Increase Salt randomness (#18179)

- The current implementation of `RandomString` doesn't give you a most-possible unique randomness. It gives you 6*`length` instead of the possible 8*`length` bits(or as `length`x bytes) randomness. This is because `RandomString` is being limited to a max value of 63, this in order to represent the random byte as a letter/digit.
- The recommendation of pbkdf2 is to use 64+ bit salt, which the `RandomString` doesn't give with a length of 10, instead of increasing 10 to a higher number, this patch adds a new function called `RandomBytes` which does give you the guarentee of 8*`length` randomness and thus corresponding of `length`x bytes randomness.
- Use hexadecimal to store the bytes value in the database, as mentioned, it doesn't play nice in order to convert it to a string. This will always be a length of 32(with `length` being 16).
- When we detect on `Authenticate`(source: db) that a user has the old format of salt, re-hash the password such that the user will have it's password hashed with increased salt.

Thanks to @zeripath for working out the rouge edges from my first commit 😄.

Co-authored-by: lafriks <lauris@nix.lv>
Co-authored-by: zeripath <art27@cantab.net>
This commit is contained in:
Gusted 2022-01-04 15:13:52 +00:00 committed by GitHub
parent 165346c15c
commit 623c93ff46
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6 changed files with 115 additions and 14 deletions

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@ -157,6 +157,24 @@ func Test_RandomString(t *testing.T) {
assert.NotEqual(t, str3, str4)
}
func Test_RandomBytes(t *testing.T) {
bytes1, err := RandomBytes(32)
assert.NoError(t, err)
bytes2, err := RandomBytes(32)
assert.NoError(t, err)
assert.NotEqual(t, bytes1, bytes2)
bytes3, err := RandomBytes(256)
assert.NoError(t, err)
bytes4, err := RandomBytes(256)
assert.NoError(t, err)
assert.NotEqual(t, bytes3, bytes4)
}
func Test_OptionalBool(t *testing.T) {
assert.Equal(t, OptionalBoolNone, OptionalBoolParse(""))
assert.Equal(t, OptionalBoolNone, OptionalBoolParse("x"))