NAME
Crypt::PBKDF2 - The PBKDF2 password hashing algorithm.
VERSION
version 0.161520
SYNOPSIS
use Crypt::PBKDF2;
my $pbkdf2 = Crypt::PBKDF2->new(
hash_class => 'HMACSHA1', # this is the default
iterations => 1000, # so is this
output_len => 20, # and this
salt_len => 4, # and this.
);
my $hash = $pbkdf2->generate("s3kr1t_password");
if ($pbkdf2->validate($hash, "s3kr1t_password")) {
access_granted();
}
DESCRIPTION
PBKDF2 is a secure password hashing algorithm that uses the techniques of "key strengthening" to make the complexity of a brute-force attack arbitrarily high. PBKDF2 uses any other cryptographic hash or cipher (by convention, usually HMAC-SHA1, but Crypt::PBKDF2
is fully pluggable), and allows for an arbitrary number of iterations of the hashing function, and a nearly unlimited output hash size (up to 2**32 - 1 times the size of the output of the backend hash). The hash is salted, as any password hash should be, and the salt may also be of arbitrary size.
ATTRIBUTES
hash_class
Type: String, Default: HMACSHA1
The name of the default class that will provide PBKDF2's Pseudo-Random Function (the backend hash). If the value starts with a +
, the +
will be removed and the remainder will be taken as a fully-qualified package name. Otherwise, the value will be appended to Crypt::PBKDF2::Hash::
.
hash_args
Type: HashRef, Default: {}
Arguments to be passed to the hash_class
constructor.
hasher
Type: Object (must fulfill role Crypt::PBKDF2::Hash), Default: None.
It is also possible to provide a hash object directly; in this case the hash_class
and hash_args
are ignored.
iterations
Type: Integer, Default: 1000.
The default number of iterations of the hashing function to use for the generate
and PBKDF2
methods.
output_len
Type: Integer.
The default size (in bytes, not bits) of the output hash. If a value isn't provided, the output size depends on the hash_class
/ hasher
selected, and will equal the output size of the backend hash (e.g. 20 bytes for HMACSHA1).
salt_len
Type: Integer, Default: 4
The default salt length (in bytes) for the generate
method.
encoding
Type: String (either "crypt" or "ldap"), Default: "ldap"
The hash format to generate. The "ldap" format is intended to be compatible with RFC2307, and looks like:
{X-PBKDF2}HMACSHA1:AAAD6A:8ODUPA==:1HSdSVVwlWSZhbPGO7GIZ4iUbrk=
While the "crypt" format is similar to the format used by the crypt()
function, except with more structured information in the second (salt) field. It looks like:
$PBKDF2$HMACSHA1:1000:4q9OTg==$9Pb6bCRgnct/dga+4v4Lyv8x31s=
Versions of this module up to 0.110461 generated the "crypt" format, so set that if you want it. Current versions of this module will read either format, but the "ldap" format is preferred.
length_limit
Type: Integer
The maximum password length to allow, for generate and verify functions. Allowing passwords of unlimited length can allow a denial-of-service attack in which an attacker asks the server to validate very large passwords.
For compatibility this attribute is unset by default, but it is recommended to set it to a reasonably small value like 100 -- large enough that users aren't discouraged from having secure passwords, but small enough to limit the computation needed to validate any one password.
METHODS
generate ($password, [$salt])
Generates a hash for the given $password
. If $salt
is not provided, a random salt with length salt_len
will be generated.
There are two output formats available, depending on the setting of the encoding
attribute: "ldap" and "crypt"; see the documentation for "encoding" for more information.
validate ($hashed, $password)
Validates whether the password $password
matches the hash string $hashed
. May throw an exception if the format of $hashed
is invalid; otherwise, returns true or false. Accepts both formats that the "generate" method can produce.
PBKDF2 ($salt, $password)
The raw PBKDF2 algorithm. Given the $salt
and $password
, returns the raw binary hash.
PBKDF2_base64 ($salt, $password)
As the PBKDF2
method, only the output is encoded with MIME::Base64.
PBKDF2_hex ($salt, $password)
As the PBKDF2
method, only the output is encoded in hexadecimal.
encode_string ($salt, $hash)
Given a generated salt and hash, hash, generates output in the form generated by generate
and accepted by validate
. Unlikely to be of much use to anyone else.
decode_string ($hashed)
Given a textual hash in the form generated by generate
, decodes it and returns a HashRef containing:
algorithm
: A string representing the hash algorithm used. See "hasher_from_algorithm ($algo_str)".iterations
: The number of iterations used.salt
: The salt, in raw binary form.hash
: The hash, in raw binary form.
This method is mostly for internal use, but it has been left public as it may come in handy. If the input data is invalid, this method may throw an exception.
hasher_from_algorithm ($algo_str)
Attempts to load and instantiate a Crypt::PBKDF2::Hash::*
class based on an algorithm string as produced by encode_string
/ generate
.
clone (%params)
Create a new object like this one, but with %params
changed.
SEE ALSO
Wikipedia: PBKDF2: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PBKDF2
RFC2898, PKCS#5 version 2.0: http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2898
RFC2307, Using LDAP as a Network Information Service: http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2307
AUTHOR
Andrew Rodland <arodland@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2016 by Andrew Rodland.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.