| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229230231232233234235236237238239240241242243244245246247248249250251252253254255256257258259260261262263264265266267268269270271272273274275276277278279280281282283284285286287288289290291 | <?php/** * @file * Secure password hashing functions for user authentication. * * Based on the Portable PHP password hashing framework. * @see http://www.openwall.com/phpass/ * * An alternative or custom version of this password hashing API may be * used by setting the variable password_inc to the name of the PHP file * containing replacement user_hash_password(), user_check_password(), and * user_needs_new_hash() functions. *//** * The standard log2 number of iterations for password stretching. This should * increase by 1 every Drupal version in order to counteract increases in the * speed and power of computers available to crack the hashes. */define('DRUPAL_HASH_COUNT', 15);/** * The minimum allowed log2 number of iterations for password stretching. */define('DRUPAL_MIN_HASH_COUNT', 7);/** * The maximum allowed log2 number of iterations for password stretching. */define('DRUPAL_MAX_HASH_COUNT', 30);/** * The expected (and maximum) number of characters in a hashed password. */define('DRUPAL_HASH_LENGTH', 55);/** * Returns a string for mapping an int to the corresponding base 64 character. */function _password_itoa64() {  return './0123456789ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz';}/** * Encodes bytes into printable base 64 using the *nix standard from crypt(). * * @param $input *   The string containing bytes to encode. * @param $count *   The number of characters (bytes) to encode. * * @return *   Encoded string */function _password_base64_encode($input, $count) {  $output = '';  $i = 0;  $itoa64 = _password_itoa64();  do {    $value = ord($input[$i++]);    $output .= $itoa64[$value & 0x3f];    if ($i < $count) {      $value |= ord($input[$i]) << 8;    }    $output .= $itoa64[($value >> 6) & 0x3f];    if ($i++ >= $count) {      break;    }    if ($i < $count) {      $value |= ord($input[$i]) << 16;    }    $output .= $itoa64[($value >> 12) & 0x3f];    if ($i++ >= $count) {      break;    }    $output .= $itoa64[($value >> 18) & 0x3f];  } while ($i < $count);  return $output;}/** * Generates a random base 64-encoded salt prefixed with settings for the hash. * * Proper use of salts may defeat a number of attacks, including: *  - The ability to try candidate passwords against multiple hashes at once. *  - The ability to use pre-hashed lists of candidate passwords. *  - The ability to determine whether two users have the same (or different) *    password without actually having to guess one of the passwords. * * @param $count_log2 *   Integer that determines the number of iterations used in the hashing *   process. A larger value is more secure, but takes more time to complete. * * @return *   A 12 character string containing the iteration count and a random salt. */function _password_generate_salt($count_log2) {  $output = '$S$';  // Ensure that $count_log2 is within set bounds.  $count_log2 = _password_enforce_log2_boundaries($count_log2);  // We encode the final log2 iteration count in base 64.  $itoa64 = _password_itoa64();  $output .= $itoa64[$count_log2];  // 6 bytes is the standard salt for a portable phpass hash.  $output .= _password_base64_encode(drupal_random_bytes(6), 6);  return $output;}/** * Ensures that $count_log2 is within set bounds. * * @param $count_log2 *   Integer that determines the number of iterations used in the hashing *   process. A larger value is more secure, but takes more time to complete. * * @return *   Integer within set bounds that is closest to $count_log2. */function _password_enforce_log2_boundaries($count_log2) {  if ($count_log2 < DRUPAL_MIN_HASH_COUNT) {    return DRUPAL_MIN_HASH_COUNT;  }  elseif ($count_log2 > DRUPAL_MAX_HASH_COUNT) {    return DRUPAL_MAX_HASH_COUNT;  }  return (int) $count_log2;}/** * Hash a password using a secure stretched hash. * * By using a salt and repeated hashing the password is "stretched". Its * security is increased because it becomes much more computationally costly * for an attacker to try to break the hash by brute-force computation of the * hashes of a large number of plain-text words or strings to find a match. * * @param $algo *   The string name of a hashing algorithm usable by hash(), like 'sha256'. * @param $password *   Plain-text password up to 512 bytes (128 to 512 UTF-8 characters) to hash. * @param $setting *   An existing hash or the output of _password_generate_salt().  