This package enables an additional layer of security when handling sensitive data. Allowing key fields of your eloquent models in the database to be encrypted at rest.
This open source package fulfils the need of encrypting selected model data in your database whilst allowing your app:key to be rotated. When needing to store private details this package allows for greater security than the default Laravel encrypter. It uses default 4096-bit RSA keys to encrypt your data securely and Laravel model casting to dynamically encrypt and decrypt key fields.
Usually, you would use Laravel's Encrypter to encrypt the data, but this has the limitation of using the app:key
as the private secret. As the app key also secures session/cookie data, it is advised that you rotate this every so often - if you're storing encrypted data using this method you have to decrypt it all first and re-encrypt whenever this is done. Therefore this package improves on this by creating a separate and stronger encryption process allowing you to rotate the app:key. This allows for a level of security of sensitive model data within your Laravel application and your database.
If you don't want to use RSA keys, then I have another package Eloquent AES which uses a separate key eloquent_key
to encrypt using AES-256-CBC.
This package requires Laravel 8.x or higher.
You can install the package via composer:
composer require richardstyles/eloquentencryption
You do not need to register the ServiceProvider as this package uses Laravel Package auto discovery. The Migration blueprint helpers are added using macros, so do not affect the schema files.
The configuration can be published using this command, if you need to change the RSA key size, storage path and key file names.
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="RichardStyles\EloquentEncryption\EloquentEncryptionServiceProvider" --tag="config"
In order to encrypt and decrypt data you need to generate RSA keys for this package. By default, this will create 4096-bit RSA keys to your storage/
directory. Do not add these to version control and backup accordingly.
php artisan encrypt:generate
There is also a helper function to define your encrypted fields in your migrations.
There is nothing special needed for this to function, simply declare a encrypted
column type in your migration files. This just creates a binary
/blob
column to hold the encrypted data. Using this helper indicates that the field is encrypted when looking through your migrations.
Schema::create('sales_notes', function (Blueprint $table) {
$table->increments('id');
$table->encrypted('private_data');
$table->encrypted('optional_private_data')->nullable();
$table->timestamps();
});
You can use any additional blueprint helpers, such as ->nullable()
if there is no initial data to encrypt. It is advised that ->index()
shouldn't normally be placed on these binary fields as you should not be querying against these, given they are encrypted.
As of version 3.x, the requirement for laravel is 8.14. This release added the Model::encryptUsing()
static function to the base Eloquent Model.
This allows the built in process for encrypted casting to use any Illuminate\Contracts\Encryption\Encrypter
class.
Please test with any existing keys and data before upgrading Otherwise your data may not be decrypted as expected. If you are on 2.x you should not see any issues as this version follows the Encrypter Contract required by the encryptUsing static function.
In your AppServiceProvider
EncryptedCast::encryptUsing(new \RichardStyles\EloquentEncryption\EloquentEncryption);
Then on your models, use the built in encrypted casts as needed.
class EncryptedCast extends Model
{
public $casts = [
'secret' => 'encrypted',
'secret_array' => 'encrypted:array',
'secret_json' => 'encrypted:json',
'secret_object' => 'encrypted:object',
'secret_collection' => 'encrypted:collection',
];
}
This was made possible by a PR to Laravel by @hivokas.
This package leverages Laravel's own custom casting to encode/decode values.
<?php
namespace App\Models;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
use RichardStyles\EloquentEncryption\Casts\Encrypted;
use RichardStyles\EloquentEncryption\Casts\EncryptedInteger;
use RichardStyles\EloquentEncryption\Casts\EncryptedFloat;
use RichardStyles\EloquentEncryption\Casts\EncryptedCollection;
use RichardStyles\EloquentEncryption\Casts\EncryptedBoolean;
class SalesData extends Model
{
/**
* The attributes that should be cast.
*
* @var array
*/
protected $casts = [
'private_data' => Encrypted::class,
'private_int' => EncryptedInteger::class,
'private_float' => EncryptedFloat::class,
'private_collection' => EncryptedCollection::class,
'private_boolean' => EncryptedBoolean::class,
];
}
There are additional casts which will cast the decrypted value into a specific data type. If there is not one that you need, simply make a PR including sufficient testing.
If you want to store your RSA key another way, such as using Hashicorp Vault. From 1.4 you can change the config option handler
to a specific class which uses the RsaKeyHandler
contract.
By default, this package uses a storage handler, which saves the generated key pair to storage/
and retrieved the contents of the keys when encryption or decryption are processed. This is something that should be considered as it could add latency to your application.
/**
* This class can be overridden to define how the RSA keys are stored, checked for
* existence and returned for Encryption and Decryption. This allows for keys to
* be held in secure Vaults or through another provider.
*/
'handler' => \RichardStyles\EloquentEncryption\FileSystem\RsaKeyStorageHandler::class,
A significant caveat with storing encrypted data in the database, is that you are unable to use your database provider to query against the column. Should you need to do this, then please be aware of the extra overhead as all rows would need to be processed in a collection using cursors and lazy collection methods.
composer test
Please see CHANGELOG for more information what has changed recently.
Please see CONTRIBUTING for details.
If you are having general issues with this package, feel free to contact me on Twitter.
If you believe you have found an issue, please report it using the GitHub issue tracker, or better yet, fork the repository and submit a pull request with a failing test.
If you're using this package, I'd love to hear your thoughts. Thanks!
If you discover any security related issues, please email [email protected] instead of using the issue tracker.
The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.
This package was generated using the Laravel Package Boilerplate.