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PHP PASeTo: Encrypt and decrypt data with PaSeTO protocol

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paseto 1.0.0MIT/X Consortium ...5PHP 5, Cryptography
Description 

Author

This package can be used to Sign, encrypt and decrypt data with Platform-Agnostic Security Tokens protocol.

It can perform several data encryption operations using secure tokens defined using the PASeTo protocol. Currently it can:

- Create a private and public key pair
- Create a shared key for symmetric encryption
- Sign data with a shared key
- Build and verify a secure token with a shared key
- Decode a token with a shared key

Innovation Award
PHP Programming Innovation award nominee
February 2020
Number 13
PASETO (Platform-Agnostic SEcurity TOkens) is a more secure approach sign, encrypt and decrypt data designed by Scott Arciszewski as an alternative to using JSON Web Tokens .

This package provides an PHP implementation of PASETO.

Manuel Lemos
Picture of Scott Arciszewski
  Performance   Level  
Innovation award
Innovation award
Nominee: 29x

Winner: 1x

 

Example

How to use the PHP library

The first thing you should know about Paseto is that it tries to accomplish type-safety by wrapping cryptographic keys inside of objects. For example:

<?php
use ParagonIE\Paseto\Keys\{
    AsymmetricSecretKey,
    SymmetricKey    
};

$privateKey = new AsymmetricSecretKey(sodium_crypto_sign_keypair());
$publicKey = $privateKey->getPublicKey();

$sharedKey = new SymmetricKey(random_bytes(32));

You can access the key's internal strings by invoking $key->raw().

No version of the protocol will let you misuse a key by accident. This will generate a TypeError:

<?php
use ParagonIE\Paseto\Protocol\Version2;
use ParagonIE\Paseto\Keys\SymmetricKey;

/
 * @var SymmetricKey $sharedKey
 */
$token = Version2::sign('some arbitrary data', $sharedKey);

Building and Verifying Pasetos

The simplest use-case is to use shared-key authentication to achieve tamper-resistant tokens:

<?php
use ParagonIE\Paseto\Builder;
use ParagonIE\Paseto\Purpose;
use ParagonIE\Paseto\Keys\SymmetricKey;
use ParagonIE\Paseto\Protocol\Version2;

/
 * @var SymmetricKey $sharedKey
 */
$token = Builder::getLocal($sharedKey, new Version2());

$token = (new Builder())
    ->setKey($sharedKey)
    ->setVersion(new Version2())
    ->setPurpose(Purpose::local())
    // Set it to expire in one day
    ->setExpiration(
        (new DateTime())->add(new DateInterval('P01D'))
    )
    // Store arbitrary data
    ->setClaims([
        'example' => 'Hello world',
        'security' => 'Now as easy as PIE'
    ]);
echo $token; // Converts automatically to a string

Decoding tokens

First, you need to define your Parser rules.

  • Which versions of the protocol do you wish to allow? If you're only using v2 in your app, you should specify this.
<?php
use ParagonIE\Paseto\Exception\PasetoException;
use ParagonIE\Paseto\Keys\SymmetricKey;
use ParagonIE\Paseto\Parser;
use ParagonIE\Paseto\Purpose;
use ParagonIE\Paseto\Rules\{
    IssuedBy,
    NotExpired
};
use ParagonIE\Paseto\ProtocolCollection;

/
 * @var string $providedToken
 * @var SymmetricKey $sharedKey
 */
$parser = Parser::getLocal($sharedKey, ProtocolCollection::v2());
// This is the same as:
$parser = (new Parser())
    ->setKey($sharedKey)
    // Adding rules to be checked against the token
    ->addRule(new NotExpired)
    ->addRule(new IssuedBy('issuer defined during creation'))
    ->setPurpose(Purpose::local())
    // Only allow version 2
    ->setAllowedVersions(ProtocolCollection::v2());

try {
    $token = $parser->parse($providedToken);
} catch (PasetoException $ex) {
    /Handle invalid token cases here./
}
var_dump($token instanceof \ParagonIE\Paseto\JsonToken);
// bool(true)

Using the Protocol Directly

Unlike JWT, we don't force you to use JSON. You can store arbitrary binary data in a Paseto, by invoking the Protocol classes directly. This is an advanced usage, of course.

