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14:31
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Q: Convert Javascript encrypt/decrypt code using crypto-js to Python

micronyksI am able to encrypt and decrypt data in nodejs using crypto-js package as shown below, Working demo main.js (nodejs) const CryptoJS = require('crypto-js'); const encrypt = (plainText) => { let secretKey = 'mySecret'; const salt = CryptoJS.lib.WordArray.random(16); const key = CryptoJS.PBK...

With 55K reputation, you should know better than to ask us to fix ChatGPT code with doesn't work problem statement. Note repl.it requires registration to run the code, so it's not helpful
I tried but failed to get an appropriate answer from ChatGPT :)
@buran 55k reputation doesn't qualify me work with ChatGPT smoothly. There is not point downvoting it.
55K reputation supposedly qualify you How to Ask on SO. Right now this is no better than "convert this code for me, please" kind of question
AKX
AKX
The "Demo" link you've posted can't be run unless I sign up for Replit, which I'm not going to do. Please add the error you're getting into your question.
For one, your Python code is using CFB encryption mode, and your JS code is using CBC. Your scheme has no authentication tags that I could see, so you can probably never be sure you've decrypted the correct message either.
@AKX Yes I understand what you say. I know nodejs/javascript but don't know python and I may be making some mistakes but some how I want to encrypt data in JS and decrypt it in python.
AKX
AKX
14:31
No, you do not want to "somehow encrypt data". You'll need to have an explicit security goal in mind first. Only then you can choose which encryption scheme (and you shouldn't roll your own from low-level primitives as you've now done; you're importing from cryptography.hazmat – hazardous materials).
Now that that's out of the way, the Fernet symmetric encryption scheme is available for both JS and Python. Naturally, since it's symmetric encryption, the moment your encryption key becomes public, so do all communications encrypted with it, past or future. Whether or not that's an issue is a matter of your security goal (as discussed in the previous comment).
@AKX As I mentioned I don't know anything in Python area. For me, I am able to encrypt/decrypt data in nodejs/javascript. Then, I have one AWS lambda function written in Python to which I have to pass my encrypted text (encrypted in node/JS), and the python lambda function must decrypt it. That is my end god.
AKX
AKX
How are you passing the data to the lambda? Over HTTPS? Congratulations, it's already encrypted, and you don't need to do any of this.
Of course I want to secure it also. I'm okay to change existing Node/Javascript code if you have any better suggestion.
AKX
AKX
You will need to explain what "of course I want to secure it also" means to you.
So I have an encrypted token that goes with each HTTPS request (in the header) to API gateway which is attached to our lambda. Once we received encrypted token in python lambda, we want to decrypt it for other use.
AKX
AKX
14:31
Why is the token encrypted? To my best knowledge, AWS API Gateway does not support plain (non-secure) HTTP, only HTTPS, so all traffic is already encrypted.
there was a typo. It it HTTPs request.
AKX
AKX
Great! To quote myself: "Over HTTPS? Congratulations, it's already encrypted, and you don't need to do any of this."
Yes it is encrypted but to check if coming token is valid or not in python lambda, we have to decrypt it.
AKX
AKX
Do not separately encrypt the token you pass in the header, and you don't need to decrypt it. Since your communications are over a secure, encrypted channel, you do not need to encrypt the header.
Our backend server encrypts all tokens come to our web app front-end at the time of login. In subsequent requests, encrypted token is passed to the lambda layer and there we need to check the authenticity/validity of the token. If it is in encrypted form, we can't check its validity. For that we want to decrypt it first.
AKX
AKX
14:31
Can you tell me why your backend server needs to encrypt the token when it passes it to the frontend?
For security reasons as we pass token from FE to backend and backend to FE.
AKX
AKX
"For security reasons" is just hand-waving and not an actual reason. What's in the token that shouldn't be readable by the frontend?
It contains user information coming from AWS cognito with his rights in the app. That's the reason.
AKX
AKX
Right. Sounds like you'll want those claims to be signed, not encrypted. See jwt.io instead.
I just updated python code using CBC mode. It still give error when I try to decrypt encrypted data from JS.
14:41
AKX why did you close it. I still don't understand. If I have sensitive information that I want to encrypt and decrypt in different platforms. Then, my question was/is valid.
AKX
AKX
15:02
I didn't close your question. I already gave you a solution: Fernet. chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/57099658#57099658
But since the Cognito information presumably isn't secret (the user should know who they are, right?), you don't need a brittle encryption scheme, but just JWT to sign the tokens. Better yet, you should just use Cognito's JWTs. docs.aws.amazon.com/cognito/latest/developerguide/…
And as I mentioned above, the encryption scheme you've written is likely not secure.
15:56
Thanks

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