I am attempting to encrypt/decrypt a plain text file in my text editor. encrypting seems to work fine, but the decrypting does not work, the text comes up encrypted. I am certain i've decrypted the text using the word i encrypted it with - could someone look through the snippet below and help me out?

Thanks :)

Encrypting:

NSAlert *alert = [NSAlert alertWithMessageText:@"Encryption"
                                     defaultButton:@"Set"
                                   alternateButton:@"Cancel"
                                       otherButton:nil
                         informativeTextWithFormat:@"Please enter a password to encrypt your file with:"];
    [alert setIcon:[NSImage imageNamed:@"License.png"]];
    NSSecureTextField *input = [[NSSecureTextField alloc] initWithFrame:NSMakeRect(0, 0, 300, 24)];
    [alert setAccessoryView:input];
    NSInteger button = [alert runModal];
    if (button == NSAlertDefaultReturn) {
    [[NSUserDefaults standardUserDefaults] setObject:[input stringValue] forKey:@"password"];   
    NSData *data;
    [self setString:[textView textStorage]];
    NSMutableDictionary *dict = [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObject:NSPlainTextDocumentType
                                                            forKey:NSDocumentTypeDocumentAttribute];
    [textView breakUndoCoalescing];
    data = [[self string] dataFromRange:NSMakeRange(0, [[self string] length])
                     documentAttributes:dict error:outError];
    NSData*encrypt = [data AESEncryptWithPassphrase:[input stringValue]];
    [encrypt writeToFile:[absoluteURL path] atomically:YES];

Decrypting:

    NSAlert *alert = [NSAlert alertWithMessageText:@"Decryption"
                                     defaultButton:@"Open"
                                   alternateButton:@"Cancel"
                                       otherButton:nil
                         informativeTextWithFormat:@"This file has been protected with a password.To view its contents,enter the password below:"];
    [alert setIcon:[NSImage imageNamed:@"License.png"]];
    NSSecureTextField *input = [[NSSecureTextField alloc] initWithFrame:NSMakeRect(0, 0, 300, 24)];
    [alert setAccessoryView:input];
    NSInteger button = [alert runModal];
    if (button == NSAlertDefaultReturn) {
    NSLog(@"Entered Password - attempting to decrypt.");    
    NSMutableDictionary *dict = [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObject:NSPlainTextDocumentType
                                                                forKey:NSDocumentTypeDocumentOption];   
    NSData*decrypted = [[NSData dataWithContentsOfFile:[self fileName]] AESDecryptWithPassphrase:[input stringValue]];
    mString = [[NSAttributedString alloc]
               initWithData:decrypted options:dict documentAttributes:NULL
               error:outError];
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Where do the -AESEncryptWithPassphrase: and -AESDecryptWithPassphrase: methods come from? – Rob Keniger Apr 6 '10 at 4:21
Hi Rob,I got the NSData+AES class (which includes these methods) from here:iphonedevelopment.blogspot.com/2009/02/… – David Schiefer Apr 6 '10 at 5:53
the issue seems to have fixed itself after changing the keybits value to 128. – David Schiefer Apr 6 '10 at 10:44
David Schiefer: That's a category, not a class. See the Objective-C Programming Language document: developer.apple.com/mac/library/documentation/Cocoa/Conceptual/… – Peter Hosey Apr 6 '10 at 12:24
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2 Answers

up vote 7 down vote accepted

Why not use the built-in encryption algorithms? Here's an NSData+AES i wrote which uses CCCrypt with a 256it key for AES256 encryption.

You can use it like:

NSData *data = [[NSData dataWithContentsOfFile:@"/etc/passwd"] 
                             encryptWithString:@"mykey"];

and decrypt it with:

NSData *file = [data decryptWithString:@"mykey"];

DISCLAIMER: There no guarantee my NSData+AES is bug-free :) It's fairly new. I welcome code reviews.

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thanks. I've coded something like this a while back, also coded one that works with NSMutableDictionary - awesome for License Property Files ;) – David Schiefer Nov 26 '10 at 8:25
Are there salts in the encryption your provided @nicerobot? – TwoDumpling Oct 11 '11 at 16:17
@TwoDumpling There is support for an initial vector as provided by CCCrypt but salt is easily just added to the text to be encrypted. – nicerobot Oct 11 '11 at 20:47
Would you just generate some random data, and append it to the key for encryption, then store the salt in the cipher text? I am a bit confused on how I would go about using a library that does have a salt. – TwoDumpling Oct 11 '11 at 21:17
@TwoDumpling Not the key. They key must be known to be able to decrypt the data. Add salt to the data being encrypted. As long as you have some way to distinguish the salt from the data, that's a fine approach. And salt doesn't have to be random, just unique enough from call to call so a time is useful as salt too. Salt is just intended to ensure the same data/key pairs never generates the same cipher. – nicerobot Oct 12 '11 at 22:49
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NSString *plainString = @"AVstjZrZ+FlqskZTuNGJLPBqc+mER8meb6MZT5XuOHCCM0Yvbr5iEVapxg8H6wF6ezQwPzTk7n/HtjWE7CgPHbaDxP4ZYFcvJXetmaY2jT3VqGpaug=";
NSString *key = @"password123";
NSString *encryptedString = [plainString AES256EncryptWithKey:key];
NSLog( @"Decrypted String: %@", [encryptedString AES256DecryptWithKey:key]);

I am using this code for decryption but getting same string as I entered in "plainString". My output will be different.

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