How would I create a random, 16-character base-62 salt in python? I need it for a protocol and I'm not sure where to start. Thanks.
8 Answers
>>> import random
>>> ALPHABET = "0123456789abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ"
>>> chars=[]
>>> for i in range(16):
chars.append(random.choice(ALPHABET))
>>> "".join(chars)
'wE9mg9pu2KSmp5lh'
This should work.
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21Nice answer, but the last 4 lines can be done more idiomatically with just
''.join(random.choice(ALPHABET) for i in range(16))
Mar 14, 2011 at 9:43 -
1@ScottGriffiths I wouldn't say that it is more idiomatic because it is a one liner... It is a nice one line though, so awesome :)– MikleJul 29, 2012 at 22:59
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4Also see secrets.choice (in 3.6+) for a cryptographically secure version, replacing random.choice in the example.– Sam BullDec 4, 2017 at 15:49
You shouldn't use UUIDs, they are unique, not random: Is using a CreateUUID() function as salt a good idea?
Your salts should use a cryptographically secure random numbers, in python 2.4+, os.urandom is the source of these (if you have a good timing source).
# for some given b62encode function
salt = b62encode(os.urandom(16))
you could also use a generator from bcrypt or other awesome crypto/hashing library that is well known and vetted by the people much more expert than I am.
import bcrypt
salt = bcrypt.gensalt()
# will be 29 chars you can then encode it however you want.
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1
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3pip install bcrypt should remove the error... show that the bcrypt package is not installed in your computer --- anurageldorado Jun 6, 2015 at 2:03
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Your base_64 example does not work. A hash may contain
[./a-zA-Z0-9]
, yours will additionally contain+
,=
and\n
.– cdauthDec 18, 2015 at 5:29 -
@cdauth given that I misread the question to begin with (base 62 was asked for), I've since updated this to reflect this. I assume that their exists an encoding function though - easy enough to find one of those on SO.– yarbelkDec 28, 2015 at 7:50
Old question, new solution with secrets
import secrets
random_string = secrets.token_hex(8)
Will produce a cryptographically strong 16-character random string.
Use this over standard pseudo-random number generators as they are much less secure.
To quote from the secrets page:
The secrets module is used for generating cryptographically strong random numbers suitable for managing data such as passwords, account authentication, security tokens, and related secrets.
In particularly, secrets should be used in preference to the default pseudo-random number generator in the random module, which is designed for modelling and simulation, not security or cryptography.
These days there is an official mksalt
method in the crypt
module.
It does not give you a simple 16 char long string but adds $digit$
in front required by most hashing functions anyway. If you are hashing passwords this is probably much safer to use.
import crypt
crypt.mksalt(crypt.METHOD_SHA512)
Generates outputs like the following:
$6$wpg9lx1sVFNFSCrP
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2
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1
in base64:
import random, base64, struct
rand_float = random.SystemRandom().random()
salt = base64.b64encode((struct.pack('!d', rand_float)))
this will be 12 chars
import random
import string
def get_salt(size=16, chars=None):
if not chars:
chars = ''.join(
[string.ascii_uppercase,
string.ascii_lowercase,
string.digits]
)
return ''.join(random.choice(chars) for x in range(size))
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What are your thoughts on the salting principal of "salts should be unique, not random"?– T.WoodyApr 8, 2019 at 20:24
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i think you should use 'secrets' module to generate secure randomness https://docs.python.org/3/library/secrets.html it specifically crafted for this kind of jobs
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While this link may answer the question, it is better to include the essential parts of the answer here and provide the link for reference. Link-only answers can become invalid if the linked page changes. - From Review Jun 17, 2023 at 9:31
I kind of like:
import md5, uuid
m = md5.md5()
m.update(uuid.uuid4())
print m.digest()[:16]
That will be very, very random.
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1Did you mean
m.update(str(uuid.uuid4()))
? And alsom.hexdigest()[:16]
? But still, that wouldn't be inbase62
right? Mar 14, 2011 at 2:31 -
Sorry, you're right about the code. I figure since my solution uses a subset of the base62 characters it might work for the original poster. Mar 14, 2011 at 4:33