I am looking to store sensitive passwords in a java keystore using java keytool's importpass. I am using Oracle java version 1.8.0_212, and cannot upgrade from java 8 at the moment.
I have created a PKCS12 keystore with the following command:
keytool -keystore test-keystore.p12 -genkey -storetype PKCS12 -alias test
I then imported a password into the keystore using:
keytool -importpass -storetype pkcs12 -alias protectedPass -keystore test-keystore.p12
This worked, but this uses the encryption algorithm "PBEWithMD5AndDES" by default, which isn't particularly secure. I am now trying to use "PBEWithHmacSHA256AndAES_128" from the Java Security Standard Algorithm Names doc but having issues getting this to work.
I've tried specifying the keyalg like this:
keytool -importpass -keyalg PBEWithHmacSHA256AndAES_128 -storetype pkcs12 -alias protectedPass -keystore test-keystore.p12 -v
and while this doesn't cause an error, it doesn't seem to actually affect the output. The secret is key still generated with PBEWithMD5AndDES:
D:\temp>keytool -importpass -keyalg PBEWithHmacSHA256AndAES_128 -storetype pkcs12 -alias protectedPass -keystore test-keystore.p12 -v
Enter keystore password:
Enter the password to be stored:
Re-enter password:
Generated PBEWithMD5AndDES secret key
[Storing test-keystore.p12]
I can see examples, such as in Java Keystores the Gory Details, of people using KeyStore.PasswordProtection to use algorithms like this, but I wanted to use the keytool if possible.
Am I missing something key here or trying to do something silly?
EDIT:
Tried to do something similar programmatically to figure out what I'm doing wrong and had no luck using PKCS12 keystores with this algorithm. However, jceks seems to work. I think this is to do with it using the SunJCE provider instead. Is there some parameter I am missing to get this algorithm working with pcks12? Or is there some other approach I could take?
I have provided some simple demo code below. If you swap "JCEKS" for "PKCS12" it will throw java.security.NoSuchAlgorithmException: unrecognized algorithm name: PBEWithHmacSHA256AndAES_128
.
Demo Code:
static void encrypt() throws Exception {
KeyStore keyStore = KeyStore.getInstance("JCEKS");
keyStore.load(null, "changeit".toCharArray());
KeyStore.PasswordProtection keyStorePP = new KeyStore.PasswordProtection("changeit".toCharArray());
SecretKeyFactory pbeKeyFactory = SecretKeyFactory.getInstance("PBEWithHmacSHA256AndAES_128");
SecretKey pbeKey = pbeKeyFactory.generateSecret(new PBEKeySpec("testpassword".toCharArray()));
keyStore.setEntry(SECRET_KEY_ALIAS, new KeyStore.SecretKeyEntry(
pbeKey), keyStorePP);
FileOutputStream outputStream = new FileOutputStream(FILE_PATH);
keyStore.store(outputStream, "changeit".toCharArray());
}
static void decrypt() throws Exception {
KeyStore keyStore = KeyStore.getInstance("JCEKS");
FileInputStream fileInputStream = new FileInputStream(FILE_PATH);
keyStore.load(fileInputStream, "changeit".toCharArray());
KeyStore.PasswordProtection keyStorePP = new KeyStore.PasswordProtection("changeit".toCharArray());
KeyStore.SecretKeyEntry ske =
(KeyStore.SecretKeyEntry)keyStore.getEntry(SECRET_KEY_ALIAS, keyStorePP);
SecretKeyFactory factory = SecretKeyFactory.getInstance("PBEWithHmacSHA256AndAES_128");
PBEKeySpec keySpec = (PBEKeySpec)factory.getKeySpec(
ske.getSecretKey(),
PBEKeySpec.class);
System.out.println(new String(keySpec.getPassword()));
}
-sigalg
has any bearing on this - perhaps it could. docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/technotes/guides/security/crypto/…