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Ruby Argon2 Gem

This Ruby Gem provides FFI bindings, and a simplified interface, to the Argon2 algorithm. Argon2 is the official winner of the Password Hashing Competition, a several year project to identify a successor to bcrypt/PBKDF/scrypt methods of securely storing passwords. This is an independant project and not official from the PHC team.

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Design

This project has several key tenets to its design:

Usage

Require this in your Gemfile like a typical Ruby gem:

require 'argon2'

To utilise default costs (RFC 9106's lower-memory, second recommended parameters):

hasher = Argon2::Password.new
hasher.create("password")

Alternatively, use this shortcut:

Argon2::Password.create("password")
    => "$argon2i$v=19$m=65536,t=2,p=1$61qkSyYNbUgf3kZH3GtHRw$4CQff9AZ0lWd7uF24RKMzqEiGpzhte1Hp8SO7X8bAew"

If your use case can afford the higher memory consumption/cost, you can/should specify to use RFC 9106's first recommended parameters:

hasher = Argon2::Password.new(profile: :rfc_9106_high_memory)
hasher.create("password")
    => "$argon2id$v=19$m=2097152,t=1,p=4$LvHa74Yax7uCWPN7P6/oQQ$V1dMt4dfuYSmLpwUTpKUzg+RrXjWzWHlE6NLowBzsAg"

To generate a hash using one of the other Argon::Profiles names:

# Only use this profile in testing env, it's unsafe!
hasher = Argon2::Password.new(profile: :unsafe_cheapest)
hasher.create("password")
    => "$argon2id$v=19$m=8,t=1,p=1$HZZHG3oTqptqgrxWxFic5g$EUokHMU6m6w2AVIEk1MpZBhVwW9Nj+ESRjPwTBVtWpY"

The list of named cost profiles are:

To generate a hash using specific time and memory cost:

hasher = Argon2::Password.new(t_cost: 2, m_cost: 16, p_cost: 1)
hasher.create("password")
    => "$argon2i$v=19$m=65536,t=2,p=1$jL7lLEAjDN+pY2cG1N8D2g$iwj1ueduCvm6B9YVjBSnAHu+6mKzqGmDW745ALR38Uo"

You can then use this function to verify a password against a given hash. Will return either true or false.

Argon2::Password.verify_password("password", secure_password)

Version 1.2.x will now allow verifying an Argon2id password:

Argon2::Password.verify_password("password", "$argon2id$v=19$m=262144,t=2,p=1$c29tZXNhbHQ$eP4eyR+zqlZX1y5xCFTkw9m5GYx0L5YWwvCFvtlbLow")
  => true

Argon2 supports an optional key value. This should be stored securely on your server, such as alongside your database credentials. Hashes generated with a key will only validate when presented that key.

KEY = "A key"
argon = Argon2::Password.new(t_cost: 2, m_cost: 16, secret: KEY)
myhash = argon.create("A password")
Argon2::Password.verify_password("A password", myhash, KEY)

Ruby 3 Types

I am now shipping signatures in sig/. The following command sets up a testing interface.

RBS_TEST_TARGET="Argon2::*" bundle exec ruby -r rbs/test/setup bin/console

You should also be able to pass Steep checks:

steep check

These tools will need to be installed manually at this time and will be added to Gemfiles after much further testing.

Version 2.2.0

This version changed the way the build system works to deal with a new version of Rubygems. See https://github.com/technion/ruby-argon2/issues/56.

Version 2.0 - Argon 2id

Version 2.x upwards will now default to the Argon2id hash format. This is consistent with current recommendations regarding Argon2 usage. It remains capable of verifying existing hashes.

Important notes regarding version 1.0 upgrade

Version 1.0.0 included a major version bump over 0.1.4 due to several breaking changes. The first of these was an API change, which you can read the background on here.

The second of these is that the reference Argon2 implementation introduced an algorithm change, which produces a hash which is not backwards compatible. This is documented on this PR on the C library. This was a regrettable requirement to address a security concern in the algorithm itself. The two versions of the Argon2 algorithm are numbered 1.0 and 1.3 respectively.

Shortly after this, version 1.0.0 of this gem was released with this breaking change, supporting only Argon2 v1.3. Further time later, the official encoding format was updated, with a spec that included the version number, and the library introduced backward compatibility. This should remove the likelihood of such breaking changes in future.

Platform Issues

The default installation workflow has caused issues with a number of gems under the latest OSX. There is some excellent documentation on the issue and some workarounds in the Jekyll Documentation. With this in mind, OSX is a fully supported OS.

Windows is not. Nobody anywhere has the resources to support Ruby FFI code on Windows.

grsec introduces certain challenges. Please see documentation here.

See the .travis.yml file to see currently tested and supported Ruby versions.

RubyDocs documentation

The usual URL will provide detailed documentation.

FAQ

Don't roll your own crypto!

This gets its own section because someone will raise it. I did not invent or alter this algorithm, or implement it directly. These bindings were written following considerable involvement with the C reference, and a strong focus has been made on following the intent of the algorithm.

It is strongly advised to avoid implementations that utilise off-spec methods of introducing salts, invent imaginary parameters, or which use the word "encryption" in describing the password hashing process

Secure wipe is useless

Although the low level C contains support for "secure memory wipe", any code hitting that layer has copied your password to a dozen places in memory. It should be assumed that such functionality does not exist.

Work maximums may be tighter than reference

The reference implementation is aimed to provide secure hashing for many years. This implementation doesn't want you to DoS yourself in the meantime. Accordingly, some artificial limits exist on work powers. This gem can be much more agile in raising these as technology progresses.

Salts in general

If you are providing your own salt, you are probably using it wrong. The design of any secure hashing system should take care of it for you.

Contributing

Any form of contribution is appreciated, however, please review CONTRIBUTING.md.

Building locally/Tests

To build the gem locally, you will need to run the setup script:

./bin/setup

You can test that the Argon2 C library was properly imported by running the C test suite:

./bin/test

The ruby wrapper test suite includes a property based test. To more strenuously perform this test, you can tune the iterations parameter:

TEST_CHECKS=10000 bundle exec rake test

License

The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.