NAME
Crypt::SKey - Perl S/Key calculator
SYNOPSIS
# In perl script:
use Crypt::SKey qw(compute);
$output = compute($sequence_num, $seed, $password);
@output = compute($sequence_num, $seed, $password, $count);
# Command line:
perl -MCrypt::SKey -e key 500 fo099804
perl -MCrypt::SKey -e key 500 fo099804 100
perl -MCrypt::SKey=key_md4 -e key_md4 500 fo099804
# The following shell alias may be useful:
alias key 'perl -MCrypt::SKey -e key'
# This allows you to simply type:
key 500 fo099804
DESCRIPTION
This module contains a simple S/Key calculator (as described in RFC 1760) implemented in Perl. It exports the function key
by default, and may optionally export the function compute
.
compute_md4
, compute_md5
, compute_sha1
, key_md4
, key_md5
, and key_sha1
are provided as convenience functions for selecting MD4, MD5, or SHA1 hashes. The default is MD4; this may be changed with with the $Crypt::SKey::HASH
variable, assigning it the value of MD4
, MD5
, or SHA1
. You can access any of these functions by exporting them in the same manner as compute
in the above example.
Most S/Key systems use MD4 hashing, but a few (notably OPIE) use MD5.
INSTALLATION
Follow the usual steps for installing any Perl module:
perl Makefile.PL
make test
make install
FUNCTIONS
compute($sequence_num, $seed, $password [, $count])
compute_md4($sequence_num, $seed, $password [, $count])
compute_md5($sequence_num, $seed, $password [, $count])
compute_sha1($sequence_num, $seed, $password [, $count])
Given three arguments, computes the hash value and returns it as a string containing six words separated by spaces (or as a string of 16 hex digits if $Crypt::SKey::HEX
is set to a true value). If $count is specified and greater than one, returns a list of several such strings. The meanings of the arguments is as follows:
sequence_number
Which output in the sequence of calculated S/Key responses to generate. This is called
N
in RFC 1760. It will usually be the first number shown in an S/Key challenge.seed
This is a random seed. It is usually the second number/string shown in an S/Key challenge.
password
This is your secret password.
count
This argument is optional and defaults to
1
. It specifies the number of S/Key responses to generate. This may be useful if you want to pre-generate a bunch of responses and print them on a piece of paper so that you don't need to have an S/Key calculator around later.
key()
key_md4()
key_md5()
key_sha1()
Acts just like the 'key' executable program that comes with the standard distribution of s/key. Reads several arguments from the command line (@ARGV
), prompts for the user's password, and prints one or more calculated s/key responses to STDOUT
. The command line arguments are, in order:
sequence_number
seed
count (optional)
Their meanings are exactly the same as with the compute
function above.
NOTES
If you care about security, you'd probably be better off using SSH than S/Key, because SSH encrypts your entire session whereas S/Key only encrypts your password. I wrote this module because nobody else seemed to have done it yet, and because sometimes I'm on systems with neither SSH nor the key
program, but I want to telnet to a system that offers S/Key password transmission.
The original key
program takes the count
parameter using the -n
flag, but this version takes it as an optional final argument. Unless I hear from someone that needs the behavior changed, I'm not likely to add the -n
flag.
I currently have no plans to write any code that checks the validity of S/Key responses at login, i.e. the code that the server has to run when authenticating users. It shouldn't be hard, though, and if someone wants to send me a patch implementing this functionality I'll be happy to add it.
AUTHOR
Ken Williams, kwilliams@cpan.org
Thanks to Chris Nandor and Allen Chen for testing MD5 functionality.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2000-2009 Ken Williams. All rights reserved.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
SEE ALSO
perl(1). RFC 1760. Digest::MD4(1). Digest::MD5(1). Term::ReadKey(1).