Securing a password in source code?

I have a password in my code which is needed to connect to a sftp server. Whats the best way to "obfuscate" or hide it in the code?

Thanks


Solution 1:

Don't store you password in your source code, store it in a protected section within you App.Config (or Web.Config).

See Encrypting Configuration File Sections Using Protected Configuration section in this Microsoft Doc

This works by encrypting the encryption keys using built-in Windows stuff, locked to the MAC address and various other undocumented things.

This will even work if you are using more than one server:

... if you are planning to use the same encrypted configuration file on multiple servers, such as a Web farm, only the RsaProtectedConfigurationProvider enables you to export the encryption keys used to encrypt the data and import them on another server.

Using this, if someone wanted to get your password, they would have to first break the Windows security on your server (not impossible, but harder than looking into your IL for the password by far).

Solution 2:

I actually consider using the "protected sections" feature in App.Config or Web.Config to be LESS secure than storing the password in your code.

Anyone with server access can decrypt that section of the config just as quick as you encrypted it by running the decrypt command described in the article everyone keeps quoting:

aspnet_regiis -pd "connectionStrings" -app "/SampleApplication"

https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/zhhddkxy.aspx#Anchor_1

So this feature of ASP.Net only adds security in the case that a hacker somehow had access to your web.config but not your entire server (happened in 2010 as @djteller mentioned in the oracle padding attack comment). But if they do have server access, you're exposed in one cmd call. They don't even have to install ildasm.exe.

However, storing actual passwords in your code is a maintenance nightmare. So one thing I've seen done is storing an encrypted password in your web.config and storing the encryption key in your code. This accomplishes the goal of hiding passwords from casual browsing while still being maintainable.

In this case a hacker has to at least decompile your code, find your key, and then figure out what encryption algorithm you're using. Not impossible, but certainly harder than running "aspnet_regiis -pd...".

Meanwhile I am also looking for better answers to this six year old question...

Solution 3:

Don't bother.
Anything you can do, your attacker can trivially undo.

If it only needs to run on a single machine, however, you can use the ProtectedData class, which will protect it securely against anyone not on that machine and/or user.

In general, the only remotely secure way to do this is to store the key in a separate, secure, location.
For example, you can encrypt it using a (non-MD5) hash of a password, then require the user to enter the password so that you can get the hash. (The hash and password themselves would not be stored anywhere; you should make a separate hash to verify the password)

Solution 4:

Best way is don't!

Failing that:

Encrypting Configuration File Sections Using Protected Configuration

Solution 5:

There are no "best way" to store password in source code since it can be recovered in many ways.

You can obfuscate password string or even encrypt it to prevent reveal thru simple viewing but it can't be treated as serious protection.