Gerhardus Geldenhuis wrote:
Thanks, I thought crypt as well... but then I would expect it to look like: userPassword: {CRYPT}saHW9GdxihkGQinstead slapcat generates: userPassword:: skadfjsajf= Two small differences: there is two :: instead of one and all of the userPassword entries ends in =.
Read the ldif(5) manpage.
Regards On 15 March 2013 15:19, Marot Laurent <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote: Hello, Seems to be base64 encoded {crypt} password http://www.openldap.org/faq/data/cache/344.html {crxPt}$1$I0(g7lbc$Zp/rgvZBd0eHöndgh0W3L/ Laurent *De :*[email protected] [mailto:[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>] *De la part de* Gerhardus Geldenhuis *Envoyé :* vendredi 15 mars 2013 15:58 *À :* [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> *Objet :* Encryption or hash for password? Hi I am using the default Ubuntu 12.10 openldap installation and have inherited an existing ldap setup. When I do a slapcat -n 1 It shows userPassword entries as follows: userPassword:: e2NyeFB0fSQxJEkwKGc3bGJjJFpwL3JndlpCZDBlSPZuZGdoMFczTC8= ( password string has been edited... ) I am not sure how this is encoded... is there a way to find out? I have tried md5 which is currently the default encoding for our servers. I have also tried slappasswd with various -h option to see if I can recreate the same hash if it is a hash. I want to add new users using ldif and would like to encrypt/hash their passwords in a similar fashion if possible. Any help would be appreciated. Regards -- Gerhardus Geldenhuis ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Le papier est un support de communication naturel, renouvelable et recyclable. Si vous devez imprimer ce mail, n’oubliez pas de le recycler. -- Gerhardus Geldenhuis
-- -- Howard Chu CTO, Symas Corp. http://www.symas.com Director, Highland Sun http://highlandsun.com/hyc/ Chief Architect, OpenLDAP http://www.openldap.org/project/
