techniques for obscuring sensitive strings in C++

落花浮王杯 提交于 2019-12-02 16:08:41

Basically, anyone with access to your program and a debugger can and will find the key in the application if they want to.

But, if you just want to make sure the key doesn't show up when running strings on your binary, you could for instance make sure that the key is not within the printable range.

Obscuring key with XOR

For instance, you could use XOR to split the key into two byte arrays:

key = key1 XOR key2

If you create key1 with the same byte-length as key you can use (completely) random byte values and then compute key2:

key1[n] = crypto_grade_random_number(0..255)
key2[n] = key[n] XOR key1[n]

You can do this in your build environment, and then only store key1and key2 in your application.

Protecting your binary

Another approach is to use a tool to protect your binary. For instance, there are several security tools that can make sure your binary is obfuscated and starts a virtual machine that it runs on. This makes it hard(er) to debug, and is also the convential way many commercial grade secure applications (also, alas, malware) is protected.

One of the premier tools is Themida, which does an awesome job of protecting your binaries. It is often used by well known programs, such as Spotify, to protect against reverse engineering. It has features to prevent debugging in programs such as OllyDbg and Ida Pro.

There is also a larger list, maybe somewhat outdated, of tools to protect your binary.
Some of them are free.

Password matching

Someone here discussed hashing password+salt.

If you need to store the key to match it against some kind of user submitted password, you should use a one-way hashing function, preferrably by combining username, password and a salt. The problem with this, though, is that your application has to know the salt to be able to do the one-way and compare the resulting hashes. So therefore you still need to store the salt somewhere in your application. But, as @Edward points out in the comments below, this will effectively protect against a dictionary attack using, e.g, rainbow tables.

Finally, you can use a combination of all the techniques above.

First of all, realise that there is nothing you can do that will stop a sufficiently determined hacker, and there are plenty of those around. The protection on every game and console around is cracked eventually, so this is only a temporary fix.

There are 4 things you can do that will increase you chances of staying hidden for a while.

1) Hide the elements of the string in some way -- something obvious like xoring ( the ^ operator) the string with another string will be good enough to make the string impossible to search for.

2) Split the string into pieces -- split up your string and pop bits of it into strangely named methods in strange modules. Don't make it easy to search through and find the method with the string in it. Of course some method will have to call all these bits, but it still makes it a little harder.

3) Don't ever build the string in memory -- most hackers use tools that let them see the string in memory after you have encoded it. If possible, avoid this. If for example you are sending the key off to a server, send it character by character, so the whole string is never around. Of course, if you are using it from something like RSA encoding, then this is trickier.

4) Do an ad-hoc algorithm -- on top of all this, add a unique twist or two. Maybe just add 1 to everything you produce, or do any encryption twice, or add a sugar. This just makes it a little harder for the hacker who already knows what to look for when someone is using, for example, vanilla md5 hashing or RSA encryption.

Above all, make sure it isn't too important when (and it will be when if you application becomes popular enough) your key is discovered!

A strategy i've used in the past is to create an array of seemingly-random characters. You initially insert, and then locate your particular characters with a algebraic process where each step from 0 to N will yield a number < size of the array which contains the next char in your obfuscated string. (This answer is feeling obfuscated now!)

Example:

Given an array of chars (numbers and dashes are for reference only)

0123456789
----------
ALFHNFELKD
LKFKFLEHGT
FLKRKLFRFK
FJFJJFJ!JL

And an equation whose first six results are: 3, 6, 7, 10, 21, 47

Would yield the word "HELLO!" from the array above.

I agree with @Checkers, your executable can be reverse-engineered.

A bit better way is to create it dynamically, for example:

std::string myKey = part1() + part2() + ... + partN();

Of course, storing private data in software which is shipped to the user is always a risk. Any sufficiently educated (and dedicated) engineer could reverse engineer the data.

That being said, you can often make things secure enough by raising the barrier which people need to overcome to reveal your private data. That's usually a good compromise.

