1

I have a classifieds website which I am creating a login system for...

In the code below, a form with "username" and "password" has been submitted to. Also a "remember_me" feature is available (Code is not tested yet):

else if($row['password']===$pass){
    session_start();
    $_SESSION['logged_in'] = '1';
    $remember_me = isset($_POST['remember']) ? $_POST['remember'] : '0';
    if($remember_me=='1'){

        $text = "SECRET_TEXT_AND_NUMBERS_HERE";
        $username= $row['username'];

        $salt1 = sha1($row['alt_username']);
        $salt2 = sha1($text);

        $cookie_value = $salt1.':'.$username.':'.sha1($row['alt_username'].$salt2.$salt1);

        setcookie("s_b", $cookie_value, time()+60*60*24*100, "/");

    }

}

Now, is this code a good start for a login page?

Also, an important follow-up question to all this, if users want to stay logged in, do I then set a $_SESSION variable like the one in the code, and just check if that is set in the beginning of all pages on the site?

 if(isset($_SESSION['logged_in'])) // Then user is logged in already

or do I check to see if the cookie created in the login page is set instead of checking the session?

2 Answers 2

3

logging in is about security; security is always more difficult then it seems.

There are a couple of things that you could improve in your code. first:

the security for your password is in the strength of the hasing algorithm. You choose to use sha1 (better than md5, but could be improved by using sha256 or bCrypt if you use PHP version >= 5.3)

First
The salt you use is supposed to be a random value, stored alongside the hashed result. in other words, the value to store in your database is:

$salt = [some random string of predifend lenght]; // Let's say 16 characters in length
$storedValue = $salt . sha256($salt . $password);

you check the password:

if ($row['username'] == $_POST['username']  && substr($row['$storedValue'], 16) == sha256(substr($row['$storedValue'], 0, 16) . $_POST['password'])) {
    // login ok
} else {
    // login fail
}

(better yet)
Use a proven library for the password hashing stuff, take a look at: Portable PHP password hashing framework and try to use the CRYPT_BLOWFISH algorithm if at all popssible.

Second
You should only store the session key in the session cookie. all other information is stored on the server.
The session cookie is already send out by PHP's session_start() function call, so you do not have to worry about this anymore.

if you want to check the sessions lifetime, you should store this information in the session array:

$_SESSION['lastActivity'] =  time()+60*60*24*100;

Third
The remember me token is a 'password equivalent' so you should only store a hash of the token in your database, just treat it as a password, only this 'password' is not typed by the user, but read from the cookie.

5
  • Could you explain "Store the session key in the session cookie" part? Shouldn't I store a cookie like I am in the code I posted? Examples are much appreciated?
    – user188962
    Nov 5, 2010 at 23:59
  • 1
    session_start() sets a cookie containing a session key, you do not need to set any other cookie to store information. If you want to store information for this user, you can do so in $_SESSION
    – Jacco
    Nov 6, 2010 at 0:23
  • Yes, during sessions offcourse I wont use cookies. But I meant the "Remember me" feature. Another thing I thought about was, is only a session variable enough for making sure the user is logged in? Is there any other barriers I could add to make it even more secure when users are switching between pages, instead of just checking one "session variable to be true or false"?
    – user188962
    Nov 6, 2010 at 11:09
  • For the remember me function, you should read: stackoverflow.com/questions/549/…
    – Jacco
    Nov 6, 2010 at 11:43
  • Generally speaking, you can consider a user to be logged in when they have a valid session cookie. It is considered good practice however to limit the time the session remains valid for to 30 minutes or so. You want the cookie to be a 'session-cookie' (=kept until browser close) and the time-out check to be done on the server side.
    – Jacco
    Nov 6, 2010 at 11:47
1

The whole point of a hash is that its non-reversible, so it's not really adding any value the way you've used for the remember me function. Stop pretending it does anything useful, and use a random token for the remember me (and log this in the database against the username) then, if you get a client presenting a remember me cookie without an authenticated session, you know where to look to find out who it is.

(this also allows a sensible approach to be applied where the user keeps moving to different machines - you might say keep the last 2 values - and flag when they try to remember me from a 3rd machine).

A 100 day timeout is rather long - maybe 30 days (with an automatic refresh might be more appropriate depending on the level of risk.

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