OpenPGP.js is a Javascript implementation of the OpenPGP protocol. This is defined in RFC 4880.
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OpenPGP.js v2.x is written in ES6 but is transpiled to ES5 using Babel to run in most environments. We support node.js v0.12+ and browsers that implement window.crypto.getRandomValues.
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The api uses ES6 promises which are available in most modern browsers. If you need to support browsers that do not support Promises, fear not! There is a polyfill, which is included in our build. So no action required on your part!
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For the OpenPGP HTTP Key Server (HKP) client the new fetch api is used. There is a polyfill for both browsers and node.js runtimes. The node module is included as a dependency if you install via npm, but we do not include the browser polyfill in our build. So you'll need to include it in your app if you intend to use the HKP client.
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Version 2.x of the library has been built from the ground up with Uint8Arrays. This allows for much better performance and memory usage than strings.
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If the user's browser supports native WebCrypto via the
window.crypto.subtle
api, this will be used. Under node.js the native crypto module is used. This can be deactivated by settingopenpgp.config.use_native = false
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The library implements the IETF proposal for authenticated encryption using native AES-GCM. This makes symmetric encryption about 30x faster on supported platforms. Since the specification has not been finalized and other OpenPGP implementations haven't adopted it yet, the feature is currently behind a flag. You can activate it by setting
openpgp.config.aead_protect = true
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For environments that don't provide native crypto, the library falls back to asm.js implementations of AES, SHA-1, and SHA-256. We use Rusha and asmCrypto Lite (a minimal subset of asmCrypto.js built specifically for OpenPGP.js).
npm install --save openpgp
bower install --save openpgp
Or just fetch a minified build under dist.
Here are some examples of how to use the v2.x api. For more elaborate examples and working code, please check out the public api unit tests. If you're upgrading from v1.x it might help to check out the documentation.
var openpgp = require('openpgp'); // use as CommonJS, AMD, ES6 module or via window.openpgp
openpgp.initWorker({ path:'openpgp.worker.js' }) // set the relative web worker path
openpgp.config.aead_protect = true // activate fast AES-GCM mode (not yet OpenPGP standard)
var options, encrypted;
options = {
data: new Uint8Array([0x01, 0x01, 0x01]), // input as Uint8Array (or String)
passwords: ['secret stuff'], // multiple passwords possible
armor: false // don't ASCII armor (for Uint8Array output)
};
openpgp.encrypt(options).then(function(ciphertext) {
encrypted = ciphertext.message.packets.write(); // get raw encrypted packets as Uint8Array
});
options = {
message: openpgp.message.read(encrypted), // parse encrypted bytes
password: 'secret stuff', // decrypt with password
format: 'binary' // output as Uint8Array
};
openpgp.decrypt(options).then(function(plaintext) {
return plaintext.data // Uint8Array([0x01, 0x01, 0x01])
});
var options, encrypted;
var pubkey = '-----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK ... END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----';
var privkey = '-----BEGIN PGP PRIVATE KEY BLOCK ... END PGP PRIVATE KEY BLOCK-----';
options = {
data: 'Hello, World!', // input as String (or Uint8Array)
publicKeys: openpgp.key.readArmored(pubkey).keys, // for encryption
privateKeys: openpgp.key.readArmored(privkey).keys // for signing (optional)
};
openpgp.encrypt(options).then(function(ciphertext) {
encrypted = ciphertext.data; // '-----BEGIN PGP MESSAGE ... END PGP MESSAGE-----'
});
options = {
message: openpgp.message.readArmored(encrypted), // parse armored message
publicKeys: openpgp.key.readArmored(pubkey).keys, // for verification (optional)
privateKey: openpgp.key.readArmored(privkey).keys[0] // for decryption
};
openpgp.decrypt(options).then(function(plaintext) {
return plaintext.data; // 'Hello, World!'
});
var options = {
userIds: [{ name:'Jon Smith', email:'jon@example.com' }], // multiple user IDs
numBits: 4096, // RSA key size
passphrase: 'super long and hard to guess secret' // protects the private key
};
openpgp.generateKey(options).then(function(key) {
var privkey = key.privateKeyArmored; // '-----BEGIN PGP PRIVATE KEY BLOCK ... '
var pubkey = key.publicKeyArmored; // '-----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK ... '
});
var hkp = new openpgp.HKP('https://pgp.mit.edu');
var options = {
query: 'alice@example.com'
};
hkp.lookup(options).then(function(key) {
var pubkey = openpgp.key.readArmored(key);
});
var hkp = new openpgp.HKP('https://pgp.mit.edu');
var pubkey = '-----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK ... END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----';
hkp.upload(pubkey).then(function() { ... });
A jsdoc build of our code comments is available at doc/index.html. Public calls should generally be made through the OpenPGP object doc/openpgp.html.
To date the OpenPGP.js code base has undergone two complete security audits from Cure53. The first audit's report has been published here.
It should be noted that js crypto apps deployed via regular web hosting (a.k.a. host-based security) provide users with less security than installable apps with auditable static versions. Installable apps can be deployed as a Firefox or Chrome packaged app. These apps are basically signed zip files and their runtimes typically enforce a strict Content Security Policy (CSP) to protect users against XSS. This blogpost explains the trust model of the web quite well.
It is also recommended to set a strong passphrase that protects the user's private key on disk.
To create your own build of the library, just run the following command after cloning the git repo. This will download all dependencies, run the tests and create a minified bundle under dist/openpgp.min.js
to use in your project:
npm install && npm test
You want to help, great! Go ahead and fork our repo, make your changes and send us a pull request.
GNU Lesser General Public License (3.0 or any later version). Please take a look at the LICENSE file for more information.
Below is a collection of resources, many of these were projects that were in someway a precursor to the current OpenPGP.js project. If you'd like to add your link here, please do so in a pull request or email to the list.
- http://www.hanewin.net/encrypt/
- https://github.com/seancolyer/gmail-crypt
- https://github.com/mete0r/jspg
- http://fitblip.pub/JSPGP-Stuffs/
- http://qooxdoo.org/contrib/project/crypto
- https://github.com/GPGTools/Mobile/wiki/Introduction
- http://gpg4browsers.recurity.com/
- https://github.com/gmontalvoriv/mailock