vote up 3 vote down star
4

I am building a custom shopping cart where CC numbers and Exp date will be stored in a database until processing (then deleted). I need to encrypt this data (obviously).

I want to use the RSACryptoServiceProvider class.

Here is my code to create my keys.

public static void AssignNewKey(){
    const int PROVIDER_RSA_FULL = 1;
    const string CONTAINER_NAME = "KeyContainer";
    CspParameters cspParams;
    cspParams = new CspParameters(PROVIDER_RSA_FULL);
    cspParams.KeyContainerName = CONTAINER_NAME;
    cspParams.Flags = CspProviderFlags.UseMachineKeyStore;
    cspParams.ProviderName = "Microsoft Strong Cryptographic Provider";
    rsa = new RSACryptoServiceProvider(cspParams);

    string publicPrivateKeyXML = rsa.ToXmlString(true);
    string publicOnlyKeyXML = rsa.ToXmlString(false);
    // do stuff with keys...
}

Now the plan is to store the private key xml on a USB drive attached to the managers key chain.

Whenever a manager leaves the company I want to be able to generate new public and private keys (and re-encrypt all currently stored CC numbers width the new public key).

My problem is that the keys generated by this code are always the same. How would I generate a unique set of keys every time?

UPDATE. My test code is below.:
note: the "privatekey" parameter here is the original private key. In order for the keys to be changed I need to verify that the private key is valid.

In Default.aspx.cs

public void DownloadNewPrivateKey_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
    StreamReader reader = new StreamReader(fileUpload.FileContent);
    string privateKey = reader.ReadToEnd();
    Response.Clear();
    Response.ContentType = "text/xml";
    Response.End();
    Response.Write(ChangeKeysAndReturnNewPrivateKey(privateKey));
}

In Crytpography.cs:

public static privateKey;
public static publicKey;
public static RSACryptoServiceProvider rsa;

public static string ChangeKeysAndReturnNewPrivateKey(string _privatekey)
{

    string testData = "TestData";
    string testSalt = "salt";
    // encrypt the test data using the exisiting public key...
    string encryptedTestData = EncryptData(testData, testSalt);
    try
    {
        // try to decrypt the test data using the _privatekey provided by user...
        string decryptTestData = DecryptData(encryptedTestData, _privatekey, testSalt);
        // if the data is successfully decrypted assign new keys...
        if (decryptTestData == testData)
        {
            AssignNewKey();
            // "AssignNewKey()" should set "privateKey" to the newly created private key...
            return privateKey;
        }
        else
        {
            return string.Empty;
        }
    }
    catch (Exception ex)
    {
        return string.Empty;
    }
}
public static void AssignParameter(){
    const int PROVIDER_RSA_FULL = 1;
    const string CONTAINER_NAME = "KeyContainer";
    CspParameters cspParams;
    cspParams = new CspParameters(PROVIDER_RSA_FULL);
    cspParams.KeyContainerName = CONTAINER_NAME;
    cspParams.Flags = CspProviderFlags.UseMachineKeyStore;
    cspParams.ProviderName = "Microsoft Strong Cryptographic Provider";
    rsa = new RSACryptoServiceProvider(cspParams);
}
public static void AssignNewKey()
{
    AssignParameter();

    using (SqlConnection myConn = new SqlConnection(Utilities.ConnectionString))
    {
        SqlCommand myCmd = myConn.CreateCommand();

        string publicPrivateKeyXML = rsa.ToXmlString(true);
        privateKey = publicPrivateKeyXML; // sets the public variable privateKey to the new private key.

        string publicOnlyKeyXML = rsa.ToXmlString(false);
        publicKey = publicOnlyKeyXML; // sets the public variable publicKey to the new public key.

        myCmd.CommandText = "UPDATE Settings SET PublicKey = @PublicKey";
        myCmd.Parameters.AddWithValue("@PublicKey", publicOnlyKeyXML);
        myConn.Open();

        myComm.ExecuteScalar();
    }
}
public static string EncryptData(string data2Encrypt, string salt)
{
    AssignParameter();

    using (SqlConnection myConn = new SqlConnection(Utilities.ConnectionString))
    {
        SqlCommand myCmd = myConn.CreateCommand();

        myCmd.CommandText = "SELECT TOP 1 PublicKey FROM Settings";

        myConn.Open();

        using (SqlDataReader sdr = myCmd.ExecuteReader())
        {
            if (sdr.HasRows)
            {
                DataTable dt = new DataTable();
                dt.Load(sdr);
                rsa.FromXmlString(dt.Rows[0]["PublicKey"].ToString());
            }
        }
    }

