bcrypt、crypto-js、node-forge、sjcl は、JavaScript 環境でセキュリティ機能を実装するための主要なライブラリですが、それぞれ目的と動作環境が異なります。bcrypt はパスワードハッシュ化に特化していますが、ネイティブ依存のため主にサーバー側で利用されます。一方、crypto-js、node-forge、sjcl は純粋な JavaScript 実装であり、ブラウザや Node.js 双方で動作します。crypto-js は汎用的な暗号化アルゴリズムを、node-forge は PKI や証明書など高度な機能を提供し、sjcl はセキュリティ監査済みの堅牢な暗号化に焦点を当てています。
セキュリティ機能を実装する際、適切なライブラリを選ぶことはアプリケーションの安全性とパフォーマンスに直結します。bcrypt、crypto-js、node-forge、sjcl はどれも npm で入手可能ですが、その役割と動作環境は大きく異なります。特に「ブラウザで動かすのか」「サーバーで動かすのか」「パスワードハッシュなのか」「データ暗号化なのか」という点で明確な使い分けが必要です。
最も重要な違いは、ライブラリがネイティブコードに依存しているかどうかです。これがブラウザでの利用可否を決定づけます。
bcrypt は C++ のネイティブバインディングに依存しています。
// bcrypt: Node.js サーバー環境専用
const bcrypt = require('bcrypt');
const saltRounds = 10;
// ネイティブバインディングが必要なため、ブラウザではエラーになります
const hash = await bcrypt.hash('myPassword', saltRounds);
crypto-js、node-forge、sjcl はすべて純粋な JavaScript で書かれています。
// crypto-js: ブラウザでも Node.js でも動作
const CryptoJS = require('crypto-js');
const hash = CryptoJS.SHA256('myPassword').toString();
// node-forge: 環境を選ばない
const forge = require('node-forge');
const md = forge.md.sha256.create();
md.update('myPassword');
const hash = md.digest().toHex();
// sjcl: 環境を選ばない
const sjcl = require('sjcl');
const hash = sjcl.hash.sha256.hash('myPassword');
各ライブラリがカバーする機能範囲は、プロジェクトの要件によって選び手を左右します。
bcrypt はパスワードハッシュ化に特化しています。
// bcrypt: パスワード検証のみ
const match = await bcrypt.compare('userInput', storedHash);
crypto-js は汎用的な暗号化アルゴリズムを提供します。
// crypto-js: AES 暗号化
const encrypted = CryptoJS.AES.encrypt('message', 'secret key').toString();
const decrypted = CryptoJS.AES.decrypt(encrypted, 'secret key').toString(CryptoJS.enc.Utf8);
node-forge は非常に広範な機能を持っています。
// node-forge: 証明書の生成など高度な操作
const pki = forge.pki;
const keys = pki.rsa.generateKeyPair(2048);
const cert = pki.createCertificate();
// 証明書フィールドの設定など詳細な制御が可能
sjcl はセキュリティに焦点を当てた暗号化ライブラリです。
node-forge ほど多機能ではありませんが、コアな暗号機能は堅牢です。// sjcl: 安全なモードでの暗号化
const ciphertext = sjcl.encrypt('password', 'secret message');
const plaintext = sjcl.decrypt('password', ciphertext);
フロントエンド開発において、バンドルサイズと実行速度は無視できません。
bcrypt はサーバー側では高速ですが、前述の通りフロントエンドでは選択肢から外れます。
crypto-js はモジュール分割がしやすく、必要な機能だけをインポートできます。
// crypto-js: 必要なものだけインポート可能
const SHA256 = require('crypto-js/sha256');
node-forge は機能が多岐にわたるため、ファイルサイズが大きくなる傾向があります。
// node-forge: 全機能を含むと重くなる
const forge = require('node-forge');
// tree-shaking が効きにくい構造
sjcl は比較的軽量で、コア機能に絞られています。
// sjcl: コア機能はコンパクト
const aes = sjcl.cipher.aes;
暗号ライブラリを選ぶ際、メンテナンス状況とセキュリティ監査の有無は極めて重要です。
bcrypt はパスワードハッシュのデファクトスタンダードです。
crypto-js は長年使われていますが、メンテナンスの頻度は低めです。
node-forge は活発にメンテナンスされています。
sjcl はスタンフォード大学発のプロジェクトで、セキュリティ監査を受けています。
bcrypt (サーバー側)// サーバー側 (Node.js)
const bcrypt = require('bcrypt');
const hash = await bcrypt.hash(password, 12);
sjcl または crypto-jssjcl、手軽さなら crypto-js。// ブラウザ側
import sjcl from 'sjcl';
const encrypted = sjcl.encrypt('userKey', sensitiveData);
node-forgenode-forge だけです。// 証明書解析
const cert = forge.pki.certificateFromPem(pemString);
bcryptjs (bcrypt の純粋 JS 版) または crypto (Node.js 標準)bcrypt パッケージは Lambda などの環境でコンパイルエラーを起こす可能性があります。純粋な JS 実装が必要な場合は bcrypt ではなく bcryptjs を検討するか、Node.js の標準 crypto モジュールを使用します。本比較の bcrypt はネイティブ版を指します。| 機能 | bcrypt | crypto-js | node-forge | sjcl |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 主な用途 | パスワードハッシュ | 汎用暗号化 | PKI/証明書/暗号 | 堅牢な暗号化 |
