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HTPASSWD(1)                         htpasswd                        HTPASSWD(1)

NAME
       htpasswd - Manage user files for basic authentication

SYNOPSIS
       htpasswd  [ -c ] [ -i ] [ -m | -B | -2 | -5 | -d | -s | -p ] [ -r rounds
       ] [ -C cost ] [ -D ] [ -v ] passwdfile username

       htpasswd -b [ -c ] [ -m | -B | -2 | -5 | -d | -s | -p ] [ -r rounds ]  [
       -C cost ] [ -D ] [ -v ] passwdfile username password

       htpasswd  -n [ -i ] [ -m | -B | -2 | -5 | -d | -s | -p ] [ -r rounds ] [
       -C cost ] username

       htpasswd -nb [ -m | -B | -2 | -5 | -d | -s | -p ] [ -r  rounds  ]  [  -C
       cost ] username password

SUMMARY
       htpasswd is used to create and update the flat-files used to store user-
       names  and  password for basic authentication of HTTP users. If htpasswd
       cannot access a file, such as not being able to write to the output file
       or not being able to read the file in order to update it, it returns  an
       error status and makes no changes.

       Resources  available  from  the  Apache HTTP server can be restricted to
       just the users listed in the files created by htpasswd. This program can
       only manage usernames and passwords stored in a flat-file. It  can  hash
       and  display password information for use in other types of data stores,
       though. To use a DBM database see dbmmanage or htdbm.

       htpasswd hashes passwords using either bcrypt, a version of MD5 modified
       for Apache, SHA-1, or the system's crypt() routine.  SHA-2-based  hashes
       (SHA-256  and  SHA-512)  are supported for crypt(). Files managed by ht-
       passwd may contain a mixture of different encoding types  of  passwords;
       some  user  records may have bcrypt or MD5-hashed passwords while others
       in the same file may have passwords hashed with crypt().

       This manual page only lists the command line arguments. For  details  of
       the  directives  necessary to configure user authentication in httpd see
       the Apache manual, which is part of the Apache distribution  or  can  be
       found at http://httpd.apache.org/.

OPTIONS
       -b     Use  batch  mode;  i.e.,  get  the password from the command line
              rather than prompting for it. This option should be used with ex-
              treme care, since the password is clearly visible on the  command
              line.  For  script  use see the -i option. Available in 2.4.4 and
              later.

       -i     Read the password from stdin without verification (for script us-
              age).

       -c     Create the  passwdfile.  If  passwdfile  already  exists,  it  is
              rewritten  and truncated. This option cannot be combined with the
              -n option.

       -n     Display the results on standard output  rather  than  updating  a
              file.  This  is useful for generating password records acceptable
              to Apache for inclusion in  non-text  data  stores.  This  option
              changes  the syntax of the command line, since the passwdfile ar-
              gument (usually the first one) is omitted. It cannot be  combined
              with the -c option.

       -m     Use MD5 hashing for passwords. This is the default (since version
              2.2.18).

       -2     Use SHA-256 crypt() based hashes for passwords. This is supported
              on most Unix platforms.

       -5     Use SHA-512 crypt() based hashes for passwords. This is supported
              on most Unix platforms.

       -B     Use bcrypt hashing for passwords. This is currently considered to
              be very secure.

       -C     This  flag  is  only allowed in combination with -B (bcrypt hash-
              ing). It sets the computing time used for  the  bcrypt  algorithm
              (higher is more secure but slower, default: 5, valid: 4 to 17).

       -r     This  flag  is only allowed in combination with -2 or -5. It sets
              the number of hash rounds used for the SHA-2  algorithms  (higher
              is more secure but slower; the default is 5,000).

       -d     Use  crypt()  hashing for passwords. This is not supported by the
              httpd server on Windows and Netware. This  algorithm  limits  the
              password  length  to  8 characters. This algorithm is insecure by
              today's standards. It used to be the default algorithm until ver-
              sion 2.2.17.

