The AWS Encryption SDK for Python provides a fully compliant, native Python implementation of the AWS Encryption SDK.
The latest full documentation can be found at Read the Docs.
Find us on GitHub.
See Support Policy for details on the current support status of all major versions of this library.
- Python 3.6+
- cryptography >= 2.5.0
- boto3 >= 1.10.0
- attrs
Note
If you have not already installed cryptography, you might need to install additional prerequisites as detailed in the cryptography installation guide for your operating system.
$ pip install aws-encryption-sdk
There are four main concepts that you need to understand to use this library:
Cryptographic materials managers (CMMs) are resources that collect cryptographic materials and prepare them for use by the Encryption SDK core logic.
An example of a CMM is the default CMM, which is automatically generated anywhere a caller provides a master key provider. The default CMM collects encrypted data keys from all master keys referenced by the master key provider.
An example of a more advanced CMM is the caching CMM, which caches cryptographic materials provided by another CMM.
Master key providers are resources that provide master keys. An example of a master key provider is AWS KMS.
To encrypt data in this client, a MasterKeyProvider
object must contain at least one MasterKey
object.
MasterKeyProvider
objects can also contain other MasterKeyProvider
objects.
Master keys generate, encrypt, and decrypt data keys. An example of a master key is a KMS customer master key (CMK).
Data keys are the encryption keys that are used to encrypt your data. If your algorithm suite uses a key derivation function, the data key is used to generate the key that directly encrypts the data.
To use this module, you (the caller) must first create an instance of the EncryptionSDKClient
class.
The constructor to this class accepts an optional keyword argument, commitment_policy
, that controls
which algorithm suites can be used for encryption and decryption. If no value
is provided for this argument, a default value of REQUIRE_ENCRYPT_REQUIRE_DECRYPT
is used. Unless
you have specialized performance requirements or are in the process of migrating from an older
version of the AWS Encryption SDK, we recommend using the default value.
import aws_encryption_sdk
from aws_encryption_sdk.identifiers import CommitmentPolicy
client = aws_encryption_sdk.EncryptionSDKClient(
commitment_policy=CommitmentPolicy.REQUIRE_ENCRYPT_REQUIRE_DECRYPT
)
You must then create an instance of either a master key provider or a CMM. The examples in this
readme use the StrictAwsKmsMasterKeyProvider
class.
A StrictAwsKmsMasterKeyProvider
is configured with an explicit list of AWS KMS
CMKs with which to encrypt and decrypt data. On encryption, it encrypts the plaintext with all
configured CMKs. On decryption, it only attempts to decrypt ciphertexts that have been wrapped
with a CMK that matches one of the configured CMK ARNs.
To create a StrictAwsKmsMasterKeyProvider
you must provide one or more CMKs. For providers that will only
be used for encryption, you can use any valid KMS key identifier. For providers that will be used for decryption, you
must use the key ARN; key ids, alias names, and alias ARNs are not supported.
Because the StrictAwsKmsMasterKeyProvider
uses the boto3 SDK to interact with AWS KMS,
it requires AWS Credentials.
To provide these credentials, use the standard means by which boto3 locates credentials or provide a
pre-existing instance of a botocore session
to the StrictAwsKmsMasterKeyProvider
.
This latter option can be useful if you have an alternate way to store your AWS credentials or
you want to reuse an existing instance of a botocore session in order to decrease startup costs.
If you configure the the StrictAwsKmsMasterKeyProvider
with multiple CMKs, the final message
will include a copy of the data key encrypted by each configured CMK.
import aws_encryption_sdk
kms_key_provider = aws_encryption_sdk.StrictAwsKmsMasterKeyProvider(key_ids=[
'arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:2222222222222:key/22222222-2222-2222-2222-222222222222',
'arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:3333333333333:key/33333333-3333-3333-3333-333333333333'
])
You can add CMKs from multiple regions to the StrictAwsKmsMasterKeyProvider
.
import aws_encryption_sdk
kms_key_provider = aws_encryption_sdk.StrictAwsKmsMasterKeyProvider(key_ids=[
'arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:2222222222222:key/22222222-2222-2222-2222-222222222222',
'arn:aws:kms:us-west-2:3333333333333:key/33333333-3333-3333-3333-333333333333',
'arn:aws:kms:ap-northeast-1:4444444444444:key/44444444-4444-4444-4444-444444444444'
])
We recommend using a StrictAwsKmsMasterKeyProvider
in order to ensure that you can only
encrypt and decrypt data using the AWS KMS CMKs you expect. However, if you are unable to
explicitly identify the AWS KMS CMKs that should be used for decryption, you can instead
use a DiscoveryAwsKmsMasterKeyProvider
for decryption operations. This provider
attempts decryption of any ciphertexts as long as they match a DiscoveryFilter
that
you configure. A DiscoveryFilter
consists of a list of AWS account ids and an AWS
partition.
import aws_encryption_sdk
from aws_encryption_sdk.key_providers.kms import DiscoveryFilter
discovery_filter = DiscoveryFilter(
account_ids=['222222222222', '333333333333'],
partition='aws'
)
kms_key_provider = aws_encryption_sdk.DiscoveryAwsKmsMasterKeyProvider(
discovery_filter=discovery_filter
)
If you do not want to filter the set of allowed accounts, you can also omit the discovery_filter
argument.
