The goal of this open source package is security through obscurity.
It aims to offer an alternative to delivering your closed source projects in plaintext. Instead, you can opt to deliver them in ciphertext (encrypted), alongside a binary PHP extension which will decrypt them on the fly.
This package uses symmetric encryption, therefore the AES-256 key (which is only known to you as the developer), can be unique per project and/or release. To avoid being detected by hex editors (e.g. Hex Fiend) and the strings command, the key is stored within the binary as an XOR cipher, split into 32 parts. Additionally, the XOR key is also split into 32 parts. All 64 key parts are then shuffled together along with 64 random key parts (128 parts in total) to ensure that the AES-256 and XOR key parts never appear in the same place twice.
If you search for an obfuscation package, there is almost always a complimentary deobfuscation package available (written by someone else), which renders the original package obsolete (unfortunately). On the other hand, AES-256 encryption hasn't been broken (yet)!
That being said, I would certainly consider obfuscation as a compliment to encryption. If your source code is obfuscated first (before encryption) and someone tries to reverse engineer your project by looking at the opcodes and stepping through it, it would be much more difficult to understand.
Typically, obfuscation focuses on altering the execution flow of your source code, combined with the scrambling of the names of your classes, methods, functions, variables and string literals. Because obfuscation essentially rewrites your code, it inevitably comes with a few "gotchas" along the way. Encryption, on the other hand, keeps your code intact (exactly as you wrote it).
- PHP ^8.2
phpize
This package was built with support for Windows in mind, however, it has not been tested yet.
The below assumes that you're currently in your application's root directory.
$ composer require chrisvpearse/phpcrypter --dev
$ ./vendor/bin/phpcrypter generate [--clean] [--] <name> [<payload>]
The below command will generate a unique AES-256-CBC symmetric key named foo
:
$ ./vendor/bin/phpcrypter generate foo
Additionally, a .phpcrypter/foo
directory will be created in your application's root, containing a PHP extension skeleton. The symmetric key is the ❤️ of the skeleton 🦴 — they will both be used to later build a binary PHP extension of the same name (foo.so
).
A good rule of thumb is one key (and therefore one PHP extension) per project.
The output of the above command will be similar to the following:
Success!
Payload: pAYL0AD==
❗ Please remember to add /.phpcrypter
to your .gitignore
file.
$ cd .phpcrypter/foo
$ phpize
$ ./configure
$ make
$ make install
The above commands will build a PHP extension named foo.so
and copy it into your PHP extension directory. The directory can be found via the following command:
$ php -i | grep ^extension_dir
You should then add the following line to your php.ini
configuration file:
extension=foo.so
The location of the loaded php.ini
configuration file can be found via the following command:
$ php -i | grep "Loaded Configuration File"
Next, verify that the extension is loaded:
$ php -m | grep foo
foo
$ ./vendor/bin/phpcrypter encrypt <payload> <path>...
The below encrypts multiple directories and files at once. You must specify the previously obtained payload
as the first argument.
$ ./vendor/bin/phpcrypter encrypt "pAYL0AD==" \
"dir-1" \
"dir-2" \
"file-1.php" \
"file-2.php"
❗ The contents of any PHP files found in the above paths will be overwritten. It is highly recommended that you create a new Git branch for these files:
$ git checkout -b encrypted
If you're just experimenting, it's useful to be able to encrypt and decrypt at will. The below decrypts any directories and/or files previously encrypted with the payload
argument:
$ ./vendor/bin/phpcrypter decrypt <payload> <path>...
❗ Again, the contents of any PHP files found in the above paths will be overwritten.
<?php // @foo
if (! extension_loaded('foo')) exit('The "foo" extension is not loaded');
#pAYL0AD==
The PHP code block should be self explanatory, however, the final line contains a base64 encoded string containing the phpcrypter version, the IV (initialization vector) and the encrypted source code.
By default, when the extension is loaded, it simply hooks into the internals of PHP, namely the zend_compile_file()
function, but it doesn't do anything, unless the foo.decrypt
configuration option is set to 1
(it is set to 1
by default).
If you set foo.decrypt
to 0
in your php.ini
configuration file, it is recommended that you use ini_set('foo.decrypt', 1)
in any unencrypted PHP files which include
/require
encrypted files. For example, if you would like to encrypt a controller, you should use ini_set()
within an unencrypted base controller. You cannot use ini_set()
within encrypted PHP files because zend_compile_file()
works at a lower level.
Below are some autocannon benchmarks (10 connections for 10s):
Extension Loaded | Extension Enabled | File Encrypted | Avg. Latency |
---|---|---|---|
No | No | No | 2860.78 ms |
Yes | php.ini |
No | 2923.03 ms |
Yes | php.ini |
Yes | 2970.96 ms |
Yes | ini_set() |
Yes | 2890.86 ms |
When you're ready to deploy your encrypted files, you should build an extension for that platform if it differs from your workstation, for example, Linux vs. macOS.
In the event that you need to install multiple extensions on the same server (for different projects), you should consider installing phpcrypter globally:
$ composer global require chrisvpearse/phpcrypter
You must specify the previously obtained payload
as the second argument, so that the same key becomes the ❤️ of this skeleton 🦴 too.
$ cd ~/.composer
$ export HISTCONTROL=ignorespace
$ ./vendor/bin/phpcrypter generate foo "pAYL0AD=="
$ unset HISTCONTROL
💡 Using HISTCONTROL=ignorespace
prevents any commands that are prefixed with a space from appearing in your shell's history.
You should refer to the previous section, following the appropriate steps for this particular platform.
You are now ready to deploy your encrypted PHP files! 🚀
The MIT License (MIT).