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Node API
The CyberChef Node.js API provides most of CyberChef's operations with a Node.js-friendly interface, plus some other helpful functions.
For a taste of what operations are available in CyberChef, check out the live demo.
- (Almost) all operations in the CyberChef web tool (see exclusions)
- ES6
import
and commonJSrequire
capability - Configurable, composable operations
- Import and run saved recipes from the CyberChef web tool with
chef.bake
npm install --save cyberchef
import chef from "cyberchef";
chef.fromBase64("U28gbG9uZyBhbmQgdGhhbmtzIGZvciBhbGwgdGhlIGZpc2gu").toString();
// => "So long and thanks for all the fish."
import chef from "cyberchef";
const aestTime = chef.translateDateTimeFormat("15/06/2015 20:45:00", {
outputTimezone: "Australia/Queensland"
}).toString();
// => "Tuesday 16th June 2015 06:45:00 +10:00 AEST"
import chef from "cyberchef";
console.log(chef.parseIPv6Address("2001:0000:4136:e378:8000:63bf:3fff:fdd2"));
/** =>
Longhand: 2001:0000:4136:e378:8000:63bf:3fff:fdd2
Shorthand: 2001:0:4136:e378:8000:63bf:3fff:fdd2
Teredo tunneling IPv6 address detected
Server IPv4 address: 65.54.227.120
Client IPv4 address: 192.0.2.45
Client UDP port: 40000
Flags:
Cone: 1 (Client is behind a cone NAT)
R: 0
Random1: 0000
UG: 00
Random2: 00000000
This is a valid Teredo address which complies with RFC 4380, however it does not comply with RFC 5991 (Teredo Security Updates) as there are no randomised bits in the flag field.
Teredo prefix range: 2001::/32 */
import chef from "cyberchef";
const message = new chef.Dish(`00000000 1f 8b 08 00 12 bc f3 57 00 ff 0d c7 c1 09 00 20 |.....¼óW.ÿ.ÇÁ.. |
00000010 08 05 d0 55 fe 04 2d d3 04 1f ca 8c 44 21 5b ff |..ÐUþ.-Ó..Ê.D![ÿ|
00000020 60 c7 d7 03 16 be 40 1f 78 4a 3f 09 89 0b 9a 7d |\`Ç×..¾@.xJ?....}|
00000030 4e c8 4e 6d 05 1e 01 8b 4c 24 00 00 00 |NÈNm....L$...|`)
.apply(chef.fromHexdump)
.apply(chef.gunzip)
.toString();
// =>"So long and thanks for all the fish." //true
import chef from "cyberchef";
fs.writeFileSync("test.txt", chef.toHex("hello").toString());
const file = new chef.Dish(fs.readFileSync("test.txt"));
console.log(file) ;
// => 68 65 6c 6c 6f
file.apply(chef.fromHex).toString()
// => hello;
You can import the default chef
object:
import chef from "cyberchef";
chef.toMorseCode("hello").toString();
// => .... . .-.. .-.. ---
You can import specific operations Using a deep import specifier:
import { toHex } from "cyberchef/src/node/index.mjs";
toHex("Menu a la carte");
// => 4d 65 6e 75 20 61 20 6c 61 20 63 61 72 74 65
const chef = require("cyberchef");
chef.toKebabCase("Large chicken shish, garlic mayo, no salad.").toString();
// => large-chicken-shish-garlic-mayo-no-salad
Operation names in the CyberChef API are camelCase versions of the operations on the web app, except for when the operation name begins with more than one uppercase character. For example, "Zlib Deflate" becomes
zlibDeflate
, but "SHA2" stays asSHA2
.
You can use operations with default config, or define your own arguments.
To see what values an argument accepts, either refer to the UI or use
chef.help(<operation name>)
and inspect the properties.
Operation with default :
chef.toCharcode("Service!") // Space delimiter, Base 16
// => 53 65 72 76 69 63 65 21
Configure . Arg keys are camelCase versions of those displayed on the CyberChef UI.
chef.toCharcode("Service!", {
base: 8
// delimiter stays as default
});
// => 123 145 162 166 151 143 145 41
Where arguments are options, they are case sensitive. It is recommended to use the `` property of the operation to access options. For example:
// OK
chef.convertDistance(122, {
inputUnits: "Kilometers (km)",
outputUnits: "Cars (4m)"
});
// => 30500
// Less error-prone
chef.convertDistance(122, {
inputUnits: chef.convertDistance.args.inputUnits.options[5],
outputUnits: chef.convertDistance.args.outputUnits.options[17]
})
// => 30500
// Invalid outputUnits value
chef.convertDistance(122, {
inputUnits: "Kilometers (km)",
outputUnits: "cars"
});
// => NaN
Operations accept a wide range of input types, such as strings, numbers, byteArrays and ArrayBuffers. For most cases, you can throw any input type at an operation and it will deal with it.
