Web Cryptography Level 2

W3C First Public Working Draft

More details about this document
This version:
https://www.w3.org/TR/2025/WD-webcrypto-2-20250422/
Latest published version:
https://www.w3.org/TR/webcrypto-2/
Latest editor's draft:
https://w3c.github.io/webcrypto/
History:
https://www.w3.org/standards/history/webcrypto-2/
Commit history
Editor:
(Proton AG)
Former editors:
Mark Watson - Until
Ryan Sleevi - Until
Feedback:
GitHub w3c/webcrypto (pull requests, new issue, open issues)

Abstract

This specification describes a JavaScript API for performing basic cryptographic operations in web applications, such as hashing, signature generation and verification, and encryption and decryption. Additionally, it describes an API for applications to generate and/or manage the keying material necessary to perform these operations. Uses for this API range from user or service authentication, document or code signing, and the confidentiality and integrity of communications.

Status of This Document

This section describes the status of this document at the time of its publication. A list of current W3C publications and the latest revision of this technical report can be found in the W3C standards and drafts index at https://www.w3.org/TR/.

This document was published by the Web Application Security Working Group as a First Public Working Draft using the Recommendation track.

Publication as a First Public Working Draft does not imply endorsement by W3C and its Members.

This is a draft document and may be updated, replaced or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to cite this document as other than work in progress.

This document was produced by a group operating under the W3C Patent Policy. W3C maintains a public list of any patent disclosures made in connection with the deliverables of the group; that page also includes instructions for disclosing a patent. An individual who has actual knowledge of a patent which the individual believes contains Essential Claim(s) must disclose the information in accordance with section 6 of the W3C Patent Policy.

This document is governed by the 03 November 2023 W3C Process Document.

1. Introduction

This section is non-normative.

The Web Cryptography API defines a low-level interface to interacting with cryptographic key material that is managed or exposed by user agents. The API itself is agnostic of the underlying implementation of key storage, but provides a common set of interfaces that allow rich web applications to perform operations such as signature generation and verification, hashing and verification, encryption and decryption, without requiring access to the raw keying material.

Cryptographic transformations are exposed via the SubtleCrypto interface, which defines a set of methods for performing common cryptographic operations. In addition to operations such as signature generation and verification, hashing and verification, and encryption and decryption, the API provides interfaces for key generation, key derivation and key import and export.

2. Use Cases

This section is non-normative.

2.1 Multi-factor Authentication

A web application may wish to extend or replace existing username/password based authentication schemes with authentication methods based on proving that the user has access to some secret keying material. Rather than using transport-layer authentication, such as TLS client certificates, the web application may prefer the richer user experience provided by authenticating within the application itself.

Using the Web Cryptography API, the application could locate suitable client keys, which may have been previously generated via the user agent or pre-provisioned out-of-band by the web application. It could then perform cryptographic operations such as decrypting an authentication challenge followed by signing an authentication response.

This exchange could be further strengthened by binding the authentication to the TLS session over which the client is authenticating, by deriving a key based on properties of the underlying transport.

If a user does not already have a key associated with their account, the web application could direct the user agent to either generate a new key or to re-use an existing key of the user's choice.

2.2 Protected Document Exchange

A web application may wish to limit the viewership of documents that contain sensitive or personal information, even when these documents have been securely received, such as over TLS.

Using the Web Cryptography API, the application could do so by encrypting the documents with a secret key, and then wrapping that key with the public keys associated with the authorized viewers. When a user agent navigates to such a web application, the application would send the encrypted form of the document. The user agent is then instructed to unwrap the encryption key, using the user's private key, and from there, decrypt and display the document.

2.3 Cloud Storage

A web application may wish to permit users to protect the confidentiality of data and documents stored with remote service providers prior to uploading.

Using the Web Cryptography API, the application may have a user select a private or secret key, optionally derive an encryption key from the selected key, encrypt the document, and then upload the encrypted data to the service provider using existing APIs.

This use case is similar to the Protected Document Exchange use case, with viewership of the document limited to the user themself.

2.4 Document Signing

A web application may wish to accept electronic signatures on documents, in lieu of requiring physical signatures.

Using the Web Cryptography API, the application may direct the user to select a key, which may have been pre-provisioned out-of-band, or generated specifically for the web application. Using this key, the application may perform a signing operation over some data, as proof that the user accepts the document.

