Quoting Reindl Harald h.reindl@thelounge.net:
Am 2015-03-18 20:46, schrieb Reindl Harald:
Am 18.03.2015 um 20:40 schrieb Conrad Kostecki:
Hi! Currently, the passwords are stored in plaintext for my dovecot, as I am still using cram-md5 AND digest-md5. I have still to offer that, as I have some deprecated clients, therefore, I am unable to hash at least those passwords for that accounts.
I've found on the Wiki:
In future it's possible that Dovecot could support multiple passwords in different schemes for a single user.
Is there any news about this? Are there still any plans to support
Am 18.03.2015 um 20:56 schrieb Conrad Kostecki: this
maybe in future? For my understanding, that would solve my problem, that I could define a password in both schemes (cram and digest) and don't have to use plaintext password?
if you would read http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CRAM-MD5 and understand how CRAM-MD5 works you would know that you just can't store cram because the whole purpose is that it changes all the time
Maybe I am totally wrong, but according to the Wiki, if I would be use using CRAM-MD5 without DIGEST-MD5, the password could be stored not in plain text but instead in a cram-md5 scheme? At least, that had worked for me in a test setup. But I will have a look.
only in a broken and unsecure implementation - or how do you store "arbitrary string of random digits, a timestamp"?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CRAM-MD5
Challenge: The server sends a base64-encoded string to the client. Before encoding, it could be any random string, but the standard that currently defines CRAM-MD5 says that it is in the format of a Message-ID email header value (including angle brackets) and includes an arbitrary string of random digits, a timestamp, and the server's fully qualified domain name.
Too much irrelevant information. Goal: Don't store cleartext passwords.
Question: Do your clients support PLAIN authentication and SSL?
The authentication method is (mostly) independent of the storage
method. Only CRAM requires either a clear text password or Dovecot's
CRAM 'cleartext workaround'.
If you use PLAIN, then your passwords can be stored encrypted. If the
clients support SSL, then you can require SSL/TLS and encrypt the
password (and ALL the content) at the transport layer.
Rick