<?php
use ParagonIE\Paseto\Keys\SymmetricKey;
use ParagonIE\Paseto\Protocol\{Version1, Version2};

$key = new SymmetricKey('YELLOW SUBMARINE, BLACK WIZARDRY');
$message = 'This is a signed, non-JSON message.';
$footer = 'key-id:gandalf0';

# Version 1:
$v1Token = Version1::encrypt($message, $key);
var_dump((string) $v1Token);
// string(163) "v1.local.B0VgDOyAtKza1ZCsPzlwQZGTfrpbo1vgzUwCvyxLiSM-gw3TC_KtMqX8woy8BuuE9-pRQNmnTGAru5OmVLzPDnDBHXbd8Sz5rssiTz5TZKLqSyYHsgBzfc53PqsTxLvw09QAy5KBSpKErPX_EfF0Od6-Ig"
var_dump(Version1::decrypt($v1Token, $key));
// string(35) "This is a signed, non-JSON message."

$v1Token = Version1::encrypt($message, $key, $footer);
var_dump((string) $v1Token);
// string(184) "v1.local.vu2ZV_apVDvIhExdenX6rm5w13E3LraRbgN9tabtspSR6KQQt5XdGY5Hho64VRj6Pa6gd-5w5XwmRZbnrxfSVYyvXrVfyDJC7pqQDgae8-MHDg5rZul7kFiH6ExXWx-1hJupWSkRnfQy168PzwS14xiTgw.a2V5LWlkOmdhbmRhbGYw"
var_dump(Version1::decrypt($v1Token, $key, $footer));
// string(35) "This is a signed, non-JSON message."

# Version 2:
$v2Token = Version2::encrypt($message, $key);
var_dump((string) $v2Token);
// string(109) "v2.local.0qOisotef_M2W1gK0b6SiUrO4fkPb24Se0eNJAkALmDvS3IlVu-72birx07hIqU4MYtrCrTJTTElYaWxOyz5Wx8wXh8cQUOF6wOo"
var_dump(Version2::decrypt($v2Token, $key));
// string(35) "This is a signed, non-JSON message."

$v2Token = Version2::encrypt($message, $key, $footer);
var_dump((string) $v2Token);
// string(130) "v2.local.b6ClQBYz-s8k7CC-dEYz2sf3zQFqES4xNUP6K-lzQTRnxVlZFxNnT5I6ouSwYe1d-t9OTnjM9d46MEt__GJvHbNO1wwIfnf1Ear-.a2V5LWlkOmdhbmRhbGYw"
var_dump(Version2::decrypt($v2Token, $key, $footer));
// string(35) "This is a signed, non-JSON message."

Details

PASETO: Platform-Agnostic Security Tokens

Build Status Latest Stable Version Latest Unstable Version License Downloads

Paseto is everything you love about JOSE (JWT, JWE, JWS) without any of the many design deficits that plague the JOSE standards.

What follows is a reference implementation. Requires PHP 7 or newer.

What is Paseto?

Paseto (Platform-Agnostic SEcurity TOkens) is a specification and reference implementation for secure stateless tokens.

Key Differences between Paseto and JWT

Unlike JSON Web Tokens (JWT), which gives developers more than enough rope with which to hang themselves, Paseto only allows secure operations. JWT gives you "algorithm agility", Paseto gives you "versioned protocols". It's incredibly unlikely that you'll be able to use Paseto in an insecure way.

> Caution: Neither JWT nor Paseto were designed for > stateless session management. > Paseto is suitable for tamper-proof cookies, but cannot prevent replay attacks > by itself.

