Reputation: 312
I've found this exactly same question. But PyCrypto doesn't install both on python 3.6.5 and 3.7.0.
So, I implement some kind of Gronsfeld-like cipher. I know, that's awful, but I can simply encrypt and derypt string with password
def encrypt(string, password):
int_list = []
password_len = len(password)
for cnt, sym in enumerate(string):
password_sym = password[cnt % password_len]
int_list.append(ord(sym)-ord(password_sym))
return int_list
# got some list which contain mine key to Todoist api, yes, this can be bruteforced, but same as any other API key
>>> [-20, -20, -50, -14, -61, -54, 2, 0, 32, 27, -51, -21, -54, -53, 4, 3, 29, -14, -51, 29, -10, -6, 1, 4, 28,
29, -55, -17, -59, -42, 2, 50, -13, -14, -52, -15, -56, -59, -44, 4]
def decrypt(int_list, password):
output_string = ""
password_len = len(password)
for cnt, numb in enumerate(int_list):
password_sym = password[cnt % password_len]
output_string += chr(numb+ord(password_sym))
return output_string
So, how to do it properly?
Upvotes: 10
Views: 14600
Reputation: 684
Cryptography is an actively developed library that provides cryptographic recipes and primitives. It supports Python 2.6-2.7, Python 3.3+ and PyPy.
Installation
$ pip install cryptography
Example code using high level symmetric encryption recipe:
from cryptography.fernet import Fernet
key = Fernet.generate_key()
cipher_suite = Fernet(key)
cipher_text = cipher_suite.encrypt(b"A really secret message. Not for prying eyes.")
plain_text = cipher_suite.decrypt(cipher_text)
Upvotes: 21