2.5 Data Integrity Protection

A web application may wish to cache data locally, while ensuring that this data cannot be modified in an offline attack.

Using the Web Cryptography API, the application may use a public key contained within the application to verify the contents of the data cache. Previously, when data was added to the cache, it would have been signed by the server with the corresponding private key. By validating the signature when restoring data from the cache, the client ensures that the cached data has not been tampered with.

2.6 Secure Messaging

A web application may wish to employ message layer security using schemes such as off-the-record (OTR) messaging, even when these messages have been securely received, such as over TLS.

The Web Cryptography API enables OTR and similar message signing schemes, by allowing key agreement to be performed. The two parties can negotiate shared encryption keys and message authentication code (MAC) keys, to allow encryption and decryption of messages, and to prevent tampering.

2.7 JavaScript Object Signing and Encryption (JOSE)

A web application may wish to interact with the structures and message formats defined by the IETF JavaScript Object Signing and Encryption (JOSE) Working Group.

Using the Web Cryptography API, the application may read and import keys encoded in the JSON key format (JWK), validate messages that have been integrity protected using digital signatures or MACs (JWS), or decrypt messages that have been encrypted (JWE).

3. Conformance

As well as sections marked as non-normative, all authoring guidelines, diagrams, examples, and notes in this specification are non-normative. Everything else in this specification is normative.

The key words MUST, REQUIRED, and SHALL in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.

The following conformance classes are defined by this specification:

conforming user agent

A user agent is considered to be a conforming user agent if it satisfies all of the MUST-, REQUIRED- and SHALL-level criteria in this specification that apply to implementations. This specification uses both the terms "conforming user agent" and "user agent" to refer to this product class.

Conformance requirements phrased as algorithms or specific steps may be implemented in any manner, so long as the end result is equivalent. (In particular, the algorithms defined in this specification are intended to be easy to follow, and not intended to be performant.)

User agents that use ECMAScript to implement the APIs defined in this specification MUST implement them in a manner consistent with the ECMAScript Bindings defined in the Web IDL specification [WebIDL] as this specification uses that specification and terminology.

Unless otherwise stated, string comparisons are done in a case-sensitive manner. String literals in this specification written in monospace font like "this" do not include the enclosing quotes.

3.1 Extensibility

Vendor-specific proprietary extensions to this specification are strongly discouraged. Authors must not use such extensions, as doing so reduces interoperability and fragments the user base, allowing only users of specific user agents to access the content in question.

If vendor-specific extensions are needed, the members should be prefixed by vendor-specific strings to prevent clashes with future versions of this specification. Extensions must be defined so that the use of extensions neither contradicts nor causes the non-conformance of functionality defined in the specification.

When vendor-neutral extensions to this specification are needed, either this specification can be updated accordingly, or an extension specification can be written that overrides the requirements in this specification. When someone applying this specification to their activities decides that they will recognize the requirements of such an extension specification, it becomes an applicable specification for the purposes of conformance requirements in this specification. Applicable specifications defined by the W3C Web Cryptography Working Group are listed in the table below.

Specification Reference
Note
Readers are advised to consult the errata to this specification for updates to the table above.

4. Scope

This section is non-normative.

4.1 Level of abstraction

The specification attempts to focus on the common functionality and features between various platform-specific or standardized cryptographic APIs, and avoid features and functionality that are specific to one or two implementations. As such this API allows key generation, management, and exchange with a level of abstraction that avoids developers needing to care about the implementation of the underlying key storage. The API is focused specifically around CryptoKey objects, as an abstraction for the underlying raw cryptographic keying material. The intent behind this is to allow an API that is generic enough to allow conforming user agents to expose keys that are stored and managed directly by the user agent, that may be stored or managed using isolated storage APIs such as per-user key stores provided by some operating systems, or within key storage devices such as secure elements, while allowing rich web applications to manipulate the keys and without requiring the web application be aware of the nature of the underlying key storage.

4.2 Cryptographic algorithms

Because the underlying cryptographic implementations will vary between conforming user agents, and may be subject to local policy, including but not limited to concerns such as government or industry regulation, security best practices, intellectual property concerns, and constrained operational environments, this specification does not dictate a mandatory set of algorithms that MUST be implemented. Instead, it defines a common set of bindings that can be used in an algorithm-independent manner, a common framework for discovering if a user agent or key handle supports the underlying algorithm, and a set of conformance requirements for the behaviors of individual algorithms, if implemented.

