The trick is to use MemoryStream.ToArray()
.
I also changed your code so that it uses the CryptoStream
to Write, in both encrypting and decrypting. And you don't need to call CryptoStream.FlushFinalBlock()
explicitly, because you have it in a using()
statement, and that flush will happen on Dispose()
. The following works for me.
byte[] rawPlaintext = System.Text.Encoding.Unicode.GetBytes("This is all clear now!");
using (Aes aes = new AesManaged())
{
aes.Padding = PaddingMode.PKCS7;
aes.KeySize = 128; // in bits
aes.Key = new byte[128/8]; // 16 bytes for 128 bit encryption
aes.IV = new byte[128/8]; // AES needs a 16-byte IV
// Should set Key and IV here. Good approach: derive them from
// a password via Cryptography.Rfc2898DeriveBytes
byte[] cipherText= null;
byte[] plainText= null;
using (MemoryStream ms = new MemoryStream())
{
using (CryptoStream cs = new CryptoStream(ms, aes.CreateEncryptor(), CryptoStreamMode.Write))
{
cs.Write(rawPlaintext, 0, rawPlaintext.Length);
}
cipherText= ms.ToArray();
}
using (MemoryStream ms = new MemoryStream())
{
using (CryptoStream cs = new CryptoStream(ms, aes.CreateDecryptor(), CryptoStreamMode.Write))
{
cs.Write(cipherText, 0, cipherText.Length);
}
plainText = ms.ToArray();
}
string s = System.Text.Encoding.Unicode.GetString(plainText);
Console.WriteLine(s);
}
Also, I guess you know you will want to explicitly set the Mode of the AesManaged instance, and use System.Security.Cryptography.Rfc2898DeriveBytes to derive the Key and IV from a password and salt.
see also:
- AesManaged
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