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Chapter 66. Jasypt
Jasypt component
Available as of Camel 2.5
Jasypt is a simplified encryption library which makes encryption and decryption easy. Camel integrates with Jasypt to allow sensitive information in Properties files to be encrypted. By dropping
camel-jasypt
on the classpath those encrypted values will automatic be decrypted on-the-fly by Camel. This ensures that human eyes can't easily spot sensitive information such as usernames and passwords.
Maven users will need to add the following dependency to their
pom.xml
for this component:
<dependency> <groupId>org.apache.camel</groupId> <artifactId>camel-jasypt</artifactId> <version>x.x.x</version> <!-- use the same version as your Camel core version --> </dependency>
Tooling
The Jasypt component provides a little command line tooling to encrypt or decrypt values.
The console output the syntax and which options it provides:
Apache Camel Jasypt takes the following options -h or -help = Displays the help screen -c or -command <command> = Command either encrypt or decrypt -p or -password <password> = Password to use -i or -input <input> = Text to encrypt or decrypt -a or -algorithm <algorithm> = Optional algorithm to use
For example to encrypt the value
tiger
you run with the following parameters. In the apache camel kit, you cd into the lib folder and run the following java cmd, where <CAMEL_HOME>
is where you have downloaded and extract the Camel distribution.
$ cd <CAMEL_HOME>/lib $ java -jar camel-jasypt-2.5.0.jar -c encrypt -p secret -i tiger
Which outputs the following result
Encrypted text: qaEEacuW7BUti8LcMgyjKw==
This means the encrypted representation
qaEEacuW7BUti8LcMgyjKw==
can be decrypted back to tiger
if you know the master password which was secret
. If you run the tool again then the encrypted value will return a different result. But decrypting the value will always return the correct original value.
So you can test it by running the tooling using the following parameters:
$ cd <CAMEL_HOME>/lib $ java -jar camel-jasypt-2.5.0.jar -c decrypt -p secret -i qaEEacuW7BUti8LcMgyjKw==
Which outputs the following result:
Decrypted text: tiger
The idea is then to use those encrypted values in your Properties files. Notice how the password value is encrypted and the value has the tokens surrounding
ENC(value here)
# refer to a mock endpoint name by that encrypted password cool.result=mock:{{cool.password}} # here is a password which is encrypted cool.password=ENC(bsW9uV37gQ0QHFu7KO03Ww==)
Tooling dependencies for Camel 2.5 and 2.6
The tooling requires the following JARs in the classpath, which has been enlisted in the
MANIFEST.MF
file of camel-jasypt
with optional/
as prefix. Hence why the java cmd above can pickup the needed JARs from the Apache Distribution in the optional
directory.
jasypt-1.6.jar commons-lang-2.4.jar commons-codec-1.4.jar icu4j-4.0.1.jar
Java 1.5 users
The
icu4j-4.0.1.jar
is only needed when running on JDK 1.5.
This JAR is not distributed by Apache Camel and you have to download it manually and copy it to the
lib/optional
directory of the Camel distribution. You can download it from Apache Central Maven repo.
Tooling dependencies for Camel 2.7 or better
Jasypt 1.7 onwards is now fully standalone, so no additional JARs are needed.
URI Options
The options below are exclusive for the Jasypt component.
Name | Default Value | Type | Description |
---|---|---|---|
password
|
null
|
String
|
Specifies the master password to use for decrypting. This option is mandatory. See below for more details. |
algorithm
|
null
|
String
|
Name of an optional algorithm to use. |
Protecting the master password
The master password used by Jasypt must be provided, so its capable of decrypting the values. However having this master password out in the opening may not be an ideal solution. Therefore you could for example provided it as a JVM system property or as a OS environment setting. If you decide to do so then the
password
option supports prefixes which dictates this. sysenv:
means to lookup the OS system environment with the given key. sys:
means to lookup a JVM system property.
For example you could provided the password before you start the application
$ export CAMEL_ENCRYPTION_PASSWORD=secret
Then start the application, such as running the start script.
When the application is up and running you can unset the environment
$ unset CAMEL_ENCRYPTION_PASSWORD
The
password
option is then a matter of defining as follows: password=sysenv:CAMEL_ENCRYPTION_PASSWORD
.
Example with Java DSL
In Java DSL you need to configure Jasypt as a
JasyptPropertiesParser
instance and set it on the Properties component as show below:
// create the jasypt properties parser JasyptPropertiesParser jasypt = new JasyptPropertiesParser(); // and set the master password jasypt.setPassword("secret"); // create the properties component PropertiesComponent pc = new PropertiesComponent(); pc.setLocation("classpath:org/apache/camel/component/jasypt/myproperties.properties"); // and use the jasypt properties parser so we can decrypt values pc.setPropertiesParser(jasypt); // add properties component to camel context context.addComponent("properties", pc);
The properties file
myproperties.properties
then contain the encrypted value, such as shown below. Notice how the password value is encrypted and the value has the tokens surrounding ENC(value here)
# refer to a mock endpoint name by that encrypted password cool.result=mock:{{cool.password}} # here is a password which is encrypted cool.password=ENC(bsW9uV37gQ0QHFu7KO03Ww==)
Example with Spring XML
In Spring XML you need to configure the
JasyptPropertiesParser
which is shown below. Then the Camel Properties component is told to use jasypt
as the properties parser, which means Jasypt have its chance to decrypt values looked up in the properties.
<!-- define the jasypt properties parser with the given password to be used --> <bean id="jasypt" class="org.apache.camel.component.jasypt.JasyptPropertiesParser"> <property name="password" value="secret"/> </bean> <!-- define the camel properties component --> <bean id="properties" class="org.apache.camel.component.properties.PropertiesComponent"> <!-- the properties file is in the classpath --> <property name="location" value="classpath:org/apache/camel/component/jasypt/myproperties.properties"/> <!-- and let it leverage the jasypt parser --> <property name="propertiesParser" ref="jasypt"/> </bean>
The Properties component can also be inlined inside the
<camelContext>
tag which is shown below. Notice how we use the propertiesParserRef
attribute to refer to Jasypt.
<!-- define the jasypt properties parser with the given password to be used --> <bean id="jasypt" class="org.apache.camel.component.jasypt.JasyptPropertiesParser"> <!-- password is mandatory, you can prefix it with sysenv: or sys: to indicate it should use an OS environment or JVM system property value, so you dont have the master password defined here --> <property name="password" value="secret"/> </bean> <camelContext xmlns="http://camel.apache.org/schema/spring"> <!-- define the camel properties placeholder, and let it leverage jasypt --> <propertyPlaceholder id="properties" location="classpath:org/apache/camel/component/jasypt/myproperties.properties" propertiesParserRef="jasypt"/> <route> <from uri="direct:start"/> <to uri="{{cool.result}}"/> </route> </camelContext>
See Also
- Encrypted passwords in ActiveMQ - ActiveMQ has a similar feature as this
camel-jasypt
component