4.3 Out of scope

This API, while allowing applications to generate, retrieve, and manipulate keying material, does not specifically address the provisioning of keys in particular types of key storage, such as secure elements or smart cards. This is due to such provisioning operations often being burdened with vendor-specific details that make defining a vendor-agnostic interface an unsuitably unbounded task. Additionally, this API does not deal with or address the discovery of cryptographic modules, as such concepts are dependent upon the underlying user agent and are not concepts that are portable between common operating systems, cryptographic libraries, and implementations.

5. Concepts

This section is non-normative.

5.1 Underlying Cryptographic Implementation

This specification assumes, but does not require, that conforming user agents do not and will not be directly implementing cryptographic operations within the user agent itself. Historically, many user agents have deferred cryptographic operations, such as those used within TLS, to existing APIs that are available as part of the underlying operating system or to third-party modules that are managed independently of the user agent.

The CryptoKey object represents the bridge between the JavaScript execution environment and these underlying libraries, through the use of the internal slot named [[handle]]. The handle represents an opaque type that is implementation specific, which may not be represented within a JavaScript type, nor is it ever exposed to script authors. In this way, the CryptoKey object is the conceptual equivalent to the JavaScript executing environment as the [[handle]] is to the underlying cryptographic implementation.

These APIs are traditionally built around a notion of cryptographic providers, an abstraction for a specific implementation of a set of algorithms. The operating system or library may come with a default provider, and users are frequently allowed to add additional providers, reconfigure the set of enabled algorithms, or otherwise customize how cryptographic services are provided.

While it is assumed that most user agents will be interacting with a cryptographic provider that is implemented purely in software, it is not required by this specification. As a result, the capabilities of some implementations may be limited by the capabilities of the underlying hardware, and, depending on how the user has configured the underlying cryptographic library, this may be entirely opaque to the User Agent.

5.2 Key Storage

This specification does not explicitly provide any new storage mechanisms for CryptoKey objects. Instead, by defining serialization and deserialization steps for CryptoKey objects, any existing or future web storage mechanisms that support storing serializable objects can be used to store CryptoKey objects.

In practice, it is expected that most authors will make use of the Indexed Database API [INDEXEDDB], which allows associative storage of key/value pairs, where the key is some string identifier meaningful to the application, and the value is a CryptoKey object. This allows the storage and retrieval of key material, without ever exposing that key material to the application or the JavaScript environment. Additionally, this allows authors the full flexibility to store any additional metadata with the CryptoKey itself.

6. Security considerations

This section is non-normative.

6.1 Security considerations for implementers

By not providing an explicit storage mechanism, this specification assumes that CryptoKey objects are scoped to the current execution environment and any storage mechanisms available to that environment (e.g. Indexed Database API). Application authors rely upon this for the security of their applications; two origins with the same CryptoKey object have full access to the underlying key, and as such, messages from these applications cannot be distinguished, and messages sent to these applications can be fully recovered. Implementors should ensure that no CryptoKey objects are shared between two origins unless the author has explicitly chosen to share (e.g., such as through the use of postMessage)

A number of algorithms specified within this specification perform computationally intensive work, such as the generation of significantly large prime numbers, or through repeated iterations of a particular operation. As such, hostile applications may attempt to misuse this API and attempt to cause significant amount of work to be performed by an implementation, denying access or services to other applications that are executing. Implementations should take steps to mitigate these risks, such as limiting the amount of operations an implementation performs concurrently, requiring user consent for operations that may be known to be disruptive for the executing environment, or defining device-specific limits on attributes such as key sizes or iteration counts.

6.2 Security considerations for authors

This specification includes descriptions for a variety of cryptographic operations, some of which have known weaknesses when used inappropriately. Application developers must take care and review appropriate and current cryptographic literature, to understand and mitigate such issues. In general, application developers are strongly discouraged from inventing new cryptographic protocols; as with all applications, users of this specification will be best served through the use of existing protocols, of which this specification provides the necessary building blocks to implement.

