This library is a fork of pysqlite. It is still in beta state (although it's strongly used in development in some linux environments). It links against against libsqlcipher.
Original code (c) 2004-2007 Gerhard Häring
Packaging for SQLCipher (c) 2013-2014 Kali Kaneko
You have to pass the PRAGMA key
before doing any operations:
from pysqlcipher import dbapi2 as sqlite conn = sqlite.connect('test.db') c = conn.cursor() c.execute("PRAGMA key='test'") c.execute('''create table stocks (date text, trans text, symbol text, qty real, price real)''') c.execute("""insert into stocks values ('2006-01-05','BUY','RHAT',100,35.14)""") conn.commit() c.close()
You can quickly verify that your database file in indeed encrypted:
hexdump -C test.db ab 7f 61 7a 33 9d 07 f4 08 68 c9 b0 4f e3 34 60 |..az3....h..O.4`| bb 9d 9c 3d 9e ce 69 57 b6 2f 36 c4 fd 13 bd 61 |...=..iW./6....a| 77 bf e3 1d 65 b5 ea f7 d2 fc 98 31 23 66 a0 1e |w...e......1#f..| a4 4f fa 66 49 36 84 a1 3e 0c 21 98 84 07 eb 07 |.O.fI6..>.!.....|
For convenience, this package uses a sqlcipher amalgamation during the regular install. See https://www.sqlite.org/amalgamation.html
For production use, you should build against libsqlcipher
installed in your
system, you can do it like this:
python setup.py build_sqlcipher
And then:
python setup.py install