This article has been 
excerpted from book "The Complete Visual C# Programmer's Guide" from the Authors 
of C# Corner.
The System.Security.Cryptography namespace contains support for the most common 
symmetric (DES, 3DES, RC2, Rijndael), asymmetric (RSA, DSA), and hash (MD5, 
SHA-1, SHA-256, SHA- 384, SHA-512) cryptography algorithms. It also includes a 
helpful class to encrypt and decrypt streams. You can use this class, called 
CryptoStream, in combination with other stream classes or you can use several 
CryptoStream class objects together. With a little effort, you can feed the 
output of one CryptoStream object into another CryptoStream object. 
Table 22.6 lists the classes and interfaces that are part of the 
System.Security.Cryptography namespace of the .NET Framework base class library. 
These classes and interfaces define the abstract object model for encryption 
algorithms within the .NET Framework. New algorithms may be added to the .NET 
Framework by subclassing and/or implementing a portion of these classes and 
interfaces.
Table 22.6: Classes and Interfaces in the System.Security.Cryptography 
Namespace 
Listing 22.35 illustrates the use of DES and CryptoStream classes to encipher 
and decipher a file. 
Listing 22.35: Cryptostream1.cs, CryptoStream with DES 
// NOTE: Before you execute the program, first
// create a file named c:\myfile.txt with text "myname is bozo..." in it.
// After you execute the code, two files will be created on the c: drive.
// The c:\ciphered.txt file will include weird ciphered characters like
// "¼ş_Eó_ğNª_4û Õ?8Ò¤¤_"5"
// The c:\enciphered.txt file will be identical to
c:\myfile.txt. 
using System;
using System.IO;
using 
System.Security;
using 
System.Security.Cryptography;
using System.Text;
class
CryptoDESSample
{
    public static
void Main(string[] 
args)
    {
        FileStream fsInput =
new FileStream(@"c:\myfile.txt",
FileMode.Open, 
FileAccess.Read);         FileStream fsCiphered =
new FileStream(@"c:\ciphered.txt",
FileMode.Create, 
FileAccess.Write);         DESCryptoServiceProvider 
ourDESProvider = new 
DESCryptoServiceProvider();
        // our 8 byte DES secret key is 12345678
        ourDESProvider.Key = ASCIIEncoding.ASCII.GetBytes("12345678");
        ourDESProvider.IV = ASCIIEncoding.ASCII.GetBytes("12345678");
        ICryptoTransform des1 = 
ourDESProvider.CreateEncryptor();
        ICryptoTransform des2 = 
ourDESProvider.CreateDecryptor();
        CryptoStream cryptostream1 =
new CryptoStream(fsCiphered, 
des1, CryptoStreamMode.Write);
        byte[] bytearrayinput =
new byte[fsInput.Length];
        fsInput.Read(bytearrayinput, 0, bytearrayinput.Length);
        cryptostream1.Write(bytearrayinput, 0, bytearrayinput.Length);
        cryptostream1.Close();
        fsInput.Close();
        fsCiphered.Close();
        FileStream fsread =
new FileStream(@"c:\ciphered.txt",
FileMode.Open, 
FileAccess.Read);         CryptoStream cryptostream2 =
new CryptoStream(fsread, 
des2, CryptoStreamMode.Read);
        StreamWriter fsEnciphered =
new StreamWriter(@"c:\enciphered.txt");
        fsEnciphered.Write(new
StreamReader(cryptostream2).ReadToEnd());
        fsEnciphered.Flush();
        fsEnciphered.Close();
    }
}
The code in Listing 22.36 uses the SHA1 algorithm to compute the hash value of a 
given string. 
Listing 22.36: Hash1.cs, Hashing a String Using SHA-1 Algorithm 
using System;
using System.IO;
using 
System.Security;
using 
System.Security.Cryptography;
public
class Class1
{
    public static
void Main(string[] 
args)
    {
        String str1 =
"MCBinc";
        Char[] char1a = str1.ToCharArray();
        Byte[] byte1a =
new Byte[char1a.Length];
        for (int 
i = 0; i < byte1a.Length; i++)
            byte1a[i] = (Byte)char1a[i];
        // create hash value from str1 using SHA1 
instance
        // returned by CryptoConfig
        byte[] hash1 = ((HashAlgorithm)
        CryptoConfig.CreateFromName("SHA1")).ComputeHash(byte1a);
        // or you can use directly created instance of 
the SHA1 class
        // byte[] hash1 = (new 
SHA1CryptoServiceProvider()).ComputeHash(byte1a );
        Console.WriteLine(str1 +
@" hashed Value is <" +
        BitConverter.ToString(hash1) +
@">");
        Console.ReadLine();
    }
}
The code in the listing writes the output in Figure 22.9 to the console. 
Figure 22.9: Output Generated from Listing 22.36 
Conclusion
Hope this article would have helped you in understanding 
System.Security.Cryptography Namespace in .NET. See other articles on the website on .NET and C#.
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