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Internet of Things
Forum Where do you store/hide your AES keys used for embedded encypt and decrypt?
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Where do you store/hide your AES keys used for embedded encypt and decrypt?

Jan Cumps
Jan Cumps over 9 years ago

In a scenario where you have two embedded systems talking to each other,

and you want to encrypt/decrypt the data with AES,

where/how do you store the AES key in your firmware sources?

 

If I put my aes-128-ecb in my source code of my firmware like this:

 

    /* Set up the variables */ 
    uint8_t aesKey[16] = { 
            0x5a, 0x69, 0x67, 0x42, 0x65, 0x65, 0x41, 0x6c, 
            0x6c, 0x69, 0x61, 0x6e, 0x63, 0x65, 0x30, 0x39 
    };

 

 

it's  out there for everyone that has access to the version control system, and can leak to the outside world.

 

What's your approach?

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Top Replies

  • brianonn
    brianonn over 9 years ago +5 suggested
    Definitely don't check any encryption keys into source control. Let's look at the problem: While programming your APIs you see that you needed an AES key for encrypting your shared link. The problem you…
  • clem57
    clem57 over 9 years ago +2
    I would take the AES 256 bit key and encrypt with a private-public key pair RSA 1024 bit. Public is safe out in the open, but the private is stored on a USB medium on a system with a locked keyring. This…
  • Fred27
    Fred27 over 9 years ago +2 suggested
    Would a "good enough" solution be to have this in a separate file that's ignored by source control? It would in theory be accessible by anyone who could get hold of the firmware, but that would be hard…
Parents
  • clem57
    0 clem57 over 9 years ago

    I would take the AES 256 bit key and encrypt with a private-public key pair RSA 1024 bit. Public is safe out in the open, but the private is stored on a USB medium on a system with a locked keyring. This scheme works for bank accounts and can for me.

    Clem

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  • clem57
    0 clem57 over 9 years ago in reply to clem57

    Not so much work. Look at putty that is used for SSH and they show how to generate and store keys in Using public keys for SSH authentication or PuTTYgen Generation of SSH Authorized Keys and RSA Authentication on Cisco Secure IDS Configuration Example - Cisco .

     

    Clem

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  • Jan Cumps
    0 Jan Cumps over 9 years ago in reply to clem57

    For OS supported plaforms, I don't have an issue (been there, done that, with api's that support secure key storage and certificate management). There are keystore solutions there.

    My question is focused on best practices for embedded, where the APIs are expecting something like 'a 16 byte long AESKey'...

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  • Jan Cumps
    0 Jan Cumps over 9 years ago in reply to clem57

    For OS supported plaforms, I don't have an issue (been there, done that, with api's that support secure key storage and certificate management). There are keystore solutions there.

    My question is focused on best practices for embedded, where the APIs are expecting something like 'a 16 byte long AESKey'...

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