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Re: encoding scripts (so that user can't see passwords easily)?


On Tue, Dec 06, 2005 at 08:36:07PM +0100, Tomasz Chmielewski wrote:
>Svend Sorensen schrieb:
>>On 12/4/05, nidhog <nidhog@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>>On 12/4/05, Christopher Faylor <cgf-no-personal-reply-please@cygwin.com> 
>>>wrote:
>>>
>>>>On Sun, Dec 04, 2005 at 12:20:57PM +0100, Tomasz Chmielewski wrote:
>>>>
>>>>>I have a little open-source project, which eases Windows administration
>>>>>a bit.
>>>>>
>>>>>In some of the scripts, I use usernames and passwords (to get to a
>>>>>password-protected network share etc.).
>>>>>Because they are scripts, username and password is in plain.
>>>>>
>>>>>Although the script files are only readable by SYSTEM and
>>>>>Administrators, if a disk is stolen, someone could easily get the
>>>>>passwords by doing simple "grep -r password ./*".
>>>>>
>>>>>Do you know some tool which could "encode" scripts?
>>>
>>>instead of storing them plaintext, why don't you try encoding them via
>>>cryptographic hashes - md5, sha1, tiger and the like.
>>
>>
>>How is the script going to get the plaintext password if all it has is
>>a one way hash?
>
>I don't really care, perhaps it won't be any one way hash anyway.
>
>It is to be a measure to prevent an accidental viewing of 
>usernames/passwords rather than some "military grade" tool which takes 
>100 years to break on a supercomputer.

So, in that case, someone has already made a suggestion:

http://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2005-12/msg00181.html

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