PHP 8.1.28 Released!

hash_pbkdf2

(PHP 5 >= 5.5.0, PHP 7, PHP 8)

hash_pbkdf2Génère une clé PBKDF2 dérivée du mot de passe fourni

Description

hash_pbkdf2(
    string $algo,
    string $password,
    string $salt,
    int $iterations,
    int $length = 0,
    bool $binary = false
): string

Liste de paramètres

algo

Nom de l'algorithme de hachage sélectionné (i.e. md5, sha256, haval160,4, etc..). Voir la fonction hash_algos() pour une liste des algorithmes supportés.

password

Le mot de passe à utiliser pour la dérivation.

salt

Le salt à utiliser pour la dérivation. Cette valeur doit être générée aléatoirement.

iterations

Le nombre d'itérations internes pour effectuer la dérivation.

length

La longueur de la chaîne de sortie. Si le paramètre binary vaut true, ce paramètre correspondra à la longueur, en octets, de la clé dérivée ; si le paramètre binary vaut false, il correspondra à deux fois la longueur, en octets, de la clé dérivée (vu que chaque octet de la clé est retournée sur deux hexits).

Si 0 est passé, la sortie complète de l'algorithme choisi sera utilisée.

binary

Lorsque définit à true, la fonction affichera les données binaires brutes. Si vaut false, l'affichage se fera en minuscule.

Valeurs de retour

Retourne une chaîne contenant la clé dérivée en minuscule, à moins que le paramètre binary ne soit positionné à true auquel cas, la représentation binaire brute de la clé dérivée sera retournée.

Erreurs / Exceptions

Une exception ValueError si l'algorithme n'est pas connu, si le paramètre iterations est inférieur ou égal à 0, si la longueur length est inférieure ou égale à 0 ou si le salt est trop long (plus grand que INT_MAX - 4).

Historique

Version Description
7.2.0 L'utilisation de fonctions de hachage non cryptographiques (adler32, crc32, crc32b, fnv132, fnv1a32, fnv164, fnv1a64, joaat) a été désactivée.
8.0.0 Lève une exception ValueError dorénavant en cas d'erreur. Précédemment, false était retourne et un message E_WARNING était émis.

Exemples

Exemple #1 Exemple avec hash_pbkdf2()

<?php
$password
= "password";
$iterations = 600000;

// Génère un sel cryptographiquement sécurise aléatoire en utilisant la fonction random_bytes(),
$salt = random_bytes(16);

$hash = hash_pbkdf2("sha256", $password, $salt, $iterations, 20);
var_dump($hash);

// Pour du binaire brute, $length doit être divisé par deux pour des résultats équivalent
$hash = hash_pbkdf2("sha256", $password, $salt, $iterations, 10, true);
var_dump(bin2hex($hash));
?>

Résultat de l'exemple ci-dessus est similaire à :

string(20) "120fb6cffcf8b32c43e7"
string(20) "120fb6cffcf8b32c43e7"

Notes

Attention

La méthode PBKDF2 peut être utilisée pour hacher des mots de passe pour le stockage. Cependant, vous devez garder à l'esprit que la fonction password_hash() ou la fonction crypt() avec la constante CRYPT_BLOWFISH est meilleur pour cet usage.

Voir aussi

add a note

User Contributed Notes 13 notes

up
24
clarence.pchy(at)gmail.com
7 years ago
Please pay great attention to the **$length** parameter! It is exactly the **return string length**, NOT the length of raw binary hash result.

I had a big problem about this --
I thought that `hash_pbkdf2(...false)` should equals to `bin2hex(hash_pbkdf2(...true))` just like `md5($x)` equals `bin2hex(md5($x, true))`. However I was wrong:

hash_pbkdf2('sha256', '123456', 'abc', 10000, 50, false); // returns string(50) "584bc5b41005169f1fa15177edb78d75f9846afc466a4bae05"
hash_pbkdf2('sha256', '123456', 'abc', 10000, 50, true); // returns string(50) "XKŴ��Qw�u��j�FjK���BFW�YpG �mp.g2�`;N�"
bin2hex(hash_pbkdf2('sha256', '123456', 'abc', 10000, 50, true)); // returns string(100) "584bc5b41005169f1fa15177edb78d75f9846afc466a4bae05119c82424657c81b5970471f098a6d702e6732b7603b194efe"

So I add such a note. Hope it will help someone else like me.
up
8
does dot not at matter dot org
10 years ago
this snippet was posted over a year ago on a dutch PHP community: (reference/source: http://www.phphulp.nl/php/script/beveiliging/pbkdf2-een-veilige-manier-om-wachtwoorden-op-te-slaan/1956/pbkdf2php/1757/)

<?php

/**
* @author Chris Horeweg
* @package Security_Tools
*/

function pbkdf2($password, $salt, $algorithm = 'sha512', $count = 20000, $key_length = 128, $raw_output = false)
{
if(!
in_array($algorithm, hash_algos(), true)) {
exit(
'pbkdf2: Hash algoritme is niet geinstalleerd op het systeem.');
}

if(
$count <= 0 || $key_length <= 0) {
$count = 20000;
$key_length = 128;
}

$hash_length = strlen(hash($algorithm, "", true));
$block_count = ceil($key_length / $hash_length);

