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// Bitcoin Hashes Library
// Written in 2018 by
// Andrew Poelstra <apoelstra@wpsoftware.net>
//
// To the extent possible under law, the author(s) have dedicated all
// copyright and related and neighboring rights to this software to
// the public domain worldwide. This software is distributed without
// any warranty.
//
// You should have received a copy of the CC0 Public Domain Dedication
// along with this software.
// If not, see <http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/>.
//
//! Rust hashes library.
//!
//! This is a simple, no-dependency library which implements the hash functions
//! needed by Bitcoin. These are SHA256, SHA256d, and RIPEMD160. As an ancillary
//! thing, it exposes hexadecimal serialization and deserialization, since these
//! are needed to display hashes anway.
//!
//! ## Commonly used operations
//!
//! Hashing a single byte slice or a string:
//!
//! ```rust
//! use bitcoin_hashes::sha256;
//! use bitcoin_hashes::Hash;
//!
//! let bytes = [0u8; 5];
//! let hash_of_bytes = sha256::Hash::hash(&bytes);
//! let hash_of_string = sha256::Hash::hash("some string".as_bytes());
//! ```
//!
//!
//! Hashing content from a reader:
//!
//! ```rust
//! use bitcoin_hashes::sha256;
//! use bitcoin_hashes::Hash;
//!
//! #[cfg(std)]
//! # fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
//! let mut reader: &[u8] = b"hello"; // in real code, this could be a `File` or `TcpStream`
//! let mut engine = sha256::HashEngine::default();
//! std::io::copy(&mut reader, &mut engine)?;
//! let hash = sha256::Hash::from_engine(engine);
//! # Ok(())
//! # }
//!
//! #[cfg(not(std))]
//! # fn main() {}
//! ```
//!
//!
//! Hashing content by [`std::io::Write`] on HashEngine:
//!
//! ```rust
//! use bitcoin_hashes::sha256;
//! use bitcoin_hashes::Hash;
//! use std::io::Write;
//!
//! #[cfg(std)]
//! # fn main() -> std::io::Result<()> {
//! let mut part1: &[u8] = b"hello";
//! let mut part2: &[u8] = b" ";
//! let mut part3: &[u8] = b"world";
//! let mut engine = sha256::HashEngine::default();
//! engine.write_all(part1)?;
//! engine.write_all(part2)?;
//! engine.write_all(part3)?;
//! let hash = sha256::Hash::from_engine(engine);
//! # Ok(())
//! # }
//!
//! #[cfg(not(std))]
//! # fn main() {}
//! ```
// Coding conventions
#![warn(missing_docs)]
// Experimental features we need.
#![cfg_attr(docsrs, feature(doc_cfg))]
#![cfg_attr(bench, feature(test))]
// In general, rust is absolutely horrid at supporting users doing things like,
// for example, compiling Rust code for real environments. Disable useless lints
// that don't do anything but annoy us and cant actually ever be resolved.
#![allow(bare_trait_objects)]
#![allow(ellipsis_inclusive_range_patterns)]
#![cfg_attr(all(not(test), not(feature = "std")), no_std)]
// Instead of littering the codebase for non-fuzzing code just globally allow.
#![cfg_attr(fuzzing, allow(dead_code, unused_imports))]
#[cfg(bench)] extern crate test;
#[cfg(any(test, feature = "std"))] extern crate core;
#[cfg(feature = "core2")] extern crate core2;
#[cfg(all(feature = "alloc", not(feature = "std")))] extern crate alloc;
#[cfg(feature = "serde")] pub extern crate serde;
#[cfg(all(test,feature = "serde"))] extern crate serde_test;
#[doc(hidden)]
pub mod _export {
/// A re-export of core::*
pub mod _core {
pub use core::*;
}
}
#[cfg(feature = "schemars")]
extern crate actual_schemars as schemars;
mod internal_macros;
#[macro_use] mod util;
#[macro_use] pub mod serde_macros;
#[cfg(any(feature = "std", feature = "core2"))] mod impls;
pub mod error;
pub mod hex;
pub mod hash160;
pub mod hmac;
pub mod ripemd160;
pub mod sha1;
pub mod sha256;
pub mod sha256d;
pub mod sha256t;
pub mod siphash24;
pub mod sha512;
pub mod sha512_256;
pub mod cmp;
use core::{borrow, fmt, hash, ops};
pub use hmac::{Hmac, HmacEngine};
pub use error::Error;
/// A hashing engine which bytes can be serialized into.