In your case, you could clutter your strings with non-printable data, and then decode that at runtime using a simple helper function, like this:

void unscramble( char *s )
{
    for ( char *str = s + 1; *str != 0; str += 2 ) {
        *s++ = *str;
    }
    *s = '\0';
}

void f()
{
    char privateStr[] = "\001H\002e\003l\004l\005o";
    unscramble( privateStr ); // privateStr is 'Hello' now.

    string s = privateStr;
    // ...
}
Bartosz Wójcik

I've created a simple encryption tool for strings, it can automatically generate encrypted strings and has a few extra options to do that, a few examples:

String as a global variable:

// myKey = "mysupersupersecretpasswordthatyouwillneverguess";
unsigned char myKey[48] = { 0xCF, 0x34, 0xF8, 0x5F, 0x5C, 0x3D, 0x22, 0x13, 0xB4, 0xF3, 0x63, 0x7E, 0x6B, 0x34, 0x01, 0xB7, 0xDB, 0x89, 0x9A, 0xB5, 0x1B, 0x22, 0xD4, 0x29, 0xE6, 0x7C, 0x43, 0x0B, 0x27, 0x00, 0x91, 0x5F, 0x14, 0x39, 0xED, 0x74, 0x7D, 0x4B, 0x22, 0x04, 0x48, 0x49, 0xF1, 0x88, 0xBE, 0x29, 0x1F, 0x27 };

myKey[30] -= 0x18;
myKey[39] -= 0x8E;
myKey[3] += 0x16;
myKey[1] += 0x45;
myKey[0] ^= 0xA2;
myKey[24] += 0x8C;
myKey[44] ^= 0xDB;
myKey[15] ^= 0xC5;
myKey[7] += 0x60;
myKey[27] ^= 0x63;
myKey[37] += 0x23;
myKey[2] ^= 0x8B;
myKey[25] ^= 0x18;
myKey[12] ^= 0x18;
myKey[14] ^= 0x62;
myKey[11] ^= 0x0C;
myKey[13] += 0x31;
myKey[6] -= 0xB0;
myKey[22] ^= 0xA3;
myKey[43] += 0xED;
myKey[29] -= 0x8C;
myKey[38] ^= 0x47;
myKey[19] -= 0x54;
myKey[33] -= 0xC2;
myKey[40] += 0x1D;
myKey[20] -= 0xA8;
myKey[34] ^= 0x84;
myKey[8] += 0xC1;
myKey[28] -= 0xC6;
myKey[18] -= 0x2A;
myKey[17] -= 0x15;
myKey[4] ^= 0x2C;
myKey[9] -= 0x83;
myKey[26] += 0x31;
myKey[10] ^= 0x06;
myKey[16] += 0x8A;
myKey[42] += 0x76;
myKey[5] ^= 0x58;
myKey[23] ^= 0x46;
myKey[32] += 0x61;
myKey[41] ^= 0x3B;
myKey[31] ^= 0x30;
myKey[46] ^= 0x6C;
myKey[35] -= 0x08;
myKey[36] ^= 0x11;
myKey[45] -= 0xB6;
myKey[21] += 0x51;
myKey[47] += 0xD9;

As unicode string with decryption loop:

// myKey = "mysupersupersecretpasswordthatyouwillneverguess";
wchar_t myKey[48];

myKey[21] = 0x00A6;
myKey[10] = 0x00B0;
myKey[29] = 0x00A1;
myKey[22] = 0x00A2;
myKey[19] = 0x00B4;
myKey[33] = 0x00A2;
myKey[0] = 0x00B8;
myKey[32] = 0x00A0;
myKey[16] = 0x00B0;
myKey[40] = 0x00B0;
myKey[4] = 0x00A5;
myKey[26] = 0x00A1;
myKey[18] = 0x00A5;
myKey[17] = 0x00A1;
myKey[8] = 0x00A0;
myKey[36] = 0x00B9;
myKey[34] = 0x00BC;
myKey[44] = 0x00B0;
myKey[30] = 0x00AC;
myKey[23] = 0x00BA;
myKey[35] = 0x00B9;
myKey[25] = 0x00B1;
myKey[6] = 0x00A7;
myKey[27] = 0x00BD;
myKey[45] = 0x00A6;
myKey[3] = 0x00A0;
myKey[28] = 0x00B4;
myKey[14] = 0x00B6;
myKey[7] = 0x00A6;
myKey[11] = 0x00A7;
myKey[13] = 0x00B0;
myKey[39] = 0x00A3;
myKey[9] = 0x00A5;
myKey[2] = 0x00A6;
myKey[24] = 0x00A7;
myKey[46] = 0x00A6;
myKey[43] = 0x00A0;
myKey[37] = 0x00BB;
myKey[41] = 0x00A7;
myKey[15] = 0x00A7;
myKey[31] = 0x00BA;
myKey[1] = 0x00AC;
myKey[47] = 0x00D5;
myKey[20] = 0x00A6;
myKey[5] = 0x00B0;
myKey[38] = 0x00B0;
myKey[42] = 0x00B2;
myKey[12] = 0x00A6;

for (unsigned int fngdouk = 0; fngdouk < 48; fngdouk++) myKey[fngdouk] ^= 0x00D5;

