Decrypting strings in Python that were encrypted with MCRYPT_RIJNDAEL_256 in PHP

dharmesh picture dharmesh · Nov 21, 2011 · Viewed 16.7k times · Source

I have a function in PHP that encrypts text as follows:

function encrypt($text)
{
    $Key = "MyKey";

    return trim(base64_encode(mcrypt_encrypt(MCRYPT_RIJNDAEL_256, $Key, $text, MCRYPT_MODE_ECB, mcrypt_create_iv(mcrypt_get_iv_size(MCRYPT_RIJNDAEL_256, MCRYPT_MODE_ECB), MCRYPT_RAND))));
}

How do I decrypt these values in Python?

Answer

101100 picture 101100 · Nov 22, 2011

To decrypt this form of encryption, you will need to get a version of Rijndael. One can be found here. Then you will need to simulate the key and text padding used in the PHP Mcrypt module. They add '\0' to pad out the text and key to the correct size. They are using a 256 bit block size and the key size used with the key you give is 128 (it may increase if you give it a bigger key). Unfortunately, the Python implementation I've linked to only encodes a single block at a time. I've created python functions which simulate the encryption (for testing) and decryption in Python

import rijndael
import base64

KEY_SIZE = 16
BLOCK_SIZE = 32

def encrypt(key, plaintext):
    padded_key = key.ljust(KEY_SIZE, '\0')
    padded_text = plaintext + (BLOCK_SIZE - len(plaintext) % BLOCK_SIZE) * '\0'

    # could also be one of
    #if len(plaintext) % BLOCK_SIZE != 0:
    #    padded_text = plaintext.ljust((len(plaintext) / BLOCK_SIZE) + 1 * BLOCKSIZE), '\0')
    # -OR-
    #padded_text = plaintext.ljust((len(plaintext) + (BLOCK_SIZE - len(plaintext) % BLOCK_SIZE)), '\0')

    r = rijndael.rijndael(padded_key, BLOCK_SIZE)

    ciphertext = ''
    for start in range(0, len(padded_text), BLOCK_SIZE):
        ciphertext += r.encrypt(padded_text[start:start+BLOCK_SIZE])

    encoded = base64.b64encode(ciphertext)

    return encoded


def decrypt(key, encoded):
    padded_key = key.ljust(KEY_SIZE, '\0')

    ciphertext = base64.b64decode(encoded)

    r = rijndael.rijndael(padded_key, BLOCK_SIZE)

    padded_text = ''
    for start in range(0, len(ciphertext), BLOCK_SIZE):
        padded_text += r.decrypt(ciphertext[start:start+BLOCK_SIZE])

    plaintext = padded_text.split('\x00', 1)[0]

    return plaintext

This can be used as follows:

key = 'MyKey'
text = 'test'

encoded = encrypt(key, text)
print repr(encoded)
# prints 'I+KlvwIK2e690lPLDQMMUf5kfZmdZRIexYJp1SLWRJY='

decoded = decrypt(key, encoded)
print repr(decoded)
# prints 'test'

For comparison, here is the output from PHP with the same text:

$ php -a
Interactive shell

php > $key = 'MyKey';
php > $text = 'test';
php > $output = mcrypt_encrypt(MCRYPT_RIJNDAEL_256, $key, $text, MCRYPT_MODE_ECB);
php > $encoded = base64_encode($output);
php > echo $encoded;
I+KlvwIK2e690lPLDQMMUf5kfZmdZRIexYJp1SLWRJY=