You can reverse the base64 easily enough.

You ain't gonna reverse md5 in this lifetime.

The dual-column could work, or you could just accept the password if
it matches either routine in a single column.

The odds of your new algorithm coincidentally matching the
base64(md5()) of another user and giving access to a Bad Guy is
effectively nil.

On Tue, January 2, 2007 3:20 pm, Jason Alexander wrote:
> Hey there,
>
>
> I'm currently working on converting an ASP.NET, C# site/application to
> PHP, and I've run into a small snag. The login algorithm hashes the
> user passwords like so:
>
> MD5 md1 = new MD5CryptoServiceProvider();
> byte[] buffer1 = new ASCIIEncoding().GetBytes(stringToHash);
> byte[] buffer2 = md1.ComputeHash(buffer1);
> md1.Clear();
> return Convert.ToBase64String(buffer2);
>
>
> The challenge here is that in this conversion, I'm also migrating the
> users over to a different system which uses a completely different
> hashing mechanism. So, really, I need to be able to un-hash these
> values, if that's even possible.
>
> Thoughts? Options? I'm afraid this is one way hash, that I'm not going
> to be able to do anything about, unfortunately.
>
>
> TIA,
> -Jason
>
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>
>


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