AES
is designed to generated random output that are symmetrical (That can be decrypted)
CryptoJS
AES
uses Math.random()
calls to generate a matrix/salt during cyphering and this randomness is included in the encrypted result, that's how decrypt can "uncypher" the encrypted data.
You can either fork the CryptoJS Library and replaces Math.random
usage by your own seed or you can change the outcome of Math.random
at runtime for the duration of the encryption.
Thanks to Javascript, you can assign custom code to native function
.
Here is Option #2. It will always return the same output, it uses the function fakeMathRandom
. This will temporarily change the outcome of Math.random
for the duration of the callBack function
fakeMathRandom function
function fakeMathRandom(callBack) {
if(!callBack) throw new Error("Must provide callBack function");
//fake predefined output setup
let seed=0;
const randomOutputs = [0.04,0.08,0.15,0.16,0.23,0.42,0.52,0.65,0.79,0.89];
//save nativeFunction
const Math_random = Math.random;
//change nativeFunction
Math.random = function() {return randomOutputs[seed++ % 10];}
//runs the callback
const callbackOutput = callBack();
//restore nativeFunction
Math.random = Math_random;
return callbackOutput;
}
Usage
var encrypted = fakeMathRandom(() => CryptoJS.AES.encrypt(text, key));
Complete Demo Code:
function fakeMathRandom(callBack) {
if(!callBack) throw new Error("Must provide callBack function");
let seed=0;
const randomOutputs = [0.04,0.08,0.15,0.16,0.23,0.42,0.52,0.65,0.79,0.89];
const Math_random = Math.random;
Math.random = function() {return randomOutputs[seed++ % 10];}
const callbackOutput = callBack();
Math.random = Math_random;
return callbackOutput;
}
var text = "Text to crypt!!!.";
var key = 'secret';
var encrypted = fakeMathRandom(() => CryptoJS.AES.encrypt(text, key)); //This will always return U2FsdGVkX18KPXCjFHrhR4Q5zBbjCf+I/m/w9jbS3EuvE59kzUxK45FrGHDpqalt
var encrypted2 = fakeMathRandom(() => CryptoJS.AES.encrypt(text, key));
var encrypted3 = fakeMathRandom(() => CryptoJS.AES.encrypt(text, key));
var decrypted = CryptoJS.AES.decrypt(encrypted, key).toString(CryptoJS.enc.Utf8);
document.getElementById('encrypted').innerHTML = encrypted
document.getElementById('encrypted2').innerHTML = encrypted2
document.getElementById('encrypted3').innerHTML = encrypted3
document.getElementById('decrypted').innerHTML = decrypted
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/crypto-js/3.1.2/rollups/aes.js"></script>
<div id="encrypted"></div>
<div id="encrypted2"></div>
<div id="encrypted3"></div>
<div id="decrypted"></div>
I hope that solve you problem!
security concern
warnings .AES
algorithm return different output for same input for a reason, Imagine you are encryptingpassword
and many users are using identical password. Without the AES "ramdomness" then all identical password will have the same encrypted value. knowing one's password may reveal the other's.