I wanted to know if the process of hashing a hash would help stop attacks to it (brute-force I think) when used with salt as well. So my code:
function hash_password($password, $salt, $site_key) {
$hash = hash('sha512', $password . $salt . $site_key);
for ($i=0; $i<1000; $i++) {
$hash = hash($hash);
}
return $hash;
}
From what I can work out my code would be secure because it stops rainbow table attacks by using salt, and stops brute-force attacks by iterating the hash.
Would this iteration actually make brute-force attacks much harder? And if so how much would it affect the performance? (how long would it take to hash 1000 times, I heard someone said you should iterate the hash until it takes 200ms)
Does doing this emulate the behaviour of an algorithm such as bcrypt?