    //read plaintext, encrypt it to ciphertext
    byte[] plainbytes = System.Text.Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes(data2Encrypt + salt);
    byte[] cipherbytes = rsa.Encrypt(plainbytes, false);
    return Convert.ToBase64String(cipherbytes);
}
public static string DecryptData(string data2Decrypt, string privatekey, string salt)
{
    AssignParameter();

    byte[] getpassword = Convert.FromBase64String(data2Decrypt);

    string publicPrivateKeyXML = privatekey;
    rsa.FromXmlString(publicPrivateKeyXML);

    //read ciphertext, decrypt it to plaintext
    byte[] plain = rsa.Decrypt(getpassword, false);
    string dataAndSalt = System.Text.Encoding.UTF8.GetString(plain);
    return dataAndSalt.Substring(0, dataAndSalt.Length - salt.Length);
}
flag

How are you testing this? – Austin Salonen Aug 20 at 16:55
I am basically calling the AssignNewKey() function from a .net page and then checking the new "publicPrivateKeyXML" against my the previous version. I'll update the question above to include my test code. – David Murdoch Aug 20 at 18:14

3 Answers

vote up 1 vote down

The RSACryptoServiceProvider(CspParameters) constructor creates a keypair which is stored in the keystore on the local machine. If you already have a keypair with the specified name, it uses the existing keypair.

It sounds as if you are not interested in having the key stored on the machine.

So use the RSACryptoServiceProvider(Int32) constructor:

public static void AssignNewKey(){
    RSA rsa = new RSACryptoServiceProvider(2048); // Generate a new 2048 bit RSA key

    string publicPrivateKeyXML = rsa.ToXmlString(true);
    string publicOnlyKeyXML = rsa.ToXmlString(false);
    // do stuff with keys...
}

EDIT:

Alternatively try setting the PersistKeyInCsp to false:

public static void AssignNewKey(){
    const int PROVIDER_RSA_FULL = 1;
    const string CONTAINER_NAME = "KeyContainer";
    CspParameters cspParams;
    cspParams = new CspParameters(PROVIDER_RSA_FULL);
    cspParams.KeyContainerName = CONTAINER_NAME;
    cspParams.Flags = CspProviderFlags.UseMachineKeyStore;
    cspParams.ProviderName = "Microsoft Strong Cryptographic Provider";
    rsa = new RSACryptoServiceProvider(cspParams);

    rsa.PersistKeyInCsp = false;

    string publicPrivateKeyXML = rsa.ToXmlString(true);
    string publicOnlyKeyXML = rsa.ToXmlString(false);
    // do stuff with keys...
}
link|flag
Correct; I guess I am not interested in having the key stored on the machine. If I use the RSACryptoServiceProvider(Int32) constructor the following code gives me a "The system cannot find the file specified." error. RSA rsa = new RSACryptoServiceProvider(2048); rsa.ToXmlString(true); – David Murdoch Aug 20 at 19:08
Since I'm running this in asp.net could that be the problem? – David Murdoch Aug 20 at 19:23
Yes, the problem is probably because the "Network Service" cannot generate keys in the user store. – Rasmus Faber Aug 20 at 20:18
All I want is a public key (stored on the server), a private key (stored with manager), and method to encrypt and decrypt some data securely using these keys. I don't want anything stored on the machine by default. Why is this so hard? Are there any alternatives you might suggest? – David Murdoch Aug 20 at 20:54
Did you see the edit I made? Try setting PersistKeyInCsp to false. – Rasmus Faber Aug 21 at 6:00
show 1 more comment
vote up 0 vote down check

What I ended up doing is create a new KeyContainer name based off of the current DateTime (DateTime.Now.Ticks.ToString()) whenever I need to create a new key and save the container name and public key to the database. Also, whenever I create a new key I would do the following:

public static string ConvertToNewKey(string oldPrivateKey)
{

    // get the current container name from the database...

    rsa.PersistKeyInCsp = false;
    rsa.Clear();
    rsa = null;

    string privateKey = AssignNewKey(true); // create the new public key and container name and write them to the database...

       // re-encrypt existing data to use the new keys and write to database...

    return privateKey;
}
public static string AssignNewKey(bool ReturnPrivateKey){
     string containerName = DateTime.Now.Ticks.ToString();
     // create the new key...
     // saves container name and public key to database...
     // and returns Private Key XML.
}

before creating the new key.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

All this discussion is very helpfull. thanks a lot

link|flag
Let me know if you have any questions – David Murdoch Oct 27 at 15:05

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.