Note that a DiscoveryAwsKmsMasterKeyProvider
cannot be used for encryption operations.
After you create an instance of an EncryptionSDKClient
and a MasterKeyProvider
, you can use either of
the client's two encrypt
/decrypt
functions to encrypt and decrypt your data.
import aws_encryption_sdk
from aws_encryption_sdk.identifiers import CommitmentPolicy
client = aws_encryption_sdk.EncryptionSDKClient(
commitment_policy=CommitmentPolicy.FORBID_ENCRYPT_ALLOW_DECRYPT
)
kms_key_provider = aws_encryption_sdk.StrictAwsKmsMasterKeyProvider(key_ids=[
'arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:2222222222222:key/22222222-2222-2222-2222-222222222222',
'arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:3333333333333:key/33333333-3333-3333-3333-333333333333'
])
my_plaintext = b'This is some super secret data! Yup, sure is!'
my_ciphertext, encryptor_header = client.encrypt(
source=my_plaintext,
key_provider=kms_key_provider
)
decrypted_plaintext, decryptor_header = client.decrypt(
source=my_ciphertext,
key_provider=kms_key_provider
)
assert my_plaintext == decrypted_plaintext
assert encryptor_header.encryption_context == decryptor_header.encryption_context
You can provide an encryption context: a form of additional authenticating information.
import aws_encryption_sdk
from aws_encryption_sdk.identifiers import CommitmentPolicy
client = aws_encryption_sdk.EncryptionSDKClient(
commitment_policy=CommitmentPolicy.FORBID_ENCRYPT_ALLOW_DECRYPT
)
kms_key_provider = aws_encryption_sdk.StrictAwsKmsMasterKeyProvider(key_ids=[
'arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:2222222222222:key/22222222-2222-2222-2222-222222222222',
'arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:3333333333333:key/33333333-3333-3333-3333-333333333333'
])
my_plaintext = b'This is some super secret data! Yup, sure is!'
my_ciphertext, encryptor_header = client.encrypt(
source=my_plaintext,
key_provider=kms_key_provider,
encryption_context={
'not really': 'a secret',
'but adds': 'some authentication'
}
)
decrypted_plaintext, decryptor_header = client.decrypt(
source=my_ciphertext,
key_provider=kms_key_provider
)
assert my_plaintext == decrypted_plaintext
assert encryptor_header.encryption_context == decryptor_header.encryption_context
If you are handling large files or simply do not want to put the entire plaintext or ciphertext in memory at once, you can use this library's streaming clients directly. The streaming clients are file-like objects, and behave exactly as you would expect a Python file object to behave, offering context manager and iteration support.
import aws_encryption_sdk
from aws_encryption_sdk.identifiers import CommitmentPolicy
import filecmp
client = aws_encryption_sdk.EncryptionSDKClient(
commitment_policy=CommitmentPolicy.FORBID_ENCRYPT_ALLOW_DECRYPT
)
kms_key_provider = aws_encryption_sdk.StrictAwsKmsMasterKeyProvider(key_ids=[
'arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:2222222222222:key/22222222-2222-2222-2222-222222222222',
'arn:aws:kms:us-east-1:3333333333333:key/33333333-3333-3333-3333-333333333333'
])
plaintext_filename = 'my-secret-data.dat'
ciphertext_filename = 'my-encrypted-data.ct'
with open(plaintext_filename, 'rb') as pt_file, open(ciphertext_filename, 'wb') as ct_file:
with client.stream(
mode='e',
source=pt_file,
key_provider=kms_key_provider
) as encryptor:
for chunk in encryptor:
ct_file.write(chunk)
new_plaintext_filename = 'my-decrypted-data.dat'
with open(ciphertext_filename, 'rb') as ct_file, open(new_plaintext_filename, 'wb') as pt_file:
with client.stream(
mode='d',
source=ct_file,
key_provider=kms_key_provider
) as decryptor:
for chunk in decryptor:
pt_file.write(chunk)
assert filecmp.cmp(plaintext_filename, new_plaintext_filename)
assert encryptor.header.encryption_context == decryptor.header.encryption_context
Adjusting the frame size can significantly improve the performance of encrypt/decrypt operations with this library.
Processing each frame in a framed message involves a certain amount of overhead. If you are encrypting a large file, increasing the frame size can offer potentially significant performance gains. We recommend that you tune these values to your use-case in order to obtain peak performance.