If the given input to an operation is not the operation's input type, it will attempt to convert the input before operating on it. For example, toBase32
's input type is byteArray
, so if you input a string, it converts that string into a byte array before running the operation.
Files from fs
can be read into appropriate functions in chef. They are converted into ArrayBuffer
s.
JavaScript objects are accepted as input to operations that expect JSON, for example, JSONBeautify
.
Operation arguments are the second argument in an operation call. The best way to see an operation's arguments is to use chef.help(<argument name here>)
or consult the UI.
Some operation arguments have default values. Some, like AESEncrypt
for example, will not work without specifying some arguments.
Declare these arguments as key value pairs, where the key is the argument name.
Example: toBase
(Number)
chef.toBase("45", {
radix: 8
})
// => 55
Example: toBase32
(binaryString)
chef.toBase32("diamond", {
alphabet: "A-Z",
});
// => MRUWCLPNZSA
These are arguments represented as dropdowns in the UI. Here the string value must be an exact match for the option string. For convenience, it is recommended to use the `` property of the operation.
Example: toDecimal
chef.toDecimal("Hello", {
delimiter: "Colon", // note case sensitive
});
// => 72:101:108:108:111
// Equivalent and less error-prone:
chef.toDecimal("Hello", {
delimiter: chef.toDecimal.args.delimiter.options[3],
});
// => 72:101:108:108:111
ToggleStrings are arguments where there is a value and an option in one argument. For example, the ADD
operation has a key
argument where you can also select the encoding for the key.
Example: ADD
with default encoding
chef.ADD("abc", {
key: "123",
});
Example: ADD
with explicit encoding. Note the property toggleValues
rather than options
in the args
object.
chef.ADD("abc", {
key: {
string: "123",
option: chef.ADD.args.key.toggleValues[4],
},
});
Operations return a Dish
type. Dish
has some functions and behaviours that make it easy to use. Most of the time you can ignore this and treat it as a string or a number.
Logging to the console, string coercion and number coercion work as you would expect:
const result = chef.toBase32(32).apply(chef.fromBase32);
// Logging to console
console.log(result); // => 32
// Number coercion
assert.equal(result + 3, 35); // OK
// String coercion
assert.equal(result.toString(), "32"); // OK
The value
property of an operation result will give the raw result. For example:
// dropBytes has output type ArrayBuffer
chef.dropBytes("I'd love a byte").value
// => ArrayBuffer { byteLength: 10 }
Calling toString
will give a string representation of the result.
Node.js does not have a File
API, so for operations that return a File
, we use a shim which creates an object with the same shape as the File
Web API. You can access the underlying data if this file type with file.data
, which will be an ArrayBuffer
.
Operations can be composed using apply
. This example performs ROT13 substitution followed by conversion to Hex on some input:
chef.ROT13("Medium rare, please.").apply(chef.toHex).toString();
// => 5a 72 71 76 68 7a 20 65 6e 65 72 2c 20 63 79 72 6e 66 72 2e
The best way to browse operations is to run Cyberchef, either locally or via the demo.
Most CyberChef operations are included in the Node.js API, with the exception of Flow Control operations. Excluded operations will throw an ExcludedOperationError if called.
For a full list of excluded operations, see the source files under src/node/config/excludedOperations
.
The chef
object has some other helpful functions.
The help
function returns the description of an operation. Use this to see what input, output and arguments an operation has.
chef.help(chef.toBase32);
/**
[{ module: 'Default',
description: 'Base32 is a notation for encoding arbitrary byte data using a restricted set of symbols that can be conveniently used by humans and processed by computers. It uses a smaller set of characters than Base64, usually the uppercase alphabet and the numbers 2 to 7.',
inputType: 'byteArray',
outputType: 'string',
flowControl: false,
:
[ { name: 'Alphabet',
type: 'binaryString',
value: 'A-Z2-7=',
toggleValues: [] } ],
name: 'To Base32' }]
*/
help
also accepts the name of an operation as a string, ignoring case and whitespace:
chef.help("to base 32") // OK
chef.help("tobase32") // OK
chef.help("toBase32") // OK
If there is more than one match for the given search term, help
will return multiple matches. It searches in the operation name and the description field, prioritising matches in the operation name.
bake
is useful for building "recipes" - chains of operations to apply to some input, in order. bake
accepts operations in multiple ways. It always returns a Dish
object.
