crypt string, salt
Used by the passwd function on Unix systems to produce
a unique 13-character string (stored in the system's password file)
from the first 8 characters of the given string and
the 2-character salt. The Perl function operates the same way,
and returns a 13-character string with the first 2 characters
being the salt. crypt uses a modified version of
the Data Encryption Standard, which produces a one-way
encryption; the resulting string cannot be decrypted to determine
the original string. crypt can be used to check that a password
is correct by comparing the string from the function to the string
found in /etc/passwd (if you have permission to do this):
if (crypt ($guess, $pass) eq $pass) {
# guess is correct
}
The variable $pass is the password string from the
password file. crypt merely uses the first two characters
from this string for the salt argument.