Using SecRandomCopyBytes in Swift

You were close, but return inside the closure returns
from the closure, not from the outer function.
Therefore only SecRandomCopyBytes() should be called in the
closure, and the result passed back.

func generateRandomBytes() -> String? {

    var keyData = Data(count: 32)
    let result = keyData.withUnsafeMutableBytes {
        (mutableBytes: UnsafeMutablePointer<UInt8>) -> Int32 in
        SecRandomCopyBytes(kSecRandomDefault, 32, mutableBytes)
    }
    if result == errSecSuccess {
        return keyData.base64EncodedString()
    } else {
        print("Problem generating random bytes")
        return nil
    }
}

For a “single-expression closure” the closure type can inferred
automatically, so this can be shortened to

func generateRandomBytes() -> String? {

    var keyData = Data(count: 32)
    let result = keyData.withUnsafeMutableBytes {
        SecRandomCopyBytes(kSecRandomDefault, 32, $0)
    }
    if result == errSecSuccess {
        return keyData.base64EncodedString()
    } else {
        print("Problem generating random bytes")
        return nil
    }
}

Swift 5 update:

func generateRandomBytes() -> String? {

    var keyData = Data(count: 32)
    let result = keyData.withUnsafeMutableBytes {
        SecRandomCopyBytes(kSecRandomDefault, 32, $0.baseAddress!)
    }
    if result == errSecSuccess {
        return keyData.base64EncodedString()
    } else {
        print("Problem generating random bytes")
        return nil
    }
}

Leave a Comment