/react-native-keychain

:key: Keychain Access for React Native

Primary LanguageJavaMIT LicenseMIT

react-native-keychain

Travis npm npm

Keychain/Keystore Access for React Native

Installation

  1. Run yarn add react-native-keychain

    1 a. Only for React Native <= 0.59: $ react-native link react-native-keychain and check MainApplication.java to verify the package was added. See manual installation below if you have issues with react-native link.

  2. Run pod install in ios/ directory to install iOS dependencies.

  3. If you want to support FaceID, add a NSFaceIDUsageDescription entry in your Info.plist.

  4. Re-build your Android and iOS projects.

Usage

import * as Keychain from 'react-native-keychain';

async () => {
  const username = 'zuck';
  const password = 'poniesRgr8';

  // Store the credentials
  await Keychain.setGenericPassword(username, password);

  try {
    // Retrieve the credentials
    const credentials = await Keychain.getGenericPassword();
    if (credentials) {
      console.log(
        'Credentials successfully loaded for user ' + credentials.username
      );
    } else {
      console.log('No credentials stored');
    }
  } catch (error) {
    console.log("Keychain couldn't be accessed!", error);
  }
  await Keychain.resetGenericPassword();
};

See KeychainExample for fully working project example.

Both setGenericPassword and setInternetCredentials are limited to strings only, so if you need to store objects etc, please use JSON.stringify/JSON.parse when you store/access it.

API

setGenericPassword(username, password, [{ accessControl, accessible, accessGroup, service, securityLevel }])

Will store the username/password combination in the secure storage. Resolves to {service, storage} or rejects in case of an error. storage - is a name of used internal cipher for saving secret; service - name used for storing secret in internal storage (empty string resolved to valid default name).

getGenericPassword([{ authenticationPrompt, service }])

Will retrieve the username/password combination from the secure storage. Resolves to { username, password, service, storage } if an entry exists or false if it doesn't. It will reject only if an unexpected error is encountered like lacking entitlements or permission.

resetGenericPassword([{ service }])

Will remove the username/password combination from the secure storage. Resolves to true in case of success.

setInternetCredentials(server, username, password, [{ accessControl, accessible, accessGroup, securityLevel }])

Will store the server/username/password combination in the secure storage. Resolves to { username, password, service, storage };

hasInternetCredentials(server)

Will check if the username/password combination for server is available in the secure storage. Resolves to true if an entry exists or false if it doesn't.

getInternetCredentials(server, [{ authenticationPrompt }])

Will retrieve the server/username/password combination from the secure storage. Resolves to { username, password } if an entry exists or false if it doesn't. It will reject only if an unexpected error is encountered like lacking entitlements or permission.

resetInternetCredentials(server)

Will remove the server/username/password combination from the secure storage.

requestSharedWebCredentials() (iOS only)

Asks the user for a shared web credential. Requires additional setup both in the app and server side, see Apple documentation. Resolves to { server, username, password } if approved and false if denied and throws an error if not supported on platform or there's no shared credentials.

setSharedWebCredentials(server, username, password) (iOS only)

Sets a shared web credential. Resolves to true when successful.

canImplyAuthentication([{ authenticationType }]) (iOS only)

Inquire if the type of local authentication policy is supported on this device with the device settings the user chose. Should be used in combination with accessControl option in the setter functions. Resolves to true if supported.

getSupportedBiometryType()

Get what type of hardware biometry support the device has. Resolves to a Keychain.BIOMETRY_TYPE value when supported, otherwise null.

This method returns null, if the device haven't enrolled into fingerprint/FaceId. Even though it has hardware for it.

getSecurityLevel([{ accessControl }]) (Android only)

Get security level that is supported on the current device with the current OS. Resolves to Keychain.SECURITY_LEVEL enum value.

