw new KeyFileNotFoundException("Key file not located.");

    if (keys.containsKey(request) == false)
        throw new UnknownKeyException("Key not found.");
    else
        storage = keys.getProperty(request).getBytes();

    return storage;
}

asHex() method (transferring array to String):

public static String asHex(byte buf[]) {

    StringBuilder strbuf = new StringBuilder(buf.length * 2);

    for (int i = 0; i < buf.length; i++) {
        if (((int) buf[i] & 0xff) < 0x10)
            strbuf.append("0");

        strbuf.append(Long.toString((int) buf[i] & 0xff, 16));
    }
    return strbuf.toString();
}
2
  • Its not clear why key size is relavent here. JCE is bundled with the jre, or is the issue that you need to use AES 256 (which requires the unlimited jurisdiction policy files)? Can you clarify please.
    – Syon
    Aug 29, 2013 at 22:17
  • @Syon The problem has been narrowed down to "probably" the way I'm storing the keys. See Jk1's answer.
    – Aaron
    Aug 29, 2013 at 22:20

1 Answer 1

3

Is there a way I can use a smaller keysize without having to install anything?

You can't use AES with keys sizes smaller than 128 bit, but there are other ciphers available: DES, Blowfish, etc. They aren't as secure as AES, but still can do the trick if your application (as most apps do) does not worth complicated hacking effort. Here's an example for 56 bit DES:

 public static String encrypt(String in) throws Exception {
    String out = " ";
    // generate a key
    KeyGenerator keygen = KeyGenerator.getInstance("DES");
    keygen.init(56);
    byte[] key = keygen.generateKey().getEncoded();
    SecretKeySpec skeySpec = new SecretKeySpec(key, "DES");

    // build the initialization vector
    SecureRandom random = new SecureRandom();
    byte iv[] = new byte[8]; //generate random 8 byte IV. 
    random.nextBytes(iv);
    IvParameterSpec ivspec = new IvParameterSpec(iv);
    // initialize the cipher for encrypt mode
    Cipher cipher = Cipher.getInstance("DES/CBC/PKCS5Padding");
    cipher.init(Cipher.ENCRYPT_MODE, skeySpec, ivspec);

    byte[] encrypted = cipher.doFinal(in.getBytes());

    out = asHex(encrypted);

    return out;
}

There is also a problem with storing and reading the keys in the code. You're storing them as hex, but reading as symbols from default platform encoding. Here's an example how to make both operations uniform:

private static void saveKey(byte[] key, byte[] iv) throws IOException {
    File keyFile = new File("C:/cikey.key");
    keys.setProperty("key", toHexString(key));
    keys.setProperty("iv", toHexString(iv));
    keys.store(new FileOutputStream(keyFile.getAbsolutePath(), false), null);
}

private static byte[] readKey(String request) throws IOException {
    File keyFile = new File("C:/cikey.key");
    keys.load(new FileInputStream(keyFile));
    return toByteArray(keys.getProperty(request));
}

public static String toHexString(byte[] array) {
    return DatatypeConverter.printHexBinary(array);
}

public static byte[] toByteArray(String s) {
    return DatatypeConverter.parseHexBinary(s);
}
14
  • I've changed everything to how you have it, including some items in my decrypt() method to match the DES as you've used. However, I now get there error: java.security.InvalidKeyException: Invalid key length: 16 bytes using: cipher.init(Cipher.DECRYPT_MODE, skeySpec, ivspec); EDIT: if it helps, I've edited my question to provide my readKey() method.
    – Aaron
    Aug 29, 2013 at 22:01
  • Why you're using a key of 16 bytes for decrypting? That is not a legal key size for DES. You should use either 7 byte (56 bit) for key as in my example above, or 5 byte (40 bit) key. Given you are only getting an error on decryption (encryption is fine) I suppose you have a bug in saving\restoring keys.
    – Jk1
    Aug 29, 2013 at 22:06
  • I've edited my question with my read/saving method. When I tried storing the keys using toString() instead of a custom method, the size was shortened to 11 instead of 16. It might be in that method, but I don't really know too much about how it works to mess with it.
    – Aaron
    Aug 29, 2013 at 22:14
  • Thanks, now it's clear where the problem is. Please refer to the updated answer for explanation.
    – Jk1
    Aug 29, 2013 at 22:25
  • Fixed the problem -- now I have javax.crypto.BadPaddingException: Given final block not properly padded. Error source is byte[] decrypted = cipher.doFinal(in.getBytes());
    – Aaron
    Aug 29, 2013 at 22:34

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