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How are passwords stored in EFT?

Karla Marsh
EFT

THE INFORMATION IN THIS ARTICLE APPLIES TO:

  • EFT Server, v8.0 and later
QUESTION

How are passwords stored in EFT?

ANSWER

EFT user and administrator passwords are stored as one-way, 32-bytes PBKDF2-HMAC-SHA1 hash, with random 18-bytes salt, 1996 iterations.

Passwords stored in memory are encrypted with two-fish.

In SQLite:

  • Site-level and below: either encrypted with AES or IDs of the password physically stored in AKV
  • Server-level: TwoFish

The EFT configuration files were moved to SQLite storage in EFT v8.0.0.37. Prior to v8, passwords managed by EFT for user and administrator authentication were stored using a base64-encoded SHA256* one-way hash. Passwords used for unattended operations such as outbound client transfers, database access, private key decryption, etc. must be reversible; thus, depending on the situation, these passwords are either obfuscated or encrypted (Twofish or similar) using a server-managed symmetric key. Passwords stored (temporarily) in memory are not encrypted.

Details
Last Modified: 3 Years Ago
Last Modified By: kmarsh
Type: FAQ
Rated 1 star based on 18 votes.
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