Commit graph

8 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Timo Teräs
16a3580ef3 add legacy functions setkey() and encrypt() 2014-02-05 11:09:53 -05:00
Rich Felker
71ae0c724d comment potentially-confusing use of struct crypt_data type 2013-04-20 14:07:01 -04:00
rofl0r
c50925071c make some arrays const
this way they'll go into .rodata, decreasing memory pressure.
2013-02-02 03:19:25 +01:00
Szabolcs Nagy
9724defdb7 in crypt_des change unnecessary union keybuf into unsigned char[]
original FreeSec code accessed keybuf as uint32* and uint8* as well
(incorrectly), this got fixed with an union, but then it seems the
uint32* access is no longer needed so the code can be simplified
2013-01-13 23:54:48 +01:00
Szabolcs Nagy
30779ee1aa crypt: fix the prototype of md5_sum, sha256_sum and sha512_sum
the internal sha2 hash sum functions had incorrect array size
in the prototype for the message digest argument, fixed by
using pointer so it is not misleading
2013-01-13 23:18:32 +01:00
Rich Felker
93ea998c9c add crypt_md5 password hash
contributed by nsz
2012-09-15 23:41:07 -04:00
Rich Felker
aeaceb1fa8 revert low rounds-count limits in crypt hashes
it was determined in discussion that these kind of limits are not
sufficient to protect single-threaded servers against denial of
service attacks from maliciously large round counts. the time scales
simply vary too much; many users will want login passwords with rounds
counts on a scale that gives decisecond latency, while highly loaded
webservers will need millisecond latency or shorter.

still some limit is left in place; the idea is not to protect against
attacks, but to avoid the runtime of a single call to crypt being, for
all practical purposes, infinite, so that configuration errors can be
caught and fixed without bringing down whole systems. these limits are
very high, on the order of minute-long runtimes for modest systems.
2012-09-15 03:03:21 -04:00
Rich Felker
b9bb8f67bb cleanup src/linux and src/misc trees, etc.
previously, it was pretty much random which one of these trees a given
function appeared in. they have now been organized into:

src/linux: non-POSIX linux syscalls (possibly shard with other nixen)
src/legacy: various obsolete/legacy functions, mostly wrappers
src/misc: still mostly uncategorized; some misc POSIX, some nonstd
src/crypt: crypt hash functions

further cleanup will be done later.
2012-09-07 00:48:25 -04:00