On 8/20/07, Vladimir Rusinov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
> On 8/21/07, Dan Cowsill <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I started having problems with my boot password not too long after I
> > changed it and I stumbled upon something altogether weird.
> >
> > The following is a copy of what grub is giving me for an md5 hash:
> >
> > --
> >
> > grub> md5crypt
> >
> > Password: ****
> > Encrypted: $1$vhwK6$dV.xpYBymjq7.cZVnFZYe0
> >
> > grub> md5crypt
> >
> > Password: ****
> > Encrypted: $1$miwK6$BKU11//PyeKMxtgiCbEeZ0
> >
> > grub> md5crypt
> >
> > Password: ****
> > Encrypted: $1$njwK6$3KqXwDtPqGm6cBGQgSl2.0
> >
> > grub> md5crypt
> >
> > Password: ****
> > Encrypted: $1$YkwK6$QCQguFhrGofbJXYnA62J91
> >
> > grub>
> >
> > --
> >
> > Now, keep in mind that the word I'm typing is 'test'.  No
> > capitalization, no spaces, no nonsense.  And yet the hashes md5crypt
> > returns are all different.  Now, that's no good if you ask me.
> >
> > Is anyone else experiencing the same issue?
> >
>
> Yes. But all hashes are works. May be this is not actually md5?
>
> --
> Vladimir Rusinov
> GreenMice Solutions: IT-решения на базе Linux
> http://greenmice.info/

A possibility, but the point of hashing a password is that the hash
will be the same each time, allowing one to compare a user submitted
password to a securely stored one.

-- 
Dan Cowsill
http://www.danthehat.net

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