Set application secret key
Void setEncryptionKey( [Int] key )
key The new encryption key. This must be an array of integers, containing exactly 32 integers between 0 and 255. An Exception will be thrown if the parameter is unsuitable. For security, encryption keys should be generated from a good-quality random number source.
Sets the application secret key used by Crypto.encode (3kaya) and Crypto.decode (3kaya) to a new value for the remainder of program execution. You can obtain the key from a variety of sources (e.g. a flat file, or a database entry) - the easiest way is probably to read 32 bytes from a file with IO.getChar (3kaya) Using an external application key removes the requirement that the application binary be strongly protected (by moving the requirement to whatever the key source is, of course). This may be useful for installing common web application binaries to a shared folder.
Web applications should call this function from within their webconfig function to avoid unpredictable results. Also to avoid unpredictable results, this function may only be called once per program run, and must be called before any other function that uses the key. An Exception will be thrown if this is called for a second time or too late.
Note: While an unscrupulous application writer could use this function to ensure that the effective application key could not be changed by kaya-rekey , they could find far easier and less easily detectable ways to put a backdoor into any application that users were unable to recompile or verify.
Kaya standard library by Edwin Brady, Chris Morris and others ([email protected]). For further information see http://kayalang.org/
The Kaya standard library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License (version 2.1 or any later version) as published by the Free Software Foundation.