PostgreSQL 9.1.3 Documentation | ||||
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This module implements a data type chkpass that is designed for storing encrypted passwords. Each password is automatically converted to encrypted form upon entry, and is always stored encrypted. To compare, simply compare against a clear text password and the comparison function will encrypt it before comparing.
There are provisions in the code to report an error if the password is determined to be easily crackable. However, this is currently just a stub that does nothing.
If you precede an input string with a colon, it is assumed to be an already-encrypted password, and is stored without further encryption. This allows entry of previously-encrypted passwords.
On output, a colon is prepended. This makes it possible to dump and reload
passwords without re-encrypting them. If you want the encrypted password
without the colon then use the raw()
function.
This allows you to use the
type with things like Apache's Auth_PostgreSQL module.
The encryption uses the standard Unix function crypt()
,
and so it suffers
from all the usual limitations of that function; notably that only the
first eight characters of a password are considered.
Note that the chkpass data type is not indexable.
Sample usage:
test=# create table test (p chkpass); CREATE TABLE test=# insert into test values ('hello'); INSERT 0 1 test=# select * from test; p ---------------- :dVGkpXdOrE3ko (1 row) test=# select raw(p) from test; raw --------------- dVGkpXdOrE3ko (1 row) test=# select p = 'hello' from test; ?column? ---------- t (1 row) test=# select p = 'goodbye' from test; ?column? ---------- f (1 row)
D'Arcy J.M. Cain (<darcy@druid.net>
)