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Save joecliff/10948117 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
var CryptoJS = require("crypto-js");//replace thie with script tag in browser env | |
//encrypt | |
var rawStr = "hello world!"; | |
var wordArray = CryptoJS.enc.Utf8.parse(rawStr); | |
var base64 = CryptoJS.enc.Base64.stringify(wordArray); | |
console.log('encrypted:', base64); | |
//decrypt | |
var parsedWordArray = CryptoJS.enc.Base64.parse(base64); | |
var parsedStr = parsedWordArray.toString(CryptoJS.enc.Utf8); | |
console.log("parsed:",parsedStr); |
Version with only one line each:
var CryptoJS = require("crypto-js"); //replace thie with script tag in browser env
//
var rawStr = "hello world!";
//encrypt
var base64 = CryptoJS.enc.Utf8.parse(rawStr).toString(CryptoJS.enc.Base64);
//decrypt
var parsedStr = CryptoJS.enc.Base64.parse(base64).toString(CryptoJS.enc.Utf8);
Someone may find it useful.
I noticed that Kubernetes encodes ssh private and public keys in its secrets (may SSL keys too) with base64 adding the trailing line at the end of a key.
For example, CryptoJS works the way similar to
$ echo -n 'Hello World' | base64
$ SGVsbG8gV29ybGQ=
-n
means that it does not add a trailing line. While keys in Kubernetes are encoded using a trailing line at the end (you can see a different result)
$ echo 'Hello World' | base64
$ SGVsbG8gV29ybGQK
So to make sure the keys are encoded the way it is meant by Kubernetes I tried the solution in Postman with a new line character - (plainText + '\n')
:
var plainText = pm.environment.get('github_ssh_private_key');
var encoded = CryptoJS.enc.Base64.stringify(CryptoJS.enc.Utf8.parse(plainText + '\n'));
pm.environment.set("github_ssh_private_key_base64", encoded);
awesooooom
this saves my day a lot, thanks!
Hallo can someone explain me the flow also how to decrypt back, if that was encrypted this way?
i am confused currently as still new to cryptography
// Code Section
{
function encrypt(data) {
const val = cryptoJS.enc.Utf8.parse(JSON.stringify(data));
const encrypted = cryptoJS.AES.encrypt(val, key, { iv: IV }).toString();
let b64 = cryptoJS.enc.Base64.parse(encrypted).toString(cryptoJS.enc.Hex);
return b64;
}
}
This gist saved me! Thank you so much!
thanks for this
If i've understood what you're saying, you just need to do this: