I'm looking for a Java function to generate/verify password hashes that were encoded in the way crypt(3) does when storing them in the Linux /etc/shadow file if sha512 is activated in /etc/pam.d/common-password.

E.g. the plaintext string "geheim" will translate to: "$6$WoC532HB$LagBJ00vAGNGu8p9oeYDOSNZo9vTNTzOgPA.K0bJoiXfbcpj3jBuTkNwdzCrSNadRi8LanH1tH6tGGPPp/Lp3."

From http://www.akkadia.org/drepper/SHA-crypt.txt I understand that, like with MD5, it's not just a SHA hash like DigestUtils or the Java MessageDigest classes produces but an algorithm that does a bit more magic.

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Did you check that: stackoverflow.com/questions/3174943/… – home Jan 30 at 11:02
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up vote 2 down vote accepted

I found Java implementations for all the new crypt() algorithms here: ftp://ftp.arlut.utexas.edu/java_hashes/

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The othe question you refer to only provides links to the traditional crypt(3) method based on DES and the "$1$" method based on MD5. I need to check passwords that use the "$5$" method that is based on SHA-1 or even the "$6$" method that is based on SHA-512.

Based here means that crypt(3) uses e.g. SHA-512 but adds a salt value and does several iterations as described on http://www.akkadia.org/drepper/SHA-crypt.txt

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After some searching I found at least one implementation of the $6$ mechanism based on SHA-512: tools.arlut.utexas.edu/gash2/doc/javadoc/arlut/csd/crypto/… – lathspell42 Feb 3 at 18:40
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