PBKDF2 in Java with Bouncy Castle vs .NET Rfc2898DeriveBytes?
I have some C# code that generates a key using PBKDF2.
//byte[] salt = new RNGCryptoServiceProvider().GetBytes(salt);
byte[] salt = new byte[] { 19, 3, 248, 189, 144, 42, 57, 23 }; // for testing
byte[] bcKey = new Rfc2898DeriveBytes("mypassword", salt, 8192).GetBytes(32);
This works fine. I am trying to implement the same in Java with Bouncy Castle. Can't get it to work (the fact that Java lacks unsigned types makes it further annoying).
SecureRandom random = new SecureRandom();
byte[] salt = u2s(new int[] { 19, 3, 248, 189, 144, 42, 57, 23 });
//random.nextBytes(salt);
PBEParametersGenerator generator = new PKCS5S2ParametersGenerator();
generator.init(PBEParametersGenerator.PKCS5PasswordToUTF8Bytes(("BLK" + password).toCharArray()), salt, keyTransformationRounds);
KeyParameter params = (KeyParameter)generator.generateDerivedParameters(keyLengthBits);
byte[] bcKey = params.getKey();
int[] bcKeyU开发者_如何转开发 = s2u(bcKey);
System.out.println(new String(Base64.encode(bcKey), "UTF-8"));
// Helper functions because Java has no unsigned types
//
// EDIT: THESE FUNCTIONS ARE INCORRECT.
// See my answer below for the correct versions.
//
static byte[] u2s(int[] unsignedArray) throws IOException
{
byte[] signedArray = new byte[unsignedArray.length];
for (int i = 0; i < signedArray.length; i++)
{
if (unsignedArray[i] < 0 || unsignedArray[i] > 255)
{
throw new IOException("unsignedArray at " + i + " was not within the range 0 to 255.");
}
signedArray[i] = (byte)(unsignedArray[i] - 128);
}
return signedArray;
}
static int[] s2u(byte[] signedArray)
{
int[] unsignedArray = new int[signedArray.length];
for (int i = 0; i < unsignedArray.length; i++)
{
unsignedArray[i] = (int)(signedArray[i] + 128);
}
return unsignedArray;
}
The resultant bcKey byte arrays differ. What am I doing wrong? Am I going about handling the conversion from unsigned to signed properly or will that not work as I expect?
I wasn't handling the signed/unsigned conversion correctly. Here are some helper functions that demonstrate conversion between integer arrays (representing unsigned byte arrays) and signed byte arrays.
The check for integers outside the range 0-255 in intsToBytes
is not necessary but might be helpful for debugging.
static byte[] intsToBytes(int[] ints)
{
byte[] bytes = new byte[ints.length];
for (int i = 0; i < ints.length; i++)
{
if (ints[i] < 0 || ints[i] > 255) System.out.println(String.format("WARNING: ints at index %1$d (%2$d) was not a valid byte value (0-255)", i, ints[i]));
bytes[i] = (byte)ints[i];
}
return bytes;
}
static int[] bytesToInts(byte[] bytes)
{
int[] ints = new int[bytes.length];
for (int i = 0; i < bytes.length; i++)
{
ints[i] = bytes[i] & 0xff;
}
return ints;
}
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