Digest::SHA - Perl extension for SHA-1/224/256/384/512 |
Digest::SHA - Perl extension for SHA-1/224/256/384/512
In programs:
# Functional interface
use Digest::SHA qw(sha1 sha1_hex sha1_base64 ...);
$digest = sha1($data); $digest = sha1_hex($data); $digest = sha1_base64($data);
$digest = sha256($data); $digest = sha384_hex($data); $digest = sha512_base64($data);
# Object-oriented
use Digest::SHA;
$sha = Digest::SHA->new($alg);
$sha->add($data); # feed data into stream $sha->addfile(*F); $sha->add_bits($bits); $sha->add_bits($data, $nbits);
$sha_copy = $sha->clone; # if needed, make copy of $sha->dump($file); # current digest state, $sha->load($file); # or save it on disk
$digest = $sha->digest; # compute digest $digest = $sha->hexdigest; $digest = $sha->b64digest;
From the command line:
$ shasum files
$ shasum --help
# Functional interface only
use Digest::SHA qw(hmac_sha1 hmac_sha1_hex ...);
$digest = hmac_sha1($data, $key); $digest = hmac_sha224_hex($data, $key); $digest = hmac_sha256_base64($data, $key);
Digest::SHA is a complete implementation of the NIST Secure Hash Standard. It gives Perl programmers a convenient way to calculate SHA-1, SHA-224, SHA-256, SHA-384, and SHA-512 message digests. The module can handle all types of input, including partial-byte data.
Digest::SHA is written in C for speed. If your platform lacks a C compiler, you can install the functionally equivalent (but much slower) the Digest::SHA::PurePerl manpage module.
The programming interface is easy to use: it's the same one found in CPAN's the Digest manpage module. So, if your applications currently use the Digest::MD5 manpage and you'd prefer the stronger security of SHA, it's a simple matter to convert them.
The interface provides two ways to calculate digests: all-at-once, or in stages. To illustrate, the following short program computes the SHA-256 digest of ``hello world'' using each approach:
use Digest::SHA qw(sha256_hex);
$data = "hello world"; @frags = split(//, $data);
# all-at-once (Functional style) $digest1 = sha256_hex($data);
# in-stages (OOP style) $state = Digest::SHA->new(256); for (@frags) { $state->add($_) } $digest2 = $state->hexdigest;
print $digest1 eq $digest2 ? "whew!\n" : "oops!\n";
To calculate the digest of an n-bit message where n is not a multiple of 8, use the add_bits() method. For example, consider the 446-bit message consisting of the bit-string ``110'' repeated 148 times, followed by ``11''. Here's how to display its SHA-1 digest:
use Digest::SHA; $bits = "110" x 148 . "11"; $sha = Digest::SHA->new(1)->add_bits($bits); print $sha->hexdigest, "\n";
Note that for larger bit-strings, it's more efficient to use the two-argument version add_bits($data, $nbits), where $data is in the customary packed binary format used for Perl strings.
The module also lets you save intermediate SHA states to disk, or display them on standard output. The dump() method generates portable, human-readable text describing the current state of computation. You can subsequently retrieve the file with load() to resume where the calculation left off.
To see what a state description looks like, just run the following:
use Digest::SHA; Digest::SHA->new->add("Shaw" x 1962)->dump;
As an added convenience, the Digest::SHA module offers routines to calculate keyed hashes using the HMAC-SHA-1/224/256/384/512 algorithms. These services exist in functional form only, and mimic the style and behavior of the sha(), sha_hex(), and sha_base64() functions.
# Test vector from draft-ietf-ipsec-ciph-sha-256-01.txt
use Digest::SHA qw(hmac_sha256_hex); print hmac_sha256_hex("Hi There", chr(0x0b) x 32), "\n";
NIST was recently informed that researchers had discovered a way to ``break'' the current Federal Information Processing Standard SHA-1 algorithm, which has been in effect since 1994. The researchers have not yet published their complete results, so NIST has not confirmed these findings. However, the researchers are a reputable research team with expertise in this area.
Due to advances in computing power, NIST already planned to phase out SHA-1 in favor of the larger and stronger hash functions (SHA-224, SHA-256, SHA-384 and SHA-512) by 2010. New developments should use the larger and stronger hash functions.
ref. http://www.csrc.nist.gov/pki/HashWorkshop/NIST%20Statement/Burr_Mar2005.html
None by default.
Provided your C compiler supports a 64-bit type (e.g. the long long of C99, or __int64 used by Microsoft C/C++), all of these functions will be available for use. Otherwise, you won't be able to perform the SHA-384 and SHA-512 transforms, both of which require 64-bit operations.
Functional style
OOP style
Invoking new as an instance method will not create a new object; instead, it will simply reset the object to the initial state associated with $alg. If the argument is missing, the object will continue using the same algorithm that was selected at creation.
$sha->add("a"); $sha->add("b"); $sha->add("c"); $sha->add("a")->add("b")->add("c"); $sha->add("a", "b", "c"); $sha->add("abc");
The return value is the updated object itself.
The first form causes the most-significant $nbits of $data to be appended to the stream. The $data argument is in the customary binary format used for Perl strings.
The second form takes an ASCII string of ``0'' and ``1'' characters as its argument. It's equivalent to
$sha->add_bits(pack("B*", $bits), length($bits));
So, the following two statements do the same thing:
$sha->add_bits("111100001010"); $sha->add_bits("\xF0\xA0", 12);
This method is inherited if the Digest::base manpage is installed on your system. Otherwise, a functionally equivalent substitute is used.
Note that the digest method is a read-once operation. Once it has been performed, the Digest::SHA object is automatically reset in preparation for calculating another digest value. Call $sha->clone->digest if it's necessary to preserve the original digest state.
Like digest, this method is a read-once operation. Call $sha->clone->hexdigest if it's necessary to preserve the original digest state.
This method is inherited if the Digest::base manpage is installed on your system. Otherwise, a functionally equivalent substitute is used.
Like digest, this method is a read-once operation. Call $sha->clone->b64digest if it's necessary to preserve the original digest state.
This method is inherited if the Digest::base manpage is installed on your system. Otherwise, a functionally equivalent substitute is used.
HMAC-SHA-1/224/256/384/512
the Digest manpage, the Digest::SHA::PurePerl manpage
The Secure Hash Standard (FIPS PUB 180-2) can be found at:
http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/fips/fips180-2/fips180-2withchangenotice.pdf
The Keyed-Hash Message Authentication Code (HMAC):
http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/fips/fips198/fips-198a.pdf
Mark Shelor <mshelor@cpan.org>
The author is particularly grateful to
Gisle Aas Chris Carey Julius Duque Jeffrey Friedl Robert Gilmour Brian Gladman Andy Lester Alex Muntada Chris Skiscim Martin Thurn Adam Woodbury
for their valuable comments and suggestions.
Copyright (C) 2003-2005 Mark Shelor
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
perlartistic
Digest::SHA - Perl extension for SHA-1/224/256/384/512 |