Morning, how long should it take for Visual Studio 2013 express for Desktop (phew, a mouthful!) take to load a new project. I've just installed and it takes 10 minutes any time I create a new project.
I'm learning about logging in via a website. I've got the basics, in that (within MVC any way) we can set an authcookie. My question is more about the database and what is stored in it. I guess we don't want to store the 'real' password but an encrypted version?
Is there a standard approach for this, or is it varied based upon situation?
@Dave One-way encryption. Even you should not get the password back in any case. Do not use weak hashing algorithms. Do use a salt and a high number of iterations. PKBDF2 is a good example, crank u the # iterations to as high as you can allow without annoying customers (~500ms is good)
Right I see. Of course, it should be one way. This means though, in theory, they type in a password, we encrypt it and match the encrpyted password to a value in a database?
@Gotalove Thanks, that what I thought. My pc is a little dated but still a Core i5 with 4GB ram. It's strange, the very first project I created was instant but every subsequent project takes 10 minutes
"Salts also combat the use of rainbow tables for cracking passwords. A rainbow table is a large list of pre-computed hashes for commonly used passwords. For a password file without salts, an attacker can go through each entry and look up the hashed password in the rainbow table."
A rainbow. You see a rainbow, as a child, chances are you already love colours and the sky. The sky is blue. And yet, we have colours in the sky. You're then told there is a pot of gold underneath. How can this get any better? The most magic thing ever, and then you're told a troll lives underneath to protect it. This is child imagination at it's best, adn some one has attacked this? People have no soul :(
Both. Password and resulting hash. The salt prevents applying such a rainbow table on data, but you can still generate your own table with the known salt and iterations, but you are suddenly limited to attacking just ONE account instead of ALL
OK, big question, but, does one have to get that deep into it? I mean, there are lots of programmers (good programmers) who don't really understand what goes on under the hood.
I guess it's about what is the damage if some one broke in really!!
You don't have to. So long as you understand the basic premise of WHY we do things that way, you can balance your own approach from ease of use to absolutely secure. That said, in .NET it's ridiculously easy to have a relatively good password storage.
private static string GenerateSalt()
{
using (var randomNumberGenerator = RandomNumberGenerator.Create())
{
var buffer = new byte[32];
randomNumberGenerator.GetBytes(buffer);
return Convert.ToBase64String(buffer);
}
}
That's a simple function to generate a salt. Now, to generate a hash:
private static string GenerateHash(string password, string salt, int iterations)
{
using (var rfc2898DeriveBytes = new Rfc2898DeriveBytes(password, Convert.FromBase64String(salt), iterations))
{
return Convert.ToBase64String(rfc2898DeriveBytes.GetBytes(64));
}
}
So now you can hash based on password, salt and iterations. So, setting a pass:
public void Update(string password)
{
var random = new Random();
Salt = GenerateSalt();
Iterations = random.Next(10000, 20000);
Hash = GenerateHash(password, Salt, (int)Iterations);
}
And to validate a password against the stored hashed data:
the third is called update. Is that to update a password? I would have thought we'd delete the original password and provide a brand new one with a new salt?
@Dave You don't generate a new salt. Iterations and Salt and Hash are the values stored in the database at that moment. So, the validation merely takes the plain text password, hashes it with the correct salt and iterations and compares it to the stored hash. If it's the same, it's valid.
@Dave Correct. Each salt is supposed to be different when you generate it.
Oh, I didn't make that connection... So, even with this information, I still can't impersonate you as I guess there is no way to decrypt based upon the salt, iteration and hash?
So, even if the dtabase becomes comprised, that information remains 'secure'
Of course, security is just an accumulation of effort and time required to break it
As time goes on, and technology changes, current 'high secure' approaches may become weak and trivial
SHA-1 (you probably know it) wasn't THAT bad a long time ago (it was still a little bad). Now that we can generate a billion of them per second, it's really, really, really useless for any kind of secure hashing.
@Sippy Because you can. For example, let's say you provide SaaS for a web shop. Just altering CSS is not enough, so the client might hire a designer to change all the layouts to fit his theme, while using your back-end systems :-)
List<Companyregister> coun = new List<Companyregister>(); { coun = ds.getcountry(); }; List<SelectListItem> item8 = new List<SelectListItem>(); foreach( var c in coun ) { item8.Add(new SelectListItem { Text = c.country, Value = c.countryid.ToString() }); }
@Sippy Yeah well, let's say you have a SaaS CMS and provide a boring layout but a great administrative panel. Your customer might want to change the ultimate boringness to his own house style, thus, he wants to modify the layout.
Any idea when I am using this code
PropertyDescriptorCollection props =
TypeDescriptor.GetProperties(typeof(T));
DataTable table = new DataTable();
for(int i = 0 ; i < props.Count ; i++)
{
PropertyDescriptor prop = props[i];
table.Columns.Add(prop.Name, prop.PropertyType);
}
why it does not get any props for this input?
customerList.Add(new Person() { contact_id = "Joe", external_id = "Black" });
@Sippy Razor is dangerous because you can invoke logic from it. Letting users write Razor is just silly. Mustache migrates this problem by not allowing any sort of logic to run on the server at all.
var customerList = new List<Person>() customerList.Add(new Person() { contact_id = "Joe", external_id = "Black" }); How can I make that customerList be datasource of my datagridview?
I tried to do: dataGridView1.DataSource = customerList; nothing in the grid :/
Need help with a very simple issue! NickLarsens answer here stackoverflow.com/a/3832781/689881 - I got that code to work but now I simply want to print out the actual combination (of hands) and not just only how many there is. How do I do that?
Well if I knew that I wouldn't be here :) I tried using a printFunc() in the Card struct, but I get some weird results. Ideally I''d also want the four suits to be like in reality - i.e. Club/Diamond/Heart/Spade. On combination would for example look like "2c3c4c5cAd"
Got a semantic issue, a web application user can belong to one of three groups, each of which preempt what that user can see on the index page. Best way I can think to do this is find out which group(s) user belongs to and serve partials for each match using Razor code on the view?
Ha, funny you say that as it's kind of one of the reasons I asked. I wanted to join the Android room and they said I couldn't as I have a history of being a 'Vamp' - I figured that meant asking questions without helping others in return, right? But if that's the case then it makes it really difficult for people just starting out because you don't know enough to help anyone!
Do you get more code from Stack Overflow than you write on your own? Do you feel entitled to help from Stack Overflow users? Do you believe in the philosophy "Just use jQuery"? Do you spend more time looking for the right "plugin" than you likely would writing it on your own?
If you answered "Yes" to any of these questions, there is a good chance you are a Help Vampire. Sorry.
@Sippy That sounds perfect, I don't want to be spoonfed! Not at the moment, I;'m just following the Microsoft Virtual Academy on C#, but looking for resources in case I need help with anything
@James PHP can use classes and whatnot, forcing you into an OOP thinking style. In C# we use the same style, so if you have the experience with that, it's so much easier.
To be honest m PhP experience wasn't my finest hour. I was leaerning from books and a few tutorial sites but then I hit OOP concepts and for some reason when I started couldn't get my head around it. That was maybe 4-5 years ago, then about a year ago I started doing some JS and HTML and the OOP concepts came to me much easier.
I think sometimes when you're trying to learn you can have an idea of something being more complicated than it is which makes it tougher to learn. Then you come back without overthinking it and it clicks