I know I'm late but I'll provide my advice anyway in case someone else who needs it found their way here.
To prevent it being used on another PC, you could probably use the MAC address or hardware address. However, this is subject to the network hardware being still available when checking the password. Please make sure you use the hardware address of the machine where the password will be checked.
private string GetBase64Mac()
{
System.Net.NetworkInformation.NetworkInterface[] interfaces = System.Net.NetworkInformation.NetworkInterface.GetAllNetworkInterfaces();
if (interfaces.Length == 0)
{
System.Net.NetworkInformation.PhysicalAddress add = interfaces[0].GetPhysicalAddress();
if (add != null)
return System.Convert.ToBase64String(add.GetAddressBytes());
}
return "";
}
To limit it by some expiry date simply use the text string of the expiry date.
private string GetExpiryDate(DateTime expiryDate)
{
return expiryDate.ToString("yyyyMMdd");
}
Simply use a hash function to hash the combine expiry date, hardware address and a secret key. Prefix or suffix the hash output with the expiry date.
private void GeneratePassword(string prefix)
{
string secretKey = "MySecretKey";
System.Security.Cryptography.SHA1 sha = System.Security.Cryptography.SHA1.Create();
byte[] preHash = System.Text.Encoding.UTF32.GetBytes(prefix + secretKey + GetBase64Mac());
byte[] hash = sha.ComputeHash(preHash);
string password = prefix + System.Convert.ToBase64String(hash);
return password;
}
In the case above, i prefix the hash with the expiry date. So, when we check the password, we simply extract the expiry date from the password, use the same function to generate the same password. If the generated password match the provided password, then you have green light.
private void TestPassword()
{
int duration = 15; // in days
string prefix = GetExpiryDate(DateTime.Today.AddDays(duration));
string generated = GeneratePassword(prefix);
// Positive test
string testPrefix = generated.Substring(0, 8);
string testPassword = GeneratePassword(testPrefix);
if (generated != TestPassword)
return false;
// Negative test
generated[2] = '2';
generated[12] = 'b';
testPrefix = generated.Substring(0, 8);
testPassword = GeneratePassword(testPrefix);
if (generated != TestPassword)
return true;
return false;
}
Sample output password:
20110318k3X3GEDvP0LkBN6zCrkijIE+sNc=
If you can't get the hardware address, then simply use the customer's name. It won't prevent the password from being used in multiple machines, but it will ensure that the same person is using it.