Caution, MCRYPT_RIJNDAEL_256 is not equivalent to AES_256.
The way to make RIJNDAEL be decrypted from AES with openssl is to use MCRYPT_RIJNDAEL_128 and padd the string to encrypt before encrypting with the follwing function:
<?php
function pkcs5_pad ($text, $blocksize) {
$pad = $blocksize - (strlen($text) % $blocksize);
return $text . str_repeat(chr($pad), $pad);
}
?>
On the decryption, the choosing of AES_256 or AES_128, etc. is based on the keysize used in the crypting. In my case it was a 128bit key so I used AES_128.
mcrypt_decrypt
(PHP 4 >= 4.0.2, PHP 5)
mcrypt_decrypt — Decrypts crypttext with given parameters
Description
$cipher
, string $key
, string $data
, string $mode
[, string $iv
] )
Decrypts the data and returns the unencrypted data.
Parameters
-
cipher -
One of the
MCRYPT_ciphernameconstants, or the name of the algorithm as string. -
key -
The key with which the data was encrypted. If it's smaller than the required keysize, it is padded with '\0'.
-
data -
The data that will be decrypted with the given
cipherandmode. If the size of the data is not n * blocksize, the data will be padded with '\0'. -
mode -
One of the
MCRYPT_MODE_modenameconstants, or one of the following strings: "ecb", "cbc", "cfb", "ofb", "nofb" or "stream". -
iv -
Used for the initialization in CBC, CFB, OFB modes, and in some algorithms in STREAM mode. If you do not supply an IV, while it is needed for an algorithm, the function issues a warning and uses an IV with all its bytes set to "\0".
Return Values
Returns the decrypted data as a string.
Be careful, sometimes mcrypt_decrypt return additional white spaces to the uncrypted string; use trim() for deleting them. I was like 2 hours searching the error and it was that..
To remove PKCS7 padding:
<?php
$decrypted = mdecrypt_generic($td, base64_decode($enc_auth_token));
$dec_s = strlen($decrypted);
$padding = ord($decrypted[$dec_s-1]);
$decrypted = substr($decrypted, 0, -$padding);
?>
If you happen to be decrypting something encrypted in ColdFusion, you'll discover that its encrypt function apparently pads the plaintext with ASCII 4, the "end of transmission" character.
Building on eddiec's code, you can remove both nulls and EOTs with this:
<?php
$retval = mcrypt_decrypt( ...etc ...);
$retval = rtrim($retval, "\0\4"); // trim ONLY the nulls and EOTs at the END
?>
It appears that mcrypt_decrypt pads the *RETURN STRING* with nulls ('\0') to fill out to n * blocksize. For old C-programmers, like myself, it is easy to believe the string ends at the first null. In PHP it does not:
strlen("abc\0\0") returns 5 and *NOT* 3
strcmp("abc", "abc\0\0") returns -2 and *NOT* 0
I learned this lesson painfully when I passed a string returned from mycrypt_decrypt into a NuSoap message, which happily passed the nulls along to the receiver, who couldn't figure out what I was talking about.
My solution was:
<?php
$retval = mcrypt_decrypt( ...etc ...);
$retval = rtrim($retval, "\0"); // trim ONLY the nulls at the END
?>
To decrypt data coming from MySQL's AES_ENCRYPT function:
<?php
function mysql_aes_key($key)
{
$new_key = str_repeat(chr(0), 16);
for($i=0,$len=strlen($key);$i<$len;$i++)
{
$new_key[$i%16] = $new_key[$i%16] ^ $key[$i];
}
return $new_key;
}
function aes_decrypt($encrypted,$key)
{
// if $encrypted is HEXed, then return it to binary
$encrypted = pack('H*',$encrypted);
$key = mysql_aes_key($key);
return rtrim(mcrypt_decrypt(MCRYPT_RIJNDAEL_128,$key,$encrypted,MCRYPT_MODE_ECB,''),"\x00..\x1F");
}
?>
adapted from the article "Replicating MySQL AES Encryption Methods With PHP" (dated 2012-05-20) found somewhere online.
Since the returned data seems to be still padded with extra characters, you can get *only* the original data that was encrypted by str_replace()'ing the \x0 characters.
<?php
$decryptedData = str_replace("\x0", '', $encryptedData);
?>
If you want to combine mcrypt with MySQL's AES_DECRYPT / AES_ENCRYPT function, please keep in mind that it uses PKCS5 padding (code from note above works just fine), what is not mentioned in MySQL's documentation at all.
