Commit e0da20ba authored by dkl%redhat.com's avatar dkl%redhat.com

Bug 455584 - Use bz_crypt everywhere instead of the crypt() function

Patch by David Lawrence <dkl@redhat.com> = r/a=LpSolit
parent 55e5f706
......@@ -53,14 +53,9 @@ sub check_credentials {
"SELECT cryptpassword FROM profiles WHERE userid = ?",
undef, $user_id);
# Wide characters cause crypt to die
if (Bugzilla->params->{'utf8'}) {
utf8::encode($password) if utf8::is_utf8($password);
}
# Using the internal crypted password as the salt,
# crypt the password the user entered.
my $entered_password_crypted = crypt($password, $real_password_crypted);
my $entered_password_crypted = bz_crypt($password, $real_password_crypted);
return { failure => AUTH_LOGINFAILED }
if $entered_password_crypted ne $real_password_crypted;
......
......@@ -464,21 +464,23 @@ sub file_mod_time {
}
sub bz_crypt {
my ($password) = @_;
# The list of characters that can appear in a salt. Salts and hashes
# are both encoded as a sequence of characters from a set containing
# 64 characters, each one of which represents 6 bits of the salt/hash.
# The encoding is similar to BASE64, the difference being that the
# BASE64 plus sign (+) is replaced with a forward slash (/).
my @saltchars = (0..9, 'A'..'Z', 'a'..'z', '.', '/');
# Generate the salt. We use an 8 character (48 bit) salt for maximum
# security on systems whose crypt uses MD5. Systems with older
# versions of crypt will just use the first two characters of the salt.
my $salt = '';
for ( my $i=0 ; $i < 8 ; ++$i ) {
$salt .= $saltchars[rand(64)];
my ($password, $salt) = @_;
if (!defined $salt) {
# The list of characters that can appear in a salt. Salts and hashes
# are both encoded as a sequence of characters from a set containing
# 64 characters, each one of which represents 6 bits of the salt/hash.
# The encoding is similar to BASE64, the difference being that the
# BASE64 plus sign (+) is replaced with a forward slash (/).
my @saltchars = (0..9, 'A'..'Z', 'a'..'z', '.', '/');
# Generate the salt. We use an 8 character (48 bit) salt for maximum
# security on systems whose crypt uses MD5. Systems with older
# versions of crypt will just use the first two characters of the salt.
$salt = '';
for ( my $i=0 ; $i < 8 ; ++$i ) {
$salt .= $saltchars[rand(64)];
}
}
# Wide characters cause crypt to die
......@@ -489,6 +491,10 @@ sub bz_crypt {
# Crypt the password.
my $cryptedpassword = crypt($password, $salt);
# HACK: Perl has bug where returned crypted password is considered tainted
# Upstream Bug: http://rt.perl.org/rt3/Public/Bug/Display.html?id=59998
trick_taint($cryptedpassword) unless (is_tainted($password) || is_tainted($salt));
# Return the crypted password.
return $cryptedpassword;
}
......@@ -914,9 +920,10 @@ of the "mtime" parameter of the perl "stat" function.
=over 4
=item C<bz_crypt($password)>
=item C<bz_crypt($password, $salt)>
Takes a string and returns a C<crypt>ed value for it, using a random salt.
An optional salt string may also be passed in.
Please always use this function instead of the built-in perl "crypt"
when initially encrypting a password.
......
......@@ -92,12 +92,7 @@ sub SaveAccount {
my $oldpassword = $cgi->param('Bugzilla_password');
# Wide characters cause crypt to die
if (Bugzilla->params->{'utf8'}) {
utf8::encode($oldpassword) if utf8::is_utf8($oldpassword);
}
if (crypt($oldpassword, $oldcryptedpwd) ne $oldcryptedpwd)
if (bz_crypt($oldpassword, $oldcryptedpwd) ne $oldcryptedpwd)
{
ThrowUserError("old_password_incorrect");
}
......
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