I forgot the password of a dev instance (irresponsible.. yeah, I am working on it). I have the connection saved in my DBeaver with the password. I am still able to connect using that connection. DBeaver is not showing it in plain text. Is there anyway I can retrieve the password? Asking DBA to reset the password is the last resort. I tried to copy paste to a notepad, copying is disabled apparently.
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2this work for me: bugdays.com/dbeaver-password-decrypter– Luciana CampelloApr 27, 2021 at 13:53
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This question is for a tool used often by programmers, it happens to also be used by other people LOL. SU might work too, but I think it's fine here since the answer is practically a programming one.– rogerdpackMar 20 at 16:54
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@rogerdpack DBeaver may be used often by programmers, that does not make it a tool which is primarily used by programmers. It is also used by DBAs, or other people querying databases.– Mark RotteveelMar 31 at 8:08
9 Answers
For DBeaver 6.1.3+
The credential file is located ~/Library/DBeaverData/workspace6/General/.dbeaver/credentials-config.json (I was on Mac) and it follows a different encryption strategy than it's predecessors. Please refer the next answer to see how to decrypt. It works like a charm.
Pre- DBeaver 6.1.3
Follow these steps (My DBeaver version was 3.5.8 and it was on Mac OsX El Capitan)
- Locate the file in which DBeaver stores the connection details. For
me, it was in this location
~/.dbeaver/General/.dbeaver-data-sources.xml
. This file is hidden, so keep that in mind when you look for it. - Locate your interested Datasource Definition node in that file.
- Decrypt the password: Unfortunately, everything is in plain text except password; Password is in some kind of Encrypted form. Decrypt it to plain-text using this tool.
Or
I put together a quick and dirty Java program by copying core of DBeaver's method for decrypting the password. Once you have the Encrypted password string, just execute this program, it will convert the password to plain text and prints it
How to run it
On Line Number 13, just replace OwEKLE4jpQ==
with whatever encrypted password you are finding in .dbeaver-data-sources.xml
file for your interested datasource. Compile it and run it, it will print the plain-text password.
https://github.com/jaisonpjohn/dbeaver-password-retriever/blob/master/SimpleStringEncrypter.java
Apparently, this is a "Popular" mistake. So I have deployed an AWS lambda function with the aforementioned code. Use this at your own risk, you will never know whether I am logging your password or not
curl https://lmqm83ysii.execute-api.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/prod/dbeaver-password-decrypter \
-X POST --data "OwEKLE4jpQ=="
Even better, here is the UI https://bugdays.com/dbeaver-password-decrypter. This goes without saying, use this at your own risk
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1@Oranges13 namespace? you meant the package name? Thanks, I removed that from the code Jan 5, 2018 at 18:02
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16I created an equivalent python script using your code as reference: gist.github.com/felipou/f5472ad5f6a414528b44beb102e17fb4 It was faster than it would take me to install the java compiler :)– felipouFeb 25, 2019 at 17:15
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2@felipou Your solution is great and you should post it as an answer.– NickZengApr 5, 2019 at 15:47
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1MUST have link http://dbeaver-password-decrypter.s3-website-us-west-2.amazonaws.com– cystbearJul 3, 2019 at 13:52
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8Since version 6.1.3, this no longer works. The credentials are now stored encrypted in
.dbeaver/credentials-config.json
according to this: github.com/dbeaver/dbeaver/wiki/Admin-Manage-Connections. I'm assuming this is an encrypted json file (it's not plaintext json). Aug 19, 2019 at 15:06
This can be done with OpenSSL:
openssl aes-128-cbc -d \
-K babb4a9f774ab853c96c2d653dfe544a \
-iv 00000000000000000000000000000000 \
-in credentials-config.json | \
dd bs=1 skip=16 2>/dev/null
Example for macOS in one line:
openssl aes-128-cbc -d -K babb4a9f774ab853c96c2d653dfe544a -iv 00000000000000000000000000000000 -in "${HOME}/Library/DBeaverData/workspace6/General/.dbeaver/credentials-config.json" | dd bs=1 skip=16 2>/dev/null
For Linux, change the above path to ~/.local/share/DBeaverData/workspace6/General/.dbeaver/credentials-config.json
.
