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<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN""http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd"> <HTML ><HEAD ><TITLE >cracklib utilities</TITLE ><META NAME="GENERATOR" CONTENT="Modular DocBook HTML Stylesheet Version 1.79"></HEAD ><BODY CLASS="article" BGCOLOR="#FFFFFF" TEXT="#000000" LINK="#0000FF" VLINK="#840084" ALINK="#0000FF" ><DIV CLASS="ARTICLE" ><DIV CLASS="TITLEPAGE" ><H1 CLASS="title" ><A NAME="AEN1" >cracklib utilities</A ></H1 ><H3 CLASS="author" ><A NAME="AEN33" >Jean Pierre LeJacq</A ></H3 ><H3 CLASS="author" ><A NAME="AEN38" >Martin Pitt</A ></H3 ><H3 CLASS="author" ><A NAME="AEN43" >Jan Dittberner</A ></H3 ><P CLASS="copyright" >Copyright © 1998, 1999 Jean Pierre LeJacq</P ><P CLASS="copyright" >Copyright © 2003 Martin Pitt</P ><P CLASS="copyright" >Copyright © 2008 Jan Dittberner</P ><P CLASS="pubdate" >$Date: 2008-06-26 21:38:06 +0200 (Do, 26 Jun 2008) $<BR></P ><DIV ><DIV CLASS="abstract" ><P ></P ><A NAME="AEN4" ></A ><P ><SPAN CLASS="application" >cracklib2</SPAN > is a library containing a C function which may be used in a <A HREF="/cgi-bin/man/man2html/passwd+1" TARGET="_top" >passwd (1)</A > like program. The idea is simple: try to prevent users from choosing passwords that could be guessed by <A HREF="http://www.crypticide.com/alecm/security/c50-faq.html" TARGET="_top" ><SPAN CLASS="application" ><TT CLASS="filename" >crack</TT ></SPAN ></A > by filtering them out, at source. <SPAN CLASS="application" >cracklib2</SPAN > is <SPAN CLASS="emphasis" ><I CLASS="emphasis" >not</I ></SPAN > a replacement <A HREF="/cgi-bin/man/man2html/passwd+1" TARGET="_top" >passwd (1)</A > program. <SPAN CLASS="application" >cracklib2</SPAN > is a <SPAN CLASS="emphasis" ><I CLASS="emphasis" >library</I ></SPAN >.</P ><P ><FONT COLOR="RED" >cracklib-runtime</FONT > contains run-time support programs which use the shared library in <FONT COLOR="RED" >libcrack2</FONT > including programs to build the password dictionary databases used by the functions in the shared library.</P ><P ></P ></DIV ></DIV ><HR></DIV ><DIV CLASS="TOC" ><DL ><DT ><B >Table of Contents</B ></DT ><DT >1. <A HREF="#AEN49" >Upstream <FONT COLOR="RED" >cracklib2</FONT > utilities.</A ></DT ><DD ><DL ><DT >1.1. <A HREF="#AEN52" ><FONT COLOR="RED" >cracklib2</FONT > dictionary utilities.</A ></DT ><DD ><DL ><DT >1.1.1. <A HREF="#s-cracklib-format" >cracklib-format</A ></DT ><DT >1.1.2. <A HREF="#s-cracklib-packer" >cracklib-packer</A ></DT ><DT >1.1.3. <A HREF="#AEN69" >cracklib-unpacker</A ></DT ><DT >1.1.4. <A HREF="#AEN78" >create-cracklib-dict</A ></DT ></DL ></DD ><DT >1.2. <A HREF="#AEN87" ><FONT COLOR="RED" >cracklib2</FONT >'s test utility <SPAN CLASS="application" >cracklib-check.</SPAN ></A ></DT ></DL ></DD ><DT >2. <A HREF="#AEN97" >Debian <FONT COLOR="RED" >cracklib2</FONT > utilities.</A ></DT ><DD ><DL ><DT >2.1. <A HREF="#AEN100" >update-cracklib</A ></DT ></DL ></DD ><DT >3. <A HREF="#AEN112" >Debian dictionaries</A ></DT ><DD ><DL ><DT >3.1. <A HREF="#s-debian-dictionary-location" >Database location for cracklib utilities.</A ></DT ><DT >3.2. <A HREF="#AEN125" >Word lists for creating dictionary databases.</A ></DT ></DL ></DD ></DL ></DIV ><DIV CLASS="section" ><H2 CLASS="section" ><A NAME="AEN49" >1. Upstream <FONT COLOR="RED" >cracklib2</FONT > utilities.</A ></H2 ><DIV CLASS="section" ><H3 CLASS="section" ><A NAME="AEN52" >1.1. <FONT COLOR="RED" >cracklib2</FONT > dictionary utilities.</A ></H3 ><DIV CLASS="section" ><H4 CLASS="section" ><A NAME="s-cracklib-format" >1.1.1. cracklib-format</A ></H4 ><P ><SPAN CLASS="application" >cracklib-format</SPAN > takes a list of text files each containing a list of words, one per line, It lowercases all words, removes control characters, and sorts the lists. It outputs the cleaned up list to standard output. </P ><P >For more information see the manual page of <A HREF="/cgi-bin/man/man2html?cracklib-format+8" TARGET="_top" ><SPAN CLASS="application" >cracklib-format</SPAN ></A >.</P ></DIV ><DIV CLASS="section" ><HR><H4 CLASS="section" ><A NAME="s-cracklib-packer" >1.1.2. cracklib-packer</A ></H4 ><P ><SPAN CLASS="application" >cracklib-packer</SPAN > reads from standard input a list of sorted and cleaned words and creates a database from the result.</P ><P >For more information see the manual page of <A HREF="/cgi-bin/man/man2html?cracklib-packer+8" TARGET="_top" ><SPAN CLASS="application" >cracklib-packer</SPAN ></A >.</P ></DIV ><DIV CLASS="section" ><HR><H4 CLASS="section" ><A NAME="AEN69" >1.1.3. cracklib-unpacker</A ></H4 ><P ><SPAN CLASS="application" >cracklib-unpacker</SPAN > reads from a database created by <A HREF="#s-cracklib-packer" ><SPAN CLASS="application" >cracklib-packer</SPAN ></A > and outputs on standard output the list of words that make up the database.