One operation, no arguments
chef.bake("I'll have the cod.", chef.toBase64);
// => SSdsbCBoYXZlIHRoZSBjb2Qu
One operation by name
chef.bake("I'll have the cod.", "to base 64");
// => SSdsbCBoYXZlIHRoZSBjb2Qu
Multiple operations, by name or by function (default arguments)
chef.bake("I'll have the cod", [chef.toBase64, "sha1"]);
// => f20135964d60f5fb66f971f5ee33d8395d1f90bf
One operation, with custom arguments
chef.bake("I'll have the salmon.", {
op: chef.toBase64,
args: {
alphabet: "A-Z",
},
});
// => SSCBYXZIHRZSBYW
Multiple operations with custom arguments
chef.bake("I'll have the salmon.", [
{
op: chef.toBase64,
args: {
alphabet: "A-Z"
}
},
{
op: chef.sort,
args: {
delimiter: "Nothing (separate chars)",
reverse: true,
}
}
]);
// => ZZYYXWSSSRIHCBB
chef.bake
is compatible with the JSON format from saved recipes in the CyberChef web UI. Therefore, you can use the UI to figure out your recipe, and then export it to use in the Node.js API.
// taken from CyberChef web export
const recipe = [
{ "op": "To Base64",
"args": ["A-Z"] },
{ "op": "Sort",
"args": ["Nothing (separate chars)", true, "Alphabetical (case sensitive)"] }
];
chef.bake("I'll have the salmon.", recipe);
// => // => ZZYYXWSSSRIHCBB
All operations in CyberChef return the Dish
type. This allows operations to be composed. You can also create a new Dish
with some input and then perform operations on it.
Example:
import chef from "cyberchef";
const dish = new chef.Dish("hello");
dish.apply(chef.toBase32).toString();
// => NBSWY3DP
For more information on Dish
, see the Dish
API below
Dish will coerce to a String or an Number where appropriate.
Empty Dish contructor
const dish = new chef.Dish();
dish.value; // => ArrayBuffer {byteLength: 0}
dish.type; // => 4
Dish with type implied from input
const dish = new chef.Dish("input");
dish.value; // => "input"
dish.type; // => 1 (string)
Dish with explicit type declaration
const dish = new chef.Dish(2, "number");
dish.value; // => 2
dish.type; // => 2 (number)
Dish will not perform coercion on construction
const dish = new chef.Dish("2", "number");
// Data is not a valid number: "2"
Coerce dish value to another type
const dish = new chef.Dish("42");
dish.type; // => 1
dish.get("number") // => 42
dish.type; // => 2
Immutably present dish value as another type with presentAs
const dish = new chef.Dish("42");
dish.type; // => 1
dish.presentAs("number") // => 42
dish.type; // => 1
Dish values get coerced to String on console.log
or toString
const result = chef.ADD("some input", {
key: "65 66 67 68",
});
// ADD output type is byteArray.
result.value // => [ 216, 213, 212, 205, 133, 207, 213, 216, 218, 218 ]
console.log(result); /* => ØÕÔÍ�ÏÕØÚÚ */
result.toString(); /* => ØÕÔÍ�ÏÕØÚÚ */
Perform operations straight off a Dish:
const result = new chef.Dish("Yum").apply(chef.toBinary);
result.value; // => 01011001 01110101 01101101
result.type; // => 1 (string)
The types for Dish
are:
- byteArray
- string
- number
- html
- ArrayBuffer
- BigNumber
- JSON
To see what features and fixes are in the pipeline, refer to the repository issues.
To run the repl, install CyberChef, run npm run repl
.
Returns configuration for operations matching the search term.
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
searchTerm | String or operation | Either a string to search for, like "base 64", or an operation. |
chef.help("md5")
/** =>
1 result found.
[ { module: 'Crypto',
description:
'MD5 (Message-Digest 5) is a widely used hash function. It has been used in a variety of security applications and is also commonly used to check the integrity of files.<br><br>However, MD5 is not collision resistant and it isn\'t suitable for applications like SSL/TLS certificates or digital signatures that rely on this property.',
infoURL: 'https://wikipedia.org/wiki/MD5',
inputType: 'ArrayBuffer',
outputType: 'string',
flowControl: false,
manualBake: false,
: [],
name: 'MD5' } ]
*/
Class which is used to return operation results, or instantiate your own for operation composition
Also exposed as a top level export Dish
.
