Password hashing (bcrypt, pbkdf2_sha512) library for Elixir.
This library is intended to make it very straightforward for developers to check users' passwords in as secure a manner as possible.
Comeonin supports bcrypt
and pbkdf2_sha512
.
- Comeonin uses the most secure, well-tested, and up-to-date hashing schemes.
- It uses the latest version of bcrypt, supporting the
$2b$ prefix. - It is easy to use.
- Salts are generated by default.
- Each function has sensible, secure defaults.
- It provides excellent documentation.
- Clear instructions are given on how to use Comeonin.
- Several recommendations are also given to help developers keep their apps secure.
At the moment, Comeonin does not support Argon2, the winner of the 2015 Password Hashing Competition, and there are no plans to support it in the near future. See this issue for more details.
See the Requirements page in the wiki for details.
- Add comeonin to your
mix.exs
dependencies
defp deps do
[ {:comeonin, "~> 2.3"} ]
end
- List
:comeonin
as an application dependency
def application do
[applications: [:logger, :comeonin]]
end
-
Run
mix do deps.get, compile
-
Optional: during tests (and tests only), you may want to reduce the number of bcrypt, or pbkdf2, rounds so it does not slow down your test suite. If you have a
config/test.exs
, you should add (depending on which algorithm you are using):
config :comeonin, :bcrypt_log_rounds, 4
config :comeonin, :pbkdf2_rounds, 1
NB: do not use the above values in production.
Either import or alias the algorithm you want to use -- either Comeonin.Bcrypt
or Comeonin.Pbkdf2
.
Both algorithms have the hashpwsalt
function, which is a convenience
function that automatically generates a salt and then hashes the password.
To hash a password with the default options:
hash = hashpwsalt("difficult2guess")
See each module's documentation for more information about all the available options.
To check a password against the stored hash, use the checkpw
function. This takes two arguments: the plaintext password and
the stored hash:
checkpw(password, stored_hash)
There is also a dummy_checkpw
function, which takes no arguments
and is to be used when the username cannot be found. It performs a hash,
but then returns false. This can be used to make user enumeration more
difficult.
BSD. For full details, please read the LICENSE file.