RSA public/private key-pair encryption class.
An object of this type makes up one half of a public/private RSA key pair. Use the createKeyPair() method to create a matching pair for encoding/decoding.
If you need to use this class in conjunction with a compatible enc/decryption algorithm on a webserver, you can achieve the same thing in PHP like this:
include ('Math/BigInteger.php');
{
$result = new Math_BigInteger();
$zero = new Math_BigInteger();
$value = new Math_BigInteger (strrev ($message), 256);
$part1 = new Math_BigInteger ($key_part1, 16);
$part2 = new Math_BigInteger ($key_part2, 16);
while (! $value->equals ($zero))
{
$result = $result->multiply ($part2);
list ($value, $remainder) = $value->divide ($part2);
$result = $result->add ($remainder->modPow ($part1, $part2));
}
return strrev ($result->toBytes());
}
..or in Java with something like this:
{
{
return result;
{
result = result.multiply (part2);
BigInteger[] div = value.divideAndRemainder (part2);
value = div[0];
result = result.add (div[1].modPow (part1, part2));
}
return result;
}
}
Disclaimer: neither of the code snippets above are tested! Please let me know if you have any corrections for them!
bool RSAKey::applyToValue |
( |
BigInteger & |
value | ) |
const |
Encodes or decodes a value.
Call this on the public key object to encode some data, then use the matching private key object to decode it.
Returns false if the operation couldn't be completed, e.g. if this key hasn't been initialised correctly.
NOTE: This method dumbly applies this key to this data. If you encode some data and then try to decode it with a key that doesn't match, this method will still happily do its job and return true, but the result won't be what you were expecting. It's your responsibility to check that the result is what you wanted.
static void RSAKey::createKeyPair |
( |
RSAKey & |
publicKey, |
|
|
RSAKey & |
privateKey, |
|
|
int |
numBits, |
|
|
const int * |
randomSeeds = nullptr , |
|
|
int |
numRandomSeeds = 0 |
|
) |
| |
|
static |
Creates a public/private key-pair.
Each key will perform one-way encryption that can only be reversed by using the other key.
The numBits parameter specifies the size of key, e.g. 128, 256, 512 bit. Bigger sizes are more secure, but this method will take longer to execute.
The randomSeeds parameter lets you optionally pass it a set of values with which to seed the random number generation, improving the security of the keys generated. If you supply these, make sure you provide more than 2 values, and the more your provide, the better the security.