Hey,
I struggled with this issue as well on FreeBSD.
This worked for me after a lot of tracing.
1. Create your PW hash with doveadm:
echo `doveadm pw -s BLF-CRYPT` | cut -d'}' -f2
This will cut the {BLF-CRYPT}… header created by doveadm.
Opensmtpd uses crypt() to figure out the hash type and
I'm already using a shared SQL user database between Dovecot and
OpenSMTPD, so all is fine in that sense. :)
I now actually recall running into the same issue when I was setting the
system up - I ended up using smtpctl encrypt to generate the shared
passwords. Alas, no way to provide rounds to
On 18.09.2018 19:33, Gilles Chehade wrote:
that's an easy one:
OpenSMTPD uses the crypt() function provided by your system and does not
care about the password scheme used as this is a system-specific detail.
On modern systems the crypt() function encodes the algorithm, rounds and
salt as a pre
On 18.09.2018 19:33, Gilles Chehade wrote:
On Tue, Sep 18, 2018 at 10:06:49AM +0300, Reio Remma wrote:
Hello!
I'm curious as to what determines the password scheme used by OpenSMTPD on a
Linux system (CentOS 7 in my case).
that's an easy one:
OpenSMTPD uses the crypt() function provided by
On Tue, Sep 18, 2018 at 06:33:33PM +0200, Gilles Chehade wrote:
>
> [...]
>
> $2b$09$fEv/zNZ/5hELpDH3Vq93AuygRLnySIcNXH78rq9WxPPbZJxmcdk5m
> | | ||
> | | ||__ encrypted password
> | | |__ begining of salt
> | |__ beginning of rounds
>
On Tue, Sep 18, 2018 at 10:06:49AM +0300, Reio Remma wrote:
> Hello!
>
> I'm curious as to what determines the password scheme used by OpenSMTPD on a
> Linux system (CentOS 7 in my case). When setting up the system I ended up
> with using SHA512, because it seems to be what works both in OpenSMTPD
Hello!
I'm curious as to what determines the password scheme used by OpenSMTPD
on a Linux system (CentOS 7 in my case). When setting up the system I
ended up with using SHA512, because it seems to be what works both in
OpenSMTPD and Dovecot, but would really like to use Blowfish instead.
Dove