flutter_secure_storage 4.1.0 flutter_secure_storage: ^4.1.0 copied to clipboard
Flutter Secure Storage provides API to store data in secure storage. Keychain is used in iOS, KeyStore based solution is used in Android.
flutter_secure_storage #
A Flutter plugin to store data in secure storage:
- Keychain is used for iOS
- AES encryption is used for Android. AES secret key is encrypted with RSA and RSA key is stored in KeyStore
libsecret
is used for Linux.
Note KeyStore was introduced in Android 4.3 (API level 18). The plugin wouldn't work for earlier versions.
Getting Started #
import 'package:flutter_secure_storage/flutter_secure_storage.dart';
// Create storage
final storage = new FlutterSecureStorage();
// Read value
String value = await storage.read(key: key);
// Read all values
Map<String, String> allValues = await storage.readAll();
// Delete value
await storage.delete(key: key);
// Delete all
await storage.deleteAll();
// Write value
await storage.write(key: key, value: value);
Configure Android version #
In [project]/android/app/build.gradle
set minSdkVersion
to >= 18.
android {
...
defaultConfig {
...
minSdkVersion 18
...
}
}
Note By default Android backups data on Google Drive. It can cause exception java.security.InvalidKeyException:Failed to unwrap key. You need to
- disable autobackup, details
- exclude sharedprefs
FlutterSecureStorage
used by the plugin, details
Linux #
You need libsecret-1-dev
and libjsoncpp-dev
on your machine to build the project, and libsecret-1-0
and libjsoncpp1
to run the application (add it as a dependency after packaging your app). If you using snapcraft to build the project use the following
parts:
uet-lms:
source: .
plugin: flutter
flutter-target: lib/main.dart
build-packages:
- libsecret-1-dev
- libjsoncpp-dev
stage-packages:
- libsecret-1-dev
- libjsoncpp1-dev
Integration Tests #
Run the following command from example
directory
flutter drive --target=test_driver/app.dart