$output = "";
for(
$i = 1; $i <= $block_count; $i++) {
$last = $salt . pack("N", $i);
$last = $xorsum = hash_hmac($algorithm, $last, $password, true);
for (
$j = 1; $j < $count; $j++) {
$xorsum ^= ($last = hash_hmac($algorithm, $last, $password, true));
}
$output .= $xorsum;
}

if(
$raw_output) {
return
substr($output, 0, $key_length);
}
else {
return
base64_encode(substr($output, 0, $key_length));
}
}
up
9
Trevor Herselman
8 years ago
This is a light-weight drop-in replacement for PHP's hash_pbkdf2(); written for compatibility with older versions of PHP.
Written, formatted and tested by myself, but using code and ideas based on the following:
https://defuse.ca/php-pbkdf2.htm
https://github.com/rchouinard/hash_pbkdf2-compat/blob/master/src/hash_pbkdf2.php
https://gist.github.com/rsky/5104756

My main goals:
1) Maximum compatibility with PHP hash_pbkdf2(), ie. a drop-in replacement function
2) Minimum code size/bloat
3) Easy to copy/paste
4) No classes, and not encapsulated in a class! Why write a class when a simple function will do?
5) Eliminate calls to sprintf(). (used by other examples for the error reporting)
6) No other dependencies, ie. extra required functions

<?php
if (!function_exists('hash_pbkdf2'))
{
function
hash_pbkdf2($algo, $password, $salt, $count, $length = 0, $raw_output = false)
{
if (!
in_array(strtolower($algo), hash_algos())) trigger_error(__FUNCTION__ . '(): Unknown hashing algorithm: ' . $algo, E_USER_WARNING);
if (!
is_numeric($count)) trigger_error(__FUNCTION__ . '(): expects parameter 4 to be long, ' . gettype($count) . ' given', E_USER_WARNING);
if (!
is_numeric($length)) trigger_error(__FUNCTION__ . '(): expects parameter 5 to be long, ' . gettype($length) . ' given', E_USER_WARNING);
if (
$count <= 0) trigger_error(__FUNCTION__ . '(): Iterations must be a positive integer: ' . $count, E_USER_WARNING);
if (
$length < 0) trigger_error(__FUNCTION__ . '(): Length must be greater than or equal to 0: ' . $length, E_USER_WARNING);

$output = '';
$block_count = $length ? ceil($length / strlen(hash($algo, '', $raw_output))) : 1;
for (
$i = 1; $i <= $block_count; $i++)
{
$last = $xorsum = hash_hmac($algo, $salt . pack('N', $i), $password, true);
for (
$j = 1; $j < $count; $j++)
{
$xorsum ^= ($last = hash_hmac($algo, $last, $password, true));
}
$output .= $xorsum;
}

if (!
$raw_output) $output = bin2hex($output);
return
$length ? substr($output, 0, $length) : $output;
}
}
up
8
Anonymous
10 years ago
Sadly this function was added in PHP 5.5 but many webservers just provide PHP 5.3. But there exists a pure PHP implementation (found here: https://defuse.ca/php-pbkdf2.htm).
I took this implementation, put it into a class with comments for PHPDoc and added a switch so that the native PHP function is used if available.

Feel free to use it!
http://pastebin.com/f5PDq735
(Posted on pastebin.com since the text would have been too long)
up
2
Flimm
6 years ago
Note that if $raw_output is false, then the output will be encoded using lowercase hexits. Some other systems (such as Django 2.0) use base64 instead. So if you're trying to generate hash strings that are compatible with those systems, you can use the base64_encode function, like this:

<?php

echo base64_encode( hash_pbkdf2( "sha256", "example password", "BbirbJq1C1G7", 100000, 0, true ) );

?>
up
2
gfilippakis at sleed dot gr
4 years ago
This is a very basic implementation of Rfc2898DeriveBytes class with only 2 of its constructors in case someone else finds it useful.

class Rfc2898DeriveBytes
{
private $textToHash;
private $saltByteSize;

public $salt;

public function __construct($arg1, $arg2)
{
if (is_string($arg1) && is_integer($arg2)) {
$this->textToHash = $arg1;
$this->saltByteSize = $arg2;
$this->salt = substr(
hex2bin(sha1(uniqid('', true))),
0,
$this->saltByteSize
);
} elseif (is_string($arg1) && is_string($arg2)) {
$this->textToHash = $arg1;
$this->salt = $arg2;
}
}

public function getBytes($size)
{
return hash_pbkdf2(
"sha1",
$this->textToHash,
$this->salt,
1000,
$size,
true
);
}
}
up
2
php . ober-mail . de
3 years ago
If you are wondering what the requirements are for the salt, have a look at the RFC[1]:

"The salt parameter should be a random string containing at least 64 bits of entropy. That means when generated from a function like *mcrypt_create_iv*, at least 8 bytes long. But for salts that consist of only *a-zA-Z0-9* (or are base_64 encoded), the minimum length should be at least 11 characters. It should be generated random for each password that's hashed, and stored along side the generated key."

