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Java

ARC4 Encryption (ARCFOUR)

See more Encryption Examples

ARC4 (ARCFOUR) encryption. The Chilkat encryption component supports the ARC4 streaming encryption algorithm.

Chilkat Java Downloads

Java
import com.chilkatsoft.*;

public class ChilkatExample {

  static {
    try {
        System.loadLibrary("chilkat");
    } catch (UnsatisfiedLinkError e) {
      System.err.println("Native code library failed to load.\n" + e);
      System.exit(1);
    }
  }

  public static void main(String argv[])
  {
    //  This example assumes the Chilkat API to have been previously unlocked.
    //  See Global Unlock Sample for sample code.

    CkCrypt2 crypt = new CkCrypt2();

    //  Set the encryption algorithm = "arc4"	
    crypt.put_CryptAlgorithm("arc4");

    //  KeyLength may range from 1 byte to 256 bytes.
    //  (i.e. 8 bits to 2048 bits)
    //  ARC4 key sizes are typically in the range of 
    //  40 to 128 bits.
    //  The KeyLength property is specified in bits:
    crypt.put_KeyLength(128);

    //  Note: The PaddingScheme and CipherMode properties
    //  do not apply w/ ARC4.  ARC4 does not encrypt in blocks --
    //  it is a streaming encryption algorithm. The number of output bytes
    //  is exactly equal to the number of input bytes.

    //  EncodingMode specifies the encoding of the output for
    //  encryption, and the input for decryption.
    //  It may be "hex", "url", "base64", or "quoted-printable".
    crypt.put_EncodingMode("hex");

    //  Note: ARC4 does not utilize initialization vectors.  IV's only
    //  apply to block encryption algorithms.  

    //  The secret key must equal the size of the key.
    //  For 128-bit encryption, the binary secret key is 16 bytes.
    String keyHex = "000102030405060708090A0B0C0D0E0F101112131415161718191A1B1C1D1E1F";
    crypt.SetEncodedKey(keyHex,"hex");

    //  Encrypt a string...
    //  The output length is exactly equal to the input.  In this
    //  example, the input string is 44 chars (ANSI bytes) so the
    //  output is 44 bytes -- and when hex encoded results in an
    //  88-char string (2 chars per byte for the hex encoding).
    String encStr = crypt.encryptStringENC("The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.");
    System.out.println(encStr);

    //  Now decrypt:
    String decStr = crypt.decryptStringENC(encStr);
    System.out.println(decStr);
  }
}