$6$
NOTES top
Glibc notes
The glibc2 version of this function supports additional encryption
algorithms.
If salt is a character string starting with the characters "$id$"
followed by a string terminated by "$":
$id$salt$encrypted
then instead of using the DES machine, id identifies the encryption
method used and this then determines how the rest of the password
string is interpreted. The following values of id are supported:
ID | Method
---------------------------------------------------------
1 | MD5
2a | Blowfish (not in mainline glibc; added in some
| Linux distributions)
5 | SHA-256 (since glibc 2.7)
6 | SHA-512 (since glibc 2.7)
So $5$salt$encrypted is an SHA-256 encoded password and
$6$salt$encrypted is an SHA-512 encoded one.
"salt" stands for the up to 16 characters following "$id$" in the
salt. The encrypted part of the password string is the actual
computed password. The size of this string is fixed:
MD5 | 22 characters
SHA-256 | 43 characters
SHA-512 | 86 characters
The characters in "salt" and "encrypted" are drawn from the set
[a-zA-Z0-9./]. In the MD5 and SHA implementations the entire key is
significant (instead of only the first 8 bytes in DES).
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