Options

Data Structure Properties/Fields

Key Platform Description Default
accessControl All This dictates how a keychain item may be used, see possible values in Keychain.ACCESS_CONTROL. None (iOS), BIOMETRY_ANY default for Android.
accessible iOS only This dictates when a keychain item is accessible, see possible values in Keychain.ACCESSIBLE. Keychain.ACCESSIBLE.WHEN_UNLOCKED
accessGroup iOS only In which App Group to share the keychain. Requires additional setup with entitlements. None
authenticationPrompt iOS only What to prompt the user when unlocking the keychain with biometry or device password. Authenticate to retrieve secret
authenticationType iOS only Policies specifying which forms of authentication are acceptable. Keychain.AUTHENTICATION_TYPE.DEVICE_PASSCODE_OR_BIOMETRICS
service All Reverse domain name qualifier for the service associated with password. App bundle ID
storage Android only Force specific cipher storage usage during saving the password Select best available storage
rules Android only Force following to a specific security rules Default: Keychain.RULES.AUTOMATIC_UPGRADE

Keychain.ACCESS_CONTROL enum

Key Description
USER_PRESENCE Constraint to access an item with either Touch ID or passcode.
BIOMETRY_ANY Constraint to access an item with Touch ID for any enrolled fingers.
BIOMETRY_CURRENT_SET Constraint to access an item with Touch ID for currently enrolled fingers.
DEVICE_PASSCODE Constraint to access an item with a passcode.
APPLICATION_PASSWORD Constraint to use an application-provided password for data encryption key generation.
BIOMETRY_ANY_OR_DEVICE_PASSCODE Constraint to access an item with Touch ID for any enrolled fingers or passcode.
BIOMETRY_CURRENT_SET_OR_DEVICE_PASSCODE Constraint to access an item with Touch ID for currently enrolled fingers or passcode.

Note #1: BIOMETRY_ANY, BIOMETRY_CURRENT_SET, BIOMETRY_ANY_OR_DEVICE_PASSCODE, BIOMETRY_CURRENT_SET_OR_DEVICE_PASSCODE - recognized by Android as a requirement for Biometric enabled storage (Till we got a better implementation);

Note #2: For Android we support only two states: Default (use the best available secured storage) and Fingerprint (use only biometric protected storage);

Refs:

Keychain.ACCESSIBLE enum

Key Description
WHEN_UNLOCKED The data in the keychain item can be accessed only while the device is unlocked by the user.
AFTER_FIRST_UNLOCK The data in the keychain item cannot be accessed after a restart until the device has been unlocked once by the user.
ALWAYS The data in the keychain item can always be accessed regardless of whether the device is locked.
WHEN_PASSCODE_SET_THIS_DEVICE_ONLY The data in the keychain can only be accessed when the device is unlocked. Only available if a passcode is set on the device. Items with this attribute never migrate to a new device.
WHEN_UNLOCKED_THIS_DEVICE_ONLY The data in the keychain item can be accessed only while the device is unlocked by the user. Items with this attribute do not migrate to a new device.
AFTER_FIRST_UNLOCK_THIS_DEVICE_ONLY The data in the keychain item cannot be accessed after a restart until the device has been unlocked once by the user. Items with this attribute never migrate to a new device.
ALWAYS_THIS_DEVICE_ONLY The data in the keychain item can always be accessed regardless of whether the device is locked. Items with this attribute never migrate to a new device.

Refs:

Keychain.AUTHENTICATION_TYPE enum

Key Description
DEVICE_PASSCODE_OR_BIOMETRICS Device owner is going to be authenticated by biometry or device passcode.
BIOMETRICS Device owner is going to be authenticated using a biometric method (Touch ID or Face ID).

Refs:

Keychain.BIOMETRY_TYPE enum

Key Description
TOUCH_ID Device supports authentication with Touch ID. (iOS only)
FACE_ID Device supports authentication with Face ID. (iOS only)
FINGERPRINT Device supports authentication with Fingerprint. (Android only)

Refs:

Keychain.SECURITY_LEVEL enum (Android only)

If set, securityLevel parameter specifies minimum security level that the encryption key storage should guarantee for storing credentials to succeed.