In order to use the APIs defined in this specification to provide any meaningful cryptographic assurances, authors must be familiar with existing threats to web applications, as well as the underlying security model employed. Conceptually, issues such as script injection are the equivalent to remote code execution in other operating environments, and allowing hostile script to be injected may allow for the exfiltration of keys or data. Script injection may come from other applications, for which the judicious use of Content Security Policy may mitigate, or it may come from hostile network intermediaries, for which the use of Transport Layer Security may mitigate.

This specification does not define any specific mechanisms for the storage of cryptographic keys. By default, unless specific effort is taken by the author to persist keys, such as through the use of the Indexed Database API, keys created with this API will only be valid for the duration of the current page (e.g. until a navigation event). Authors that wish to use the same key across different pages or multiple browsing sessions must employ existing web storage technologies. Authors should be aware of the security assumptions of these technologies, such as the same-origin security model; that is, any application that shares the same scheme, host, and port have access to the same storage partition, even if other information, such as the path, may differ. Authors may explicitly choose to relax this security through the use of inter-origin sharing, such as postMessage.

Authors should be aware that this specification places no normative requirements on implementations as to how the underlying cryptographic key material is stored. The only requirement is that key material is not exposed to script, except through the use of the exportKey and wrapKey operations. In particular, it does not guarantee that the underlying cryptographic key material will not be persisted to disk, possibly unencrypted, nor that it will be inaccessible to users or other applications running with the same privileges as the User Agent. Any application or user that has access to the device storage may be able to recover the key material, even through scripts may be prohibited.

This specification places no normative requirements on how implementations handle key material once all references to it go away. That is, conforming user agents are not required to zeroize key material, and it may still be accessible on device storage or device memory, even after all references to the CryptoKey have gone away.

Applications may share a CryptoKey object across security boundaries, such as origins, through the use of the structured clone algorithm and APIs such as postMessage. While access to the underlying cryptographic key material may be restricted, based upon the extractable attribute, once a key is shared with a destination origin, the source origin can not later restrict or revoke access to the key. As such, authors must be careful to ensure they trust the destination origin to take the same mitigations against hostile script that the source origin employs. Further, in the event of script injection on the source origin, attackers may post the key to an origin under attacker control. Any time that the user agent visits the attacker's origin, the user agent may be directed to perform cryptographic operations using that key, such as the decryption of existing messages or the creation of new, fraudulent messages.

Authors should be aware that users may, at any time, choose to clear the storage associated with an origin, potentially destroying keys. Applications that are meant to provide long-term storage, such as on the server, should consider techniques such as key escrow to prevent such data from being inaccessible. Authors should not presume that keys will be available indefinitely.

6.3 Security considerations for users

Users of applications that employ the APIs defined in this specification should be aware that these applications will have full access to all messages exchanged, regardless of the cryptography employed. That is, for messages that are encrypted, applications that use these APIs will have full access to the decrypted message as well.

7. Privacy considerations

This section is non-normative.

Fingerprinting
By exposing additional APIs that reflect capabilities of the underlying platform, this specification may allow malicious applications to determine or distinguish different user agents or devices.
Super-cookies
This specification does not provide any means for malicious applications to create identifiers that outlive existing web storage technologies. However, care must be taken when introducing future revisions to this API or additional cryptographic capabilities, such as those that are hardware backed (e.g.: smart cards or Trusted Platform Modules). Considering that such storage is designed to prevent any two users from having the same underlying key data, such APIs may represent a real risk of being used as a permanent identifier against the user's wishes.
Use of randomUUID as user ID
randomUUID is useful for generating user IDs, but does not directly give any ability to generate global identifiers.

8. Dependencies

This specification relies on underlying specifications.

DOM

A conforming user agent MUST support at least the subset of the functionality defined in DOM that this specification relies upon; in particular, it MUST support Promises and DOMException. [DOM]

HTML

A conforming user agent MUST support at least the subset of the functionality defined in HTML that this specification relies upon; in particular, it MUST support the ArrayBufferView typedef and serializable objects. [HTML]

Web IDL

A conforming user agent MUST be a conforming implementation of the IDL fragments in this specification, as described in the Web IDL specification. [WebIDL]

9. Terminology

The terms ArrayBuffer, ArrayBufferView, and serializable objects, are defined by the HTML specification [HTML].

The terms DOMString and BufferSource are defined in [WEBIDL].

The term byte sequence is defined in [Infra].

