Shiro 1.2.0 and later provides a command line program that can hash strings and resources (files, URLs, classpath entries) of almost any type. To use it, you must have a Java Virtual Machine installed and the ‘java’ command must be accessible in your $PATH
environment variable.
Ensure you have access to the shiro-tools-hasher-
version-cli.jar
file. You can either find this in a source build in the buildroot/tools/hasher/target
directory or via download through Maven.
# Use the following to download from Maven Central into # ~/.m2/repository/org/apache/shiro/tools/shiro-tools-hasher/X.X.X/shiro-tools-hasher-X.X.X-cli.jar $ mvn dependency:get -DgroupId=org.apache.shiro.tools -DartifactId=shiro-tools-hasher -Dclassifier=cli -Dversion=X.X.X
Once you have access to the jar, you can run the following command:
$ java -jar shiro-tools-hasher-X.X.X-cli.jar
This will print all available options for both standard (MD5, SHA1) and more complex password hashing scenarios.
Please read the printed instructions for the above command. It will provide an exhaustive list of instructions which will help you use the hasher depending on your needs. However, we've provided some quick reference usages/scenarios below for convenience.
It is best to keep user passwords in the shiro.ini
[users]
section secure. To add a new user account line, use the above command with the **-p**
(or --password
) option:
$ java -jar shiro-tools-hasher-X.X.X-cli.jar -p
It will then ask you to enter the password and then confirm it:
Password to hash: Password to hash (confirm):
When this command executes, it will print out the securely-salted-iterated-and-hashed password. For example:
$shiro1$SHA-256$500000$eWpVX2tGX7WCP2J+jMCNqw==$it/NRclMOHrfOvhAEFZ0mxIZRdbcfqIBdwdwdDXW2dM=
Take this value and place it as the password in the user definition line (followed by any optional roles) as defined in the INI Users Configuration documentation. For example:
[users] ... user1 = $shiro1$SHA-256$500000$eWpVX2tGX7WCP2J+jMCNqw==$it/NRclMOHrfOvhAEFZ0mxIZRdbcfqIBdwdwdDXW2dM=
You will also need to ensure that the implicit iniRealm
uses a CredentialsMatcher
that knows how to perform secure hashed password comparisons. So configure this in the [main]
section as well:
[main] ... passwordMatcher = org.apache.shiro.authc.credential.PasswordMatcher iniRealm.credentialsMatcher = $passwordMatcher ...
Although you can perform any hash with any algorithm supported on the JVM, the default hashing algorithm is MD5, common for file checksums. Just use the **-r**
(or --resource
) option to indicate the following value is a resource location (and not text you wish hashed):
$ java -jar shiro-tools-hasher-X.X.X-cli.jar -r RESOURCE_PATH
By default RESOURCE_PATH
is expected to be a file path, but you may specify classpath or URL resources by using the classpath:
or url:
prefix respectively.
Some examples:
<command> -r fileInCurrentDirectory.txt <command> -r ../../relativePathFile.xml <command> -r ~/documents/myfile.pdf <command> -r /usr/local/logs/absolutePathFile.log <command> -r url:http://foo.com/page.html <command> -r classpath:/WEB-INF/lib/something.jar