I'm working on an android application where I'd like the user to be able to encrypt messages using other's public keys. The system would generate a public/private keypair and then messages can be sent to other users secretly.
I'm creating an Encryption class which will handle the encryption/decryption of messages. Unfortunately I'm having some problems.
In this method, I'd like to pass the user's secret (private key) as well as the message they want to encrypt. I'd like the secret to be user-defined (like "MySecretPassword").
public static void lock(String secret, String textToEncrypt) {
try {
//Convert the public key string into a key
byte[] encodedPublicKey = Base64.decode(secret.getBytes("utf-8"),Base64.DEFAULT);
X509EncodedKeySpec spec = new X509EncodedKeySpec(encodedPublicKey);
KeyFactory keyFactory = KeyFactory.getInstance("RSA");
PublicKey publickey = keyFactory.generatePublic(spec); //Crash Here
PrivateKey privateKey = keyFactory.generatePrivate(spec);
//Encrypt Message
Cipher cipher = Cipher.getInstance("RSA");
cipher.init(Cipher.ENCRYPT_MODE, publickey);
byte[] encryptedBytes = cipher.doFinal(textToEncrypt.getBytes());
Log.d(TAG,"Encrypted: "+new String(encryptedBytes));
} catch (Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
The exception is as follows:
java.security.spec.InvalidKeySpecException: java.lang.RuntimeException: error:0c0740b0:ASN.1 encoding routines:ASN1_get_object:TOO_LONG
What am I missing here? Am I missing something obvious or am I misunderstanding how these tools work? I've used this javascript library for public/private key encryption before and am trying to do something similar here. I'd appreciate it if somebody could point me in the right direction :)
A secret is not a public key.
You encrypt with the public key of the recipient. That value is public, which means that anybody can look it up. You need to get the value of the other party's public key and feed it into your code, not send in your own private key. The proper way to do this does not involve any secrets!
Normally one does not directly encrypt a message with RSA, instead they encrypt an AES key (or other symmetric key) with RSA and use the AES key to encrypt the message. If your messages are really short, you could use RSA directly, but it won't work for long messages.
Here are a couple links showing how to implement RSA on Android: