Jasypt integration for Spring boot 2.x and 3.0.0
Jasypt Spring Boot provides Encryption support for property sources in Spring Boot Applications.
There are 3 ways to integrate jasypt-spring-boot in your project:
- Simply adding the starter jar
jasypt-spring-boot-starterto your classpath if using@SpringBootApplicationor@EnableAutoConfigurationwill enable encryptable properties across the entire Spring Environment - Adding
jasypt-spring-bootto your classpath and adding@EnableEncryptablePropertiesto your main Configuration class to enable encryptable properties across the entire Spring Environment - Adding
jasypt-spring-bootto your classpath and declaring individual encryptable property sources with@EncrytablePropertySource
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Use one of the following 3 methods (briefly explained above):
-
Simply add the starter jar dependency to your project if your Spring Boot application uses
@SpringBootApplicationor@EnableAutoConfigurationand encryptable properties will be enabled across the entire Spring Environment (This means any system property, environment property, command line argument, application.properties, application-*.properties, yaml properties, and any other property sources can contain encrypted properties):<dependency> <groupId>com.github.ulisesbocchio</groupId> <artifactId>jasypt-spring-boot-starter</artifactId> <version>3.0.5</version> </dependency>
-
IF you don't use
@SpringBootApplicationor@EnableAutoConfigurationAuto Configuration annotations then add this dependency to your project:<dependency> <groupId>com.github.ulisesbocchio</groupId> <artifactId>jasypt-spring-boot</artifactId> <version>3.0.5</version> </dependency>
And then add
@EnableEncryptablePropertiesto you Configuration class. For instance:@Configuration @EnableEncryptableProperties public class MyApplication { ... }
And encryptable properties will be enabled across the entire Spring Environment (This means any system property, environment property, command line argument, application.properties, yaml properties, and any other custom property sources can contain encrypted properties)
-
IF you don't use
@SpringBootApplicationor@EnableAutoConfigurationAuto Configuration annotations and you don't want to enable encryptable properties across the entire Spring Environment, there's a third option. First add the following dependency to your project:<dependency> <groupId>com.github.ulisesbocchio</groupId> <artifactId>jasypt-spring-boot</artifactId> <version>3.0.5</version> </dependency>
And then add as many
@EncryptablePropertySourceannotations as you want in your Configuration files. Just like you do with Spring's@PropertySourceannotation. For instance:@Configuration @EncryptablePropertySource(name = "EncryptedProperties", value = "classpath:encrypted.properties") public class MyApplication { ... }
Conveniently, there's also a @EncryptablePropertySources annotation that one could use to group annotations of type @EncryptablePropertySource like this:
@Configuration
@EncryptablePropertySources({@EncryptablePropertySource("classpath:encrypted.properties"),
@EncryptablePropertySource("classpath:encrypted2.properties")})
public class MyApplication {
...
}Also, note that as of version 1.8, @EncryptablePropertySource supports YAML files
As of version 1.7 1.15, a 4th method of enabling encryptable properties exists for some special cases. A custom ConfigurableEnvironment class is provided: EncryptableEnvironmentStandardEncryptableEnvironment and StandardEncryptableServletEnvironment that can be used with SpringApplicationBuilder to define the custom environment this way:
new SpringApplicationBuilder()
.environment(new StandardEncryptableEnvironment())
.sources(YourApplicationClass.class).run(args);This method would only require using a dependency for jasypt-spring-boot. No starter jar dependency is required. This method is useful for early access of encrypted properties on bootstrap. While not required in most scenarios could be useful when customizing Spring Boot's init behavior or integrating with certain capabilities that are configured very early, such as Logging configuration. For a concrete example, this method of enabling encryptable properties is the only one that works with Spring Properties replacement in logback-spring.xml files, using the springProperty tag. For instance:
<springProperty name="user" source="db.user"/>
<springProperty name="password" source="db.password"/>
<appender name="db" class="ch.qos.logback.classic.db.DBAppender">
<connectionSource
class="ch.qos.logback.core.db.DriverManagerConnectionSource">
<driverClass>org.postgresql.Driver</driverClass>
<url>jdbc:postgresql://localhost:5432/simple</url>
<user>${user}</user>
<password>${password}</password>
</connectionSource>
</appender>This mechanism could be used for instance (as shown) to initialize Database Logging Appender that require sensitive credentials to be passed.
Alternatively, if a custom StringEncryptor is needed to be provided, a static builder method is provided StandardEncryptableEnvironment#builder for customization (other customizations are possible):
StandardEncryptableEnvironment
.builder()
.encryptor(new MyEncryptor())
.build()This will trigger some configuration to be loaded that basically does 2 things:
- It registers a Spring post processor that decorates all PropertySource objects contained in the Spring Environment so they are "encryption aware" and detect when properties are encrypted following jasypt's property convention.
- It defines a default
StringEncryptorthat can be configured through regular properties, system properties, or command line arguments.
When using METHODS 1 and 2 you can define encrypted properties in any of the PropertySource contained in the Environment. For instance, using the @PropertySource annotation:
@SpringBootApplication
@EnableEncryptableProperties
@PropertySource(name="EncryptedProperties", value = "classpath:encrypted.properties")
public class MyApplication {
...
}And your encrypted.properties file would look something like this:
secret.property=ENC(nrmZtkF7T0kjG/VodDvBw93Ct8EgjCA+)Now when you do environment.getProperty("secret.property") or use @Value("${secret.property}") what you get is the decrypted version of secret.property.
When using METHOD 3 (@EncryptablePropertySource) then you can access the encrypted properties the same way, the only difference is that you must put the properties in the resource that was declared within the @EncryptablePropertySource annotation so that the properties can be decrypted properly.
Jasypt uses an StringEncryptor to decrypt properties. For all 3 methods, if no custom StringEncryptor (see the Custom Encryptor section for details) is found in the Spring Context, one is created automatically that can be configured through the following properties (System, properties file, command line arguments, environment variable, etc.):
| Key | Required | Default Value |
| jasypt.encryptor.password | True | - |
| jasypt.encryptor.algorithm | False | PBEWITHHMACSHA512ANDAES_256 |
| jasypt.encryptor.key-obtention-iterations | False | 1000 |
| jasypt.encryptor.pool-size | False | 1 |
| jasypt.encryptor.provider-name | False | SunJCE |
| jasypt.encryptor.provider-class-name | False | null |
| jasypt.encryptor.salt-generator-classname | False | org.jasypt.salt.RandomSaltGenerator |
| jasypt.encryptor.iv-generator-classname | False | org.jasypt.iv.RandomIvGenerator |
| jasypt.encryptor.string-output-type | False | base64 |
| jasypt.encryptor.proxy-property-sources | False | false |
| jasypt.encryptor.skip-property-sources | False | empty list |
The only property required is the encryption password, the rest could be left to use default values. While all this properties could be declared in a properties file, the encryptor password should not be stored in a property file, it should rather be passed as system property, command line argument, or environment variable and as far as its name is jasypt.encryptor.password it'll work.
The last property, jasypt.encryptor.proxyPropertySources is used to indicate jasyp-spring-boot how property values are going to be intercepted for decryption. The default value, false uses custom wrapper implementations of PropertySource, EnumerablePropertySource, and MapPropertySource. When true is specified for this property, the interception mechanism will use CGLib proxies on each specific PropertySource implementation. This may be useful on some scenarios where the type of the original PropertySource must be preserved.
For custom configuration of the encryptor and the source of the encryptor password you can always define your own StringEncryptor bean in your Spring Context, and the default encryptor will be ignored. For instance:
@Bean("jasyptStringEncryptor")
public StringEncryptor stringEncryptor() {
PooledPBEStringEncryptor encryptor = new PooledPBEStringEncryptor();
SimpleStringPBEConfig config = new SimpleStringPBEConfig();
config.setPassword("password");
config.setAlgorithm("PBEWITHHMACSHA512ANDAES_256");
config.setKeyObtentionIterations("1000");
config.setPoolSize("1");
config.setProviderName("SunJCE");
config.setSaltGeneratorClassName("org.jasypt.salt.RandomSaltGenerator");
config.setIvGeneratorClassName("org.jasypt.iv.RandomIvGenerator");
config.setStringOutputType("base64");
encryptor.setConfig(config);
return encryptor;
}Notice that the bean name is required, as jasypt-spring-boot detects custom String Encyptors by name as of version 1.5. The default bean name is:
jasyptStringEncryptor
But one can also override this by defining property:
jasypt.encryptor.bean
So for instance, if you define jasypt.encryptor.bean=encryptorBean then you would define your custom encryptor with that name:
@Bean("encryptorBean")
public StringEncryptor stringEncryptor() {
...
}As of jasypt-spring-boot-1.10 there are new extensions points. EncryptablePropertySource now uses EncryptablePropertyResolver to resolve all properties:
public interface EncryptablePropertyResolver {
String resolvePropertyValue(String value);
}Implementations of this interface are responsible of both detecting and decrypting properties. The default implementation, DefaultPropertyResolver uses the before mentioned
StringEncryptor and a new EncryptablePropertyDetector.
You can override the default implementation by providing a Bean of type EncryptablePropertyDetector with name encryptablePropertyDetector or if you wanna provide
your own bean name, override property jasypt.encryptor.property.detector-bean and specify the name you wanna give the bean. When providing this, you'll be responsible for
detecting encrypted properties.
Example:
private static class MyEncryptablePropertyDetector implements EncryptablePropertyDetector {
@Override
public boolean isEncrypted(String value) {
if (value != null) {
return value.startsWith("ENC@");
}
return false;
}
@Override
public String unwrapEncryptedValue(String value) {
return value.substring("ENC@".length());
}
}@Bean(name = "encryptablePropertyDetector")
public EncryptablePropertyDetector encryptablePropertyDetector() {
return new MyEncryptablePropertyDetector();
}If all you want to do is to have different prefix/suffix for encrypted properties, you can keep using all the default implementations
and just override the following properties in application.properties (or application.yml):
jasypt:
encryptor:
property:
prefix: "ENC@["
suffix: "]"You can override the default implementation by providing a Bean of type EncryptablePropertyResolver with name encryptablePropertyResolver or if you wanna provide
your own bean name, override property jasypt.encryptor.property.resolver-bean and specify the name you wanna give the bean. When providing this, you'll be responsible for
detecting and decrypting encrypted properties.
Example:
class MyEncryptablePropertyResolver implements EncryptablePropertyResolver {
private final PooledPBEStringEncryptor encryptor;
public MyEncryptablePropertyResolver(char[] password) {
this.encryptor = new PooledPBEStringEncryptor();
SimpleStringPBEConfig config = new SimpleStringPBEConfig();
config.setPasswordCharArray(password);
config.setAlgorithm("PBEWITHHMACSHA512ANDAES_256");
config.setKeyObtentionIterations("1000");
config.setPoolSize(1);
config.setProviderName("SunJCE");
config.setSaltGeneratorClassName("org.jasypt.salt.RandomSaltGenerator");
config.setIvGeneratorClassName("org.jasypt.iv.RandomIvGenerator");
config.setStringOutputType("base64");
encryptor.setConfig(config);
}
@Override
public String resolvePropertyValue(String value) {
if (value != null && value.startsWith("{cipher}")) {
return encryptor.decrypt(value.substring("{cipher}".length()));
}
return value;
}
}@Bean(name="encryptablePropertyResolver")
EncryptablePropertyResolver encryptablePropertyResolver(@Value("${jasypt.encryptor.password}") String password) {
return new MyEncryptablePropertyResolver(password.toCharArray());
}Notice that by overriding EncryptablePropertyResolver, any other configuration or overrides you may have for prefixes, suffixes,
EncryptablePropertyDetector and StringEncryptor will stop working since the Default resolver is what uses them. You'd have to
wire all that stuff yourself. Fortunately, you don't have to override this bean in most cases, the previous options should suffice.
But as you can see in the implementation, the detection and decryption of the encrypted properties are internal to MyEncryptablePropertyResolver
jasypt-spring-boot:2.1.0 introduces a new feature to specify property filters. The filter is part of the EncryptablePropertyResolver API
and allows you to determine which properties or property sources to contemplate for decryption. This is, before even examining the actual
property value to search for, or try to, decrypt it. For instance, by default, all properties which name start with jasypt.encryptor
are excluded from examination. This is to avoid circular dependencies at load time when the library beans are configured.
By default, the DefaultPropertyResolver uses DefaultPropertyFilter, which allows you to specify the following string pattern lists:
- jasypt.encryptor.property.filter.include-sources: Specify the property sources name patterns to be included for decryption
- jasypt.encryptor.property.filter.exclude-sources: Specify the property sources name patterns to be EXCLUDED for decryption
- jasypt.encryptor.property.filter.include-names: Specify the property name patterns to be included for decryption
- jasypt.encryptor.property.filter.exclude-names: Specify the property name patterns to be EXCLUDED for decryption
You can override the default implementation by providing a Bean of type EncryptablePropertyFilter with name encryptablePropertyFilter or if you wanna provide
your own bean name, override property jasypt.encryptor.property.filter-bean and specify the name you wanna give the bean. When providing this, you'll be responsible for
detecting properties and/or property sources you want to contemplate for decryption.
Example:
class MyEncryptablePropertyFilter implements EncryptablePropertyFilter {
public boolean shouldInclude(PropertySource<?> source, String name) {
return name.startsWith('encrypted.');
}
}@Bean(name="encryptablePropertyFilter")
EncryptablePropertyFilter encryptablePropertyFilter() {
return new MyEncryptablePropertyFilter();
}Notice that for this mechanism to work, you should not provide a custom EncryptablePropertyResolver and use the default
resolver instead. If you provide custom resolver, you are responsible for the entire process of detecting and decrypting
properties.
Define a comma-separated list of fully-qualified class names to be skipped from introspection. This classes will not be wrapped/proxied by this plugin and thereby properties contained in them won't supported encryption/decryption:
jasypt.encryptor.skip-property-sources=org.springframework.boot.env.RandomValuePropertySource,org.springframework.boot.ansi.AnsiPropertySourceEncrypted properties are cached within your application and in certain scenarios, like when using externalized configuration
from a config server the properties need to be refreshed when they changed. For this jasypt-spring-boot registers a
RefreshScopeRefreshedEventListener that listens to the following events by default to clear the encrypted properties cache:
public static final List<String> EVENT_CLASS_NAMES = Arrays.asList(
"org.springframework.cloud.context.scope.refresh.RefreshScopeRefreshedEvent",
"org.springframework.cloud.context.environment.EnvironmentChangeEvent",
"org.springframework.boot.web.servlet.context.ServletWebServerInitializedEvent"
);Should you need to register extra events that you would like to trigger an encrypted cache invalidation you can add them using the following property (separate by comma if more than one needed):
jasypt.encryptor.refreshed-event-classes=org.springframework.boot.context.event.ApplicationStartedEventA Maven plugin is provided with a number of helpful utilities.
To use the plugin, just add the following to your pom.xml:
<build>
<plugins>
<plugin>
<groupId>com.github.ulisesbocchio</groupId>
<artifactId>jasypt-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<version>3.0.5</version>
</plugin>
</plugins>
</build>When using this plugin, the easiest way to provide your encryption password is via a system property i.e. -Djasypt.encryptor.password="the password".
By default, the plugin will consider encryption configuration in standard Spring boot configuration files under ./src/main/resources. You can also use system properties or environment variables to supply this configuration.
Keep in mind that the rest of your application code and resources are not available to the plugin because Maven plugins do not share a classpath with projects. If your application provides encryption configuration via a StringEncryptor bean then this will not be picked up.
In general, it is recommended to just rely on the secure default configuration.
To encrypt a single value run:
mvn jasypt:encrypt-value -Djasypt.encryptor.password="the password" -Djasypt.plugin.value="theValueYouWantToEncrypt"To encrypt placeholders in src/main/resources/application.properties, simply wrap any string with DEC(...).
For example:
sensitive.password=DEC(secret value)
regular.property=exampleThen run:
mvn jasypt:encrypt -Djasypt.encryptor.password="the password"Which would edit that file in place resulting in:
sensitive.password=ENC(encrypted)
regular.property=exampleThe file name and location can be customised.
To decrypt a single value run:
mvn jasypt:decrypt-value -Djasypt.encryptor.password="the password" -Djasypt.plugin.value="DbG1GppXOsFa2G69PnmADvQFI3esceEhJYbaEIKCcEO5C85JEqGAhfcjFMGnoRFf"To decrypt placeholders in src/main/resources/application.properties, simply wrap any string with ENC(...). For
example:
sensitive.password=ENC(encrypted)
regular.property=exampleThis can be decrypted as follows:
mvn jasypt:decrypt -Djasypt.encryptor.password="the password"Which would output the decrypted contents to the screen:
sensitive.password=DEC(decrypted)
regular.property=exampleNote that outputting to the screen, rather than editing the file in place, is designed to reduce accidental committing of decrypted values to version control. When decrypting, you most likely just want to check what value has been encrypted, rather than wanting to permanently decrypt that value.
Changing the configuration for existing encrypted properties is slightly awkward using the encrypt/decrypt goals. You must run the decrypt goal using the old configuration, then copy the decrypted output back into the original file, then run the encrypt goal with the new configuration.
The re-encrypt goal simplifies this by re-encrypting a file in place. 2 sets of configuration must be provided. The new configuration is supplied in the same way as you would configure the other maven goals. The old configuration is supplied via system properties prefixed with "jasypt.plugin.old" instead of "jasypt.encryptor".
For example, to re-encrypt application.properties that was previously encrypted with the password OLD and then encrypt with the new password NEW:
mvn jasypt:reencrypt -Djasypt.plugin.old.password=OLD -Djasypt.encryptor.password=NEWNote: All old configuration must be passed as system properties. Environment variables and Spring Boot configuration files are not supported.
Sometimes the default encryption configuration might change between versions of jasypt-spring-boot. You can automatically upgrade your encrypted properties to the new defaults with the upgrade goal. This will decrypt your application.properties file using the old default configuration and re-encrypt using the new default configuration.
mvn jasypt:upgrade -Djasypt.encryptor.password=EXAMPLEYou can also pass the system property -Djasypt.plugin.old.major-version to specify the version you are upgrading from.
This will always default to the last major version where the configuration changed. Currently, the only major version
where the defaults changed is version 2, so there is no need to set this property, but it is there for future use.
You can also decrypt a properties file and load all of its properties into memory and make them accessible to Maven. This is useful when you want to make encrypted properties available to other Maven plugins.
You can chain the goals of the later plugins directly after this one. For example, with flyway:
mvn jasypt:load flyway:migrate -Djasypt.encryptor.password="the password"You can also specify a prefix for each property with -Djasypt.plugin.keyPrefix=example.. This
helps to avoid potential clashes with other Maven properties.
For all the above utilities, the path of the file you are encrypting/decrypting defaults to
file:src/main/resources/application.properties.
This can be changed using the -Djasypt.plugin.path system property.
You can encrypt a file in your test resources directory:
mvn jasypt:encrypt -Djasypt.plugin.path="file:src/main/test/application.properties" -Djasypt.encryptor.password="the password"Or with a different name:
mvn jasypt:encrypt -Djasypt.plugin.path="file:src/main/resources/flyway.properties" -Djasypt.encryptor.password="the password"Or with a different file type (the plugin supports any plain text file format including YAML):
mvn jasypt:encrypt -Djasypt.plugin.path="file:src/main/resources/application.yaml" -Djasypt.encryptor.password="the password"Note that the load goal only supports .property files
You can override any spring config you support in your application when running the plugin, for instance selecting a given spring profile:
mvn jasypt:encrypt -Dspring.profiles.active=cloud -Djasypt.encryptor.password="the password" To encrypt/decrypt properties in multi-module projects disable recursion with -N or --non-recursive on the maven command:
mvn jasypt:upgrade -Djasypt.plugin.path=file:server/src/test/resources/application-test.properties -Djasypt.encryptor.password=supersecret -Njasypt-spring-boot:2.1.1 introduces a new feature to encrypt/decrypt properties using asymmetric encryption with a pair of private/public keys
in DER or PEM formats.
The following are the configuration properties you can use to config asymmetric decryption of properties;
| Key | Default Value | Description |
| jasypt.encryptor.privateKeyString | null | private key for decryption in String format |
| jasypt.encryptor.privateKeyLocation | null | location of the private key for decryption in spring resource format |
| jasypt.encryptor.privateKeyFormat | DER | Key format. DER or PEM |
You should either use privateKeyString or privateKeyLocation, the String format takes precedence if set.
To specify a private key in DER format with privateKeyString, please encode the key bytes to base64.
Note that jasypt.encryptor.password still takes precedences for PBE encryption over the asymmetric config.
jasypt:
encryptor:
privateKeyString: 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
jasypt:
encryptor:
privateKeyLocation: classpath:private_key.der
jasypt:
encryptor:
privateKeyFormat: PEM
privateKeyString: |-
-----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----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-----END PRIVATE KEY-----
jasypt:
encryptor:
privateKeyFormat: PEM
privateKeyLocation: classpath:private_key.pem
There is no program/command to encrypt properties using asymmetric keys but you can use the following code snippet to encrypt your properties:
import com.ulisesbocchio.jasyptspringboot.encryptor.SimpleAsymmetricConfig;
import com.ulisesbocchio.jasyptspringboot.encryptor.SimpleAsymmetricStringEncryptor;
import org.jasypt.encryption.StringEncryptor;
public class PropertyEncryptor {
public static void main(String[] args) {
SimpleAsymmetricConfig config = new SimpleAsymmetricConfig();
config.setPublicKey("MIIBIjANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQEFAAOCAQ8AMIIBCgKCAQEArQfyGCvBOdgmDGU6ciGPVNB6jHsMip0b0qOrPvVTSJ/x0offjKARogA2tjGjyr3rUtwg9woMBqv/iyENR0GBnIUa0jkYsznCKeygcflnNa4mrVf7XKXLhSwtY+kCe3diPk+0QPfEsfF9/aK6pWBUFcrE8P2k2sF/8mo8dFJU1t6zQGPspHkNAgR6MLU8SjPZxnMS6EG722MdYhvSYAKsnu02Hozqb4jh/gaQ/E6NkvM3DkqIyIYsRH2smstIFEb9CCiTdiz/OsJKQLgGy/pqIVKtai3lnUxAayEV45Z61rNTOusNJf+icGhZxjqhAeoWjMxOCVmVC2GKa9sisqBgkQIDAQAB");
StringEncryptor encryptor = new SimpleAsymmetricStringEncryptor(config);
String message = "chupacabras";
String encrypted = encryptor.encrypt(message);
System.out.printf("Encrypted message %s\n", encrypted);
}
}import com.ulisesbocchio.jasyptspringboot.encryptor.SimpleAsymmetricConfig;
import com.ulisesbocchio.jasyptspringboot.encryptor.SimpleAsymmetricStringEncryptor;
import org.jasypt.encryption.StringEncryptor;
import static com.ulisesbocchio.jasyptspringboot.util.AsymmetricCryptography.KeyFormat.PEM;
public class PropertyEncryptor {
public static void main(String[] args) {
SimpleAsymmetricConfig config = new SimpleAsymmetricConfig();
config.setKeyFormat(PEM);
config.setPublicKey("-----BEGIN PUBLIC KEY-----\n" +
"MIIBIjANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQEFAAOCAQ8AMIIBCgKCAQEArQfyGCvBOdgmDGU6ciGP\n" +
"VNB6jHsMip0b0qOrPvVTSJ/x0offjKARogA2tjGjyr3rUtwg9woMBqv/iyENR0GB\n" +
"nIUa0jkYsznCKeygcflnNa4mrVf7XKXLhSwtY+kCe3diPk+0QPfEsfF9/aK6pWBU\n" +
"FcrE8P2k2sF/8mo8dFJU1t6zQGPspHkNAgR6MLU8SjPZxnMS6EG722MdYhvSYAKs\n" +
"nu02Hozqb4jh/gaQ/E6NkvM3DkqIyIYsRH2smstIFEb9CCiTdiz/OsJKQLgGy/pq\n" +
"IVKtai3lnUxAayEV45Z61rNTOusNJf+icGhZxjqhAeoWjMxOCVmVC2GKa9sisqBg\n" +
"kQIDAQAB\n" +
"-----END PUBLIC KEY-----\n");
StringEncryptor encryptor = new SimpleAsymmetricStringEncryptor(config);
String message = "chupacabras";
String encrypted = encryptor.encrypt(message);
System.out.printf("Encrypted message %s\n", encrypted);
}
}As of version 3.0.5, AES 256-GCM Encryption is supported. To use this type of encryption, set the property jasypt.encryptor.gcm-secret-key-string, jasypt.encryptor.gcm-secret-key-location or jasypt.encryptor.gcm-secret-key-password.
The underlying algorithm used is AES/GCM/NoPadding so make sure that's installed in your JDK.