[1] https://wiki.php.net/rfc/hash_pbkdf2
up
2
Yahe
4 years ago
On an error hash_pbkdf2() will not just raise an E_WARNING but it will also return FALSE.
up
0
php at ober-mail dot de
3 years ago
If you are wondering what the requirements are for the salt, have a look at the RFC[1]:

"The salt parameter should be a random string containing at least 64 bits of entropy. That means when generated from a function like *mcrypt_create_iv*, at least 8 bytes long. But for salts that consist of only *a-zA-Z0-9* (or are base_64 encoded), the minimum length should be at least 11 characters. It should be generated random for each password that's hashed, and stored along side the generated key."

[1] https://wiki.php.net/rfc/hash_pbkdf2
up
0
nimasdj [AT] yahoo [DOT] com
8 years ago
There is a mistake in the class provided by Binod Kumar Luitel (http://php.net/manual/en/function.hash-pbkdf2.php#113488):
this line:
return bin2hex(substr($this->output, 0, $this->key_length));
must be changed to:
return substr(bin2hex($this->output), 0, $this->key_length);
up
0
Binod Kumar Luitel
10 years ago
People who wants pure PHP implementation of the function, i.e. who don't have PHP 5.5 installed within their server, can use the following implementation. Nothing has been modified so far as from reference https://defuse.ca/php-pbkdf2.htm but the OOP lovers might like this.
For more information about PBKDF2 see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PBKDF2

<?php
/**
* PBKDF2 key derivation function as defined by RSA's PKCS #5: https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2898.txt
* $algorithm - The hash algorithm to use. Recommended: SHA256
* $password - The password.
* $salt - A salt that is unique to the password.
* $count - Iteration count. Higher is better, but slower. Recommended: At least 1000.
* $key_length - The length of the derived key in bytes.
* $raw_output - If true, the key is returned in raw binary format. Hex encoded otherwise.
* Returns: A $key_length-byte key derived from the password and salt.
*/
if (!function_exists("hash_pbkdf2")) {
function
hash_pbkdf2($algorithm, $password, $salt, $count, $key_length, $raw_output = false) {

class
pbkdf2 {
public
$algorithm;
public
$password;
public
$salt;
public
$count;
public
$key_length;
public
$raw_output;

private
$hash_length;
private
$output = "";

public function
__construct($data = null)
{
if (
$data != null) {
$this->init($data);
}
}

public function
init($data)
{
$this->algorithm = $data["algorithm"];
$this->password = $data["password"];
$this->salt = $data["salt"];
$this->count = $data["count"];
$this->key_length = $data["key_length"];
$this->raw_output = $data["raw_output"];
}

public function
hash()
{
$this->algorithm = strtolower($this->algorithm);
if(!
in_array($this->algorithm, hash_algos(), true))
throw new
Exception('PBKDF2 ERROR: Invalid hash algorithm.');

if(
$this->count <= 0 || $this->key_length <= 0)
throw new
Exception('PBKDF2 ERROR: Invalid parameters.');

$this->hash_length = strlen(hash($this->algorithm, "", true));
$block_count = ceil($this->key_length / $this->hash_length);
for (
$i = 1; $i <= $block_count; $i++) {
// $i encoded as 4 bytes, big endian.
$last = $this->salt . pack("N", $i);
// first iteration
$last = $xorsum = hash_hmac($this->algorithm, $last, $this->password, true);
// perform the other $this->count - 1 iterations
for ($j = 1; $j < $this->count; $j++) {
$xorsum ^= ($last = hash_hmac($this->algorithm, $last, $this->password, true));
}
$this->output .= $xorsum;
if(
$this->raw_output)
return
substr($this->output, 0, $this->key_length);
else
return
bin2hex(substr($this->output, 0, $this->key_length));
}
}
}

$data = array('algorithm' => $algorithm, 'password' => $password, 'salt' => $salt, 'count' => $count, 'key_length' => $key_length, 'raw_output' => $raw_output);
try {
$pbkdf2 = new pbkdf2($data);
return
$pbkdf2->hash();
} catch (
Exception $e) {
throw
$e;
}
}
}
up
-3
php - ober-mail - de
3 years ago
If you are wondering what the requirements are for the salt, have a look at the RFC[1]:

"The salt parameter should be a random string containing at least 64 bits of entropy. That means when generated from a function like *mcrypt_create_iv*, at least 8 bytes long. But for salts that consist of only *a-zA-Z0-9* (or are base_64 encoded), the minimum length should be at least 11 characters. It should be generated random for each password that's hashed, and stored along side the generated key."

[1] https://wiki.php.net/rfc/hash_pbkdf2
up
-7
Peter
10 years ago
See also https://github.com/rchouinard/hash_pbkdf2-compat for a compatibility function
To Top