Digest::MD5 - phpMan

Command: man perldoc info search(apropos)  


NAME
    Digest::MD5 - Perl interface to the MD5 Algorithm

SYNOPSIS
     # Functional style
     use Digest::MD5 qw(md5 md5_hex md5_base64);

     $digest = md5($data);
     $digest = md5_hex($data);
     $digest = md5_base64($data);

     # OO style
     use Digest::MD5;

     $ctx = Digest::MD5->new;

     $ctx->add($data);
     $ctx->addfile($file_handle);

     $digest = $ctx->digest;
     $digest = $ctx->hexdigest;
     $digest = $ctx->b64digest;

DESCRIPTION
    The "Digest::MD5" module allows you to use the RSA Data Security Inc.
    MD5 Message Digest algorithm from within Perl programs. The algorithm
    takes as input a message of arbitrary length and produces as output a
    128-bit "fingerprint" or "message digest" of the input.

    Note that the MD5 algorithm is not as strong as it used to be. It has
    since 2005 been easy to generate different messages that produce the
    same MD5 digest. It still seems hard to generate messages that produce a
    given digest, but it is probably wise to move to stronger algorithms for
    applications that depend on the digest to uniquely identify a message.

    The "Digest::MD5" module provide a procedural interface for simple use,
    as well as an object oriented interface that can handle messages of
    arbitrary length and which can read files directly.

FUNCTIONS
    The following functions are provided by the "Digest::MD5" module. None
    of these functions are exported by default.

    md5($data,...)
        This function will concatenate all arguments, calculate the MD5
        digest of this "message", and return it in binary form. The returned
        string will be 16 bytes long.

        The result of md5("a", "b", "c") will be exactly the same as the
        result of md5("abc").

    md5_hex($data,...)
        Same as md5(), but will return the digest in hexadecimal form. The
        length of the returned string will be 32 and it will only contain
        characters from this set: '0'..'9' and 'a'..'f'.

    md5_base64($data,...)
        Same as md5(), but will return the digest as a base64 encoded
        string. The length of the returned string will be 22 and it will
        only contain characters from this set: 'A'..'Z', 'a'..'z', '0'..'9',
        '+' and '/'.

        Note that the base64 encoded string returned is not padded to be a
        multiple of 4 bytes long. If you want interoperability with other
        base64 encoded md5 digests you might want to append the redundant
        string "==" to the result.

METHODS
    The object oriented interface to "Digest::MD5" is described in this
    section. After a "Digest::MD5" object has been created, you will add
    data to it and finally ask for the digest in a suitable format. A single
    object can be used to calculate multiple digests.

    The following methods are provided:

    $md5 = Digest::MD5->new
        The constructor returns a new "Digest::MD5" object which encapsulate
        the state of the MD5 message-digest algorithm.

        If called as an instance method (i.e. $md5->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.

    $md5->reset
        This is just an alias for $md5->new.

    $md5->clone
        This a copy of the $md5 object. It is useful when you do not want to
        destroy the digests state, but need an intermediate value of the
        digest, e.g. when calculating digests iteratively on a continuous
        data stream. Example:

            my $md5 = Digest::MD5->new;
            while (<>) {
                $md5->add($_);
                print "Line $.: ", $md5->clone->hexdigest, "\n";
            }

    $md5->add($data,...)
        The $data provided as argument are appended to the message we
        calculate the digest for. The return value is the $md5 object
        itself.

        All these lines will have the same effect on the state of the $md5
        object:

            $md5->add("a"); $md5->add("b"); $md5->add("c");
            $md5->add("a")->add("b")->add("c");
            $md5->add("a", "b", "c");
            $md5->add("abc");

    $md5->addfile($io_handle)
        The $io_handle will be read until EOF and its content appended to
        the message we calculate the digest for. The return value is the
        $md5 object itself.

        The addfile() method will croak() if it fails reading data for some
        reason. If it croaks it is unpredictable what the state of the $md5
        object will be in. The addfile() method might have been able to read
        the file partially before it failed. It is probably wise to discard
        or reset the $md5 object if this occurs.

        In most cases you want to make sure that the $io_handle is in
        "binmode" before you pass it as argument to the addfile() method.

    $md5->add_bits($data, $nbits)
    $md5->add_bits($bitstring)
        Since the MD5 algorithm is byte oriented you might only add bits as
        multiples of 8, so you probably want to just use add() instead. The
        add_bits() method is provided for compatibility with other digest
        implementations. See Digest for description of the arguments that
        add_bits() take.

    $md5->digest
        Return the binary digest for the message. The returned string will
        be 16 bytes long.

        Note that the "digest" operation is effectively a destructive,
        read-once operation. Once it has been performed, the "Digest::MD5"
        object is automatically "reset" and can be used to calculate another
        digest value. Call $md5->clone->digest if you want to calculate the
        digest without resetting the digest state.

    $md5->hexdigest
        Same as $md5->digest, but will return the digest in hexadecimal
        form. The length of the returned string will be 32 and it will only
        contain characters from this set: '0'..'9' and 'a'..'f'.

