Iñigo Barandiaran wrote:
Thanks!Well, you can use the built-in md5 function for this purpose. For instance, you could insert a password into the table with a statement like: insert into auth_data (user_id, password) values (1, md5('test')); And compare the supplied password with something like: select true from auth_data where user_id = 1 and password = md5('test'); You don't need to depend on an external library for this functionality; it's built right into Postgres. Personally, in my own apps I write in PHP, I use a combination of sha1 and md5 to hash user passwords, without depending on Postgres to do the hashing, but the effect is basically the same. Raymond |