The key is from the source and is converted to hexadecimal. This can be done in Python:
>>> import struct
>>> struct.pack('<16b', -70, -69, 74, -97, 119, 74, -72, 83, -55, 108, 45, 101, 61, -2, 84, 74).hex()
'babb4a9f774ab853c96c2d653dfe544a'
Edit: I've published the script for this here.
For DBeaver 6.1.3+ the creds are stored in a "json" file now with different encryption.
This seemed to do the job for me:
import javax.crypto.*;
import javax.crypto.spec.IvParameterSpec;
import javax.crypto.spec.SecretKeySpec;
import java.io.ByteArrayInputStream;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.InputStream;
import java.nio.file.Files;
import java.nio.file.Paths;
import java.security.*;
public class DecryptDbeaver {
// from the DBeaver source 8/23/19 https://github.com/dbeaver/dbeaver/blob/57cec8ddfdbbf311261ebd0c7f957fdcd80a085f/plugins/org.jkiss.dbeaver.model/src/org/jkiss/dbeaver/model/impl/app/DefaultSecureStorage.java#L31
private static final byte[] LOCAL_KEY_CACHE = new byte[] { -70, -69, 74, -97, 119, 74, -72, 83, -55, 108, 45, 101, 61, -2, 84, 74 };
static String decrypt(byte[] contents) throws InvalidAlgorithmParameterException, InvalidKeyException, IOException, NoSuchPaddingException, NoSuchAlgorithmException {
try (InputStream byteStream = new ByteArrayInputStream(contents)) {
byte[] fileIv = new byte[16];
byteStream.read(fileIv);
Cipher cipher = Cipher.getInstance("AES/CBC/PKCS5Padding");
SecretKey aes = new SecretKeySpec(LOCAL_KEY_CACHE, "AES");
cipher.init(Cipher.DECRYPT_MODE, aes, new IvParameterSpec(fileIv));
try (CipherInputStream cipherIn = new CipherInputStream(byteStream, cipher)) {
return inputStreamToString(cipherIn);
}
}
}
static String inputStreamToString(java.io.InputStream is) {
java.util.Scanner s = new java.util.Scanner(is).useDelimiter("\\A");
return s.hasNext() ? s.next() : "";
}
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
if (args.length != 1) {
System.err.println("syntax: param1: full path to your credentials-config.json file");
System.exit(1);
}
System.out.println(decrypt(Files.readAllBytes(Paths.get(args[0]))));
}
}
Pass it the path of your credentials-config.json file on local filesystem, for me it was
Compile it
$ javac DecryptDbeaver.java
Now run it [adjusts the paths to target your credentials-config.json file]
$ java DecryptDbeaver ~/Library/DBeaverData/workspace6/General/.dbeaver/credentials-config.json
Or if java 11+:
$ java DecryptDbeaver.java ~/Library/DBeaverData/workspace6/General/.dbeaver/credentials-config.json
It will output to the console the user+pass for connections.
{"postgres-jdbc-some-id":{"#connection":{"user":"your_user_name","password":"your_password"...
If you don't recognize which password goes to which DB based on username, you must cross link the id names it also outputs initially to the sibling data-sources.json
file (which should already be present and unencrypted and contains database coordinates).
