Development:
Windows 7 RTM 64bit
Intel Core 2 Quad processor
Python 2.5.4 (r254:67916, Dec 23 2008, 15:10:54) [MSC v.1310 32 bit
(Intel)] on win32
Python 2.6.2 (r262:71605, Apr 14 2009, 22:40:02) [MSC v.1500 32 bit
(Intel)] on win32
output:
46fb33cd6220b470d7fecb3dfb547fb2501517ca9695f8527895d1a4a1e515c0a05c8c1f15bd6f0439848717af00bdde902b50be454dd81878a9fce362b2e501

Production:
Dreamhost server
2.6.29-xeon-aufs2.29-ipv6-qos-grsec kernel
Python 2.5 (release25-maint, Jul 23 2008, 18:15:29)
[GCC 4.1.2 20061115 (prerelease) (Debian 4.1.1-21)] on linux2
output:
485c79d8330897e613847f64333a0ccebd705b1902c4c4872cb1b7cc9ad856eb00e70dd11474b39282699a453dead6d86d6f482992778bb9166d9c920f9fa694

I tried it on two more systems and they both produce the same hash as
my development machine.  Definitely a Dreamhost issue.  I think that's
the third time they've hosed me today.

On Aug 23, 7:08 pm, mdipierro <mdipie...@cs.depaul.edu> wrote:
> They are supposed to be the same. This is a hash algorithm and cannot
> depend on the machine. There is a bug somewhere (like the compiled a
> 32 bits code on a 64 bits machine and the bit shifting operator works
> differently).
>
> Can you give us details about the two python versions and machine
> architectures? This is a major bug with hashlib or hmac.
>
> Massimo
>
> On Aug 23, 6:59 pm, "mr.freeze" <nat...@freezable.com> wrote:
>
> > Yes, varchar(128).  Here's the output of that command on both servers
> > from the terminal:
>
> > Production:>>> import hmac
> > >>> import hashlib
> > >>> d= hmac.new('mykey','mypass',hashlib.sha512)
> > >>> d.hexdigest()
>
> > '485c79d8330897e613847f64333a0ccebd705b1902c4c4872cb1b7cc9ad856eb00e70dd11474b39282699a453dead6d86d6f482992778bb9166d9c920f9fa694'
>
> > Development:>>> import hmac
> > >>> import hashlib
> > >>> d = hmac.new('mykey','mypass',hashlib.sha512)
> > >>> d.hexdigest()
>
> > '46fb33cd6220b470d7fecb3dfb547fb2501517ca9695f8527895d1a4a1e515c0a05c8c1f15bd6f0439848717af00bdde902b50be454dd81878a9fce362b2e501'
>
> > They're supposed to be the same, right? Or am I misunderstanding how
> > this works.
>
> > On Aug 23, 6:34 pm, mdipierro <mdipie...@cs.depaul.edu> wrote:
>
> > > I cannot reproduce any machine dependence. I tried:
>
> > > hmac.new('mykey','something',hashlib.sha512).hexdigest()
>
> > > How long is your password field. Is it 128 bytes?
>
> > > Massimo
>
> > > On Aug 23, 5:57 pm, "mr.freeze" <nat...@freezable.com> wrote:
>
> > > > I have a strange situation and I know virtually nothing about
> > > > cryptography.  I am passing a key to my auth password requires
> > > > statement after the recent discussion on security strength like so:
>
> > > > if "login" in request.args:
> > > >     t.password.requires = [CRYPT(key='mykey')]
> > > > else:
> > > >     t.password.requires = [IS_STRONG(upper=1,number=1,special=1),CRYPT
> > > > (key='mykey')]
>
> > > > Here's the weird part: I have a dev server and a production server
> > > > that are both running web2py and pointed to the same MySQL database.
> > > > If I reset a user password from the dev server (retrieve_password), I
> > > > can only log in from the dev server after that.  The same is true for
> > > > the production machine.  Resetting from the production server reverses
> > > > the situation.
>
> > > > I have stepped through the code and verified that at line 779 in
> > > > tools.py user[passfield] is indeed different than form.vars.get
> > > > (passfield, '') (both look like valid password hashes) so user = None,
> > > > and thus login fails.
>
> > > > All I can figure is that the encryption is bound to the machine that
> > > > generated the password hash.  I'm using the same version of Python and
> > > > web2py.  Can someone verify or explain?
>
> > > > As always, thanks for your help.
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