       -s     Use SHA-1 (160-bit) hashing for passwords. Facilitates  migration
              from/to  Netscape  servers  using  the LDAP Directory Interchange
              Format (ldif). This algorithm is insecure by today's standards.

       -p     Use plaintext passwords. Though htpasswd will support creation on
              all platforms, the httpd daemon will only accept plain text pass-
              words on Windows and Netware.

       -D     Delete user. If the username exists  in  the  specified  htpasswd
              file, it will be deleted.

       -v     Verify password. Verify that the given password matches the pass-
              word of the user stored in the specified htpasswd file. Available
              in 2.4.5 and later.

       passwdfile
              Name  of the file to contain the user name and password. If -c is
              given, this file is created if it  does  not  already  exist,  or
              rewritten and truncated if it does exist.

       username
              The  username to create or update in passwdfile. If username does
              not exist in this file, an entry is added. If it does exist,  the
              password is changed.

       password
              The  plaintext password to be hashed and stored in the file. Only
              used with the -b flag.

EXIT STATUS
       htpasswd returns a zero status ("true") if  the  username  and  password
       have  been successfully added or updated in the passwdfile. htpasswd re-
       turns 1 if it encounters some problem accessing files, 2 if there was  a
       syntax  problem with the command line, 3 if the password was entered in-
       teractively and the verification entry didn't match, 4 if its  operation
       was interrupted, 5 if a value is too long (username, filename, password,
       or final computed record), 6 if the username contains illegal characters
       (see  the  Restrictions section), and 7 if the file is not a valid pass-
       word file.

EXAMPLES
             htpasswd /usr/local/etc/apache/.htpasswd-users jsmith

       Adds or modifies the password for user jsmith. The user is prompted  for
       the  password. The password will be hashed using the modified Apache MD5
       algorithm. If the file does not exist, htpasswd will do  nothing  except
       return an error.

             htpasswd -c /home/doe/public_html/.htpasswd jane

       Creates  a new file and stores a record in it for user jane. The user is
       prompted for the password. If the file exists and  cannot  be  read,  or
       cannot be written, it is not altered and htpasswd will display a message
       and return an error status.

             htpasswd -db /usr/web/.htpasswd-all jones Pwd4Steve

       Encrypts  the  password  from  the  command  line  (Pwd4Steve) using the
       crypt() algorithm, and stores it in the specified file.

SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS
       Web password files such as those  managed  by  htpasswd  should  not  be
       within  the Web server's URI space -- that is, they should not be fetch-
       able with a browser.

       This program is not safe as a setuid executable. Do not make it setuid.

       The use of the -b option is discouraged,  since  when  it  is  used  the
       plaintext password appears on the command line.

       When  using the crypt() algorithm, note that only the first 8 characters
       of the password are used to form the password. If the supplied  password
       is longer, the extra characters will be silently discarded.

       The  SHA-1  hashing  format  does not use salting: for a given password,
       there is only one hashed representation. The  crypt()  and  MD5  formats
       permute  the  representation by prepending a random salt string, to make
       dictionary attacks against the passwords more difficult.

       The SHA-1 and crypt() formats are insecure by today's standards.

       The SHA-2-based crypt() formats (SHA-256 and SHA-512) are  supported  on
       most   modern   Unix   systems,   and   follow   the   specification  at
       https://www.akkadia.org/drepper/SHA-crypt.txt.

RESTRICTIONS
       On the Windows platform, passwords hashed with htpasswd are  limited  to
       no  more  than  255 characters in length. Longer passwords will be trun-
       cated to 255 characters.

       The MD5 algorithm used by htpasswd is specific to the  Apache  software;
       passwords hashed using it will not be usable with other Web servers.

       Usernames are limited to 255 bytes and may not include the character :.

       The  cost  of  computing a bcrypt password hash value increases with the
       number of rounds specified by the -C option. The  apr-util  library  en-
       forces a maximum number of rounds of 17 in version 1.6.0 and later.

Apache HTTP Server                 2024-04-02                       HTPASSWD(1)

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