String as a global variable:

// myKey = "mysupersupersecretpasswordthatyouwillneverguess";
unsigned char myKey[48] = { 0xAF, 0xBB, 0xB5, 0xB7, 0xB2, 0xA7, 0xB4, 0xB5, 0xB7, 0xB2, 0xA7, 0xB4, 0xB5, 0xA7, 0xA5, 0xB4, 0xA7, 0xB6, 0xB2, 0xA3, 0xB5, 0xB5, 0xB9, 0xB1, 0xB4, 0xA6, 0xB6, 0xAA, 0xA3, 0xB6, 0xBB, 0xB1, 0xB7, 0xB9, 0xAB, 0xAE, 0xAE, 0xB0, 0xA7, 0xB8, 0xA7, 0xB4, 0xA9, 0xB7, 0xA7, 0xB5, 0xB5, 0x42 };

for (unsigned int dzxykdo = 0; dzxykdo < 48; dzxykdo++) myKey[dzxykdo] -= 0x42;

Somewhat dependent on what you are trying to protect as joshperry points out. From experience, I would say that if it is part of some licensing scheme to protect your software then don't bother. They will eventially reverse engineer it. Simply use a simple cipher like ROT-13 to protect it from simple attacks (line running strings over it). If it is to secure users sensitive data I would be questioning whether protecting that data with a private key stored locally is a wise move. Again it comes down to what you are trying to protect.

EDIT: If you are going to do it then a combination of techniques that Chris points out will be far better than rot13.

As was said before, there's no way to totally protect your string. But there are ways to protect it wis a reasonable safety.

When I had to do this, I did put some innocent looking string into the code (a copyright notice, for example, or some faked user prompt or anything else that won't be changed by someone fixing unrelated code), encrypted that using itself as a key, hashed that (adding some salt), and used the result as a key to encrypt what I actually wanted to encrypt.

Of course this could be hacked, but it does take a determined hacker to do so.

If you are on windows user DPAPI, http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms995355.aspx

As a previous post said if you are on mac use the keychain.

Basically all of these cute ideas about how to store your private key inside your binary are sufficiently poor from a security perspective that you should not do them. Anyone getting your private key is a big deal, don't keep it inside your program. Depending on how import your app is you can keep your private keys on a smart card, on a remote computer your code talks to or you can do what most people do and keep it in a very secure place on the local computer (the "key store" which is kind of like a weird secure registry) that is protected by permissions and all the strength of your OS.

This is a solved problem and the answer is NOT to keep the key inside your program :)

Try this. The source code explains how to encrypt and decrypt on the fly all strings in a given Visual Studio c++ project.

One method I recently tried is:

  1. Take hash (SHA256) of the private data and populate it in code as part1
  2. Take XOR of private data and its hash and populate it in code as part2
  3. Populate data: Don't store it as char str[], but populate on runtime using assignment instructions (as shown in macro below)
  4. Now, generate the private data on run time by taking the XOR of part1 and part2
  5. Additional step: Calculate hash of generated data and compare it with part1. It will verify the integrity of private data.

MACRO to populate data:

Suppose, private data is of 4 bytes. We define a macro for it which saves the data with assignment instructions in some random order.

#define POPULATE_DATA(str, i0, i1, i2, i3)\
{\
    char *p = str;\
    p[3] = i3;\
    p[2] = i2;\
    p[0] = i0;\
    p[1] = i1;\
}

Now use this macro in code where you need to save part1 and part2, as follows:

char part1[4] = {0};
char part2[4] = {0};
POPULATE_DATA(part1, 1, 2, 3, 4); 
POPULATE_DATA(part2, 5, 6, 7, 8);

Instead of storing private key in your executable, you may want to request it from the user and store it by means of an external password manager, something similar to Mac OS X Keychain Access.

Context dependent but you could just store the hash of the key plus a salt (constant string, easy to obscure).

Then when (if) the user enters the key, you add the salt, calculate the hash and compare.

The salt is probably unnecessary in this case, it stops a brute-force dictionary attack if the hash can be isolated (a Google search has also been know to work).

A hacker still only has to insert a jmp instruction somewhere to bypass the whole lot, but that's rather more complicated than a simple text search.

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