Digest - Modules that calculate message digests
$md5 = Digest->new("MD5");
$sha1 = Digest->new("SHA-1");
$sha256 = Digest->new("SHA-256");
$sha384 = Digest->new("SHA-384");
$sha512 = Digest->new("SHA-512");
$hmac = Digest->HMAC_MD5($key);
The Digest::
modules calculate digests, also called "fingerprints" or "hashes", of some data, called a message. The digest is (usually) some small/fixed size string. The actual size of the digest depend of the algorithm used. The message is simply a sequence of arbitrary bytes or bits.
An important property of the digest algorithms is that the digest is likely to change if the message change in some way. Another property is that digest functions are one-way functions, i.e. it should be hard to find a message that correspond to some given digest. Algorithms differ in how "likely" and how "hard", as well as how efficient they are to compute.
All Digest::
modules provide the same programming interface. A functional interface for simple use, as well as an object oriented interface that can handle messages of arbitrary length and which can read files directly.
The digest can be delivered in three formats:
This is the most compact form, but it is not well suited for printing or embedding in places that can't handle arbitrary data.
A twice as long string of lowercase hexadecimal digits.
A string of portable printable characters. This is the base64 encoded representation of the digest with any trailing padding removed. The string will be about 30% longer than the binary version. MIME::Base64 tells you more about this encoding.
The functional interface is simply importable functions with the same name as the algorithm. The functions take the message as argument and return the digest. Example:
use Digest::MD5 qw(md5);
$digest = md5($message);
There are also versions of the functions with "_hex" or "_base64" appended to the name, which returns the digest in the indicated form.
The following methods are available for all Digest::
modules:
The constructor returns some object that encapsulate the state of the message-digest algorithm. You can add data to the object and finally ask for the digest. The "XXX" should of course be replaced by the proper name of the digest algorithm you want to use.
The two first forms are simply syntactic sugar which automatically load the right module on first use. The second form allow you to use algorithm names which contains letters which are not legal perl identifiers, e.g. "SHA-1".
If new() is called as an instance method (i.e. $ctx->new) it will just reset the state the object to the state of a newly created object. No new object is created in this case, and the return value is the reference to the object (i.e. $ctx).
The clone method creates a copy of the digest state object and returns a reference to the copy.
This is just an alias for $ctx->new.
The $data provided as argument are appended to the message we calculate the digest for. The return value is the $ctx object itself.
The $io_handle is read until EOF and the content is appended to the message we calculate the digest for. The return value is the $ctx object itself.
The bits provided are appended to the message we calculate the digest for. The return value is the $ctx object itself.
The two argument form of add_bits() will add the first $nbits bits from data. For the last potentially partial byte only the high order $nbits % 8
bits are used. If $nbits is greater than length($data) * 8
, then this method would do the same as $ctx->add($data)
, i.e. $nbits is silently ignored.
The one argument form of add_bits() takes a $bitstring of "1" and "0" chars as argument. It's a shorthand for $ctx->add_bits(pack("B*", $bitstring), length($bitstring))
.
This example shows two calls that should have the same effect:
$ctx->add_bits("111100001010");
$ctx->add_bits("\xF0\xA0", 12);
Most digest algorithms are byte based. For those it is not possible to add bits that are not a multiple of 8, and the add_bits() method will croak if you try.
Return the binary digest for the message.
Note that the digest
operation is effectively a destructive, read-once operation. Once it has been performed, the $ctx object is automatically reset
and can be used to calculate another digest value. Call $ctx->clone->digest if you want to calculate the digest without reseting the digest state.
Same as $ctx->digest, but will return the digest in hexadecimal form.
Same as $ctx->digest, but will return the digest as a base64 encoded string.
This table should give some indication on the relative speed of different algorithms. It is sorted by throughput based on a benchmark done with of some implementations of this API:
Algorithm Size Implementation MB/s
MD4 128 Digest::MD4 v1.1 24.9
MD5 128 Digest::MD5 v2.30 18.7
Haval-256 256 Digest::Haval256 v1.0.4 17.0
SHA-1 160 Digest::SHA1 v2.06 15.3
SHA-1 160 Digest::SHA v4.0.0 10.1
SHA-256 256 Digest::SHA2 v1.0.0 7.6
SHA-256 256 Digest::SHA v4.0.0 6.5
SHA-384 384 Digest::SHA2 v1.0.0 2.7
SHA-384 384 Digest::SHA v4.0.0 2.7
SHA-512 512 Digest::SHA2 v1.0.0 2.7
SHA-512 512 Digest::SHA v4.0.0 2.7
Whirlpool 512 Digest::Whirlpool v1.0.2 1.4
MD2 128 Digest::MD2 v2.03 1.1
Adler-32 32 Digest::Adler32 v0.03 0.2
MD5 128 Digest::Perl::MD5 v1.5 0.1
These numbers was achieved Nov 2003 with ActivePerl-5.8.1 running under Linux on a P-II 350 MHz CPU. The last 2 entries differ by being pure perl implementations of the algorithms, which explains why they are so slow.
Digest::Adler32, Digest::Haval256, Digest::HMAC, Digest::MD2, Digest::MD4, Digest::MD5, Digest::SHA, Digest::SHA1, Digest::SHA2, Digest::Whirlpool
New digest implementations should consider subclassing from Digest::base.
Gisle Aas <gisle@aas.no>
The Digest::
interface is based on the interface originally developed by Neil Winton for his MD5
module.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
Copyright 1998-2001,2003 Gisle Aas.
Copyright 1995-1996 Neil Winton.