--- NOT PRODUCTION READY ---
Conversion of cryptographic keys in Multikey format to and from WebCrypto and JWK. The conversions are available for the three EC curves that are defined for Verifiable Credentials: ECDSA with P-256 and P-384 and EDDSA.
(This is really a proof-of-concept implementation. It shows that such conversion can indeed be done, which is an important in proving the practical usability of multikeys. It would need extra tests using external Multikeys.)
The package has been written in TypeScript+Node.js. (There is also a Typescript+Deno version.)
For a more detailed documentation, see the code documentation, generated by typedoc. A short set of examples may help.
The interface makes use of the JsonWebKey
, CryptoKeyPair
, and CryptoKey
types, which are global types in Node.js (or Deno), defined by WebCrypto. The following types are also exported by the package:
export interface JWKKeyPair {
publicKey: JsonWebKey;
privateKey?: JsonWebKey;
}
export type Multibase = string;
// The field names in `Multikey` reflect the Multikey specification.
export interface Multikey {
publicKeyMultibase: Multibase;
secretKeyMultibase?: Multibase;
}
import * as mkc from "multikey-webcrypto";
// Get a JWK pair
const jwk_pair: mkc.JWKKeyPair = {
publicKey: your_jwk_public_key,
privateKey: your_jwk_private_key,
};
const mk_pair: mkc.Multikey = mkc.JWKToMultikey(jwk_pair);
// mk_pair.publicKeyMultibase and mk_pair.secretKeyMultibase provide the converted values
// Convert the multikey back to jwk
const generated_jwk_pair: mkc.JWKKeyPair = mkc.multikeyToJWK(mk_pair);
In all cases the secret key may be missing or set to undefined
, so that only the public key is converted. The same can be achieved if the functions are used with an overloaded signature:
import * as mkc from "multikey-webcrypto";
const mk: mkc.Multibase = mkc.JWKToMultikey(your_jwk_public_key);
// mk the encoded value
// Convert the multikey back to jwk
const generated_jwk_public_key: mkc.JWKKeyPair = mkc.multikeyToJWK(mk);
The interface is similar to the JWK case. The only major difference is that functions are asynchronous (the reason is that WebCrypto implementations are asynchronous).
The simplest approach is to use the await
constructs in the code:
import * as mkc from "multikey-webcrypto";
// Convert a JWK Pair to a Multikey.
// Note: the `CryptoKeyPair` interface is defined by the WebCrypto implementations, not by this package
const crypto_pair: CryptoKeyPair = {
publicKey: your_web_crypto_public_key,
privateKey: your_web_crypto_secret_key,
};
const mk_pair: Multikey = await mkc.cryptoToMultikey(crypto_pair);
// mk_pair.publicKeyMultibase and mk_pair.secretKeyMultibase provide the right values
// Convert the multikey back to jwk
const generated_crypto_pair: mkc.JWKKeyPair = await mkc.multikeyToCrypto(mk_pair);
Similarly to the JWK case, handling public keys only can be done with the aliased versions of the same functions:
import * as mkc from "multikey-webcrypto";
const mk: Multibase = mkc.cryptoToMultikey(your_web_crypto_public_key);
// mk the encoded value
// Convert the multikey back to jwk
const generated_crypto_key: JWKKeyPair = mkc.multikeyToJWK(mk);