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8As before, here is the Python (3) version: gist.github.com/felipou/50b60309f99b70b1e28f6d22da5d8e61– felipouOct 3, 2019 at 16:51
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5A note for Linux Users, the file is found in <workspace>/General/.dbeaver/credentials-config.json The Workspace directory can be found the preferences -> General -> Workspace. So for me it was: ~/.local/share/DBeaverData/workspace6/General/.dbeaver/credentials-config.json Oct 18, 2020 at 3:53
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2In one CLI, java can run java files now:
java DecryptDbeaver.java ~/.local/share/DBeaverData/workspace6/General/.dbeaver/credentials-config.json
– pdemJun 20, 2022 at 9:16 -
Does anyone have a solution to re-encode the json please? The goal is to set-up the credentials via a script that fetches them from an external source.– J4Y-MMar 17 at 12:06
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On Windows the path is:
C:\Users\{username}\AppData\Roaming\DBeaverData\workspace6\General\.dbeaver\credentials-config.json
Aug 15 at 8:30
For Windows users (Tested Version 7.3.4, also tested 22.2.3)
Press File > Export > DBeaver > Project
Change the name of the export file to .zip, and unzip
Download OpenSSL, and copy \projects\General\.dbeaver\credentials-config.json
into the same folder as the bin directory of openssl
Then run:
openssl aes-128-cbc -d -K babb4a9f774ab853c96c2d653dfe544a -iv 00000000000000000000000000000000 -in "credentials-config.json"
If you have WSL installed, this command can also be run from a Linux install with openssl available (which openssl
) from any directory within the Linux install (Tested with Ubuntu on WSL2 copied file to \\wsl$\Ubuntu\home\me\dbeaver\credentials
).
It will output to the terminal as default, if you need it in a file add > chosen_filename.json
to the command.
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3
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2
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The Export is not needed, just decrypt from the "credentials-config.json" file (you can find it here: %appdata%\DBeaverData\workspace6\General\.dbeaver).– leon22May 26 at 11:26
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This is the command to get the decrypted version of dbeaver credentials file on your desired destination path:
openssl aes-128-cbc -d \
-K babb4a9f774ab853c96c2d653dfe544a \
-iv 00000000000000000000000000000000 \
-in {path for the encrypted credentials file} > \
{your desired destination file}
- {your desired destination file} e.g.
~/Desktop/dbeaver-credentials.json
You'll find dbeaver-credentials.json
file on Desktop. But this file will have list of only usernames & passwords with some connection stanza (like mysql5-17be86ca5ea-294e2a427af47fc4
). No db or server names will be there. You've to find the connection against the object id.
For Ubuntu snap
package dbeaver-ce
,
- {path for the encrypted credentials file} =
~/snap/dbeaver-ce/current/.local/share/DBeaverData/workspace6/General/.dbeaver/credentials-config.json
For Linux OS users, run this in Terminal:
openssl aes-128-cbc -d -K babb4a9f774ab853c96c2d653dfe544a -iv 00000000000000000000000000000000 -in "path_to/credentials-config.json" | dd bs=1 skip=16 2>/dev/null
Just replace the string "path_to/credentials-config.json" with your actual path to that file and you'll get something like this:
{"mysql8-17e009389a8-5fc414bd64e183f4":{"#connection":{"user":"root","password":"root"}},"mysql8-18099236fdf-3c3fc761c6fdde":{"#connection":{"user":"user.name","password":"your_secret_password"},"network/ssh_tunnel":{"user":"sql","jumpServer0.password":""}}}%
if there is package declaration just compile javac -d . SimpleStringEncrypter.java it will put it in the correct directory structure under the current directory Then you can give java -cp . packagename.SimpleStringEncrypter and it will run. Basic java.
Anyway this program is fantastic and saved a lot of time for me.
Look at this:
docker run -d -p 18080:8080 --name crack-dbeaver-password-18080 geekyouth/crack-dbeaver-password
If you dont want all the saved connections
Just remove the --\DBeaverData\workspace6\General folder from the file system so that it can not ask any password again. and the workspace data will be lost.
You will loose all the custom settings and preferences.
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1although it could be useful, this is unrelated to the original question– dankilevJun 7, 2021 at 15:18