376

I was implementing password hashing with salt, so I generated salt as binary, hashed the password, base64 encoded the password and salt then stored them into database.

Now when I am checking password, I am supposed to decode the salt back into binary data, use it to hash the supplied password, base64 encode the result and check if the result matches the one in database.

The problem is, I cannot find a method to decode the salt back into binary data. I encoded them using the Buffer.toString method but there doesn't seem to be reverse function.

0

1 Answer 1

797

As of Node.js v6.0.0 using the constructor method has been deprecated and the following method should instead be used to construct a new buffer from a base64 encoded string:

var b64string = /* whatever */;
var buf = Buffer.from(b64string, 'base64'); // Ta-da

For Node.js v5.11.1 and below

Construct a new Buffer and pass 'base64' as the second argument:

var b64string = /* whatever */;
var buf = new Buffer(b64string, 'base64'); // Ta-da

If you want to be clean, you can check whether from exists :

if (typeof Buffer.from === "function") {
    // Node 5.10+
    buf = Buffer.from(b64string, 'base64'); // Ta-da
} else {
    // older Node versions, now deprecated
    buf = new Buffer(b64string, 'base64'); // Ta-da
}
14
  • 2
    It's not that bad, the 3rd constructor is right there.
    – Matt Ball
    Jan 29, 2013 at 15:34
  • 42
    And for those searching the reverse method - ( new Buffer( str ) ).toString( "base64" ). Sep 5, 2015 at 18:33
  • 13
    This method has been deprecated now, the correct way is now: var buf = Buffer.from(b64string, 'base64'); as noted here: nodejs.org/api/… May 8, 2016 at 20:48
  • 4
    FYI, this code does not appear to work on older Node versions. Buffer.from is still a function on node 4.3.6, but 'TypeError: base64 is not a function'
    – Doug
    Dec 21, 2016 at 21:59
  • 18
    If toString('ascii') isn't working for you, try this instead: Buffer.from(string, 'base64').toString('utf-8') Apr 23, 2018 at 8:37

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.