The Apache htpasswd
file does not support any shadow functionality. Therefor you have to prevent the users accessing your web server in order to keep them away from the password file. So the only solution is your SSH based approach or any other remote solution. The following description will explain how to write a SSH command script to change the password only if the user knows his old password. The major problem is, that Apache does not provide a command line tool to verify a password in a htpasswd
file. But this can be done by hand.
The following description assumes that the web server user is www-data
and that the home directory of the user is /var/www
.
First you have to create a htpasswd file, that is writable by the web server user:
# ls -la .htpasswd
-rw-r--r-- 1 www-data root 18 10. Mai 16:30 .htpasswd
Then you have to add the keys of all your users to the authorized_keys
file of the web server user. You have to prefix each line with the command
option.
# cat .ssh/authorized_keys
command="/var/www/.htpasswd.sh" ssh-rsa AAAA... user@host
Whenever a user connects with his key only the .htpasswd.sh
gets executed. The users do not have any shell access to the web server.
This is the script to change the password:
#! /bin/bash
HTPASSWD=/var/www/.htpasswd
die () { echo "$*" >&2 ; exit 1 ; }
read -p 'Enter user name: ' USER
read -s -p 'Old password: ' OLDPW ; echo
read -s -p 'New password: ' NEWPW0 ; echo
read -s -p 'Re-type new password: ' NEWPW1 ; echo
if LINE=$(grep ^"$USER": "$HTPASSWD")
then
echo "$LINE" | sed 's/.*:\(..\)\(.\+\)/\1 \2/' | {
read SALT CRYPT
if [[ "$SALT$CRYPT" = $(echo "$OLDPW" | mkpasswd -sS "$SALT") ]] ; then
if [ "$NEWPW0" != "$NEWPW1" ] ; then
die "Password verification error!"
fi
PWS=$(grep -v ^"$USER:" "$HTPASSWD")
{
echo "$PWS"
echo -n "$USER:"
echo "$NEWPW0" | mkpasswd -s
} > "$HTPASSWD"
echo "Updating password for user $USER."
else
die "Password verification error!"
fi
}
else
die "Password verification error!"
fi
The tricky part is the password verification. It is done by reading the old salt and encrypting the old password with the old salt. The result is compared with the old encrypted password in the htpasswd
file.
Now the user can connect to the web server in order to change the password:
$ ssh www-data@localhost
Enter user name: szi
Old password:
New password:
Re-type new password:
Updating password for user szi.
Connection to localhost closed.
Everybody can change only his own password and nobody has access to the encrypted passwords of the other users. This solution has an additional benefit about using the original htpasswd
program in a shell script, because the passwords are never used as a command line argument. This would not be possible with htpasswd
, because it can not read the password from stdin like mkpasswd
.