pgcryptopgcryptoencryptionfor specific columns
The pgcrypto module provides cryptographic functions for
PostgreSQL.
This module is considered trusted, that is, it can be
installed by non-superusers who have CREATE privilege
on the current database.
pgcrypto requires OpenSSL and won't be installed if
OpenSSL support was not selected when PostgreSQL was built.
General Hashing Functionsdigest()digest
digest(data text, type text) returns bytea
digest(data bytea, type text) returns bytea
Computes a binary hash of the given data.
type is the algorithm to use.
Standard algorithms are md5, sha1,
sha224, sha256,
sha384 and sha512.
Moreover, any digest algorithm OpenSSL supports
is automatically picked up.
If you want the digest as a hexadecimal string, use
encode() on the result. For example:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION sha1(bytea) returns text AS $$
SELECT encode(digest($1, 'sha1'), 'hex')
$$ LANGUAGE SQL STRICT IMMUTABLE;
hmac()hmac
hmac(data text, key text, type text) returns bytea
hmac(data bytea, key bytea, type text) returns bytea
Calculates hashed MAC for data with key key.
type is the same as in digest().
This is similar to digest() but the hash can only be
recalculated knowing the key. This prevents the scenario of someone
altering data and also changing the hash to match.
If the key is larger than the hash block size it will first be hashed and
the result will be used as key.
Password Hashing Functions
The functions crypt() and gen_salt()
are specifically designed for hashing passwords.
crypt() does the hashing and gen_salt()
prepares algorithm parameters for it.
The algorithms in crypt() differ from the usual
MD5 or SHA1 hashing algorithms in the following respects:
They are slow. As the amount of data is so small, this is the only
way to make brute-forcing passwords hard.
They use a random value, called the salt, so that users
having the same password will have different encrypted passwords.
This is also an additional defense against reversing the algorithm.
They include the algorithm type in the result, so passwords hashed with
different algorithms can co-exist.
Some of them are adaptive — that means when computers get
faster, you can tune the algorithm to be slower, without
introducing incompatibility with existing passwords.
lists the algorithms
supported by the crypt() function.
crypt()crypt
crypt(password text, salt text) returns text
Calculates a crypt(3)-style hash of password.
When storing a new password, you need to use
gen_salt() to generate a new salt value.
To check a password, pass the stored hash value as salt,
and test whether the result matches the stored value.
Example of setting a new password:
UPDATE ... SET pswhash = crypt('new password', gen_salt('md5'));
Example of authentication:
SELECT (pswhash = crypt('entered password', pswhash)) AS pswmatch FROM ... ;
This returns true if the entered password is correct.
gen_salt()gen_salt
gen_salt(type text [, iter_count integer ]) returns text
Generates a new random salt string for use in crypt().
The salt string also tells crypt() which algorithm to use.
The type parameter specifies the hashing algorithm.
The accepted types are: des, xdes,
md5 and bf.
The iter_count parameter lets the user specify the iteration
count, for algorithms that have one.
The higher the count, the more time it takes to hash
the password and therefore the more time to break it. Although with
too high a count the time to calculate a hash may be several years
— which is somewhat impractical. If the iter_count
parameter is omitted, the default iteration count is used.
Allowed values for iter_count depend on the algorithm and
are shown in .
Iteration Counts for crypt()AlgorithmDefaultMinMaxxdes725116777215bf6431
For xdes there is an additional limitation that the
iteration count must be an odd number.
To pick an appropriate iteration count, consider that
the original DES crypt was designed to have the speed of 4 hashes per
second on the hardware of that time.
Slower than 4 hashes per second would probably dampen usability.
Faster than 100 hashes per second is probably too fast.
gives an overview of the relative slowness
of different hashing algorithms.
The table shows how much time it would take to try all
combinations of characters in an 8-character password, assuming
that the password contains either only lower case letters, or
upper- and lower-case letters and numbers.
In the crypt-bf entries, the number after a slash is
the iter_count parameter of
gen_salt.
Notes:
The machine used is an Intel Mobile Core i3.
crypt-des and crypt-md5 algorithm numbers are
taken from John the Ripper v1.6.38 -test output.
md5 hash numbers are from mdcrack 1.2.
sha1 numbers are from lcrack-20031130-beta.
crypt-bf numbers are taken using a simple program that
loops over 1000 8-character passwords. That way I can show the speed
with different numbers of iterations. For reference: john
-test shows 13506 loops/sec for crypt-bf/5.
