1393
Comment:
|
← Revision 29 as of 2023-03-14 09:55:42 ⇥
2503
|
Deletions are marked like this. | Additions are marked like this. |
Line 1: | Line 1: |
= How to choose a good password = | = How to change your LST password = |
Line 3: | Line 3: |
A practical approach for choosing a new passwords is to | === Connect to login server === In order to change your password, you have to connect to the server ''login.lst.uni-saarland.de'' via ssh. To do so just open a console (command promt, terminal, etc.) and type the following command: |
Line 6: | Line 9: |
ssh login.coli.uni-saarland.de | ssh <your_username>@login.lst.uni-saarland.de }}} === How to choose a good password === After logging in, you can create a new password with the command apg - Pick one! {{{ |
Line 12: | Line 22: |
= Linux / MacOS = To change your password please log in with !SecureShell (ssh) to 'login.coli.uni-saarland.de' and enter the command 'yppasswd'. |
=== Change your password === Finally, use the ''passwd'' command to change the password to either a generated password or one you choose. |
Line 15: | Line 27: |
ssh login.coli.uni-saarland.de | |
Line 18: | Line 29: |
= Windows = Press CTRL-Alt-Del and select "Change Password". Windows passwords are independent from Linux / MacOS / Mail passwords. |
|
Line 21: | Line 30: |
= Email / Web Server = Your email password is the same as your Linux / MacOS password. |
In case of a "kerberos" messages, please log out and log in and try again. |
Line 25: | Line 33: |
A password should be |
== A password should be == |
Line 30: | Line 37: |
* new, do not reuse your old password(s)! | |
Line 31: | Line 39: |
A very good way to create hard to guess, yet easy to remember passwords (or passphrases) is to employ the "diceware" method using real world, physical dice. In short * roll a dice 5 times, |
== Diceware == A very good way to create hard to guess, yet easy to remember passwords (or passphrases) is to employ the "diceware" method using real world, physical dice. In short * roll 5 dice 6 times, |
Line 35: | Line 44: |
* repeat until you have 6 words * 30 dice rolls in total) |
* repeat until you have 6 words. * Your 30 dice rolls yielded ~77 bits of entropy which is now encoded in the 6 words you chose. |
Line 40: | Line 50: |
== Mini FAQ == Q: If I use more than 10 characters I am more secure, right? <<BR>> A: No, not really. Currently we consider a 10 random character password "safe", but feel free to use longer passwords. Please consider that there are other ways to attack your account besides a brute force password attack. Be aware of the fact that there is no perfect security. <<BR>> https://xkcd.com/538 <<BR>> <<BR>> Q: How about passwords I use on the Internet with my web browser? <<BR>> A: We recommend using a password manager/password generator, like "keepassx", to create and store long (>30 chars) random passwords. We also recommend using the built in web browser password storage, but it is mandatory to use a strong (see above) master password (Firefox: Preferences -> Security -> Change Master Password) when doing so! |
How to change your LST password
Connect to login server
In order to change your password, you have to connect to the server login.lst.uni-saarland.de via ssh. To do so just open a console (command promt, terminal, etc.) and type the following command:
ssh <your_username>@login.lst.uni-saarland.de
How to choose a good password
After logging in, you can create a new password with the command apg - Pick one!
apg -a0 -MNLC -t -m10 -x10
Passwords generated this way will take on average approximately 64 years to be broken by a 8xTitan-X GPU cluster node.
Change your password
Finally, use the passwd command to change the password to either a generated password or one you choose.
passwd
In case of a "kerberos" messages, please log out and log in and try again.
More information on passwords
A password should be
- kept secret
- changed on a regular basis
- not be easy to guess by others (like your Matrikelnummer or 'klausi1' for instance)
- new, do not reuse your old password(s)!
Diceware
A very good way to create hard to guess, yet easy to remember passwords (or passphrases) is to employ the "diceware" method using real world, physical dice. In short
- roll 5 dice 6 times,
- look up the word which corresponds to the result using an existing list of words,
- repeat until you have 6 words.
- Your 30 dice rolls yielded ~77 bits of entropy which is now encoded in the 6 words you chose.
A more detailled description including word lists for many languages can be found here:
http://world.std.com/~reinhold/diceware.html
Mini FAQ
Q: If I use more than 10 characters I am more secure, right?
A: No, not really. Currently we consider a 10 random character password "safe", but feel free to use longer passwords. Please consider that there are other ways to attack your account besides a brute force password attack. Be aware of the fact that there is no perfect security.
https://xkcd.com/538
Q: How about passwords I use on the Internet with my web browser?
A: We recommend using a password manager/password generator, like "keepassx", to create and store long (>30 chars) random passwords. We also recommend using the built in web browser password storage, but it is mandatory to use a strong (see above) master password (Firefox: Preferences -> Security -> Change Master Password) when doing so!