14.4. sha
— SHA-1 message digest algorithm¶
2.5 版後已棄用: Use the hashlib
module instead.
This module implements the interface to NIST’s secure hash algorithm, known as
SHA-1. SHA-1 is an improved version of the original SHA hash algorithm. It is
used in the same way as the md5
module: use new()
to create an sha
object, then feed this object with arbitrary strings using the update()
method, and at any point you can ask it for the digest of the
concatenation of the strings fed to it so far. SHA-1 digests are 160 bits
instead of MD5’s 128 bits.
-
sha.
new
([string])¶ Return a new sha object. If string is present, the method call
update(string)
is made.
The following values are provided as constants in the module and as attributes
of the sha objects returned by new()
:
-
sha.
blocksize
¶ Size of the blocks fed into the hash function; this is always
1
. This size is used to allow an arbitrary string to be hashed.
-
sha.
digest_size
¶ The size of the resulting digest in bytes. This is always
20
.
An sha object has the same methods as md5 objects:
-
sha.
update
(arg)¶ Update the sha object with the string arg. Repeated calls are equivalent to a single call with the concatenation of all the arguments:
m.update(a); m.update(b)
is equivalent tom.update(a+b)
.
-
sha.
digest
()¶ Return the digest of the strings passed to the
update()
method so far. This is a 20-byte string which may contain non-ASCII characters, including null bytes.
-
sha.
hexdigest
()¶ Like
digest()
except the digest is returned as a string of length 40, containing only hexadecimal digits. This may be used to exchange the value safely in email or other non-binary environments.
-
sha.
copy
()¶ Return a copy (「clone」) of the sha object. This can be used to efficiently compute the digests of strings that share a common initial substring.
也參考
- Secure Hash Standard
The Secure Hash Algorithm is defined by NIST document FIPS PUB 180-2: Secure Hash Standard, published in August 2002.
- Cryptographic Toolkit (Secure Hashing)
Links from NIST to various information on secure hashing.