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New SimpleCrypt page

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    erwanage
    wrote on last edited by
    #58

    Thanks for your help.
    I'm not at ease with with hashing and combining stuff :/
    How can you do that?
    How do you combine 2 unsigned int?

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      andre
      wrote on last edited by
      #59

      In the same way I do in the snippet I posted, for instance. I use bitshifting, but that is the same as multiplication by 2-to-the-power-of-n. Basically, what you do is:

      put the values of your ints in 64 bits variables

      shift one of the values 32 bits by either:

      multiplying by 0xFFFFFFFF, or

      bitshifting

      add the two numbers by either:

      simply adding the numbers, or

      using a binary OR operation like I did in my sample.

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        rich
        wrote on last edited by
        #60

        Just a note that this appears to be a Vigenere cipher scheme (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vigenère_cipher for details) if you simply want basic scrambling of data to prevent trivial access to the plain text then this could well be sufficient, but it's not very strong. Particularly be careful of using this for long texts.

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          andre
          wrote on last edited by
          #61

          Thanks for the note. If I understand the page you link, I'm not sure that the class implements what qualifies as a Vigenere cipher, but I will agree that it does not provide strong cryptography.

          The small additional trick is that the code uses the value of the previous code block as part of the key for the next block. That will hinder the kinds of analysis described in the article, if I understand it correctly. The key length is known in this case: 8 bytes, but because the key is mixed with the previously generated cypher text, it does not work to just decrypt the text as eight different cesar cyphers.

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            rich
            wrote on last edited by
            #62

            Yes, this is the auto-key variant of vigenere cipher, and is a lot stronger than the basic one.

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              andre
              wrote on last edited by
              #63

              Interesting stuff. Perhaps I should try to make a new version (still: keeping it simple!) that is a bit stronger.

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                rich
                wrote on last edited by
                #64

                If you do, I'd be tempted to use something like RC4 which while not perfect, is very simple to implement.

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                  zester
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #65

                  Andre I think you did a great job, at documenting not only usage but also the algorithm. I wish all of Qt's examples were so well thought out ;)

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                    katropine
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #66

                    Great job, easy to use. One question, I tested my app on Debian and Mint and no problem, but on Fedora 17 and Arch
                    I get "Invalid version or not a cyphertext."

                    @ QByteArray ba = cypher;

                    char version = ba.at(0);
                    if (version !=3) {  //we only work with version 3
                        m_lastError = ErrorUnknownVersion;
                        qWarning() << "Invalid version or not a cyphertext.";
                        return QByteArray();
                    }@
                    
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                      andre
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #67

                      Sorry, no idea. I did not test on these sytems, but I have no clue why it would go wrong on a different linux system. That seems unlikely somehow. Perhaps the data you feed into SimpleCrypt is corrupted somehow?

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                        katropine
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #68

                        Yes, sorry something else went wrong on those systems and indeed corrupted the settings string.
                        My Bad.

                        SimpleCrypt works perfectly.

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                          amanjit
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #69

                          Hi,

                          [quote author="Andre" date="1300457411"]I have just added a "page":http://developer.qt.nokia.com/wiki/Simple_encryption in the Snippets category [/quote]

                          Thanks for this class. I am invoking it's constructor with my predefined key (my secret) and I am wondering why qsrand() is initialized with currentTimeMillis or similar (in the constructor code)? I don't get the same encryption results on multiple invocations so I used my quint64 key to initialize qsrand (in the constructor), then it works..

                          @
                          SimpleCrypt c1(Q_UINT64_C(0x0c2ad4a4acb9f023)); //some random number
                          SimpleCrypt c2(Q_UINT64_C(0x0c2ad4a4acb9f023)); //some random number

                          qDebug() << "Crypt1 " << c1.encryptToString(QString("justatest"));
                          qDebug() << "Crypt2 " << c2.encryptToString(QString("justatest"));
                          @

                          Output
                          @
                          Crypt1 "AwLLXV+ZSO+x3Ise1Aw="
                          Crypt2 "AwIUgoBGlzBuA1TBC9M="
                          @

                          Just wondering :)

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                            andre
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #70

                            Why would you want to have the same cypher text when using the same clear text and key? As long as the decrypted plain text from these cypher texts is the same, what is the problem with having different cypher texts? The algorithm uses a randomization of the string on purpose. It makes it much harder to leak part of the key because analysis is much harder this way.

                            An explanation is in the "details page":/wiki/SimpleCrypt_algorithm_details#2d478ba9ee3cf03e338b506b1a0292dc that has more on the idea of using a random number as a leading byte.

                            You replacing that they way you did partly negates this, and thus makes the cypher weaker by a couple of bits. Note that even with your change, encrypting the same plain text using the same SimpleCrypt instance twice will result in different cypher texts.

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                              amanjit
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #71

                              Hi Andre,

                              Thanks for answering; I wasn't looking for reasonably strong encryption - I just wanted to always get the same encrypted string for the same input (private key+string_to_be_encrypted); its just for private use anyway, and non-critical.

                              I am using QCryptographicHash for that now, it solves my problem

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                                andre
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #72

                                Eh, no, that class does not solve your problem, if you are indeed looking for encryption rather than hashing. There is a big difference between the two...

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                                  amanjit
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #73

                                  [quote author="Andre" date="1356878054"]Eh, no, that class does not solve your problem, if you are indeed looking for encryption rather than hashing. There is a big difference between the two... [/quote]

                                  That's a chicken and egg problem: I don't want to elaborate on "my problem" and hence prove that I am fine with hashing because of concerns of privacy. Please understand that and thank you for your help.

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                                    topocc
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #74

                                    worked in QT 5?

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                                      topocc
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #75

                                      good thing I changed was this:

                                      @//QString cypherString = QString::fromAscii(cypher.toBase64());
                                      QString cypherString = QString::fromUtf8(cypher.toBase64());

                                      //QString cypherString = QString::fromAscii(cypher.toBase64());
                                      QString cypherString = QString::fromUtf8(cypher.toBase64());

                                      //QByteArray cyphertextArray = QByteArray::fromBase64(cyphertext.toAscii());
                                      QByteArray cyphertextArray = QByteArray::fromBase64(cyphertext.toUtf8());

                                      //QByteArray cyphertextArray = QByteArray::fromBase64(cyphertext.toAscii());
                                      QByteArray cyphertextArray = QByteArray::fromBase64(cyphertext.toUtf8());@

                                      there will be well done this.

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                                        Ian Monroe
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #76

                                        I was getting SIGABRT's when attempting to decrypt an empty string with a Qt with debugging enabled. So I've added a little check. Doesn't seem possible to link to wiki history diffs, but you can see it there.

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                                          andre
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #77

                                          Thanks, good catch.

                                          I assume you're talking about this snippet, right?
                                          @
                                          if( cypher.count() < 3 )
                                          return QByteArray();
                                          @

                                          A small problem is, that no error code is set. I think that needs to be added.

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