(The very small
difference in results is in accordance with the fact that the
crypt-bf implementation in pgcrypto
is the same one used in John the Ripper.)
Note that try all combinations is not a realistic exercise.
Usually password cracking is done with the help of dictionaries, which
contain both regular words and various mutations of them. So, even
somewhat word-like passwords could be cracked much faster than the above
numbers suggest, while a 6-character non-word-like password may escape
cracking. Or not.
PGP Encryption Functions
The functions here implement the encryption part of the OpenPGP
(RFC 4880)
standard. Supported are both symmetric-key and public-key encryption.
An encrypted PGP message consists of 2 parts, or packets:
Packet containing a session key — either symmetric-key or public-key
encrypted.
Packet containing data encrypted with the session key.
When encrypting with a symmetric key (i.e., a password):
The given password is hashed using a String2Key (S2K) algorithm. This is
rather similar to crypt() algorithms — purposefully
slow and with random salt — but it produces a full-length binary
key.
If a separate session key is requested, a new random key will be
generated. Otherwise the S2K key will be used directly as the session
key.
If the S2K key is to be used directly, then only S2K settings will be put
into the session key packet. Otherwise the session key will be encrypted
with the S2K key and put into the session key packet.
When encrypting with a public key:
A new random session key is generated.
It is encrypted using the public key and put into the session key packet.
In either case the data to be encrypted is processed as follows:
Optional data-manipulation: compression, conversion to UTF-8,
and/or conversion of line-endings.
The data is prefixed with a block of random bytes. This is equivalent
to using a random IV.
A SHA1 hash of the random prefix and data is appended.
All this is encrypted with the session key and placed in the data packet.
pgp_sym_encrypt()pgp_sym_encryptpgp_sym_encrypt_bytea
pgp_sym_encrypt(data text, psw text [, options text ]) returns bytea
pgp_sym_encrypt_bytea(data bytea, psw text [, options text ]) returns bytea
Encrypt data with a symmetric PGP key psw.
The options parameter can contain option settings,
as described below.
pgp_sym_decrypt()pgp_sym_decryptpgp_sym_decrypt_bytea
pgp_sym_decrypt(msg bytea, psw text [, options text ]) returns text
pgp_sym_decrypt_bytea(msg bytea, psw text [, options text ]) returns bytea
Decrypt a symmetric-key-encrypted PGP message.
Decrypting bytea data with pgp_sym_decrypt is disallowed.
This is to avoid outputting invalid character data. Decrypting
originally textual data with pgp_sym_decrypt_bytea is fine.
The options parameter can contain option settings,
as described below.
pgp_pub_encrypt()pgp_pub_encryptpgp_pub_encrypt_bytea
pgp_pub_encrypt(data text, key bytea [, options text ]) returns bytea
pgp_pub_encrypt_bytea(data bytea, key bytea [, options text ]) returns bytea
Encrypt data with a public PGP key key.
Giving this function a secret key will produce an error.
The options parameter can contain option settings,
as described below.
pgp_pub_decrypt()pgp_pub_decryptpgp_pub_decrypt_bytea
pgp_pub_decrypt(msg bytea, key bytea [, psw text [, options text ]]) returns text
pgp_pub_decrypt_bytea(msg bytea, key bytea [, psw text [, options text ]]) returns bytea
Decrypt a public-key-encrypted message. key must be the
secret key corresponding to the public key that was used to encrypt.
If the secret key is password-protected, you must give the password in
psw. If there is no password, but you want to specify
options, you need to give an empty password.
Decrypting bytea data with pgp_pub_decrypt is disallowed.
This is to avoid outputting invalid character data. Decrypting
originally textual data with pgp_pub_decrypt_bytea is fine.
The options parameter can contain option settings,
as described below.
pgp_key_id()pgp_key_id
pgp_key_id(bytea) returns text
pgp_key_id extracts the key ID of a PGP public or secret key.
Or it gives the key ID that was used for encrypting the data, if given
an encrypted message.
It can return 2 special key IDs:
SYMKEY
The message is encrypted with a symmetric key.
ANYKEY
The message is public-key encrypted, but the key ID has been removed.
That means you will need to try all your secret keys on it to see
which one decrypts it. pgcrypto itself does not produce
such messages.