    $md5->b64digest
        Same as $md5->digest, but will return the digest as a base64 encoded
        string. The length of the returned string will be 22 and it will
        only contain characters from this set: 'A'..'Z', 'a'..'z', '0'..'9',
        '+' and '/'.

        The base64 encoded string returned is not padded to be a multiple of
        4 bytes long. If you want interoperability with other base64 encoded
        md5 digests you might want to append the string "==" to the result.

    @ctx = $md5->context
    $md5->context(@ctx)
        Saves or restores the internal state. When called with no arguments,
        returns a 3-element list: number of blocks processed, a 16-byte
        internal state buffer, then up to 63 bytes of unprocessed data. When
        passed those same arguments, restores the state. This is only useful
        for specialised operations.

EXAMPLES
    The simplest way to use this library is to import the md5_hex() function
    (or one of its cousins):

        use Digest::MD5 qw(md5_hex);
        print "Digest is ", md5_hex("foobarbaz"), "\n";

    The above example would print out the message:

        Digest is 6df23dc03f9b54cc38a0fc1483df6e21

    The same checksum can also be calculated in OO style:

        use Digest::MD5;

        $md5 = Digest::MD5->new;
        $md5->add('foo', 'bar');
        $md5->add('baz');
        $digest = $md5->hexdigest;

        print "Digest is $digest\n";

    With OO style, you can break the message arbitrarily. This means that we
    are no longer limited to have space for the whole message in memory,
    i.e. we can handle messages of any size.

    This is useful when calculating checksum for files:

        use Digest::MD5;

        my $filename = shift || "/etc/passwd";
        open (my $fh, '<', $filename) or die "Can't open '$filename': $!";
        binmode($fh);

        $md5 = Digest::MD5->new;
        while (<$fh>) {
            $md5->add($_);
        }
        close($fh);
        print $md5->b64digest, " $filename\n";

    Or we can use the addfile method for more efficient reading of the file:

        use Digest::MD5;

        my $filename = shift || "/etc/passwd";
        open (my $fh, '<', $filename) or die "Can't open '$filename': $!";
        binmode ($fh);

        print Digest::MD5->new->addfile($fh)->hexdigest, " $filename\n";

    Since the MD5 algorithm is only defined for strings of bytes, it can not
    be used on strings that contains chars with ordinal number above 255
    (Unicode strings). The MD5 functions and methods will croak if you try
    to feed them such input data:

        use Digest::MD5 qw(md5_hex);

        my $str = "abc\x{300}";
        print md5_hex($str), "\n";  # croaks
        # Wide character in subroutine entry

    What you can do is calculate the MD5 checksum of the UTF-8
    representation of such strings. This is achieved by filtering the string
    through encode_utf8() function:

        use Digest::MD5 qw(md5_hex);
        use Encode qw(encode_utf8);

        my $str = "abc\x{300}";
        print md5_hex(encode_utf8($str)), "\n";
        # 8c2d46911f3f5a326455f0ed7a8ed3b3

SEE ALSO
    Digest, Digest::MD2, Digest::SHA, Digest::HMAC

    md5sum(1)

    RFC 1321

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MD5

    The paper "How to Break MD5 and Other Hash Functions" by Xiaoyun Wang
    and Hongbo Yu.

COPYRIGHT
    This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
    under the same terms as Perl itself.

     Copyright 1998-2003 Gisle Aas.
     Copyright 1995-1996 Neil Winton.
     Copyright 1991-1992 RSA Data Security, Inc.

    The MD5 algorithm is defined in RFC 1321. This implementation is derived
    from the reference C code in RFC 1321 which is covered by the following
    copyright statement:

    *   Copyright (C) 1991-2, RSA Data Security, Inc. Created 1991. All
        rights reserved.

        License to copy and use this software is granted provided that it is
        identified as the "RSA Data Security, Inc. MD5 Message-Digest
        Algorithm" in all material mentioning or referencing this software
        or this function.

        License is also granted to make and use derivative works provided
        that such works are identified as "derived from the RSA Data
        Security, Inc. MD5 Message-Digest Algorithm" in all material
        mentioning or referencing the derived work.

        RSA Data Security, Inc. makes no representations concerning either
        the merchantability of this software or the suitability of this
        software for any particular purpose. It is provided "as is" without
        express or implied warranty of any kind.

        These notices must be retained in any copies of any part of this
        documentation and/or software.

    This copyright does not prohibit distribution of any version of Perl
    containing this extension under the terms of the GNU or Artistic
    licenses.

AUTHORS
    The original "MD5" interface was written by Neil Winton
    ("N.Winton AT axion.uk").

    The "Digest::MD5" module is written by Gisle Aas
    <gisle AT ActiveState.com>.


Generated by $Id: phpMan.php,v 4.55 2007/09/05 04:42:51 chedong Exp $ Author: Che Dong
On Apache
Under GNU General Public License
2024-05-11 07:03 @3.12.120.202 CrawledBy Mozilla/5.0 AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko; compatible; ClaudeBot/1.0; +claudebot@anthropic.com)
Valid XHTML 1.0!Valid CSS!