Logo Questions Linux Laravel Mysql Ubuntu Git Menu
 

Nodejs decrypt using crypto error wrong final block length

I use this code to crypt/decrypt string value

var crypto = require('crypto');

function encrypt(text){
    var cipher = crypto.createCipher('aes-256-cbc','secret key');
    var encrypted = cipher.update(text.toString(),'utf8','hex') + cipher.final('hex');
    return encrypted;
}

function decrypt(text){
    var decipher = crypto.createDecipher('aes-256-cbc','secret key');
    var decrypted = decipher.update(text.toString(),'hex','utf8') + decipher.final('utf8');
    return decrypted ;
}

module.exports.encrypt = encrypt;
module.exports.decrypt = decrypt;

When i try to decrypt something that isn't crypted for example decrypt('test') it throw me the following error :

crypto.js:292
  var ret = this._binding.final();
                          ^
TypeError: error:0606506D:digital envelope routines:EVP_DecryptFinal_ex:wrong final block length
    at Decipher.Cipher.final (crypto.js:292:27)

I tryed also to use buffers without sucess and couldn't find any solution over Internet.

The real problem is I use this to decrypt cookie value. If a hacker creates a fake cookie with the value "test" it will crash my program.

like image 358
Bobby Shark Avatar asked Jun 07 '26 09:06

Bobby Shark


1 Answers

The output of AES-CBC (without ciphertext stealing) is always a multiple of 16 bytes (32 hex characters). As you do not provide hexadecimal characters at all ("test") and since the string is not a multiple of 32 hexadecimal characters you will always see an error.

So this:

000102030405060708090A0B0C0D0E0F101112131415161718191A1B1C1D1E1F

would for instance be valid.

So you need to check that what you get is containing the right characters and is of the right length. To make sure that you don't get any padding or content related errors you will need to put a (hexadecimal encoded) HMAC value calculated over the ciphertext at the end. Then first check encoding, length and then the HMAC. If the HMAC is correct you can be assured that the plaintext won't contain any invalid information after decryption.

like image 105
Maarten Bodewes Avatar answered Jun 09 '26 01:06

Maarten Bodewes