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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Best Approach To Encrypt The Passwords Post 302916556 by Ariean on Wednesday 10th of September 2014 03:51:40 PM
Old 09-10-2014
Best Approach To Encrypt The Passwords

Hello All,
I am using the red hat Linux OS and bash shell scripting. Below is my requirement.
  1. I need to store encrypted the passwords of database accounts, ftp acccounts into a file1.
  2. Encrypt that file1 or make it secure with password to open & read it.
  3. Later in shell scripts
  4. I need to decrypt the file1
  5. Read the password for a particular account and close it.
  6. Use that password value further in the scripts.
could you please tell me how can i acheive this? wanted to know industry best standards. I hardly remember at one of my previous companies we were using some kdb file to store the passwords but never get a chance to dwelve further to understand it. please help

Thank you.
 

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PASSWD(5)						     Linux Programmer's Manual							 PASSWD(5)

NAME
passwd - password file DESCRIPTION
Passwd is a text file, that contains a list of the system's accounts, giving for each account some useful information like user ID, group ID, home directory, shell, etc. Often, it also contains the encrypted passwords for each account. It should have general read permission (many utilities, like ls(1) use it to map user IDs to usernames), but write access only for the superuser. In the good old days there was no great problem with this general read permission. Everybody could read the encrypted passwords, but the hardware was too slow to crack a well-chosen password, and moreover, the basic assumption used to be that of a friendly user-community. These days many people run some version of the shadow password suite, where /etc/passwd has asterisks (*) instead of encrypted passwords, and the encrypted passwords are in /etc/shadow which is readable by the superuser only. Regardless of whether shadow passwords are used, many sysadmins use an asterisk in the encrypted password field to make sure that this user can not authenticate him- or herself using a password. (But see the Notes below.) If you create a new login, first put an asterisk in the password field, then use passwd(1) to set it. There is one entry per line, and each line has the format: account:password:UID:GID:GECOS:directory:shell The field descriptions are: account the name of the user on the system. It should not contain capital letters. password the encrypted user password, an asterisk (*), or the letter 'x'. (See pwconv(8) for an explanation of 'x'.) UID the numerical user ID. GID the numerical primary group ID for this user. GECOS This field is optional and only used for informational purposes. Usually, it contains the full username. GECOS means General Electric Comprehensive Operating System, which has been renamed to GCOS when GE's large systems division was sold to Honeywell. Dennis Ritchie has reported: "Sometimes we sent printer output or batch jobs to the GCOS machine. The gcos field in the password file was a place to stash the information for the $IDENTcard. Not elegant." directory the user's $HOME directory. shell the program to run at login (if empty, use /bin/sh). If set to a nonexistent executable, the user will be unable to login through login(1). FILES
/etc/passwd NOTES
If you want to create user groups, their GIDs must be equal and there must be an entry in /etc/group, or no group will exist. If the encrypted password is set to an asterisk, the user will be unable to login using login(1), but may still login using rlogin(1), run existing processes and initiate new ones through rsh(1), cron(8), at(1), or mail filters, etc. Trying to lock an account by simply chang- ing the shell field yields the same result and additionally allows the use of su(1). SEE ALSO
login(1), passwd(1), su(1), getpwent(3), getpwnam(3), group(5), shadow(5) COLOPHON
This page is part of release 3.25 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/. Linux 1998-01-05 PASSWD(5)
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