I'm getting different outputs from hashing a string on the command line vs. in Java on Android. I'm sure I'm doing something wrong, but I don't see what.
Command line:
kevin@aphrodite:~$ echo derp | sha256sum
ee673d13de31533a375b41d9e57731d9bb4dbddbd6c1d2364f15be40fd783346 -
Java:
final String plaintext = "derp";
final MessageDigest md;
try {
md = MessageDigest.getInstance("SHA-256");
} catch (NoSuchAlgorithmException e) {
/* SHA-256 should be supported on all devices. */
throw new RuntimeException(e);
}
final String inputHash = bytesToHex(md.digest(plaintext.getBytes()));
Log.debug(TAG, "input hash: " + inputHash);
Java output:
10-05 13:32:57.412: D/Config(12082): input hash: 3f4146a1d0b5dac26562ff7dc6248573f4e996cf764a0f517318ff398dcfa792
Here's the bytesToHex(...)
method, which I found in another Q&A. I confirmed that it's doing the right thing by logging Integer.toHexString(b)
for each b
.
private static final char[] hexDigit = "0123456789abcdef".toCharArray();
private static String bytesToHex(byte[] bytes) {
char[] hexChars = new char[bytes.length * 2];
for (int i = 0; i < bytes.length; ++i) {
int b = bytes[i] & 0xFF;
hexChars[i * 2] = hexDigit[b >>> 4];
hexChars[i * 2 + 1] = hexDigit[b & 0x0F];
}
return new String(hexChars);
}
Because echo
includes a trailing new-line. You can use
echo -n derp | sha256sum
or add \n
to your plaintext
like
final String plaintext = "derp\n";
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