require 'openssl' require 'active_support/base64' module ActiveSupport # MessageEncryptor is a simple way to encrypt values which get stored somewhere # you don't trust. # # The cipher text and initialization vector are base64 encoded and returned to you. # # This can be used in situations similar to the MessageVerifier, but where you don't # want users to be able to determine the value of the payload. class MessageEncryptor class InvalidMessage < StandardError; end OpenSSLCipherError = OpenSSL::Cipher.const_defined?(:CipherError) ? OpenSSL::Cipher::CipherError : OpenSSL::CipherError def initialize(secret, cipher = 'aes-256-cbc') @secret = secret @cipher = cipher end def encrypt(value) cipher = new_cipher # Rely on OpenSSL for the initialization vector iv = cipher.random_iv cipher.encrypt cipher.key = @secret cipher.iv = iv encrypted_data = cipher.update(Marshal.dump(value)) encrypted_data << cipher.final [encrypted_data, iv].map {|v| ActiveSupport::Base64.encode64s(v)}.join("--") end def decrypt(encrypted_message) cipher = new_cipher encrypted_data, iv = encrypted_message.split("--").map {|v| ActiveSupport::Base64.decode64(v)} cipher.decrypt cipher.key = @secret cipher.iv = iv decrypted_data = cipher.update(encrypted_data) decrypted_data << cipher.final Marshal.load(decrypted_data) rescue OpenSSLCipherError, TypeError raise InvalidMessage end def encrypt_and_sign(value) verifier.generate(encrypt(value)) end def decrypt_and_verify(value) decrypt(verifier.verify(value)) end private def new_cipher OpenSSL::Cipher::Cipher.new(@cipher) end def verifier MessageVerifier.new(@secret) end end end