Key Description
ANY no security guarantees needed (default value); Credentials can be stored in FB Secure Storage;
SECURE_SOFTWARE requires for the key to be stored in the Android Keystore, separate from the encrypted data;
SECURE_HARDWARE requires for the key to be stored on a secure hardware (Trusted Execution Environment or Secure Environment). Read this article for more information.

Keychain.STORAGE_TYPE enum (Android only)

Key Description
FB Facebook compatibility cipher
AES Encryptions without human interaction.
RSA Encryption with biometrics.

Keychain.RULES enum (Android only)

Key Description
NONE No rules. Be dummy, developer control everything
AUTOMATIC_UPGRADE Upgrade secret to the best available storage as soon as it is available and user request secret extraction. Upgrade not applied till we request the secret.

Important Behavior

Rule 1: Automatic Security Level Upgrade

As a rule library try to apply the best possible encryption and access method for storing secrets.

What does it mean in practical use case?

Scenario #1: User has a new phone and run on it application with this module and store secret on device. Several days later user configured biometrics on the device and run application again. When user will try to access the secret, library will detect security enhancement and will upgrade secret storage to the best possible.


Q: What will happens if user disable/drop biometrics usage?

A: User will lost ability to extract secret from storage. On re-enable biometrics access to the secret will be possible to access again.


Q: Is it possible any automatic downgrading?

A: From security perspective any Automatic downgrading is treated as "a loss of the trust" point. Developer should implement own logic to allow downgrade and deal with "security loss". (My recommendation - never do that!)


Q: How to disable automatic upgrade?

A: Do call getGenericPassword({ ...otherProps, rules: "none" }) with extra property rules set to none string value.


Q: How to force a specific level of encryption during saving the secret?

A: Do call setGenericPassword({ ...otherProps, storage: "AES" }) with forced storage.

Note: attempt to force storage RSA when biometrics is not available will force code to reject call with errors specific to device biometric configuration state.

Manual Installation

iOS

Option: Manually

  • Right click on Libraries, select Add files to "…" and select node_modules/react-native-keychain/RNKeychain.xcodeproj
  • Select your project and under Build Phases -> Link Binary With Libraries, press the + and select libRNKeychain.a.
  • make sure pod 'RNKeychain' is not in your Podfile

Option: With CocoaPods

Add the following to your Podfile and run pod update:

pod 'RNKeychain', :path => '../node_modules/react-native-keychain'

Enable Keychain Sharing entitlement for iOS 10+

For iOS 10 you'll need to enable the Keychain Sharing entitlement in the Capabilities section of your build target. (See screenshot). Otherwise you'll experience the error shown below.

screen shot 2016-09-16 at 20 56 33

Error: {
  code = "-34018";
  domain = NSOSStatusErrorDomain;
  message = "The operation couldn\U2019t be completed. (OSStatus error -34018.)";
}

Android

Option: Manually

  • Edit android/settings.gradle to look like this (without the +):
rootProject.name = 'MyApp'

include ':app'

+ include ':react-native-keychain'
+ project(':react-native-keychain').projectDir = new File(rootProject.projectDir, '../node_modules/react-native-keychain/android')
  • Edit android/app/build.gradle (note: app folder) to look like this:
apply plugin: 'com.android.application'

android {
  ...
}

dependencies {
  implementation fileTree(dir: 'libs', include: ['*.jar'])
  implementation 'com.android.support:appcompat-v7:23.0.1'
  implementation 'com.facebook.react:react-native:0.19.+'
+ implementation project(':react-native-keychain')
}
  • Edit your MainApplication.java (deep in android/app/src/main/java/...) to look like this (note two places to edit):
package com.myapp;

+ import com.oblador.keychain.KeychainPackage;

....