The SimpleGCMByteEncryptor uses a IVGenerator to encrypt properties. You can configure that with property jasypt.encryptor.iv-generator-classname if you don't want to
use the default implementation RandomIvGenerator
When using a key via jasypt.encryptor.gcm-secret-key-string or jasypt.encryptor.gcm-secret-key-location, make sure you encode your key in base64.
The base64 string value could set to jasypt.encryptor.gcm-secret-key-string, or just can save it in a file and use a spring resource locator to that file in property jasypt.encryptor.gcm-secret-key-location. For instance:
jasypt.encryptor.gcm-secret-key-string="PNG5egJcwiBrd+E8go1tb9PdPvuRSmLSV3jjXBmWlIU="
#OR
jasypt.encryptor.gcm-secret-key-location=classpath:secret_key.b64
#OR
jasypt.encryptor.gcm-secret-key-location=file:/full/path/secret_key.b64
#OR
jasypt.encryptor.gcm-secret-key-location=file:relative/path/secret_key.b64Optionally, you can create your own StringEncryptor bean:
@Bean("encryptorBean")
public StringEncryptor stringEncryptor() {
SimpleGCMConfig config = new SimpleGCMConfig();
config.setSecretKey("PNG5egJcwiBrd+E8go1tb9PdPvuRSmLSV3jjXBmWlIU=");
return new SimpleGCMStringEncryptor(config);
}Alternatively, you can use a password to encrypt/decrypt properties using AES 256-GCM. The password is used to generate a key on startup, so there is a few properties you need to/can set, these are:
jasypt.encryptor.gcm-secret-key-password="chupacabras"
#Optional, defaults to "1000"
jasypt.encryptor.key-obtention-iterations="1000"
#Optional, defaults to 0, no salt. If provided, specify the salt string in ba64 format
jasypt.encryptor.gcm-secret-key-salt="HrqoFr44GtkAhhYN+jP8Ag=="
#Optional, defaults to PBKDF2WithHmacSHA256
jasypt.encryptor.gcm-secret-key-algorithm="PBKDF2WithHmacSHA256"Make sure this parameters are the same if you're encrypting your secrets with external tools.
Optionally, you can create your own StringEncryptor bean:
@Bean("encryptorBean")
public StringEncryptor stringEncryptor() {
SimpleGCMConfig config = new SimpleGCMConfig();
config.setSecretKeyPassword("chupacabras");
config.setSecretKeyIterations(1000);
config.setSecretKeySalt("HrqoFr44GtkAhhYN+jP8Ag==");
config.setSecretKeyAlgorithm("PBKDF2WithHmacSHA256");
return new SimpleGCMStringEncryptor(config);
}You can use the Maven Plugin or follow a similar strategy as explained in Asymmetric Encryption's Encrypting Properties
The jasypt-spring-boot-demo-samples repo contains working Spring Boot app examples. The main jasypt-spring-boot-demo Demo app explicitly sets a System property with the encryption password before the app runs. To have a little more realistic scenario try removing the line where the system property is set, build the app with maven, and the run:
java -jar target/jasypt-spring-boot-demo-0.0.1-SNAPSHOT.jar --jasypt.encryptor.password=password
And you'll be passing the encryption password as a command line argument. Run it like this:
java -Djasypt.encryptor.password=password -jar target/jasypt-spring-boot-demo-0.0.1-SNAPSHOT.jar
And you'll be passing the encryption password as a System property.
If you need to pass this property as an Environment Variable you can accomplish this by creating application.properties or application.yml and adding:
jasypt.encryptor.password=${JASYPT_ENCRYPTOR_PASSWORD:}
or in YAML
jasypt:
encryptor:
password: ${JASYPT_ENCRYPTOR_PASSWORD:}
basically what this does is to define the jasypt.encryptor.password property pointing to a different property JASYPT_ENCRYPTOR_PASSWORD that you can set with an Environment Variable, and you can also override via System Properties. This technique can also be used to translate property name/values for any other library you need.
This is also available in the Demo app. So you can run the Demo app like this:
JASYPT_ENCRYPTOR_PASSWORD=password java -jar target/jasypt-spring-boot-demo-1.5-SNAPSHOT.jar
Note: When using Gradle as build tool, processResources task fails because of '$' character, to solve this you just need to scape this variable like this '\$'.
While jasypt-spring-boot-demo is a comprehensive Demo that showcases all possible ways to encrypt/decrypt properties, there are other multiple Demos that demo isolated scenarios.

