The scrypt key derivation function was originally developed for use in the Tarsnap online backup system and is designed to be far more secure against hardware brute-force attacks than alternative functions such as PBKDF2 or bcrypt.
We estimate that on modern (2009) hardware, if 5 seconds are spent computing a
derived key, the cost of a hardware brute-force attack against scrypt is
roughly 4000 times greater than the cost of a similar attack against bcrypt (to
find the same password), and 20000 times greater than a similar attack against
PBKDF2. If the scrypt encryption utility is used with default parameters,
the cost of cracking the password on a file encrypted by scrypt enc is
approximately 100 billion times more than the cost of cracking the same
password on a file encrypted by openssl enc; this means that a five-character
password using scrypt is stronger than a ten-character password using
openssl.
Details of the scrypt key derivation function are given in:
- The Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) RFC 7914: The scrypt Password-Based Key Derivation Function.
- The original conference paper: Colin Percival, Stronger Key Derivation via Sequential Memory-Hard Functions, presented at BSDCan'09, May 2009. Conference presentation slides.
Some additional articles may be of interest:
- Filippo Valsorda presented a very well-written explanation about how the scrypt parameters impact the memory usage and CPU time of the algorithm.
- J. Alwen, B. Chen, K. Pietrzak, L. Reyzin, S. Tessaro, Scrypt is Maximally Memory-Hard, Cryptology ePrint Archive: Report 2016/989.
A simple password-based encryption utility is available as a demonstration of
the scrypt key derivation function. It can be invoked as:
scrypt enc [options] infile [outfile]to encrypt data,scrypt dec [options] infile [outfile]to decrypt data, orscrypt info infileto see the encryption parameters used, and the memory required to decrypt the encrypted file.
If [outfile] is not specified, the output is written to standard output.
scrypt also supports a number of command-line [options]:
-t maxtimewill instructscryptto spend at most maxtime seconds computing the derived encryption key from the password; for encryption, this value will determine how secure the encrypted data is, while for decryption this value is used as an upper limit (ifscryptdetects that it would take too long to decrypt the data, it will exit with an error message).-m maxmemfracinstructsscryptto use at most the specified fraction of the available RAM for computing the derived encryption key. For encryption, increasing this value might increase the security of the encrypted data, depending on themaxtimevalue; for decryption, this value is used as an upper limit and maycausescrypt to exit with an error.-M maxmeminstructsscryptto use at most the specified number of bytes of RAM when computing the derived encryption key.--logN value1,-r value2,-p value3will set the encryption parameters explicitly.--passphrase method:argallows the user to specify whether to read the passphrase from stdin, /dev/tty, an environment variable, or a file.
If the encrypted data is corrupt, scrypt dec will exit with a non-zero
status. However, scrypt dec may produce output before it determines that
the encrypted data was corrupt, so for applications which require data to be
authenticated, you must store the output of scrypt dec in a temporary
location and check scrypt's exit code before using the decrypted data.
To use scrypt as a key derivation function (KDF) with
libscrypt-kdf, include scrypt-kdf.h and use:
/**
* scrypt_kdf(passwd, passwdlen, salt, saltlen, N, r, p, buf, buflen):
* Compute scrypt(passwd[0 .. passwdlen - 1], salt[0 .. saltlen - 1], N, r,
* p, buflen) and write the result into buf. The parameters r, p, and buflen
* must satisfy r * p < 2^30 and buflen <= (2^32 - 1) * 32. The parameter N
* must be a power of 2 greater than 1.
*
* Return 0 on success; or -1 on error.
*/
int scrypt_kdf(const uint8_t *, size_t, const uint8_t *, size_t, uint64_t,
uint32_t, uint32_t, uint8_t *, size_t);
There is a sample of using this function in tests/libscrypt-kdf.
If you installed the library, you can compile that file and run
the binary:
$ cd tests/libscrypt-kdf/
$ c99 sample-libscrypt-kdf.c -lscrypt-kdf
$ ./a.out
crypto_scrypt(): success
If you would rather copy our source files directly into your
project, then take a look at the lib/crypto/crypto_scrypt.h
header, which provides crypto_scrypt().
The scrypt utility has been tested on FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, Linux
(Slackware, CentOS, Gentoo, Ubuntu), Solaris, OS X, Cygwin, and GNU Hurd.
-
GPG-signed SHA256 for scrypt version 1.3.3 (signature generated using Tarsnap code signing key)
This cleartext signature of the SHA256 output can be verified with:
gpg --decrypt scrypt-sigs-1.3.3.ascYou may then compare the displayed hash to the SHA256 hash of
scrypt-1.3.3.tgz.
In addition, scrypt is available in the OpenBSD and FreeBSD ports trees and
in NetBSD pkgsrc as security/scrypt.
❗ We strongly recommend that people use the latest official release tarball on https://www.tarsnap.com/scrypt.html
To build scrypt, extract the tarball and run ./configure && make. See the
BUILDING file for more details (e.g., dealing with OpenSSL on OSX).
A small test suite can be run with:
make test
On platforms with less than 1 GB of RAM, use:
make test SMALLMEM=1
Memory-testing normal operations with valgrind (takes approximately 4 times as long as no valgrind tests) can be enabled with:
make test USE_VALGRIND=1
Memory-testing all tests with valgrind (requires over 1 GB memory, and takes
approximately 4 times as long as USE_VALGRIND=1) can be enabled with:
make test USE_VALGRIND=2
The scrypt key derivation function and the scrypt encryption utility are discussed on the scrypt@tarsnap.com mailing list.