| 動作環境 | Node.js (ネイティブ) | ブラウザ/Node.js | ブラウザ/Node.js | ブラウザ/Node.js |
| 暗号化 | ❌ (ハッシュのみ) | ✅ (AES, DES 等) | ✅ (広範) | ✅ (AES, CCM 等) |
| ハッシュ化 | ✅ (bcrypt) | ✅ (SHA, MD5 等) | ✅ (広範) | ✅ (SHA256 等) |
| PKI/証明書 | ❌ | ❌ | ✅ | ❌ |
| セキュリティ | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ (標準) | ⭐⭐⭐ (要注意) | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ (設定依存) | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ (監査済) |
bcrypt は、Node.js サーバーでパスワードを扱う場合の唯一の正解です。ただし、これはサーバーサイドの選択肢であり、フロントエンドパッケージではありません。
crypto-js は、ブラウザで手軽に暗号化を行いたい場合の「ファーストチョイス」になりがちですが、セキュリティクリティカルな用途では設計を慎重に検討する必要があります。
node-forge は、証明書操作や高度な暗号インフラを JavaScript で完結させたい場合の強力なツールですが、その分複雑さとサイズを許容できる必要があります。
sjcl は、セキュリティ専門家の監査を重視し、堅実な暗号化実装が必要な場合に最適です。機能は絞られていますが、その分「安全な使い方」が強制される側面があります。
最終的には、「サーバーかブラウザか」「パスワードかデータ暗号化か」「証明書が必要か」という 3 点で絞り込むと、迷うことなく選定できます。
パスワードのハッシュ化が目的で、かつ Node.js サーバー環境で動作する場合は bcrypt を選択します。ネイティブバインディングを使用するためパフォーマンスは高いですが、ブラウザやサーバーレス環境(ネイティブコンパイル不可)では動作しないため、フロントエンドやエッジ関数では避けてください。
ブラウザ環境で AES や SHA などの標準的な暗号化・ハッシュ化を手軽に実装したい場合に最適です。API がシンプルで導入が容易ですが、セキュリティ監査の頻度やメンテナンス体制は他ライブラリに比べて緩やかなため、機密性の極めて高いデータには注意が必要です。
TLS/SSL、PKI、X.509 証明書、ASN.1 など、高度な暗号インフラ機能が必要な場合に選択します。純粋な JavaScript で書かれているためブラウザでも動作しますが、ライブラリが巨大になる傾向があるため、バンドルサイズを気にするプロジェクトでは注意が必要です。
セキュリティが最優先で、監査済みのコードベースを必要とする場合に適しています。パスワード管理や堅牢な暗号化に焦点を当てており、設計が保守的ですが信頼性が高いです。ただし、機能の幅は node-forge より狭く、更新頻度も低めです。
A library to help you hash passwords.
You can read about bcrypt in Wikipedia as well as in the following article: How To Safely Store A Password
Please verify that the NodeJS version you are using is a stable version; Unstable versions are currently not supported and issues created while using an unstable version will be closed.
If you are on a stable version of NodeJS, please provide a sufficient code snippet or log files for installation issues. The code snippet does not require you to include confidential information. However, it must provide enough information so the problem can be replicable, or it may be closed without an explanation.
Please upgrade to atleast v5.0.0 to avoid security issues mentioned below.
| Node Version | Bcrypt Version |
|---|---|
| 0.4 | <= 0.4 |
| 0.6, 0.8, 0.10 | >= 0.5 |
| 0.11 | >= 0.8 |
| 4 | <= 2.1.0 |
| 8 | >= 1.0.3 < 4.0.0 |
| 10, 11 | >= 3 |
| 12 onwards | >= 3.0.6 |
node-gyp only works with stable/released versions of node. Since the bcrypt module uses node-gyp to build and install, you'll need a stable version of node to use bcrypt. If you do not, you'll likely see an error that starts with:
gyp ERR! stack Error: "pre" versions of node cannot be installed, use the --nodedir flag instead
Per bcrypt implementation, only the first 72 bytes of a string are used. Any extra bytes are ignored when matching passwords. Note that this is not the first 72 characters. It is possible for a string to contain less than 72 characters, while taking up more than 72 bytes (e.g. a UTF-8 encoded string containing emojis). If a string is provided, it will be encoded using UTF-8.
