SYNOPSIS

     use Crypt::Password::Util qw(crypt_type looks_like_crypt crypt);
    
     say crypt_type('62F4a6/89.12z');                    # CRYPT
     say crypt_type('$1$$...');                          # MD5-CRYPT
     say crypt_type('$apr1$4DdvgCFk$...');               # MD5-CRYPT
     say crypt_type('$5$4DdvgCFk$...');                  # SSHA256
     say crypt_type('$6$4DdvgCFk$...');                  # SSHA512
     say crypt_type('1a1dc91c907325c69271ddf0c944bc72'); # PLAIN-MD5
     say crypt_type('$2a$08$TTSynMjJTrXiv3qEZFyM1.H9tjv71i57p2r63QEJe/2p0p/m1GIy2'); # BCRYPT
     say crypt_type('foo');                              # undef
    
     # return detailed information
     say crypt_type('$1$$oXYGukVGYa16SN.Pw5vNt/', 1);
     # => {}
    
     say looks_like_crypt('62F4a6/89.12z');   # 1
     say looks_like_crypt('foo');             # 0
    
     say crypt('pass'); # automatically choose the appropriate type and salt

DESCRIPTION

    Crypt::Password::Util facilitates the generation and recognition of
    unix passwords as found in /etc/shadow on Unix/Linux systems and
    /etc/master.passwd on BSD systems. When using crypt(), it is possible
    several methods will be attempted before returning a result. This is
    done to insure that your system supports the selected hash type.

FUNCTIONS

 crypt_type($str[, $detail]) => str|hash

    Return crypt type, or undef if $str does not look like a crypted
    password. Currently known types:

    # CODE: require Crypt::Password::Util; my $types =
    \%Crypt::Password::Util::CRYPT_TYPES; print "=over\n\n"; for my $type
    (sort keys %$types) { print "=item *
    $type\n\n$types->{$type}{summary}.\n\nRecognized by:
    $types->{$type}{re_summary}.\n\nMore info: $types-{$type}{link}>\n\n" }
    print "=back\n\n";

    If $detail is set to true, will return a hashref of information
    instead. This include type, as well as the parsed header, salt, etc.

 looks_like_crypt($str) => BOOL

    Return true if $str looks like a crypted password.

 crypt($str) => STR

    Like Perl's crypt(), but automatically choose the appropriate crypt
    type and random salt. Will first choose SSHA512 with 64-bit random
    salt. If not supported by system, fall back to MD5-CRYPT with 32-bit
    random salt. If that is not supported, fall back to CRYPT.

SEE ALSO

    Authen::Passphrase which recognizes more encodings (but currently not
    SSHA256 and SSHA512).