pub trait HashEngine: Clone + Default {
/// Byte array representing the internal state of the hash engine.
type MidState;
/// Outputs the midstate of the hash engine. This function should not be
/// used directly unless you really know what you're doing.
fn midstate(&self) -> Self::MidState;
/// Length of the hash's internal block size, in bytes.
const BLOCK_SIZE: usize;
/// Add data to the hash engine.
fn input(&mut self, data: &[u8]);
/// Return the number of bytes already n_bytes_hashed(inputted).
fn n_bytes_hashed(&self) -> usize;
}
/// Trait which applies to hashes of all types.
pub trait Hash: Copy + Clone + PartialEq + Eq + PartialOrd + Ord +
hash::Hash + fmt::Debug + fmt::Display + fmt::LowerHex +
ops::Index<ops::RangeFull, Output = [u8]> +
ops::Index<ops::RangeFrom<usize>, Output = [u8]> +
ops::Index<ops::RangeTo<usize>, Output = [u8]> +
ops::Index<ops::Range<usize>, Output = [u8]> +
ops::Index<usize, Output = u8> +
borrow::Borrow<[u8]>
{
/// A hashing engine which bytes can be serialized into. It is expected
/// to implement the `io::Write` trait, and to never return errors under
/// any conditions.
type Engine: HashEngine;
/// The byte array that represents the hash internally.
type Bytes: hex::FromHex + Copy;
/// Constructs a new engine.
fn engine() -> Self::Engine {
Self::Engine::default()
}
/// Produces a hash from the current state of a given engine.
fn from_engine(e: Self::Engine) -> Self;
/// Length of the hash, in bytes.
const LEN: usize;
/// Copies a byte slice into a hash object.
fn from_slice(sl: &[u8]) -> Result<Self, Error>;
/// Hashes some bytes.
fn hash(data: &[u8]) -> Self {
let mut engine = Self::engine();
engine.input(data);
Self::from_engine(engine)
}
/// Flag indicating whether user-visible serializations of this hash
/// should be backward. For some reason Satoshi decided this should be
/// true for `Sha256dHash`, so here we are.
const DISPLAY_BACKWARD: bool = false;
/// Returns the underlying byte array.
fn to_byte_array(self) -> Self::Bytes;
/// Returns a reference to the underlying byte array.
fn as_byte_array(&self) -> &Self::Bytes;
/// Constructs a hash from the underlying byte array.
fn from_byte_array(bytes: Self::Bytes) -> Self;
/// Returns an all zero hash.
///
/// An all zeros hash is a made up construct because there is not a known input that can create
/// it, however it is used in various places in Bitcoin e.g., the Bitcoin genesis block's
/// previous blockhash and the coinbase transaction's outpoint txid.
fn all_zeros() -> Self;
}
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
use crate::{Hash, sha256d};
hash_newtype! {
/// A test newtype
struct TestNewtype(sha256d::Hash);
/// A test newtype
struct TestNewtype2(sha256d::Hash);
}
#[test]
fn convert_newtypes() {
let h1 = TestNewtype::hash(&[]);
let h2: TestNewtype2 = h1.to_raw_hash().into();
assert_eq!(&h1[..], &h2[..]);
let h = sha256d::Hash::hash(&[]);
let h2: TestNewtype = h.to_string().parse().unwrap();
assert_eq!(h2.to_raw_hash(), h);
}
}