I want to crypt an input stream and send it to another server via TCP. So far so good. Everything runs smoothly, until the connection is closed. In almost any case the needed block size of 192 bits is not met and the script crashes with wrong final block length
, although I turned auto padding on.
It seems like auto padding only works, when using the legacy interface. Am I doing something wrong here?
var net = require("net")
, crypto = require("crypto");
var credentials = { algorithm: "aes192", password: "password" }
, decipher = crypto.createDecipher(credentials.algorithm, credentials.password)
, cipher = crypto.createCipher(credentials.algorithm, credentials.password);
decipher.setAutoPadding(true);
cipher.setAutoPadding(true);
net.createServer(function(socket) {
socket.pipe(socket);
}).listen(2000);
var socket = net.connect(2000);
socket.pipe(decipher).pipe(process.stdout);
process.stdin.pipe(cipher).pipe(socket);
socket.write("Too short.");
socket.end();
In my ideal Node.js world, the (De-)Cipher Stream would automatically pad the last block, when the source stream is closed. I think this is a design flaw.
Apart from opening an issue, how can I circumvent this behaviour? Do I have to put a byte counter between Socket and (De-)Cipher Streams?
crypto = { algorithm: "aes192", password: password }
if you're accessing crypto in the following lines.this.crypto = { ... };
. Fixed.