The length in bits of a byte sequence is its length multiplied by 8.

A byte sequence containing a bit sequence b is the byte sequence obtained by first appending zero or more bits of value zero to b such that the length of the resulting bit sequence is minimal and an integer multiple of 8 and then considering each consecutive sequence of 8 bits in that string as a byte.

When this specification says to convert a non-negative integer i to a byte sequence of length n, where n * 8 is greater than the logarithm to base 2 of i, the user agent must first calculate the binary representation of i, most significant bit first, prefix this with sufficient zero bits to form a bit sequence of length n * 8, and then return the byte sequence formed by considering each consecutive sequence of 8 bits in that bit sequence as a byte.

Comparing two strings in a case-sensitive manner means comparing them exactly, code point for code point.

Comparing two strings in a ASCII case-insensitive manner means comparing them exactly, code point for code point, except that the codepoints in the range U+0041 .. U+005A (i.e. LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A to LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Z) and the corresponding codepoints in the range U+0061 .. U+007A (i.e. LATIN SMALL LETTER A to LATIN SMALL LETTER Z) are also considered to match.

When this specification says to terminate the algorithm, the user agent must terminate the algorithm after finishing the step it is on. The algorithm referred to is the set of specification-defined processing steps, rather than the underlying cryptographic algorithm that may be in the midst of processing.

When this specification says to parse an ASN.1 structure, the user agent must perform the following steps:

  1. Let data be a sequence of bytes to be parsed.

  2. Let structure be the ASN.1 structure to be parsed.

  3. Let exactData be an optional boolean value. If it is not supplied, let it be initialized to true.

  4. Parse data according to the Distinguished Encoding Rules of [X690], using structure as the ASN.1 structure to be decoded.

  5. If exactData was specified, and all of the bytes of data were not consumed during the parsing phase, then throw a DataError.

  6. Return the parsed ASN.1 structure.

When this specification says to parse a subjectPublicKeyInfo, the user agent must parse an ASN.1 structure, with data set to the sequence of bytes to be parsed, structure as the ASN.1 structure of subjectPublicKeyInfo, as specified in [RFC5280], and exactData set to true.

When this specification says to parse a PrivateKeyInfo, the user agent must parse an ASN.1 structure with data set to the sequence of bytes to be parsed, structure as the ASN.1 structure of PrivateKeyInfo, as specified in [RFC5208], and exactData set to true.

When this specification says to parse a JWK, the user agent must run the following steps:

  1. Let data be the sequence of bytes to be parsed.

  2. Let json be the Unicode string that results from interpreting data according to UTF-8.

  3. Convert json to UTF-16.

  4. Let result be the object literal that results from executing the JSON.parse internal function in the context of a new global object, with text argument set to a JavaScript String containing json.

  5. Let key be the result of converting result to the IDL dictionary type of JsonWebKey.

  6. If the kty field of key is not defined, then throw a DataError.

  7. Return key.

When this specification says to calculate the usage intersection of two sequences, a and b the result shall be a sequence containing each recognized key usage value that appears in both a and b, in the order listed in the list of recognized key usage values, where a value is said to appear in a sequence if an element of the sequence exists that is a case-sensitive string match for that value.

When this specification says to calculate the normalized value of a usages list, usages the result shall be the usage intersection of usages and a sequence containing all recognized key usage values.

When this specification refers to the cached ECMAScript object associated with an internal slot [[slot]] of object, the user agent must run the following steps:

  1. If the [[slot_cached]] internal slot of object is undefined:
    Set the [[slot_cached]] internal slot of object to the result of performing type conversion to an ECMAScript object as defined in [WebIDL] to the contents of the [[slot]] internal slot of object.
  2. Return the contents of the [[slot_cached]] internal slot of object.

10. Crypto interface

The Crypto interface represents an interface to general purpose cryptographic functionality including a cryptographically strong pseudo-random number generator seeded with truly random values.