Note that different keys may have the same ID. This is rare but a normal
event. The client application should then try to decrypt with each one,
to see which fits — like handling ANYKEY.
armor(), dearmor()armordearmor
armor(data bytea [ , keys text[], values text[] ]) returns text
dearmor(data text) returns bytea
These functions wrap/unwrap binary data into PGP ASCII-armor format,
which is basically Base64 with CRC and additional formatting.
If the keys and values arrays are specified,
an armor header is added to the armored format for each
key/value pair. Both arrays must be single-dimensional, and they must
be of the same length. The keys and values cannot contain any non-ASCII
characters.
pgp_armor_headerspgp_armor_headers
pgp_armor_headers(data text, key out text, value out text) returns setof record
pgp_armor_headers() extracts the armor headers from
data. The return value is a set of rows with two columns,
key and value. If the keys or values contain any non-ASCII characters,
they are treated as UTF-8.
Options for PGP Functions
Options are named to be similar to GnuPG. An option's value should be
given after an equal sign; separate options from each other with commas.
For example:
pgp_sym_encrypt(data, psw, 'compress-algo=1, cipher-algo=aes256')
All of the options except convert-crlf apply only to
encrypt functions. Decrypt functions get the parameters from the PGP
data.
The most interesting options are probably
compress-algo and unicode-mode.
The rest should have reasonable defaults.
cipher-algo
Which cipher algorithm to use.
Values: bf, aes128, aes192, aes256, 3des, cast5
Default: aes128
Applies to: pgp_sym_encrypt, pgp_pub_encrypt
compress-algo
Which compression algorithm to use. Only available if
PostgreSQL was built with zlib.
Values:
0 - no compression
1 - ZIP compression
2 - ZLIB compression (= ZIP plus meta-data and block CRCs)
Default: 0
Applies to: pgp_sym_encrypt, pgp_pub_encrypt
compress-level
How much to compress. Higher levels compress smaller but are slower.
0 disables compression.
Values: 0, 1-9
Default: 6
Applies to: pgp_sym_encrypt, pgp_pub_encrypt
convert-crlf
Whether to convert \n into \r\n when
encrypting and \r\n to \n when
decrypting. RFC 4880 specifies that text data should be stored using
\r\n line-feeds. Use this to get fully RFC-compliant
behavior.
Values: 0, 1
Default: 0
Applies to: pgp_sym_encrypt, pgp_pub_encrypt, pgp_sym_decrypt, pgp_pub_decrypt
disable-mdc
Do not protect data with SHA-1. The only good reason to use this
option is to achieve compatibility with ancient PGP products, predating
the addition of SHA-1 protected packets to RFC 4880.
Recent gnupg.org and pgp.com software supports it fine.
Values: 0, 1
Default: 0
Applies to: pgp_sym_encrypt, pgp_pub_encrypt
sess-key
Use separate session key. Public-key encryption always uses a separate
session key; this option is for symmetric-key encryption, which by default
uses the S2K key directly.
Values: 0, 1
Default: 0
Applies to: pgp_sym_encrypt
s2k-mode
Which S2K algorithm to use.
Values:
0 - Without salt. Dangerous!
1 - With salt but with fixed iteration count.
3 - Variable iteration count.
Default: 3
Applies to: pgp_sym_encrypt
s2k-count
The number of iterations of the S2K algorithm to use. It must
be a value between 1024 and 65011712, inclusive.
Default: A random value between 65536 and 253952
Applies to: pgp_sym_encrypt, only with s2k-mode=3
s2k-digest-algo
Which digest algorithm to use in S2K calculation.
Values: md5, sha1
Default: sha1
Applies to: pgp_sym_encrypt
s2k-cipher-algo
Which cipher to use for encrypting separate session key.
Values: bf, aes, aes128, aes192, aes256
Default: use cipher-algo
Applies to: pgp_sym_encrypt
unicode-mode
Whether to convert textual data from database internal encoding to
UTF-8 and back. If your database already is UTF-8, no conversion will
be done, but the message will be tagged as UTF-8. Without this option
it will not be.
Values: 0, 1
Default: 0
Applies to: pgp_sym_encrypt, pgp_pub_encrypt
Generating PGP Keys with GnuPG
To generate a new key:
gpg --gen-key
The preferred key type is DSA and Elgamal.
For RSA encryption you must create either DSA or RSA sign-only key
as master and then add an RSA encryption subkey with
gpg --edit-key.