As should be the case with any security tool, anyone using this library should scrutinise it. If you find or suspect an issue with the code, please bring it to the maintainers' attention. We will spend some time ensuring that this library is as secure as possible.
Here is a list of BCrypt-related security issues/concerns that have come up over the years.
< 5.0.0 suffer from bcrypt wrap-around bug and will truncate passwords >= 255 characters leading to severely weakened passwords. Please upgrade at earliest. See this wiki page for more details.< 5.0.0 do not handle NUL characters inside passwords properly leading to all subsequent characters being dropped and thus resulting in severely weakened passwords. Please upgrade at earliest. See this wiki page for more details.This library supports $2a$ and $2b$ prefix bcrypt hashes. $2x$ and $2y$ hashes are specific to bcrypt implementation developed for John the Ripper. In theory, they should be compatible with $2b$ prefix.
Compatibility with hashes generated by other languages is not 100% guaranteed due to difference in character encodings. However, it should not be an issue for most cases.
Hashes generated in earlier version of bcrypt remain 100% supported in v2.x.x and later versions. In most cases, the migration should be a bump in the package.json.
Hashes generated in v2.x.x using the defaults parameters will not work in earlier versions.
node-gypOpenSSL - This is only required to build the bcrypt project if you are using versions <= 0.7.7. Otherwise, we're using the builtin node crypto bindings for seed data (which use the same OpenSSL code paths we were, but don't have the external dependency).npm install bcrypt
Note: OS X users using Xcode 4.3.1 or above may need to run the following command in their terminal prior to installing if errors occur regarding xcodebuild: sudo xcode-select -switch /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer
Pre-built binaries for various NodeJS versions are made available on a best-effort basis.
Only the current stable and supported LTS releases are actively tested against.
There may be an interval between the release of the module and the availabilty of the compiled modules.
Currently, we have pre-built binaries that support the following platforms:
If you face an error like this:
node-pre-gyp ERR! Tried to download(404): https://github.com/kelektiv/node.bcrypt.js/releases/download/v1.0.2/bcrypt_lib-v1.0.2-node-v48-linux-x64.tar.gz
make sure you have the appropriate dependencies installed and configured for your platform. You can find installation instructions for the dependencies for some common platforms in this page.
const bcrypt = require('bcrypt');
const saltRounds = 10;
const myPlaintextPassword = 's0/\/\P4$$w0rD';
const someOtherPlaintextPassword = 'not_bacon';
Technique 1 (generate a salt and hash on separate function calls):
bcrypt.genSalt(saltRounds, function(err, salt) {
bcrypt.hash(myPlaintextPassword, salt, function(err, hash) {
// Store hash in your password DB.
});
});
Technique 2 (auto-gen a salt and hash):
bcrypt.hash(myPlaintextPassword, saltRounds, function(err, hash) {
// Store hash in your password DB.
});
Note that both techniques achieve the same end-result.
// Load hash from your password DB.
bcrypt.compare(myPlaintextPassword, hash, function(err, result) {
// result == true
});
bcrypt.compare(someOtherPlaintextPassword, hash, function(err, result) {
// result == false
});
bcrypt uses whatever Promise implementation is available in global.Promise. NodeJS >= 0.12 has a native Promise implementation built in. However, this should work in any Promises/A+ compliant implementation.
Async methods that accept a callback, return a Promise when callback is not specified if Promise support is available.
bcrypt.hash(myPlaintextPassword, saltRounds).then(function(hash) {
// Store hash in your password DB.
});
// Load hash from your password DB.
bcrypt.compare(myPlaintextPassword, hash).then(function(result) {
// result == true
});
bcrypt.compare(someOtherPlaintextPassword, hash).then(function(result) {
// result == false
});
This is also compatible with async/await
async function checkUser(username, password) {
//... fetch user from a db etc.
const match = await bcrypt.compare(password, user.passwordHash);
if(match) {
//login
}
//...
}
import bcrypt from "bcrypt";
// later
await bcrypt.compare(password, hash);
const bcrypt = require('bcrypt');
const saltRounds = 10;
const myPlaintextPassword = 's0/\/\P4$$w0rD';
const someOtherPlaintextPassword = 'not_bacon';
Technique 1 (generate a salt and hash on separate function calls):
const salt = bcrypt.genSaltSync(saltRounds);
const hash = bcrypt.hashSync(myPlaintextPassword, salt);
// Store hash in your password DB.
Technique 2 (auto-gen a salt and hash):
const hash = bcrypt.hashSync(myPlaintextPassword, saltRounds);
// Store hash in your password DB.
As with async, both techniques achieve the same end-result.
