Web Crypto API
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This page is not complete.
The Web Crypto API is an interface allowing a script to use cryptographic primitives in order to build systems using cryptography.
A fundamental feature of this API is to allow the manipulation and storage of private and secret keys without requiring the underlying bits of the key to be made available to JavaScript.
This interface allows a script to access the following primitives:
-
digest, the ability to compute a hash of an arbitrary block of data, in order to detect any change in it.
-
mac, the ability to compute a message authentication code.
-
sign and verify, the ability to digitally sign a document, and to verify a signature.
-
encrypt and decrypt, the ability to encode or decode a document.
-
import and export, the ability to import a key or export a key.
-
key generation, the ability to create a cryptographically secure key, or key pair, without the use of base key, but using the available entropy of the local system.
-
key wrapping and unwrapping, the ability to transmit, and to receive, a key from a third party, encoded using another key, without exposing the underlying key to JavaScript.
-
random, the ability to generate cryptographically sound pseudo-random numbers.
Web Crypto API doesn't solve all cryptographic problems a Web site or an application may encounter:
- It doesn't relax the same-origin security model of the browser, like cases where keys are issued by centralized entities used by several Web sites.
- It doesn't interact with dedicated hardware, like smart cards, USB dongles, or randomness generators.
Warning!
- The mere use of cryptography doesn't make your system secure. Security is a process that constantly evaluates the risks a system incurs in its context of use. The context and the risks experienced evolve over time.
- When dealing with security, the whole system must be considered. In the case of the Web Crypto API, Web developers shouldn't consider only the security of the script, but the security of the connection to the server, because using Web Crypto over HTTP is not secure. The overall security can't be stronger than the security of the weakest part of the overall system.
Interfaces
Some browsers implemented an interface called Crypto
without having it well defined or being cryptographically sound. In order to avoid confusion, methods and properties of this interface have been removed from browsers implementing the Web Crypto API, and all Web Crypto API methods are available on a new interface: SubtleCrypto
. The Crypto.subtle
property gives access to an object implementing it.
Use cases
The Web Crypto API can be used:
- to verify that data has not been tampered with by a third-party. Even if the data is stored in the clear, the storage of a signature, generated from a password, allows the people knowing the password to know that it is genuine.
Specifications
Crypto
|
Desktop |
|
Chrome |
Edge |
Firefox |
Internet Explorer |
Opera |
Safari |
Basic support |
11 |
12 |
26 |
11 |
15 |
6.1 |
subtle
|
37 |
12 |
34
- 34
- 32 — 34
Disabled
- Disabled From version 32 until version 34 (exclusive): this feature is behind the
dom.webcrypto.enabled preference (needs to be set to true ). To change preferences in Firefox, visit about:config.
|
11 |
24 |
10.1
- 10.1
- 7
Prefixed
- Prefixed Requires the vendor prefix: webkit
|
getRandomValues |
11 |
12 |
26 |
11 |
15 |
4 |
|
Mobile |
|
Android webview |
Chrome for Android |
Edge Mobile |
Firefox for Android |
Opera for Android |
iOS Safari |
Samsung Internet |
Basic support |
Yes |
18 |
12 |
26 |
14 |
6.1 |
Yes |
subtle
|
37 |
37 |
12 |
34
- 34
- 32 — 34
Disabled
- Disabled From version 32 until version 34 (exclusive): this feature is behind the
dom.webcrypto.enabled preference (needs to be set to true ). To change preferences in Firefox, visit about:config.
|
24 |
10.1
- 10.1
- 7
Prefixed
- Prefixed Requires the vendor prefix: webkit
|
Yes |
getRandomValues |
Yes |
18 |
12 |
26 |
14 |
4 |
Yes |