# Crypt::Libcrypt Provide a simple Perl 6 binding to POSIX crypt(3) function ## Description This is a binding to the crypt() function that is typically defined in libcrypt on most Unix-like systems or those providing a POSIX API. There is a single exported subroutine crypt() that perform a one-way encryption of the supplied plain text, with the provided "salt". Depending on the implementation on your system, the structure of the salt may influence the algorithm that is used to perform the encryption. The default will probably be the DES algorithm that was traditionally used to encrypt passwords on a Unix system. Because this is intended primarily for the encryption of passwords and is "one way" (i.e. there is no mechanism to "decrypt" the crypt text,) it is not suitable for general purpose encryption. In order to check whether a password entered by a user is correct it should be encrypted using the stored encrypted password as the "salt" - the result will be the same as the stored crypt text if the password is the same. ## Installation Currently there is no dedicated test to determine whether your platform is supported, the unit tests may simply fail horribly. Assuming you have a working perl6 installation you should be able to install this with *ufo* : ufo make test make install *ufo* can be installed with *panda* for rakudo: panda install ufo Or you can install directly with "panda": # From the source directory panda install . # Remote installation panda install Crypt::Libcrypt Other install mechanisms may be become available in the future. ## Support This should be considered experimental software until such time that Perl 6 reaches an official release. However suggestions/patches are welcomed via github at https://github.com/jonathanstowe/Crypt-Libcrypt I'm not able to test on a wide variety of platforms so any help there would be appreciated. Also help with the documentation of which platforms support which encryption algorithms is probably required. ## Licence Please see the LICENCE file in the distribution (C) Jonathan Stowe 2015