</P ><P >For more information see the manual page of <A HREF="/cgi-bin/man/man2html?cracklib-unpacker+8" TARGET="_top" ><SPAN CLASS="application" >cracklib-unpacker</SPAN ></A >.</P ></DIV ><DIV CLASS="section" ><HR><H4 CLASS="section" ><A NAME="AEN78" >1.1.4. create-cracklib-dict</A ></H4 ><P ><SPAN CLASS="application" >create-cracklib-dict</SPAN > takes one or more word list files as arguments and converts them into cracklib dictionaries for use by password checking programs. The results are placed in the default compiled-in dictionary location (<A HREF="#s-debian-dictionary-location" >Section 3.1</A >).</P ><P >If you wish to store the dictionary in a different location, use the <A HREF="#s-cracklib-format" >cracklib-format</A > and <A HREF="#s-cracklib-packer" ><SPAN CLASS="application" >cracklib-packer</SPAN ></A > commands directly.</P ></DIV ></DIV ><DIV CLASS="section" ><HR><H3 CLASS="section" ><A NAME="AEN87" >1.2. <FONT COLOR="RED" >cracklib2</FONT >'s test utility <SPAN CLASS="application" >cracklib-check.</SPAN ></A ></H3 ><P ><SPAN CLASS="application" >cracklib-check</SPAN > takes a list of passwords from stdin and checks them via libcrack2's <A HREF="/cgi-bin/man/man2html/FascistCheck+3" TARGET="_top" >FascistCheck</A > sub routine.</P ><P ><SPAN CLASS="application" >cracklib-check</SPAN > prints each checked password and the corresponding result of <A HREF="/cgi-bin/man/man2html/FascistCheck+3" TARGET="_top" >FascistCheck</A > to stdout. The password and the result are separated by a colon.</P ></DIV ></DIV ><DIV CLASS="section" ><HR><H2 CLASS="section" ><A NAME="AEN97" >2. Debian <FONT COLOR="RED" >cracklib2</FONT > utilities.</A ></H2 ><DIV CLASS="section" ><H3 CLASS="section" ><A NAME="AEN100" >2.1. update-cracklib</A ></H3 ><P ><SPAN CLASS="application" >update-cracklib</SPAN > uses <A HREF="#s-cracklib-format" ><SPAN CLASS="application" >cracklib-format</SPAN ></A > and <A HREF="#s-cracklib-packer" ><SPAN CLASS="application" >cracklib-packer</SPAN ></A > to update the default cracklib dictionary it uses the word lists configured in <TT CLASS="filename" >/etc/cracklib/cracklib.conf</TT >.</P ><P >For more information see the manual page of <A HREF="/cgi-bin/man/man2html?update-cracklib+8" TARGET="_top" ><SPAN CLASS="application" >cracklib-format</SPAN ></A >.</P ></DIV ></DIV ><DIV CLASS="section" ><HR><H2 CLASS="section" ><A NAME="AEN112" >3. Debian dictionaries</A ></H2 ><P ><SPAN CLASS="application" >cracklib2</SPAN > uses a word database that is in a binary format generated by the utilities <A HREF="#s-cracklib-format" ><SPAN CLASS="application" >cracklib-format</SPAN ></A > and <A HREF="#s-cracklib-packer" ><SPAN CLASS="application" >cracklib-packer</SPAN ></A >. Three files are created with the suffixes of .hwm, .pwd, and .pwi. These files are not byte-order independent, in fact they are probably architecture specific, mostly due to speed constraints.</P ><DIV CLASS="section" ><HR><H3 CLASS="section" ><A NAME="s-debian-dictionary-location" >3.1. Database location for cracklib utilities.</A ></H3 ><P >All cracklib utilities can use a dictionary database location specified as a command line argument. The utilities use a default dictionary database if nothing else is specified. On a Debian system the database is located in the directory <TT CLASS="filename" >/var/cache/cracklib/cracklib_dict</TT > and is generated daily with the program <TT CLASS="filename" >/etc/cron.daily/cracklib</TT >.</P ></DIV ><DIV CLASS="section" ><HR><H3 CLASS="section" ><A NAME="AEN125" >3.2. Word lists for creating dictionary databases.</A ></H3 ><P ><SPAN CLASS="application" >cracklib2</SPAN > is only as good as the word dictionary database you create. Basically, you want to include any word that a malicious user could guess. It could include: <P ></P ><UL ><LI ><P >Names (including nicknames and user ids) of all users.</P ></LI ><LI ><P >Names of pets, relatives, cars, ... of all users.</P ></LI ><LI ><P >Computer, network, printer, ... names.</P ></LI ><LI ><P >Insurance numbers, employee numbers, ... of users. * ...</P ></LI ></UL > </P ><P >Debian provides a number of word lists that can be used as sources for creating the cracklib2 dictionary database. The package wenglish provides a standard ASCII word list that can be directly used. The package ispell also supplies a large word list but it is in binary format. I haven't figured out how to decode this binary format so that the resulting word list can be used by cracklib2.</P ></DIV ></DIV ></DIV ></BODY ></HTML >