|
NAMEAuthen::Htpasswd::User - represents a user line in a .htpasswd fileSYNOPSISmy $user = Authen::Htpasswd::User->new($username, $password[, @extra_info], \%options); my $user = $pwfile->lookup_user($username); # from Authen::Htpasswd object if ($user->check_password($password)) { ... } if ($user->hashed_password eq $foo) { ... } # these are written immediately if the user was looked up from an Authen::Htpasswd object $user->username('bill'); $user->password('bar'); $user->hashed_password('tIYAwma5mxexA'); $user->extra_info('root', 'joe@site.com', 'Joe Sysadmin'); $user->set(username => 'bill', password => 'foo'); # set several at once print $user->to_line, "\n"; METHODSnewmy $userobj = Authen::Htpasswd::User->new($username, $password[, @extra_info], \%options); Creates a user object. You may also specify the arguments and options together in a hash: "{ username => $foo, password => $bar, extra_info => [$email, $name], ... }".
check_password$userobj->check_password($password,\@check_hashes); Returns whether the password matches. "check_hashes" is the same as for Authen::Htpasswd. usernamehashed_passwordextra_info(@fields)Get and set the fields of the user line. These methods, as well as "password" and "set" below, write any changes immediately if the user was lookup up from an Authen::Htpasswd object. If the username is changed, the old entry is not preserved.password$userobj->password($newpass); Encrypts a new password. Dies if $newpass is not provided. set$userobj->set(item => $value, ...); Sets any of the four preceding values at once. Only writes the file once if it is going to be written. to_line$userobj->to_line; Returns a line for the user, suitable for printing to a ".htpasswd" file. There is no newline at the end. AUTHORDavid Kamholz "dkamholz@cpan.org"Yuval Kogman COPYRIGHT & LICENSECopyright (c) 2005 - 2007 the aforementioned authors. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
Visit the GSP FreeBSD Man Page Interface. |