Paseto

Paseto Example 1

v2.local.QAxIpVe-ECVNI1z4xQbm_qQYomyT3h8FtV8bxkz8pBJWkT8f7HtlOpbroPDEZUKop_vaglyp76CzYy375cHmKCW8e1CCkV0Lflu4GTDyXMqQdpZMM1E6OaoQW27gaRSvWBrR3IgbFIa0AkuUFw.UGFyYWdvbiBJbml0aWF0aXZlIEVudGVycHJpc2Vz

This decodes to:

  • Version: `v2`
  • Purpose: `local` (shared-key authenticated encryption)
  • Payload (hex-encoded):
    400c48a557be10254d235cf8c506e6fea418a26c93de1f05b55f1bc64cfca412
    56913f1fec7b653a96eba0f0c46542a8a7fbda825ca9efa0b3632dfbe5c1e628
    25bc7b5082915d0b7e5bb81930f25cca9076964c33513a39aa105b6ee06914af
    581ad1dc881b1486b4024b9417
    
    * Nonce: `400c48a557be10254d235cf8c506e6fea418a26c93de1f05` * Authentication tag: `6914af581ad1dc881b1486b4024b9417`
  • Decrypted Payload:
    {
      "data": "this is a signed message",
      "exp": "2039-01-01T00:00:00+00:00"
    }
    
    * Key used in this example (hex-encoded):
    
    707172737475767778797a7b7c7d7e7f808182838485868788898a8b8c8d8e8f
  • Footer:
    Paragon Initiative Enterprises
    

Paseto Example 2

v2.public.eyJleHAiOiIyMDM5LTAxLTAxVDAwOjAwOjAwKzAwOjAwIiwiZGF0YSI6InRoaXMgaXMgYSBzaWduZWQgbWVzc2FnZSJ91gC7-jCWsN3mv4uJaZxZp0btLJgcyVwL-svJD7f4IHyGteKe3HTLjHYTGHI1MtCqJ-ESDLNoE7otkIzamFskCA

This decodes to:

  • Version: `v2`
  • Purpose: `public` (public-key digital signature)
  • Payload:
    {
      "data": "this is a signed message",
      "exp": "2039-01-01T00:00:00+00:00"
    }
    
  • Signature (hex-encoded):
    d600bbfa3096b0dde6bf8b89699c59a746ed2c981cc95c0bfacbc90fb7f8207c
    86b5e29edc74cb8c761318723532d0aa27e1120cb36813ba2d908cda985b2408
    
  • Public key (hex-encoded):
    11324397f535562178d53ff538e49d5a162242970556b4edd950c87c7d86648a
    

To learn what each version means, please see this page in the documentation.

JWT

An example JWT (taken from JWT.io) might look like this:

eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJzdWIiOiIxMjM0NTY3ODkwIiwibmFtZSI6IkpvaG4gRG9lIiwiYWRtaW4iOnRydWV9.TJVA95OrM7E2cBab30RMHrHDcEfxjoYZgeFONFh7HgQ 

This decodes to:

Header:

{
  "alg": "HS256",
  "typ": "JWT"
}

Body:

{
  "sub": "1234567890",
  "name": "John Doe",
  "admin": true
}

Signature:

TJVA95OrM7E2cBab30RMHrHDcEfxjoYZgeFONFh7HgQ

Motivation

As you can see, with JWT, you get to specify an alg header. There are a lot of options to choose from (including none).

There have been ways to exploit JWT libraries by replacing RS256 with HS256 and using the known public key as the HMAC-SHA256 key, thereby allowing arbitrary token forgery.

With Paseto, your options are version and a purpose. There are two possible values for purpose:

  • `local` -- shared-key encryption (symmetric-key, AEAD)
  • `public` -- public-key digital signatures (asymmetric-key)

Paseto only allows you to use authenticated modes.

Regardless of the purpose selected, the header (and an optional footer, which is always cleartext but base64url-encoded) is included in the signature or authentication tag.

How to Use this Library

See the documentation.

The section dedicated to this PHP implementation may be more relevant.

Other Implementations

The curation of other implementations has been moved to paseto.io. See https://github.com/paragonie/paseto-io for the website source code.

Support Contracts

If your company uses this library in their products or services, you may be interested in purchasing a support contract from Paragon Initiative Enterprises.


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