Thanks, Joan, I'll give this a shot!

On Thu, Jul 20, 2017, 21:31 Joan Touzet <[email protected]> wrote:

> Hi Geoff,
>
> I describe one approach in the Chef CouchDB cookbook:
>
>     https://github.com/wohali/couchdb-cookbook
>
> "One way is by downloading and extracting CouchDB's source code, changing
> into the dev/ directory, and running the following one-liner, replacing
> MYPASSWORD with your desired password:"
>
> python -c 'import uuid;from pbkdf2 import
> pbkdf2_hex;password="MYPASSWORD";salt=uuid.uuid4().hex;iterations=10;print("-pbkdf2-{},{},{}".format(pbkdf2_hex(password,salt,iterations,20),salt,iterations))'
>
> -Joan
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Geoffrey Cox" <[email protected]>
> To: "user" <[email protected]>
> Sent: Thursday, 20 July, 2017 11:53:13 PM
> Subject: Running a CouchDB 2.0 Cluster in Production on AWS with Docker
>
> Hi,
>
> I finally got around to writing a post on how we are running a CouchDB 2.0
> cluster in production on AWS
> <
> https://medium.com/@redgeoff/running-a-couchdb-2-0-cluster-in-production-on-aws-with-docker-50f745d4bdbc
> >.
> I hope this helps others to bootstrap their projects.
>
> For the community, is there a command line tool or a simple command line
> script that can be written to generate the pbkdf2 hash of a password given
> the clear text password and secret? I know you can start a CouchDB node
> with a clear text password in the local.ini file and then have it create
> the hashed value, but this is a bit roundabout.
>
> If you have any feedback, please send it my way.
>
> Thanks!
>
> Geoff
>

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