In web2py they look like:

"pbkdf2(1000,20,sha512)$99f92ea3b8cdb79f$788117d26668f147cd8f10652cb61e51532d4e04"

"alg(parameters)$salt$base16encoded"

Try this:

import re, base64
a = 
 "pbkdf2_sha256$10000$FL21dN1vykVF$SUkANu/eKdKeUeT5lYr06aMpC5/T0vrBDo/iSy+ExyI="

def convert(p):
    a,b,c,d = p.split('$')
    c = base64.b16encode(base64.b64decode(c)).lower()
    d = base64.b16encode(base64.b64decode(d)).lower()
    n = len(d)
    return "pbkdf2(%s,%s,sha512)$%s$%s" % (b,n,c,d)

print convert(a)

I cannot test it without knowing the password.



On Monday, 4 November 2013 08:16:13 UTC-6, Andy B wrote:
>
> I have a legacy Django app that is due for a major overhaul. Instead of 
> continuing to use Django I would really like to make the switch to use 
> web2py instead. The only thing that's holding me back is the existing app 
> has several hundred Django user accounts that need to be migrated. I'm 
> unable to figure out how to have web2py authenticate passwords generated by 
> Django.
>
> From what I could find, Django saves passwords in the following format:
> algorithm + iterations + salt + base64 encoded hash
>
> ex: 
> "pbkdf2_sha256$10000$FL21dN1vykVF$SUkANu/eKdKeUeT5lYr06aMpC5/T0vrBDo/iSy+ExyI="
>
> Does anyone have any suggestions as to how I can get web2py to 
> authenticate user accounts with passwords in this format?
>

-- 
Resources:
- http://web2py.com
- http://web2py.com/book (Documentation)
- http://github.com/web2py/web2py (Source code)
- https://code.google.com/p/web2py/issues/list (Report Issues)
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"web2py-users" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.

Reply via email to