CA5373: Do not use obsolete key derivation function
Property | Value |
---|---|
Rule ID | CA5373 |
Title | Do not use obsolete key derivation function |
Category | Security |
Fix is breaking or non-breaking | Non-breaking |
Enabled by default in .NET 9 | No |
Cause
Cryptographically weak key derivation methods System.Security.Cryptography.PasswordDeriveBytes and/or Rfc2898DeriveBytes.CryptDeriveKey are used to generate a key.
Rule description
This rule detects the invocation of weak key derivation methods System.Security.Cryptography.PasswordDeriveBytes and Rfc2898DeriveBytes.CryptDeriveKey.
System.Security.Cryptography.PasswordDeriveBytes used a weak algorithm PBKDF1. Rfc2898DeriveBytes.CryptDeriveKey does not use iteration count and salt from the Rfc2898DeriveBytes
object, which makes it weak.
How to fix violations
Password-based key derivation should use the PBKDF2 algorithm with SHA-2 hashing. Rfc2898DeriveBytes.GetBytes can be used to achieve that.
When to suppress warnings
Suppress the warning if the risk associated with using PBKDF1 is carefully reviewed and accepted.
Suppress a warning
If you just want to suppress a single violation, add preprocessor directives to your source file to disable and then re-enable the rule.
#pragma warning disable CA5373
// The code that's violating the rule is on this line.
#pragma warning restore CA5373
To disable the rule for a file, folder, or project, set its severity to none
in the configuration file.
[*.{cs,vb}]
dotnet_diagnostic.CA5373.severity = none
For more information, see How to suppress code analysis warnings.
Pseudo-code examples
Violation
As of the time of this writing, the following pseudo-code sample illustrates the pattern detected by this rule.
using System;
using System.Security.Cryptography;
class TestClass
{
public void TestMethod(Rfc2898DeriveBytes rfc2898DeriveBytes, string algname, string alghashname, int keySize, byte[] rgbIV)
{
rfc2898DeriveBytes.CryptDeriveKey(algname, alghashname, keySize, rgbIV);
}
}
Solution
using System;
using System.Security.Cryptography;
class TestClass
{
public void TestMethod(Rfc2898DeriveBytes rfc2898DeriveBytes)
{
rfc2898DeriveBytes.GetBytes(1);
}
}