Encrypt and decrypt raw data, objects, strings and files. The
core functions here are encrypt_data
and
decrypt_data
which take raw data and decrypt it, writing
either to file or returning a raw vector. The other functions
encrypt and decrypt arbitrary R objects (encrypt_object
,
decrypt_object
), strings (encrypt_string
,
decrypt_string
) and files (encrypt_file
,
decrypt_file
).
Usage
encrypt_data(data, key, dest = NULL)
encrypt_object(object, key, dest = NULL, rds_version = NULL)
encrypt_string(string, key, dest = NULL)
encrypt_file(path, key, dest = NULL)
decrypt_data(data, key, dest = NULL)
decrypt_object(data, key)
decrypt_string(data, key)
decrypt_file(path, key, dest = NULL)
Arguments
- data
(for
encrypt_data
,decrypt_data
,decrypt_object
,decrypt_string
) a raw vector with the data to be encrypted or decrypted. For the decryption functions this must be data derived by encrypting something or you will get an error.- key
A
cyphr_key
object describing the encryption approach to use.- dest
The destination filename for the encrypted or decrypted data, or
NULL
to return a raw vector. This is not used bydecrypt_object
ordecrypt_string
which always return an object or string.- object
(for
encrypt_object
) an arbitrary R object to encrypt. It will be serialised to raw first (see serialize).- rds_version
RDS serialisation version to use (see serialize. The default in R version 3.3 and below is version 2 - in the R 3.4 series version 3 was introduced and is becoming the default. Version 3 format serialisation is not understood by older versions so if you need to exchange data with older R versions, you will need to use
rds_version = 2
. The default argument here (NULL
) will ensure the same serialisation is used as R would use by default.- string
(for
encrypt_string
) a scalar character vector to encrypt. It will be converted to raw first with charToRaw.- path
(for
encrypt_file
) the name of a file to encrypt. It will first be read into R as binary (see readBin).
Examples
key <- key_sodium(sodium::keygen())
# Some super secret data we want to encrypt:
x <- runif(10)
# Convert the data into a raw vector:
data <- serialize(x, NULL)
data
#> [1] 58 0a 00 00 00 03 00 04 04 01 00 03 05 00 00 00 00 05 55 54 46 2d 38 00 00
#> [26] 00 0e 00 00 00 0a 3f b4 ac 0a 80 00 00 00 3f ea b2 db 32 a0 00 00 3f e3 39
#> [51] 6e e4 e0 00 00 3f c4 1f 67 fd 80 00 00 3f 7e 4e e0 60 00 00 00 3f dd d9 64
#> [76] 1c 80 00 00 3f df db 95 b1 40 00 00 3f d2 8b 8b e9 c0 00 00 3f e7 73 c4 ec
#> [101] c0 00 00 3f e8 b8 7f 08 40 00 00
# Encrypt the data; without the key above we will never be able to
# decrypt this.
data_enc <- encrypt_data(data, key)
data_enc
#> [1] 55 39 8c cd 98 a7 ca 10 0d 68 46 d4 02 df 9a 1e fd fb f1 dd 2a af 92 f3 41
#> [26] 63 5e db 03 22 bc c4 26 5e df d6 42 e2 1d f5 41 5c 80 e2 af 33 4f b2 6f df
#> [51] 36 a4 95 89 c4 74 98 72 7a 1d 47 f4 6a 8b c4 d8 0c 21 42 05 62 fc 4e 99 ff
#> [76] fc 89 5c 28 53 be 2f 57 ea ee 73 e5 44 9e 88 9a 2a 8d 3c 9a c2 56 99 96 8d
#> [101] cb 9b fc 4b fb 2d 0c 2e b4 81 d5 73 f4 cd 75 8d 52 31 0e a6 8f 0c e2 0b 62
#> [126] db 74 ae 76 78 5e 2a a5 61 29 02 a8 6a d0 bd 20 21 b0 63 ff e8 13 77 f9 01
#> [151] a7
# Our random numbers:
unserialize(decrypt_data(data_enc, key))
#> [1] 0.080750138 0.834333037 0.600760886 0.157208442 0.007399441 0.466393497
#> [7] 0.497777389 0.289767245 0.732881987 0.772521511
# Same as the never-encrypted version:
x
#> [1] 0.080750138 0.834333037 0.600760886 0.157208442 0.007399441 0.466393497
#> [7] 0.497777389 0.289767245 0.732881987 0.772521511
# This can be achieved more easily using `encrypt_object`:
data_enc <- encrypt_object(x, key)
identical(decrypt_object(data_enc, key), x)
#> [1] TRUE
# Encrypt strings easily:
str_enc <- encrypt_string("secret message", key)
str_enc
#> [1] 2d 52 29 9d a6 00 2f 08 d4 a1 6a af 72 79 19 a0 39 6a 60 2d e6 3c db 95 79
#> [26] c9 23 1f d3 85 44 a9 d9 cc d7 18 50 2f 6c a5 91 f1 12 fb 40 84 18 57 b3 7d
#> [51] 8c e0 93 5b
decrypt_string(str_enc, key)
#> [1] "secret message"