String Functions
PHP Manual

crypt

(PHP 4, PHP 5)

cryptOne-way string hashing

Description

string crypt ( string $str [, string $salt ] )

crypt() will return a hashed string using the standard Unix DES-based algorithm or alternative algorithms that may be available on the system.

Some operating systems support more than one type of hash. In fact, sometimes the standard DES-based algorithm is replaced by an MD5-based algorithm. The hash type is triggered by the salt argument. Prior to 5.3, PHP would determine the available algorithms at install-time based on the system's crypt(). If no salt is provided, PHP will auto-generate either a standard two character (DES) salt, or a twelve character (MD5), depending on the availability of MD5 crypt(). PHP sets a constant named CRYPT_SALT_LENGTH which indicates the longest valid salt allowed by the available hashes.

The standard DES-based crypt() returns the salt as the first two characters of the output. It also only uses the first eight characters of str, so longer strings that start with the same eight characters will generate the same result (when the same salt is used).

On systems where the crypt() function supports multiple hash types, the following constants are set to 0 or 1 depending on whether the given type is available:

Note:

As of PHP 5.3.0, PHP contains its own implementation and will use that if the system lacks of support for one or more of the algorithms.

Parameters

str

The string to be hashed.

salt

An optional salt string to base the hashing on. If not provided, the behaviour is defined by the algorithm implementation and can lead to unexpected results.

Return Values

Returns the hashed string or a string that is shorter than 13 characters and is guaranteed to differ from the salt on failure.

Changelog

Version Description
5.3.2 Added SHA-256 and SHA-512 crypt based on Ulrich Drepper's » implementation.
5.3.2 Fixed Blowfish behaviour on invalid rounds to return "failure" string ("*0" or "*1"), instead of falling back to DES.
5.3.0 PHP now contains its own implementation for the MD5 crypt, Standard DES, Extended DES and the Blowfish algorithms and will use that if the system lacks of support for one or more of the algorithms.

Examples

Example #1 crypt() examples

<?php
$password 
crypt('mypassword'); // let the salt be automatically generated

/* You should pass the entire results of crypt() as the salt for comparing a
   password, to avoid problems when different hashing algorithms are used. (As
   it says above, standard DES-based password hashing uses a 2-character salt,
   but MD5-based hashing uses 12.) */
if (crypt($user_input$password) == $password) {
   echo 
"Password verified!";
}
?>

Example #2 Using crypt() with htpasswd

<?php
// Set the password
$password 'mypassword';

// Get the hash, letting the salt be automatically generated
$hash crypt($password);
?>

Example #3 Using crypt() with different hash types

<?php
if (CRYPT_STD_DES == 1) {
    echo 
'Standard DES: ' crypt('rasmuslerdorf''rl') . "\n";
}

if (
CRYPT_EXT_DES == 1) {
    echo 
'Extended DES: ' crypt('rasmuslerdorf''_J9..rasm') . "\n";
}

if (
CRYPT_MD5 == 1) {
    echo 
'MD5:          ' crypt('rasmuslerdorf''$1$rasmusle$') . "\n";
}

if (
CRYPT_BLOWFISH == 1) {
    echo 
'Blowfish:     ' crypt('rasmuslerdorf''$2a$07$usesomesillystringforsalt$') . "\n";
}

if (
CRYPT_SHA256 == 1) {
    echo 
'SHA-256:      ' crypt('rasmuslerdorf''$5$rounds=5000$usesomesillystringforsalt$') . "\n";
}

if (
CRYPT_SHA512 == 1) {
    echo 
'SHA-512:      ' crypt('rasmuslerdorf''$6$rounds=5000$usesomesillystringforsalt$') . "\n";
}
?>

The above example will output something similar to:

Standard DES: rl.3StKT.4T8M
Extended DES: _J9..rasmBYk8r9AiWNc
MD5:          $1$rasmusle$rISCgZzpwk3UhDidwXvin0
Blowfish:     $2a$07$usesomesillystringfore2uDLvp1Ii2e./U9C8sBjqp8I90dH6hi
SHA-256:      $5$rounds=5000$usesomesillystri$KqJWpanXZHKq2BOB43TSaYhEWsQ1Lr5QNyPCDH/Tp.6
SHA-512:      $6$rounds=5000$usesomesillystri$D4IrlXatmP7rx3P3InaxBeoomnAihCKRVQP22JZ6EY47Wc6BkroIuUUBOov1i.S5KPgErtP/EN5mcO.ChWQW21

Notes

Note: There is no decrypt function, since crypt() uses a one-way algorithm.

See Also


String Functions
PHP Manual