> [Marek Lewczuk schreef op 29-04-2004 09:31 +0100] > > Joolz wrote: > >Hi, I'm completely new to hashing, so please bear with me. > > > >I want to store passwords in a pg db, MD5 seems like a good way to > >enhance security (no more plaintext passwords over the line etc.) I > >had a look at MD5, in PHP 4.3.4 there is a function md5() which seems > >to work nicely: > > > > echo md5('apple'); > > > >returns ae6d32585ecc4d33cb8cd68a047d8434 every time. Apart from the > >PHP frontend, I also want to be able to use the same algorithm in > >native pg. I found that postgresql-contrib-7.3.4 has a function > >crypt() which I expected to work the same. However: > > > > select crypt('apple', gen_salt('md5')); > > > >gives values different from the PHP md5() function, and moreover, > >they're different each time. Can anyone please tell me what I should > >do to get the same result in native pg as in PHP? > > > >Thanks! > > > > I whould suggest to update PG to version 7.4, where there is built-in > MD5 function. Thanks, I already found some fc1 rpm's (still in development). But can anyone tell me if the 7.4 internal md5() function will do the same as the PHP md5() function? Or do a quick select md5('apple') and let me know if the result is 'ae6d32585ecc4d33cb8cd68a047d8434'? I really wouldn't like to upgrade from my current stable situation, only to find out that it didn't solve my original problem. TIA! -- 10:14-10:15 Fedora Core release 1 (Yarrow) Linux 2.4.22-1.2188.nptl