The sodium crypto library compiled to pure JavaScript using Emscripten, with automatically generated wrappers to make it easy to use in web applications.
The complete library weights 151 Kb (minified, gzipped) and can run in a web browser as well as server-side.
Supported browsers/JS engines:
- Chrome >= 16
- Edge >= 0.11
- Firefox >= 21
- Internet Explorer >= 11
- Mobile Safari on iOS >= 8.0 (older versions produce incorrect results)
- NodeJS
- Opera >= 15
- Safari >= 6 (older versions produce incorrect results)
Ready-to-use files based on libsodium 1.0.6 can be directly copied to your project.
Use Bower:
$ bower install libsodium.jsor directly include a copy of the sodium.min.js file.
Including the sodium.min.js file will add a sodium object to the
global namespace.
If a sodium object is already present in the global namespace, and
the sodium.onload function is defined, this function will be called
right after the library has been loaded and initialized.
<script>
window.sodium = { onload: function(sodium) {
alert(sodium.to_hex(sodium.crypto_generichash(64, 'test')));
}};
</script>
...
<script src="sodium.js" async defer></script>As an alternative, use a module loader or Browserify as described below.
Copy the .js files for libsodium and libsodium-wrappers
to your project and load the libsodium-wrappers module.
Alternatively, use npm. The npm package is
called libsodium-wrappers and includes a dependency on the raw
libsodium module.
var sodium = require('libsodium-wrappers');
console.log(sodium.to_hex(sodium.crypto_generichash(64, 'test')));crypto_aead(ChaCha20-Poly1305)crypto_auth(SHA256, SHA512, and the default crypto_auth with SHA512/256)crypto_boxcrypto_box_sealcrypto_generichash(Blake2b)crypto_hash(SHA512/256)crypto_onetimeauth(Poly1305)crypto_pwhash(scrypt)crypto_scalarmult(Curve25519)crypto_secretboxcrypto_shorthash(SipHash)crypto_sign(Ed25519)- Ed25519->Curve25519 conversion
randombytes
from_base64(),to_base64()from_hex(),to_hex()from_string(),to_string()memcmp()(constant-time check for equality, returnstrueorfalse)compare() (constant-time comparison. Values must have the same size. Returns-1,0or1`)memzero()(applies toUint8Arrayobjects)increment()(increments an arbitrary-long number stored as a little-endianUint8Array- typically to increment nonces)
The API exposed by the wrappers is identical to the one of the C library, except that buffer lengths never need to be explicitly given.
Binary input buffers should be Uint8Array objects. However, if a string
is given instead, the wrappers will automatically convert the string
to an array containing a UTF-8 representation of the string.
Example:
var key = sodium.randombytes_buf(sodium.crypto_shorthash_KEYBYTES),
hash1 = sodium.crypto_shorthash(new Uint8Array([1, 2, 3, 4]), key),
hash2 = sodium.crypto_shorthash('test', key);If the output is a unique binary buffer, it is returned as a
Uint8Array object.
However, an extra parameter can be given to all wrapped functions, in order to specify what format the output should be in. Valid options are `uint8array' (default), 'text', 'hex' and 'base64'.
Example:
var key = sodium.randombytes_buf(sodium.crypto_shorthash_KEYBYTES),
hash_hex = sodium.crypto_shorthash('test', key, 'hex');In addition, the from_base64, to_base64, from_hex, to_hex,
from_string, and to_string functions are available to explicitly
convert base64, hexadecimal, and arbitrary string representations
from/to Uint8Array objects.
Functions returning more than one output buffer are returning them as
an object. For example, the sodium.crypto_box_keypair() function
returns the following object:
{ keyType: 'curve25519', privateKey: (Uint8Array), publicKey: (Uint8Array) }If you want to compile the files yourself, the following dependencies need to be installed on your system:
- autoconf
- automake
- emscripten
- git
- nodejs
- libtool
- make
- mocha (
npm install -g mocha) - zopfli (
npm install -g node-zopfli)
Running make will clone libsodium, build it, test it, build the
wrapper, and create the modules and minified distribution files.
The build available in this repository does not contain all the functions available in the original libsodium library.
Providing that you have all the build dependencies installed, here is how you can build libsodium.js to include the functions you need :
git clone https://github.com/jedisct1/libsodium.js
cd ./libsodium.js
# Get the original C version of libsodium and configure it
make libsodium/configure
# Modify the emscripten.sh
# Specifically, add the name of the missing functions and constants in the "EXPORTED_FUNCTIONS" array.
# Ensure that the name begins with an underscore and that it is between double quotes.
nano libsodium/dist-build/emscripten.sh
# Build libsodium, and then libsodium.js with your chosen functions
makeNOTE: for each of the functions/constants you add, make sure that the corresponding symbol files exist in the wrapper/symbols folder and that the constants are listed in the wrapper/constants.json file.
NOTE: If try you run node test/test.js to test your custom build, it will not test your custom build (but it will test the latest "official" build). However you can test it inside the browser by opening test/index.html.
Built by Ahmad Ben Mrad and Frank Denis.
This wrapper is distributed under the ISC License.