rsa-compat.js/README.md

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rsa-compat.js

| Sponsored by ppl. Created at Daplie.

JavaScript RSA utils that work on Windows, Mac, and Linux with or without C compiler

In order to provide a module that "just works" everywhere, we mix and match methods from node.js core, ursa, forge, and others.

This is useful for certbot and letsencrypt.

(in the future we'd like to provide the same API to the browser)

Install

# node.js
npm install --save rsa-compat

# CLI
npm install --global rsa-compat

Usage

CLI

You can generate keypairs on Windows, Mac, and Linux using rsa-keygen-js:

# generates a new keypair in the current directory
rsa-keypiar-js

Examples

Generate an RSA Keypair:

var RSA = require('rsa-compat').RSA;

var bitlen = 1024;
var exp = 65537;
var options = { public: true, pem: true, internal: true };

RSA.generateKeypair(bitlen, exp, options, function (err, keypair) {
  console.log(keypair);
});

Here's what the object might look like:

console.log(keypair):


{ publicKeyPem: '-----BEGIN RSA PUBLIC KEY-----\n/*base64 pem-encoded string*/'
, privateKeyPem: '-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----\n/*base64 pem-encoded string*/'
, privateKeyJwk: {
    kty: "RSA"
  , n: '/*base64 modulus n = pq*/'
  , e: '/*base64 exponent (usually 65537)*/'
  , d: '/*base64 private exponent (d = e^1 (mod ϕ(n))/'
  , p: '/*base64 first prime*/'
  , q: '/*base64 second prime*/'
  , dp: '/*base64 first exponent for Chinese remainder theorem (dP = d (mod p1))*/'
  , dq: '/*base64 Second exponent, used for CRT (dQ = d (mod q1))/'
  , qi: '/*base64 Coefficient, used for CRT (qinv = q^1 (mod p))*/'
  }
, publicKeyJwk: {
    kty: "RSA"
  , n: '/*base64 modulus n = pq*/'
  , e: '/*base64 exponent (usually 65537)*/'
  }

, _ursa: '/*undefined or intermediate ursa object*/'
, _ursaPublic: '/*undefined or intermediate ursa object*/'
, _forge: '/*undefined or intermediate forge object*/'
, _forgePublic: '/*undefined or intermediate forge object*/'
}

NOTE: this object is JSON safe as _ursa and _forge will be ignored

See http://crypto.stackexchange.com/questions/6593/what-data-is-saved-in-rsa-private-key to learn a little more about the meaning of the specific fields in the JWK.

API

  • RSA.generateKeypair(bitlen, exp, options, cb)
  • RSA.import(keypair, options)
  • RSA.exportPrivatePem(keypair)
  • RSA.exportPublicPem(keypair)
  • RSA.exportPrivateJwk(keypair)
  • RSA.exportPublicJwk(keypair)
  • RSA.signJws(keypair, header, protect, payload)
    • (deprecated RSA.signJws(keypair, payload, nonce))
  • RSA.generateCsrPem(keypair, names)
  • RSA.generateCsrDerWeb64(keypair, names)

keypair can be any object with any of these keys publicKeyPem, privateKeyPem, publicKeyJwk, privateKeyJwk

RSA.generateKeypair(bitlen, exp, options, cb)

Create a private keypair and export it as PEM, JWK, and/or internal formats

RSA.generateKeypair(null, null, null, function (keypair) { /*...*/ });

RSA.generateKeypair(1024, 65537, { pem: false, public: false, internal: false }, function (keypair) { /*...*/ });

bitlen: 1024 (default), 2048, or 4096

exp: 65537 (default)

options:

{ public: false       // export public keys
, pem: false          // export pems
, jwk: true           // export jwks
, internal: false     // preserve internal intermediate formats (_ursa, _forge)
, thumbprint: false   // JWK sha256 thumbprint
, fingerprint: false  // NOT IMPLEMENTED (RSA key fingerprint)
}

RSA.import(keypair, options)

Imports keypair as JWKs and internal values _ursa and _forge.

var keypair = RSA.import({ privateKeyPem: '...'});

console.log(keypair);
{ privateKeyPem: ..., privateKeyJwk: ..., _ursa: ..., _forge: ... }

RSA.export*(keypair)

You put in an object like { privateKeyPem: '...' } or { publicKeyJwk: {} } and you get back the keys in the format you requested.

Note:

  • Private keys can be used to export both private and public keys
  • Public keys can NOT be used to generate private keys

Example:

var keypair = { privateKeyPem: '...' };

keypair.publicKeyJwk = RSA.exportPublicJwk(keypair);

console.log(keypair);

RSA.signJws(keypair, payload, nonce)

Generates a signature in JWS format (necessary for certbot/letsencrypt).

var message = "Hello, World!"
var nonce = crypto.randomBytes(16).toString('hex');
var jws = RSA.signJws(keypair, message, nonce);

console.log(jws);

The result looks like this:

{ "header": {
    "alg": "RS256",
    "jwk": {
      "kty": "RSA",
      "n": "AMJubTfOtAarnJytLE8fhNsEI8wnpjRvBXGK/Kp0675J10ORzxyMLqzIZF3tcrUkKBrtdc79u4X0GocDUgukpfkY+2UPUS/GxehUYbYrJYWOLkoJWzxn7wfoo9X1JgvBMY6wHQnTKvnzZdkom2FMhGxkLaEUGDSfsNznTTZNBBg9",
      "e": "AQAB"
    }
  },
  "protected": "eyJub25jZSI6IjhlZjU2MjRmNWVjOWQzZWYifQ",
  "payload": "JLzF1NBNCV3kfbJ5sFaFyX94fJuL2H-IzaoBN-ciiHk",
  "signature": "Wb2al5SDyh5gjmkV79MK9m3sfNBBPjntSKor-34BBoGwr6n8qEnBmqB1Y4zbo-5rmvsoPmJsnRlP_hRiUY86zSAQyfbisTGrGBl0IQ7ditpkfYVm0rBWJ8WnYNqYNp8K3qcD7NW72tsy-XoWEjNlz4lWJeRdEG2Nt4CJgnREH4Y"
}

RSA.generateCsr*(keypair, names)

You can generate the CSR in human-readable or binary / base64 formats:

RSA.generateCsrPem(keypair, names):

var pem = RSA.generateCsrPem(keypair, [ 'example.com', 'www.example.com' ]);

console.log(pem);

web-safe base64 for certbot/letsencrypt:

RSA.generateCsrDerWeb64(keypair, names):

var web64 = RSA.generateCsrDerWeb64(keypair, [ 'example.com', 'www.example.com' ]);

console.log(web64);