How To Keep Your Best Programmers

I really liked this article – How To Keep Your Best Programmers.  It’s not your average three paragraphs and a link, I admit. It’s somewhat of a long read.  But it does a good job of explaining why people in general, and good developers in particular choose to leave or stay in the company.

It’s difficult to quote as it flows continuously, but if I had to choose, I’d use this as a teaser:

For some background, check out this video from RSA Animate. The video is great watching, but if you haven’t the time, the gist of it is that humans are not motivated economically toward self-actualization (as widely believed) but are instead driven by these three motivating factors: the desire to control one’s own work, the desire to get better at things, and the desire to work toward some goal beyond showing up for 40 hours per week and collecting a paycheck.

Frustration with organizational stupidity is usually the result of a lack of autonomy and the perception of no discernible purpose.

Not that I am a good programmer, but it helped me understand some of my own career jumps…

Let’s Encrypt is not in Beta anymore

Let’s Encrypt – anew Certificate Authority, which is free, open, and automated – announced that it’s leaving beta.  Just look at how many SSL certificates they’ve issued, and at what rate!

Issuance-April-10-2016

I’ve first written about Let’s Encrypt back in November 2014.  It hasn’t been that long ago, but boy, what a journey!

Single Sign-On Between SugarCRM and Request Tracker

As mentioned before, over the last few month I’ve been involved in quite a few integration projects, using mostly SugarCRM and Request Tracker.  One of the interesting challenges was the Single Sign-On (SSO) between the two.

Continue reading Single Sign-On Between SugarCRM and Request Tracker

Working with encrypted values in SugarCRM 6.5

SugarCRM comes with a variety of modules that store values in the database.  Some of those values are encrypted.  For example, mailbox passwords for inbound and outbound email configurations.

When you create this configurations through the web interface or the API, you don’t need to worry about encryption, as SugarCRM handles that all by itself.  But sometimes, you need to access those values from third-party code.  The easiest way would be of course to use the same API functionality, but this is not always possible (different machines, different technology stack, etc).

It is still possible decrypt the values in the database, if you know where to look.

First of all, here is a little side note for InboundEmail and OutboundEmail modules.  InboundEmail is a full-featured module, which you can find in modules/InboundEmail folder.  OutboundEmail is however not – it lives in include/OutboundEmail .  This might seem surprising, but the reason for this (probably, as I don’t know for sure) is that outbound email configuration is much simpler.  Inbound emails are linked with folders, which are then used to subscribe users, etc.  Outbound emails are just SMTP configurations to use, directly linked to users.

Anyways.  Let’s get back on track.

Most of the encryption and decryption magic happens in include/utils/encryption_utils.php.  If you look through the code, you’ll notice that it deals with mostly two things:

  1. Generating or reading an existing encryption key.
  2. Encrypting or decrypting text with Blowfish, using the encryptionkey.

Encryption keys are stored in custom/blowfish/ folder.  The files that you’ll find there have weird names and a .php extension.  The name of the file comes from the module, for which the key will be used.  ROT13 algorithm is used to convert the name of the module into the file name.  (Note, that for outbound email, the name of the module is OutBoundEmail, not OutboundEmail).

If the encryption key file does not exist, a new one will be generated.  The file will contain a PHP snippet like this:

<?php // created: 2016-04-18 10:00:00 
  $key = array ( 0 => 'a0a0a0a0-b1b1-c3c3-d4d4-e5e5e5e5e5e5',
);

If you accidentally remove the file, then you won’t be able to decrypt any of the values, encrypted with this key, so make sure you backup this up.  Especially considering that this folder might be in your .gitignore, as a sub-folder of custom/ which stored lots of auto-generated stuff.

Note that the file actually defines a $key variable, which, if you will include it in your code, can overwrite your $key variable. So, be warned.

Now, the encryption and decryption is handled with the Crypt_Blowfish library from Pear.  You can find it in include/Pear/Crypt_Blowfish folder.

A little note for the above as well.  The Blowfish.php file which contains the Crypt_Blowfish class, requires the Blowfish/DefaultKey.php file (from the setKey() method).  That requirement uses relative path, but not based on the current file.  Yeah, I know.  So, if you just copy over the library somewhere else, you might need to adjust either path variables, or the setKey() method.

Armed with this knowledge, you can now work with encrypted values stored by the SugarCRM in the database.  Good luck!