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I use this code to encrypt a string (basically, this is the example given on the Rijndael class on MSDN):

public static String AESEncrypt(String str2Encrypt, Byte[] encryptionKey, Byte[] IV)
{
    Byte[] encryptedText;

    using (RijndaelManaged rijAlg = new RijndaelManaged())
    {
        // Use the provided key and IV
        rijAlg.Key = encryptionKey;
        rijAlg.IV = IV;

        // Create a decrytor to perform the stream transform
        ICryptoTransform encryptor = rijAlg.CreateEncryptor(rijAlg.Key, rijAlg.IV);

        // Create the streams used for encryption
        using (MemoryStream msEncrypt = new MemoryStream())
        using (CryptoStream csEncrypt = new CryptoStream(msEncrypt, encryptor, CryptoStreamMode.Write))
        {
            using (StreamWriter swEncrypt = new StreamWriter(csEncrypt))
            {
                // Write all data to the stream
                swEncrypt.Write(str2Encrypt);
            }

            encryptedText = msEncrypt.ToArray();
        }
    }

    return Encoding.Default.GetString(encryptedText);
}

I use Encoding.Default to convert a byte array to a string but I'm not sure it's a good solution. My goal is to store encrypted text (such as passwords...) in files. Should I continue with Encoding.Default or use Encoding.UTF8Encoding or something else?

Can that have negative consequences on the stored values when I try to encrypt and decrypt them if the files are moved onto different OS'?

0

4 Answers 4

47

You should absolutely not use an Encoding to convert arbitrary binary data to text. Encoding is for when you've got binary data which genuinely is encoded text - this isn't.

Instead, use Convert.ToBase64String to encode the binary data as text, then decode using Convert.FromBase64String.

4
  • Thanks Jon. Saves me from serious bugs.
    – Otiel
    Nov 3, 2011 at 15:48
  • 9
    See also Phil Haack's post expanding on this Jan 30, 2012 at 9:28
  • @Jon Skeet,please help me understand your comment "Encoding is for when you've got binary data which genuinely is encoded text".If I have an xml data and i encrypt that into a byte array,is that xml considered as encoded text? Sep 20, 2017 at 0:19
  • @RennishJoseph: After encryption, it's not encoded text, no - not in the way that Encoding deals with. You'd use Encoding to convert the XML text into binary data, then you'd encrypt it to get more binary data. Later, you'd decrypt the binary data (with a result that's still binary data), and use Encoding to convert the result back to text.
    – Jon Skeet
    Sep 20, 2017 at 5:19
0

Yes, Encoding.Default is your machine's current ANSI code page and may well be different between multiple machines/locales. If the data was textual data and to make it portable, you would need to use a fixed encoding format, for example UTF8.

However, as your data is NOT textual data, you can not try and use any textual encoding to convert to a string. The best option is to use a hex or Base64 encoding or keep it as a blob/byte array.

2
  • This is clearly not textual data - it's the result of performing encryption, so it's arbitrary binary data. Any Encoding is inappropriate here.
    – Jon Skeet
    Nov 3, 2011 at 15:00
  • Yeah, clarified a bit once i knew the data wasn't text at all.
    – Deanna
    Nov 3, 2011 at 15:50
0

If your goal is to store encrypted information in files, and you have a byte array, you should store it directly - don't convert it to a string at all. For example, in C# you can use File.WriteAllBytes to write a byte array directly to a file. Remember that files hold bytes, not strings (if you write a string into a file, some kind of Encoding will be used to convert it to bytes, even if you are using a technique that doesn't explicitly refer to Encoding).

If you actually need the byte array to be stored as a string (for example, because it will be stored in JSON) then the most common technique is to use base64 with Convert.ToBase64String, as Jon mentioned.

(In non-encryption applications you might have a byte[] that contains a mixture of ASCII and binary data and you want to convert it to a string. In this case base64 works fine but it hides the text - Byte Array In String format is like base64 except that runs of ASCII are preserved - C# version in Loyc.Essentials NuGet package, Java version here)

-1

im not 100% sure here but i think that Encoding.Default refers to the system default encoding and yes that can change from system to system..

If i where you i would use UTF8 or some other encoding that does not change from system to system..

for more info about extended ascii look here

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extended_ASCII

1
  • 1
    No, using UTF-8 is not a good solution - this binary data is not UTF-8-encoded text; it's arbitrary binary data.
    – Jon Skeet
    Nov 3, 2011 at 14:59

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