WebIDLpartial interface mixin WindowOrWorkerGlobalScope {
  [SameObject] readonly attribute Crypto crypto;
};

[Exposed=(Window,Worker)]
interface Crypto {
  [SecureContext] readonly attribute SubtleCrypto subtle;
  ArrayBufferView getRandomValues(ArrayBufferView array);
  [SecureContext] DOMString randomUUID();
};
Note
Implementations should generate cryptographically strong random values using well-established cryptographic pseudo-random number generators seeded with high-quality entropy, such as from an operating-system entropy source (e.g., "/dev/urandom"). This specification provides no lower-bound on the information theoretic entropy present in cryptographically strong random values, but implementations should make a best effort to provide as much entropy as practicable.
Note
This interface defines a synchronous method for obtaining cryptographically strong random values. While some devices and implementations may support truly random cryptographic number generators or provide interfaces that block when there is insufficient entropy, implementations are discouraged from using these sources when implementing getRandomValues, both for performance and to avoid depleting the system of entropy. Instead, these sources should be used to seed a cryptographic pseudo-random number generator that can then return suitable values efficiently.

10.1 Methods and Parameters

10.1.1 The getRandomValues method

The getRandomValues method generates cryptographically strong random values. It must act as follows:

  1. If array is not an Int8Array, Uint8Array, Uint8ClampedArray, Int16Array, Uint16Array, Int32Array, Uint32Array, BigInt64Array, or BigUint64Array, then throw a TypeMismatchError and terminate the algorithm.

  2. Let byteLength be the byte length of array.

  3. If byteLength is greater than 65536, throw a QuotaExceededError and terminate the algorithm.

  4. Let bytes be a byte sequence of length byteLength.

  5. Fill bytes with cryptographically secure random bytes.

  6. Write bytes into array.

  7. Return array.

Note

Do not generate keys using the getRandomValues method. Use the generateKey method instead.

10.1.2 The randomUUID method

The randomUUID method generates a new version 4 UUID and returns its namespace specific string representation as described in section 3 of [RFC4122]. To generate a random UUID:

  1. Let bytes be a byte sequence of length 16.
  2. Fill bytes with cryptographically secure random bytes.
  3. Set the 4 most significant bits of bytes[6], which represent the UUID version, to 0100.
  4. Set the 2 most significant bits of bytes[8], which represent the UUID variant, to 10.
  5. Return the string concatenation of «

    1. hexadecimal representation of bytes[0], hexadecimal representation of bytes[1], hexadecimal representation of bytes[2], hexadecimal representation of bytes[3],
    2. "-",
    3. hexadecimal representation of bytes[4], hexadecimal representation of bytes[5],
    4. "-",
    5. hexadecimal representation of bytes[6], hexadecimal representation of bytes[7],
    6. "-",
    7. hexadecimal representation of bytes[8], hexadecimal representation of bytes[9],
    8. "-",
    9. hexadecimal representation of bytes[10], hexadecimal representation of bytes[11], hexadecimal representation of bytes[12], hexadecimal representation of bytes[13], hexadecimal representation of bytes[14], hexadecimal representation of bytes[15]

    ».

For the steps described in the algorithm to generate a random UUID, the hexadecimal representation of a byte value is the two-character string created by expressing value in hexadecimal using ASCII lower hex digits, left-padded with "0" to reach two ASCII lower hex digits.

10.2 Attributes

10.2.1 The subtle attribute

The subtle attribute provides an instance of the SubtleCrypto interface which provides low-level cryptographic primitives and algorithms.

11. Algorithm dictionary

The Algorithm object is a dictionary object [WEBIDL] which is used to specify an algorithm and any additional parameters required to fully specify the desired operation.

WebIDLtypedef (object or DOMString) AlgorithmIdentifier;

typedef AlgorithmIdentifier HashAlgorithmIdentifier;

dictionary Algorithm {
  required DOMString name;
};

11.1 Algorithm Dictionary Members

name
The name of the registered algorithm to use.

12. KeyAlgorithm dictionary

The KeyAlgorithm dictionary represents information about the contents of a given CryptoKey object.

WebIDLdictionary KeyAlgorithm {
  required DOMString name;
};

12.1 Description

This section is non-normative.

The KeyAlgorithm dictionary is provided to aid in documenting how fixed, public properties of a CryptoKey are reflected back to an application. The actual dictionary type is never exposed to applications.

12.2 KeyAlgorithm dictionary members

name
The name of the algorithm used to generate the CryptoKey

13. CryptoKey interface

The CryptoKey object represents an opaque reference to keying material that is managed by the user agent.

WebIDLenum KeyType { "public", "private", "secret" };

enum KeyUsage { "encrypt", "decrypt", "sign", "verify", "