// Load hash from your password DB.
bcrypt.compareSync(myPlaintextPassword, hash); // true
bcrypt.compareSync(someOtherPlaintextPassword, hash); // false
We recommend using async API if you use bcrypt on a server. Bcrypt hashing is CPU intensive which will cause the sync APIs to block the event loop and prevent your application from servicing any inbound requests or events. The async version uses a thread pool which does not block the main event loop.
BCrypt.
genSaltSync(rounds, minor)
rounds - [OPTIONAL] - the cost of processing the data. (default - 10)minor - [OPTIONAL] - minor version of bcrypt to use. (default - b)genSalt(rounds, minor, cb)
rounds - [OPTIONAL] - the cost of processing the data. (default - 10)minor - [OPTIONAL] - minor version of bcrypt to use. (default - b)cb - [OPTIONAL] - a callback to be fired once the salt has been generated. uses eio making it asynchronous. If cb is not specified, a Promise is returned if Promise support is available.
err - First parameter to the callback detailing any errors.salt - Second parameter to the callback providing the generated salt.hashSync(data, salt)
data - [REQUIRED] - the data to be encrypted.salt - [REQUIRED] - the salt to be used to hash the password. if specified as a number then a salt will be generated with the specified number of rounds and used (see example under Usage).hash(data, salt, cb)
data - [REQUIRED] - the data to be encrypted.salt - [REQUIRED] - the salt to be used to hash the password. if specified as a number then a salt will be generated with the specified number of rounds and used (see example under Usage).cb - [OPTIONAL] - a callback to be fired once the data has been encrypted. uses eio making it asynchronous. If cb is not specified, a Promise is returned if Promise support is available.
err - First parameter to the callback detailing any errors.encrypted - Second parameter to the callback providing the encrypted form.compareSync(data, encrypted)
data - [REQUIRED] - data to compare.encrypted - [REQUIRED] - data to be compared to.compare(data, encrypted, cb)
data - [REQUIRED] - data to compare.encrypted - [REQUIRED] - data to be compared to.cb - [OPTIONAL] - a callback to be fired once the data has been compared. uses eio making it asynchronous. If cb is not specified, a Promise is returned if Promise support is available.
err - First parameter to the callback detailing any errors.same - Second parameter to the callback providing whether the data and encrypted forms match [true | false].getRounds(encrypted) - return the number of rounds used to encrypt a given hash
encrypted - [REQUIRED] - hash from which the number of rounds used should be extracted.A note about the cost: when you are hashing your data, the module will go through a series of rounds to give you a secure hash. The value you submit is not just the number of rounds the module will go through to hash your data. The module will use the value you enter and go through 2^rounds hashing iterations.
From @garthk, on a 2GHz core you can roughly expect:
rounds=8 : ~40 hashes/sec
rounds=9 : ~20 hashes/sec
rounds=10: ~10 hashes/sec
rounds=11: ~5 hashes/sec
rounds=12: 2-3 hashes/sec
rounds=13: ~1 sec/hash
rounds=14: ~1.5 sec/hash
rounds=15: ~3 sec/hash
rounds=25: ~1 hour/hash
rounds=31: 2-3 days/hash
Because it's come up multiple times in this project and other bcrypt projects, it needs to be said. The bcrypt library is not susceptible to timing attacks. From codahale/bcrypt-ruby#42:
One of the desired properties of a cryptographic hash function is preimage attack resistance, which means there is no shortcut for generating a message which, when hashed, produces a specific digest.
A great thread on this, in much more detail can be found @ codahale/bcrypt-ruby#43
If you're unfamiliar with timing attacks and want to learn more you can find a great writeup @ A Lesson In Timing Attacks
However, timing attacks are real. And the comparison function is not time safe. That means that it may exit the function early in the comparison process. Timing attacks happen because of the above. We don't need to be careful that an attacker will learn anything, and our comparison function provides a comparison of hashes. It is a utility to the overall purpose of the library. If you end up using it for something else, we cannot guarantee the security of the comparator. Keep that in mind as you use the library.
The characters that comprise the resultant hash are ./ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789$.
Resultant hashes will be 60 characters long and they will include the salt among other parameters, as follows:
$[algorithm]$[cost]$[salt][hash]
"$2a$" or "$2b$" indicates BCryptExample:
$2b$10$nOUIs5kJ7naTuTFkBy1veuK0kSxUFXfuaOKdOKf9xYT0KKIGSJwFa
| | | |
| | | hash-value = K0kSxUFXfuaOKdOKf9xYT0KKIGSJwFa
| | |
| | salt = nOUIs5kJ7naTuTFkBy1veu
| |
| cost-factor => 10 = 2^10 rounds
|
hash-algorithm identifier => 2b = BCrypt
If you create a pull request, tests better pass :)
npm install
npm test
The code for this comes from a few sources:
Unless stated elsewhere, file headers or otherwise, the license as stated in the LICENSE file.