freebsd-skq/share/doc/handbook/crypt.sgml
jfieber d4c76dacba * Make author's email address come out as mailto url's in HTML.
* Import my "Installation for the Impatient" to the install section.

* Move Booting and memory use into a "Tech Topics" chapter; add
  DMA information. (Frank Durda IV)

* Bring in ESDI section.  (Wilko Bulte)

* Bring in MD5/DES section.  (Garrett Wollman)

* Fix a couple problems with LaTeX output.
1995-09-25 04:53:33 +00:00

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<!-- $Id$ -->
<!-- The FreeBSD Documentation Project -->
<sect><heading>DES, MD5, and Crypt<label id="crypt"></heading>
<p><em>Contributed by &a.wollman;<newline>24 September 1995.</em>
<p><bf>History</bf>
<p>In order to protect the security of passwords on UN*X systems from
being easily exposed, passwords have traditionally been scrambled in
some way. Starting with Bell Labs' Seventh Edition Unix, passwords
were encrypted using what the security people call a ``one-way hash
function''. That is to say, the password is transformed in such a way
that the original password cannot be regained except by brute-force
searching the space of possible passwords. Unfortunately, the only
secure method that was available to the AT&amp;T researchers at the
time was based on DES, the Data Encryption Standard. This causes only
minimal difficulty for commercial vendors, but is a serious problem
for an operating system like FreeBSD where all the source code is
freely available, because national governments in many places like to
place restrictions on cross-border transport of DES and other
encryption software.
<p>So, the FreeBSD team was faced with a dilemma: how could we provide
compatibility with all those UNIX systems out there while still not
running afoul of the law? We decided to take a dual-track approach:
we would make distributions which contained only a non-regulated
password scrambler, and then provide as a separate add-on library the
DES-based password hash. The password-scrambling function was moved
out of the C library to a separate library, called `<tt>libcrypt</tt>'
because the name of the C function to implement it is
`<tt>crypt</tt>'. In FreeBSD 1.x and some pre-release 2.0 snapshots,
the non-regulated scrambler uses an insecure function written by Nate
Williams; in subsequent releases this was replaced by a mechanism
using the RSA Data Security, Inc., MD5 one-way hash function. Because
neither of these functions involve encryption, they are believed to be
exportable from the US and importable into many other countries.
<p>Meanwhile, work was also underway on the DES-based password hash
function. First, a version of the `<tt>crypt</tt>' function which was
written outside the US was imported, thus synchronizing the US and
non-US code. Then, the library was modified and split into two; the
DES `<tt>libcrypt</tt>' contains only the code involved in performing
the one-way password hash, and a separate `<tt>libcipher</tt>' was
created with the entry points to actually perform encryption. The
code was partitioned in this way to make it easier to get an export
license for the compiled library.
<p><bf>Recognizing your `<tt>crypt</tt>' mechanism</bf>
<p>It is fairly easy to recognize whether a particular password
string was created using the DES- or MD5-based hash function.
MD5 password strings always begin with the characters
`<tt>&dollar;1&dollar;</tt>'. DES password strings do not have
any particular identifying characteristics, but they are shorter
than MD5 passwords, and are coded in a 64-character alphabet
which does not include the `<tt>&dollar;</tt>' character, so a
relatively short string which doesn't begin with a dollar sign is
very likely a DES password.
<p>Determining which library is being used on your system is fairly
easy for most programs, except for those like `<tt>init</tt>' which
are statically linked. (For those programs, the only way is to try
them on a known password and see if it works.) Programs which use
`<tt>crypt</tt>' are linked against `<tt>libcrypt</tt>', which for
each type of library is a symbolic link to the appropriate
implementation. For example, on a system using the DES versions:
<tscreen><verb>
$ cd /usr/lib
$ ls -l /usr/lib/libcrypt*
lrwxr-xr-x 1 bin bin 13 Sep 5 12:50 libcrypt.a -> libdescrypt.a
lrwxr-xr-x 1 bin bin 18 Sep 5 12:50 libcrypt.so.2.0 -> libdescrypt.so.2.0
lrwxr-xr-x 1 bin bin 15 Sep 5 12:50 libcrypt_p.a -> libdescrypt_p.a
</verb></tscreen>
On a system using the MD5-based libraries, the same links will be
present, but the target will be `<tt>libscrypt</tt>' rather than
`<tt>libdescrypt</tt>'.