public class MainActivity extends extends ReactActivity {

  @Override
  protected List<ReactPackage> getPackages() {
      return Arrays.<ReactPackage>asList(
              new MainReactPackage(),
+             new KeychainPackage()
      );
  }
  ...
}

Proguard Rules

On Android builds that use proguard (like release), you may see the following error:

RNKeychainManager: no keychain entry found for service:
JNI DETECTED ERROR IN APPLICATION: JNI FindClass called with pending exception java.lang.NoSuchFieldError: no "J" field "mCtxPtr" in class "Lcom/facebook/crypto/cipher/NativeGCMCipher;" or its superclasses

If so, add a proguard rule in proguard-rules.pro:

-keep class com.facebook.crypto.** {
   *;
}

Unit Testing with Jest

The keychain manager relies on interfacing with the native application itself. As such, it does not successfully compile and run in the context of a Jest test, where there is no underlying app to communicate with. To be able to call the JS functions exposed by this module in a unit test, you should mock them in one of the following two ways:

First, let's create a mock object for the module:

const keychainMock = {
  SECURITY_LEVEL_ANY: "MOCK_SECURITY_LEVEL_ANY",
  SECURITY_LEVEL_SECURE_SOFTWARE: "MOCK_SECURITY_LEVEL_SECURE_SOFTWARE",
  SECURITY_LEVEL_SECURE_HARDWARE: "MOCK_SECURITY_LEVEL_SECURE_HARDWARE",
  setGenericPassword: jest.fn().mockResolvedValue(),
  getGenericPassword: jest.fn().mockResolvedValue(),
  resetGenericPassword: jest.fn().mockResolvedValue(),
  ...
}

Using a Jest __mocks__ Directory

  1. Read the jest docs for initial setup

  2. Create a react-native-keychain folder in the __mocks__ directory and add index.js file in it. It should contain the following code:

export default keychainMock;

Using a Jest Setup File

  1. In your Jest config, add a reference to a setup file

  2. Inside your setup file, set up mocking for this package:

jest.mock('react-native-keychain', () => keychainMock);

Now your tests should run successfully, though note that writing and reading to the keychain will be effectively a no-op.

Notes

Android Notes

The module will automatically use the appropriate CipherStorage implementation based on API level:

  • API level 16-22 will en/de crypt using Facebook Conceal
  • API level 23+ will en/de crypt using Android Keystore

Encrypted data is stored in SharedPreferences.

The setInternetCredentials(server, username, password) call will be resolved as call to setGenericPassword(username, password, server). Use the server argument to distinguish between multiple entries.

iOS Notes

If you need Keychain Sharing in your iOS extension, make sure you use the same App Group and Keychain Sharing group names in your Main App and your Share Extension. To then share the keychain between the Main App and Share Extension, use the accessGroup and service option on setGenericPassword and getGenericPassword, like so: getGenericPassword({ accessGroup: 'group.appname', service: 'com.example.appname' })

Refs:

macOS Catalyst

This package supports macOS Catalyst.

Security

On API levels that do not support Android keystore, Facebook Conceal is used to en/decrypt stored data. The encrypted data is then stored in SharedPreferences. Since Conceal itself stores its encryption key in SharedPreferences, it follows that if the device is rooted (or if an attacker can somehow access the filesystem), the key can be obtained and the stored data can be decrypted. Therefore, on such a device, the conceal encryption is only an obscurity. On API level 23+ the key is stored in the Android Keystore, which makes the key non-exportable and therefore makes the entire process more secure. Follow best practices and do not store user credentials on a device. Instead use tokens or other forms of authentication and re-ask for user credentials before performing sensitive operations.

Android Security Framework

Maintainers


Joel Arvidsson

Author

Vojtech Novak

Maintainer

Pelle Stenild Coltau

Maintainer

Oleksandr Kucherenko

Contributor

For Developers / Contributors

License

MIT © Joel Arvidsson 2016-2020