Pwgen plug-in: Difference between revisions
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But Microsoft provides the CryptoAPI in Windows, which we can use to collect crypto-grade entropy from the operating system. This plugin exports just one API call, which can be used to generate a password of arbitrary | But Microsoft provides the CryptoAPI in Windows, which we can use to collect crypto-grade entropy from the operating system. This plugin exports just one API call, which can be used to generate a password of arbitrary | ||
length (1 to 255 characters) using secure entropy provided to us by the OS. | length (1 to 255 characters) using secure entropy provided to us by the OS. We restrict the generated password to the 62-character set consisting of upper and lower-case alphanumerics. | ||
== Usage of plugin == | == Usage of plugin == |
Revision as of 18:11, 9 October 2009
Author: Cventers (talk, contrib) |
Pwgen Plugin by Chase Venters, Public Domain
Links
Download v0.01:
Pwgen-001.zip (11 KB)
ZIP contains binary, source, documentation, example
Description
The random number facilities already available for NSIS do not generate good entropy. If these facilities are used to generate passwords (as an installer might do when setting up a user account to run a service), the passwords they generate will be very predictable.
But Microsoft provides the CryptoAPI in Windows, which we can use to collect crypto-grade entropy from the operating system. This plugin exports just one API call, which can be used to generate a password of arbitrary length (1 to 255 characters) using secure entropy provided to us by the OS. We restrict the generated password to the 62-character set consisting of upper and lower-case alphanumerics.
Usage of plugin
pwgen::GeneratePassword 10 Pop $0 MessageBox MB_OK "Random password: $0"
Credits
- Written by Chase Venters
- last edited 10/09/2009