SUSE Package Hub 15 one-click install Install ghc-pwstore-purehaskell NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled. See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo. This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered. SUSE-PackageHub-15-Standard-Pool Package Hub 15 Dummy repo - this will fail ghc-pwstore-purehaskell Secure password storage, in pure Haskell To store passwords securely, they should be salted, then hashed with a slow hash function. This library uses PBKDF1-SHA256, and handles all the details. It is implemented in pure Haskell, with no C dependencies. For a faster implementation, the pwstore-fast package has the exact same API but is about 25 times faster due to its use of the cryptohash package, which is partly implemented in C. This pure Haskell version is visibly slower, but still quite usable. SUSE Package Hub 15 one-click install Install ghc-pwstore-purehaskell NOTE: This one-click installation requires that the SUSE Package Hub extension to already be enabled. See http://packagehub.suse.com/how-to-use/ for information on enabling the Package Hub extension If the extension is not enabled, this installation will fail while trying to enable an invalid repo. This package might depend on packages from SUSE Linux Enterprise modules. If those modules are not enabled, a package dependency error will be encountered. SUSE-PackageHub-15-Standard-Pool Package Hub 15 Dummy repo - this will fail ghc-pwstore-purehaskell Secure password storage, in pure Haskell To store passwords securely, they should be salted, then hashed with a slow hash function. This library uses PBKDF1-SHA256, and handles all the details. It is implemented in pure Haskell, with no C dependencies. For a faster implementation, the pwstore-fast package has the exact same API but is about 25 times faster due to its use of the cryptohash package, which is partly implemented in C. This pure Haskell version is visibly slower, but still quite usable.