Must be *   at least 12 characters (the settings and salt). * * @return *   A string containing the hashed password (and salt) or FALSE on failure. *   The return string will be truncated at DRUPAL_HASH_LENGTH characters max. */function _password_crypt($algo, $password, $setting) {  // Prevent DoS attacks by refusing to hash large passwords.  if (strlen($password) > 512) {    return FALSE;  }  // The first 12 characters of an existing hash are its setting string.  $setting = substr($setting, 0, 12);  if ($setting[0] != '$' || $setting[2] != '$') {    return FALSE;  }  $count_log2 = _password_get_count_log2($setting);  // Hashes may be imported from elsewhere, so we allow != DRUPAL_HASH_COUNT  if ($count_log2 < DRUPAL_MIN_HASH_COUNT || $count_log2 > DRUPAL_MAX_HASH_COUNT) {    return FALSE;  }  $salt = substr($setting, 4, 8);  // Hashes must have an 8 character salt.  if (strlen($salt) != 8) {    return FALSE;  }  // Convert the base 2 logarithm into an integer.  $count = 1 << $count_log2;  // We rely on the hash() function being available in PHP 5.2+.  $hash = hash($algo, $salt . $password, TRUE);  do {    $hash = hash($algo, $hash . $password, TRUE);  } while (--$count);  $len = strlen($hash);  $output =  $setting . _password_base64_encode($hash, $len);  // _password_base64_encode() of a 16 byte MD5 will always be 22 characters.  // _password_base64_encode() of a 64 byte sha512 will always be 86 characters.  $expected = 12 + ceil((8 * $len) / 6);  return (strlen($output) == $expected) ? substr($output, 0, DRUPAL_HASH_LENGTH) : FALSE;}/** * Parse the log2 iteration count from a stored hash or setting string. */function _password_get_count_log2($setting) {  $itoa64 = _password_itoa64();  return strpos($itoa64, $setting[3]);}/** * Hash a password using a secure hash. * * @param $password *   A plain-text password. * @param $count_log2 *   Optional integer to specify the iteration count. Generally used only during *   mass operations where a value less than the default is needed for speed. * * @return *   A string containing the hashed password (and a salt), or FALSE on failure. */function user_hash_password($password, $count_log2 = 0) {  if (empty($count_log2)) {    // Use the standard iteration count.    $count_log2 = variable_get('password_count_log2', DRUPAL_HASH_COUNT);  }  return _password_crypt('sha512', $password, _password_generate_salt($count_log2));}/** * Check whether a plain text password matches a stored hashed password. * * Alternative implementations of this function may use other data in the * $account object, for example the uid to look up the hash in a custom table * or remote database. * * @param $password *   A plain-text password * @param $account *   A user object with at least the fields from the {users} table. * * @return *   TRUE or FALSE. */function user_check_password($password, $account) {  if (substr($account->pass, 0, 2) == 'U$') {    // This may be an updated password from user_update_7000(). Such hashes    // have 'U' added as the first character and need an extra md5().    $stored_hash = substr($account->pass, 1);    $password = md5($password);  }  else {    $stored_hash = $account->pass;  }  $type = substr($stored_hash, 0, 3);  switch ($type) {    case '$S$':      // A normal Drupal 7 password using sha512.      $hash = _password_crypt('sha512', $password, $stored_hash);      break;    case '$H$':      // phpBB3 uses "$H$" for the same thing as "$P$".    case '$P$':      // A phpass password generated using md5.  This is an      // imported password or from an earlier Drupal version.      $hash = _password_crypt('md5', $password, $stored_hash);      break;    default:      return FALSE;  }  return ($hash && $stored_hash == $hash);}/** * Check whether a user's hashed password needs to be replaced with a new hash. * * This is typically called during the login process when the plain text * password is available. A new hash is needed when the desired iteration count * has changed through a change in the variable password_count_log2 or * DRUPAL_HASH_COUNT or if the user's password hash was generated in an update * like user_update_7000(). * * Alternative implementations of this function might use other criteria based * on the fields in $account. * * @param $account *   A user object with at least the fields from the {users} table. * * @return *   TRUE or FALSE. */function user_needs_new_hash($account) {  // Check whether this was an updated password.  if ((substr($account->pass, 0, 3) != '$S$') || (strlen($account->pass) != DRUPAL_HASH_LENGTH)) {    return TRUE;  }  // Ensure that $count_log2 is within set bounds.  $count_log2 = _password_enforce_log2_boundaries(variable_get('password_count_log2', DRUPAL_HASH_COUNT));  // Check whether the iteration count used differs from the standard number.  return (_password_get_count_log2($account->pass) !== $count_log2);}
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