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docs/en/docs/tutorial/response-model.md
## Return the same input data Here we are declaring a `UserIn` model, it will contain a plaintext password: === "Python 3.10+" ```Python hl_lines="7 9" {!> ../../../docs_src/response_model/tutorial002_py310.py!} ``` === "Python 3.8+" ```Python hl_lines="9 11"
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docs/en/docs/tutorial/security/oauth2-jwt.md
But you cannot convert from the gibberish back to the password. ### Why use password hashing If your database is stolen, the thief won't have your users' plaintext passwords, only the hashes. So, the thief won't be able to try to use that password in another system (as many users use the same password everywhere, this would be dangerous). ## Install `passlib`
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docs/en/docs/tutorial/security/simple-oauth2.md
### Check the password At this point we have the user data from our database, but we haven't checked the password. Let's put that data in the Pydantic `UserInDB` model first. You should never save plaintext passwords, so, we'll use the (fake) password hashing system. If the passwords don't match, we return the same error. #### Password hashing
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docs/en/docs/tutorial/sql-databases.md
!!! warning This example is not secure, the password is not hashed. In a real life application you would need to hash the password and never save them in plaintext. For more details, go back to the Security section in the tutorial. Here we are focusing only on the tools and mechanics of databases. !!! tip
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