To list keys:
gpg --list-secret-keys
To export a public key in ASCII-armor format:
gpg -a --export KEYID > public.key
To export a secret key in ASCII-armor format:
gpg -a --export-secret-keys KEYID > secret.key
You need to use dearmor() on these keys before giving them to
the PGP functions. Or if you can handle binary data, you can drop
-a from the command.
For more details see man gpg,
The GNU
Privacy Handbook and other documentation on
.
Limitations of PGP Code
No support for signing. That also means that it is not checked
whether the encryption subkey belongs to the master key.
No support for encryption key as master key. As such practice
is generally discouraged, this should not be a problem.
No support for several subkeys. This may seem like a problem, as this
is common practice. On the other hand, you should not use your regular
GPG/PGP keys with pgcrypto, but create new ones,
as the usage scenario is rather different.
Raw Encryption Functions
These functions only run a cipher over data; they don't have any advanced
features of PGP encryption. Therefore they have some major problems:
They use user key directly as cipher key.
They don't provide any integrity checking, to see
if the encrypted data was modified.
They expect that users manage all encryption parameters
themselves, even IV.
They don't handle text.
So, with the introduction of PGP encryption, usage of raw
encryption functions is discouraged.
encryptdecryptencrypt_ivdecrypt_iv
encrypt(data bytea, key bytea, type text) returns bytea
decrypt(data bytea, key bytea, type text) returns bytea
encrypt_iv(data bytea, key bytea, iv bytea, type text) returns bytea
decrypt_iv(data bytea, key bytea, iv bytea, type text) returns bytea
Encrypt/decrypt data using the cipher method specified by
type. The syntax of the
type string is:
algorithm-mode/pad:padding
where algorithm is one of:
bf — Blowfishaes — AES (Rijndael-128, -192 or -256)
and mode is one of:
cbc — next block depends on previous (default)
ecb — each block is encrypted separately (for
testing only)
and padding is one of:
pkcs — data may be any length (default)
none — data must be multiple of cipher block size
So, for example, these are equivalent:
encrypt(data, 'fooz', 'bf')
encrypt(data, 'fooz', 'bf-cbc/pad:pkcs')
In encrypt_iv and decrypt_iv, the
iv parameter is the initial value for the CBC mode;
it is ignored for ECB.
It is clipped or padded with zeroes if not exactly block size.
It defaults to all zeroes in the functions without this parameter.
Random-Data Functionsgen_random_bytes
gen_random_bytes(count integer) returns bytea
Returns count cryptographically strong random bytes.
At most 1024 bytes can be extracted at a time. This is to avoid
draining the randomness generator pool.
gen_random_uuid
gen_random_uuid() returns uuid
Returns a version 4 (random) UUID. (Obsolete, this function
internally calls the core
function of the same name.)
NotesConfigurationpgcrypto configures itself according to the findings of the
main PostgreSQL configure script. The options that
affect it are --with-zlib and
--with-ssl=openssl.
When compiled with zlib, PGP encryption functions are able to
compress data before encrypting.
pgcrypto requires OpenSSL.
Otherwise, it will not be built or installed.
When compiled against OpenSSL 3.0.0 and later
versions, the legacy provider must be activated in the
openssl.cnf configuration file in order to use older
ciphers like DES or Blowfish.
NULL Handling
As is standard in SQL, all functions return NULL, if any of the arguments
are NULL. This may create security risks on careless usage.
Security Limitations
All pgcrypto functions run inside the database server.
That means that all
the data and passwords move between pgcrypto and client
applications in clear text. Thus you must:
Connect locally or use SSL connections.Trust both system and database administrator.
If you cannot, then better do crypto inside client application.
The implementation does not resist
side-channel
attacks. For example, the time required for
a pgcrypto decryption function to complete varies among
ciphertexts of a given size.
Useful ReadingThe GNU Privacy Handbook.Describes the crypt-blowfish algorithm.How to choose a good password.Interesting idea for picking passwords.Describes good and bad cryptography.Technical ReferencesOpenPGP message format.The MD5 Message-Digest Algorithm.HMAC: Keyed-Hashing for Message Authentication.Comparison of crypt-des, crypt-md5 and bcrypt algorithms.Description of Fortuna CSPRNG.Jean-Luc Cooke Fortuna-based /dev/random driver for Linux.Author
Marko Kreen markokr@gmail.compgcrypto uses code from the following sources:
AlgorithmAuthorSource originDES cryptDavid Burren and othersFreeBSD libcryptMD5 cryptPoul-Henning KampFreeBSD libcryptBlowfish cryptSolar Designerwww.openwall.com