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This is a set of Python_ bindings for the scrypt_ key derivation function.
.. image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/scrypt.svg :target: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/scrypt/ :alt: Latest Version
.. image:: https://anaconda.org/conda-forge/scrypt/badges/version.svg :target: https://anaconda.org/conda-forge/scrypt
.. image:: https://anaconda.org/conda-forge/scrypt/badges/downloads.svg :target: https://anaconda.org/conda-forge/scrypt
Scrypt is useful when encrypting password as it is possible to specify a minimum amount of time to use when encrypting and decrypting. If, for example, a password takes 0.05 seconds to verify, a user won't notice the slight delay when signing in, but doing a brute force search of several billion passwords will take a considerable amount of time. This is in contrast to more traditional hash functions such as MD5 or the SHA family which can be implemented extremely fast on cheap hardware.
For Debian and Ubuntu, please ensure that the following packages are installed:
.. code:: bash
$ sudo apt-get install build-essential libssl-dev python-dev
For Fedora and RHEL-derivatives, please ensure that the following packages are installed:
.. code:: bash
$ sudo yum install gcc openssl-devel python-devel
For OSX, please do the following::
$ brew install openssl
$ export CFLAGS="-I$(brew --prefix openssl)/include $CFLAGS"
$ export LDFLAGS="-L$(brew --prefix openssl)/lib $LDFLAGS"
For OSX, you can also use the precompiled wheels. They are installed by::
$ pip install scrypt
For Windows, please use the precompiled wheels. They are installed by::
$ pip install scrypt
For Windows, when the package should be compiled, the development package from https://slproweb.com/products/Win32OpenSSL.html is needed. It needs to be installed to C:\OpenSSL-Win64.
You can install py-scrypt from this repository if you want the latest but possibly non-compiling version::
$ git clone https://github.com/holgern/py-scrypt.git
$ cd py-scrypt
$ python setup.py build
Become superuser (or use virtualenv):
# python setup.py install
Run tests after install:
$ python setup.py test
Or you can install the latest release from PyPi::
$ pip install scrypt
Users of the Anaconda_ Python distribution can directly obtain pre-built Windows, Intel Linux or macOS / OSX binaries from the conda-forge channel. This can be done via::
$ conda install -c conda-forge scrypt
If you want py-scrypt for your Python 3 environment, just run the above commands with your Python 3 interpreter. Py-scrypt supports both Python 2 and 3.
From version 0.6.0 (not available on PyPi yet), py-scrypt supports PyPy as well.
Fore encryption/decryption, the library exports two functions
encrypt
and decrypt
::
>>> import scrypt
>>> data = scrypt.encrypt('a secret message', 'password', maxtime=0.1) # This will take at least 0.1 seconds
>>> data[:20]
'scrypt\x00\r\x00\x00\x00\x08\x00\x00\x00\x01RX9H'
>>> scrypt.decrypt(data, 'password', maxtime=0.1) # This will also take at least 0.1 seconds
'a secret message'
>>> scrypt.decrypt(data, 'password', maxtime=0.05) # scrypt won't be able to decrypt this data fast enough
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
scrypt.error: decrypting file would take too long
>>> scrypt.decrypt(data, 'wrong password', maxtime=0.1) # scrypt will throw an exception if the password is incorrect
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
scrypt.error: password is incorrect
From these, one can make a simple password verifier using the following functions::
def hash_password(password, maxtime=0.5, datalength=64):
return scrypt.encrypt(os.urandom(datalength), password, maxtime=maxtime)
def verify_password(hashed_password, guessed_password, maxtime=0.5):
try:
scrypt.decrypt(hashed_password, guessed_password, maxtime)
return True
except scrypt.error:
return False
But, if you want output that is deterministic and constant in size,
you can use the hash
function::
>>> import scrypt
>>> h1 = scrypt.hash('password', 'random salt')
>>> len(h1) # The hash will be 64 bytes by default, but is overridable.
64
>>> h1[:10]
'\xfe\x87\xf3hS\tUo\xcd\xc8'
>>> h2 = scrypt.hash('password', 'random salt')
>>> h1 == h2 # The hash function is deterministic
True
Scrypt_ was created by Colin Percival and is licensed as 2-clause BSD. Since scrypt does not normally build as a shared library, I have included the source for the currently latest version of the library in this repository. When a new version arrives, I will update these sources.
Kelvin Wong
_ on Bitbucket provided changes to make the library
available on Mac OS X 10.6 and earlier, as well as changes to make the
library work more like the command-line version of scrypt by
default. Kelvin also contributed with the unit tests, lots of cross
platform testing and work on the hash
function.
Burstaholic_ on Bitbucket provided the necessary changes to make the library build on Windows.
The python-appveyor-demo
_ repository for setting up automated Windows
builds for a multitude of Python versions.
This library is licensed under the same license as scrypt; 2-clause BSD.
.. _scrypt: http://www.tarsnap.com/scrypt.html .. _Python: http://python.org .. _Burstaholic: https://bitbucket.org/Burstaholic .. _Kelvin Wong: https://bitbucket.org/kelvinwong_ca .. _python-appveyor-demo: https://github.com/ogrisel/python-appveyor-demo .. _Anaconda: https://www.continuum.io
FAQs
Bindings for the scrypt key derivation function library
We found that scrypt demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 2 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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