Sodium is a modern, easy-to-use software library for encryption, decryption, signatures, password hashing and more.

It is a portable, cross-compilable, installable, packageable fork of NaCl, with a compatible API, and an extended API to improve usability even further.

Its goal is to provide all of the core operations needed to build higher-level cryptographic tools.

Sodium is cross-platforms and cross-languages. It runs on a variety of compilers and operating systems, including Windows (with MinGW or Visual Studio, x86 and x86_64), iOS and Android. Javascript and WebAssembly versions are also available and are fully supported. Bindings for all common programming languages are available and well-supported.

The design choices emphasize security and ease of use. But despite the emphasis on high security, primitives are faster across-the-board than most implementations.

Downloading libsodium

​libsodium 1.0.18-stable is the latest version.

Mailing list

A mailing-list is available to discuss libsodium.

In order to join, just send a random mail to sodium-subscribe {at} pureftpd {dot} org .

License

​ISC license.

See the LICENSE file for details.

The development of libsodium is entirely made by volunteers. We would like to specially thank the following companies and organizations for their contribution:

​Paragonie Initiative Enterprise, who donated a Raspberry Pi to ensure that the library works perfectly on this hardware. Thanks!

​Private Internet Access, who sponsored a complete security audit. This is amazing, thanks!

​Maximilian Blochberger and Joshua Small, who both generously donated $100. This will help a lot to cover the infrastructure costs. Thanks again, Max and Joshua!

People who designed the primitives and wrote implementations the library is based on can be found in the AUTHORS file. This project wouldn't exist without them.

Also a huge "thank you" to people and companies who contributed bindings for their favorite programming languages. A list can be found in the THANKS file.

Another huge "thank you" to package maintainers who have been doing an amazing job at building packages for many distributions and operating systems.

Finally, thanks to you for reading this documentation and for the awesome projects you are going to build with this library!