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
inputOrDish=null |
Buffer, ArrayBuffer, String, Number, Object or Dish | The input on which you want to operate, or a Dish instance to clone a dish. If null , the dish's value and type properties are set to [] and 0 respectively. |
type=null |
String or Dish enum |
The type that you want the input coerced to. |
const dish = new chef.Dish("hello");
dish.value; // "hello"
dish.type; // 1, signifying string type enum.
// Explicitly declare type
const dish = new chef.Dish(5, "number");
dish.value; // 5
dish.type; // 2;
Perform an array of operations, in order, on the given input. Return a Dish
of the result.
Useful for consuming recipes saved from the web version of CyberChef.
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
input | any | The input for the recipe. |
recipeConfig |
String or operation or an object with properties op and `` (see CyberChef save recipe JSON format), or an Array of one or more of these types. |
A description of which operations, with given arguments, to perform on the input. |
// Single operation input
chef.bake("Apple pie", chef.toBase32).toString();
// => IFYHA3DFEBYGSZI=
// Single operation name
chef.bake("Apple pie", "to base 32").toString();
// => IFYHA3DFEBYGSZI=
// Single operation object with
chef.bake("Apple pie", {
op: chef.toBase32, // string would work here too
: {
alphabet: "A-Z"
}
}).toString();
// => IFYHADFEBYGSZI
// Multiple operations
chef.bake("Apple pie", [
chef.toBase32,
{
op: "from base 32",
: {
alphabet: "A-Z2-7=",
},
}
]).toString();
// => Apple pie
Map from string representation of type to the type enum.
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
typeStr | String | String representation of type |
Type | Description |
---|---|
Number | The type enum for the string. |
chef.Dish.typeEnum("bytearray");
// => 0
Get string representation of Dish type enum.
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
typeEnum | Number | Dish type enum |
Type | Description |
---|---|
String | The string representation of the Dish type enum. |
chef.Dish.enumLookup(Dish.JSON);
// => "JSON"
Construct a new Dish.
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
inputOrDish | any or Dish instance |
The input for the recipe. Input a Dish to clone it. Accepts object of shape {input: "a", value: "b"} or just input. |
type | String or Number | type enum or string representation of type. |
// Empty Dish constructor
const dish = new chef.Dish();
// String type dish (implied)
const dish = new chef.Dish("some input");
// Number type dish (explicit)
const dish = new chef.Dish(460, "number");
// Dish from another dish. Clones it.
const secondDish = new chef.Dish(dish);
A method for chaining operations. Run the given operation with the dish as the input. A new dish is returned and the original is not changed.
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
operation | Operation | Operation to run with dish as input |
=null | Object | Operation arguments |
// Operation with default arguments
const dish = new chef.Dish(5, "number");
const result = dish.apply(chef.toBase32);
// Operation with custom arguments
const base64 = dish.apply(chef.toBase64, {
alphabet: "A-Z",
});
Coerce the dish to a different type. Mutable.
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
type | String or Number | Type enum or string representation of type to convert to |
Type | Description |
---|---|
any | The value of the dish in after being coerced to the new type. |
const dish = new Dish("360");
dish.type; // => 1 (string)
const asNumber = dish.get("number");
asNumber; // => 360
dish.type; // => 2 (number)
return the dish value as another type, without changing the dish.
Same arguments as dish.get
.
Get the current dish value as a string. Does not change the dish.
Sets the data value and type and then validates them.
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
value | * | new dish value |
type | String or Dish enum |
The data type of value. See Dish enums. |
const dish = new Dish()
dish.set("this is the value", "string"); // ok
dish.set("this has invalid type", "number") // throws Error.
Type | Description |
---|---|
boolean | whether the current dish config is valid. |
Calculate the size of the dish.
Type | Description |
---|---|
Number | A representation of the size of the dish value. Calculated in different ways depending on the type. |
Clone the dish.
Type | Description |
---|---|
Dish | The cloned dish. |
The Dish enums are there to describe the Dish types.
Dish.BYTE_ARRAY = 0;
Dish.STRING = 1;
Dish.NUMBER = 2;
Dish.HTML = 3;
Dish.ARRAY_BUFFER = 4;
Dish.BIG_NUMBER = 5;
Dish.JSON = 6;
Dish.FILE = 7;
Dish.LIST_FILE = 8;