Looking for suggestions on a password strength checker for objective-c. I did some googling and didn't find any hits, neither here on SO. I could write one up but thought I'd check here first - has anyone implemented one?
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I prefer avoiding storing user passwords wherever possible.– tc.Jan 27, 2013 at 3:05
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Agreed - though in this case it's unavoidable. I plan on hashing and following other good practices. I would like to provide a convenience to my users by having a password meter that actively checks their password as it's entered.– capikawJan 27, 2013 at 3:13
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Do you have a password hash in mind?– tc.Jan 27, 2013 at 4:13
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No, what do you recommend?– capikawJan 27, 2013 at 19:44
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My simple password strength checker in C might be helpful if you are trying to build one: github.com/hb20007/miscellaneous-programs/tree/master/…– hb20007May 17, 2018 at 13:04
3 Answers
I am only aware of two half-decent password strength estimators: zxcvbn (in CoffeeScript, compiles to JavaScript) and Passfault (in Java, appears to be intended as a webapp).
(Actually, that's is a slight lie; there was one in a PhD thesis I read a while back, but I'm not sure where I put the link.)
Every other password "strength" checker I've looked at in any detail has been flawed, often deeply flawed (e.g. GRC's "haystacks" assumes a very dumb bruteforce; even open-source password crackers are much more sophisticated) — the other day, the password strength meter of a large UK loyalty card scheme told me that "1Aa" was a "GOOD" password ("GOOD" is the highest rating).
(The other problem is that the password strength required depends on how it's being used: a 48-bit password like "W1mCj6B1" is fine for a Google account but incredibly weak as a Windows/Mac login password or a WPA passphrase.)
I don't think you're likely to find a decent one in Objective-C, given their rarity. If you do end up writing one, I have a few suggestions:
- Write it in C (or maybe C++). This won't cost you much and will be far more portable; Objective-C pretty much ties you to OS X and iOS in the same way that .NET ties you to Windows (i.e. in theory you can port the runtime to other platforms; in practice it will be much less used outside of those platforms). To increase usage, you could add an Objective-C API.
- Decide what to do about non-ASCII characters (and non-English languages in general). There are essentially two options:
- Disallow them (people are used to it, right?)
- Map to ASCII for strength estimation, e.g. by stripping accents (see
NSWidthInsensitiveSearch
andNSDiacriticInsensitiveSearch
) and jumping through some hoops to map ı/İ/ß to i/I/ss. There's alsokCFStringTransformToLatin
which promises to transliterate most scripts to the Latin alphabet. This bit doesn't need to be in C because it'll heavily depend on Unicode libraries, although you may be able to use ICU.
Finally, password strength estimation is a hard problem. Guess the strength of
2jmj7l5rSw0yVb_vlWAYkK_YBwk
. Now ask Google.
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Phenomenal information - great links. Thanks! I now realize how in-depth and subjective password estimators are. I'll do some more reading on the topic and see if I can find a happy medium for my project - luckily I'm not dealing with highly-sensitive user information!– capikawJan 27, 2013 at 20:08
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1Passwords are "highly-sensitive user information" - password reuse is rampant! IMO that's the biggest reason for avoiding passwords whenever possible: A leaked password DB is easily used to attack users' email accounts, and there's a limit to how much password hashes will protect you (because they have to be fast enough to perform on a busy server).– tc.Jan 27, 2013 at 22:11
I have created a method for this purpose. I know this is old question, but I think it actual for now to, so here is the url of code:
https://github.com/ruben-samsonyan/PasswordStrengthChecker/blob/master/passwordChecker.m