Rather than committing this directly I created the following pull request: https://bitbucket.org/galaxy/galaxy-central/pull-request/165/password-securi... It would be great if a couple of people could sign-off on it before merging. I don't think I'm doing anything stupid, but a sanity check is appreciated. -- James Taylor, Assistant Professor, Biology/CS, Emory University On Sun, May 5, 2013 at 12:12 PM, James Taylor <james@jamestaylor.org> wrote:
Vipin, I think the main problem here is that you cannot treat PBKDF2 as a hash in this way. Every time you hash the same password you get a different result because you are generating a new random salt. Instead, you need to decode the in database representation to extract the salt and then do a comparison on the hashed part.
I have this working in a backward compatible way, and I think it is a good idea so I will be committing it to central shortly.
-- James Taylor, Assistant Professor, Biology/CS, Emory University
On Thu, May 2, 2013 at 2:34 PM, Vipin TS <vipin.ts@gmail.com> wrote:
Thanks James, I have updated the password of one user in galaxy_user table with the new algorithm, I also adjusted the function "new_secure_hash" in /lib/galaxy/util/hash_util.py in such a way that it returns the new hash instead of sha1. Now I tried to login, it fails to get the account, I think there is something going wrong in the password hash comparison. Can you please assit here.
+++ b/lib/galaxy/util/hash_util.py Thu May 02 14:33:07 2013 -0400 @@ -25,13 +25,60 @@ Returns either a sha1 hash object (if called with no arguments), or a hexdigest of the sha1 hash of the argument `text_type`. """ + import hashlib + from os import urandom + from base64 import b64encode, b64decode + from itertools import izip + from pbkdf2 import pbkdf2_bin + + SALT_LENGTH = 12 + KEY_LENGTH = 24 + HASH_FUNCTION = 'sha256' + COST_FACTOR = 10000 + if text_type: + #return sha1( text_type ).hexdigest() + + sec_hash_1 = sha1( text_type ).hexdigest() + + if isinstance(sec_hash_1, unicode): + sec_hash_1 = sec_hash_1.encode('utf-8') + salt = b64encode(urandom(SALT_LENGTH)) + + return 'PBKDF2${0}${1}${2}${3}'.format( + HASH_FUNCTION, + COST_FACTOR, + salt, + b64encode(pbkdf2_bin(sec_hash_1, salt, COST_FACTOR, KEY_LENGTH, getattr(hashlib, HASH_FUNCTION))))
thanks, Vipin
That should be the only place, it is called from the some methods of the User model object. So you could modify it to always hash new passwords in a different way, but check old passwords with sha1 first, then something else.
Although it might be nice to move the functionality into security.validate_user_input since it is really specific to user passwords, especially with those changes.
I'd be happy to see this go into main with sha256 or something similar. Also, we could consider adding a random per-user salt field if you are really concerned about this.
-- James Taylor, Assistant Professor, Biology/CS, Emory University
On Thu, May 2, 2013 at 10:21 AM, Vipin TS <vipin.ts@gmail.com> wrote:
Hello dev-team, I would like to add the different type of password encryption to the users in my galaxy instance. I started working with the current password encoding script: /home/apps/galaxy-dist/lib/galaxy/util/hash_util.py
I will keep the current sha1 and add another layer of encryption to the sha1 hash, otherwise I need to force all my users to change the password and follow the new hashing method.
Can anyone please point me any other place/script which I missed regarding the encryption/decryption of user authentication.
thanks in advance, --/Vipin
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