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var $validate = array(
  'password' => array(
      'passwordlength' => array('rule' => array('between', 8, 50),'message' => 'Enter 8-50 chars'),
      'passwordequal' => array('checkpasswords','message' => 'Passwords dont match') 
  )
);

function checkpasswords()
{
   return strcmp($this->data['Airline']['password'],$this->data['Airline']['confirm password']);
}

This code is not working and always gives the error message even if they match. Also when i do a edit i get the followoing error as there is no password field. is there any fix

Undefined index:  password [APP/models/airline.php, line 25]
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1  
is $this->datadata intended? If not, there's your problem. – Stephen Sep 21 '10 at 13:24
i fixed the above code to remove the extra data still i get the error – Web Developer Sep 21 '10 at 13:28
Could I see the html form that posts the data? – Stephen Sep 21 '10 at 13:33
1  
Are you missing an underscore in 'confirm password' in your checkpassword-function? – Tim Sep 21 '10 at 13:40
2  
strcmp returns 0 if the strings are equal. 0 will be understood as false, so it'll do the exact opposite of what you expect it to do. – deceze Sep 24 '10 at 2:51

4 Answers

Are you using the AuthComponent? Be aware that it hashes all incoming password fields (but not "password confirm" fields, check with debug($this->data)), so the fields will never be the same. Read the manual and use AuthComponent::password to do the check.


Having said that, here's something I use:

public $validate = array(
    'password' => array(
        'confirm' => array(
            'rule' => array('password', 'password_control', 'confirm'),
            'message' => 'Repeat password',
            'last' => true
        ),
        'length' => array(
            'rule' => array('password', 'password_control', 'length'),
            'message' => 'At least 6 characters'
        )
    ),
    'password_control' => array(
        'notempty' => array(
            'rule' => array('notEmpty'),
            'allowEmpty' => false,
            'message' => 'Repeat password'
        )
    )
);

public function password($data, $controlField, $test) {
    if (!isset($this->data[$this->alias][$controlField])) {
        trigger_error('Password control field not set.');
        return false;
    }

    $field = key($data);
    $password = current($data);
    $controlPassword = $this->data[$this->alias][$controlField];

    switch ($test) {
        case 'confirm' :
            if ($password !== Security::hash($controlPassword, null, true)) {
                $this->invalidate($controlField, 'Repeat password');
                return false;
            }
            return true;

        case 'length' :
            return strlen($controlPassword) >= 6;

        default :
            trigger_error("Unknown password test '$test'.");
    }
}

This is bad for the following reasons:

  • Has tight coupling to the form, always expects a field password_control to be present. You need to use field whitelisting or disable validation if you don't have one in your data, i.e.: $this->User->save($this->data, true, array('field1', 'field2')).
  • Manually hashes the password the way the AuthComponent does (since there's no clean access to components from the model). If you change the algorithm used in the AuthComponent, you need to change it here as well.

Having said that, it transparently validates and produces proper error messages for both the password and password control fields without requiring any additional code in the controller.

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up vote 4 down vote accepted

here is the mistake

'passwordequal' => array('checkpasswords','message' => 'Passwords dont match') 

I changed it to

'passwordequal'  => array('rule' =>'checkpasswords','message' => 'Passwords dont match')

also strcmp function also had mistakes as it would return 0 (i.e False) all the time in the above code

if(strcmp($this->data['Airline']['password'],$this->data['Airline']['confirm_password']) ==0 )
{
    return true;
}
return false;
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5  
Oh, the horrible redundancy! In a case like this you're supposed to use return strcmp(...) == 0. – deceze Sep 24 '10 at 6:11

Would this help: http://sumanrs.wordpress.com/2011/10/01/cakephp-user-password-manager-authentication-missing-guide/ ? That should take care of password validation.

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For CakePHP 2.x users using Authentication you may note that "AuthComponent no longer automatically hashes every password it can find." I.e. the solutions above may not be the correct way of solving the problem for 2.x. http://book.cakephp.org/2.0/en/core-libraries/components/authentication.html#hashing-passwords

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