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ep_hash_auth

v3.0.20

Published

Allow the use of hashed passwords in etherpad-lite.

Downloads

1,461

Readme

Publish Status Backend Tests Status

ep_hash_auth

This Etherpad plugin allows the usage of hashed passwords for authentication. As of version 2.x it uses the crypto lib and/or the bcrypt lib for comparison. Besides settings.json, it is now possible to store the user-database in a filesystem hierarchy. The hash files are read on authentication.

  "users": {
	"admin": {"password": "admin","is_admin": true},
	"y": {"is_admin": true, "hash": "b2112aa7399 ... b071ea5976"},
	"z": {"is_admin": true, "hash": "b5152ab7359 ... a041fa5646", "displayname": "Jane Doe"}
  }

optionally specify hash type and digest, folders and extension, defaults are:

  "ep_hash_auth": {
    "hash_typ": "sha512",
    "hash_dig": "hex",
    "hash_dir": "/var/etherpad/users",
    "hash_ext": "/.hash",
    "hash_adm": false,
    "displayname_ext": "/.displayname"
  },

This means user Alice would have to have her hash in sha512 hex OR in bcrypt format in the following file:

/var/etherpad/users/Alice/.hash

The hash_adm parameter defines the role of file-authenticated users, by default they are not admins.

The displayname_ext parameter defines from which file the displayname of a user can be read. If the file does not exist for a user, the displayname remains unchanged.

Generate the hashes

Bcrypt:

apt-get install -yqq python-bcrypt
python -c 'import bcrypt; print(bcrypt.hashpw(b"password", bcrypt.gensalt(rounds=10, prefix=b"2a")))'

Scrypt:

var scrypt = require('scrypt');
console.log(scrypt.kdfSync("password", scrypt.paramsSync(0.1)));

Argon2:

var argon2 = require('argon2');
argon2.hash("password", {timeCost: 4, memoryCost: 2 ** 13, parallelism: 2, type: argon2.argon2i}).then(hash => {console.log(hash);});

Credits

the npm