Blake2b is a high performance Java implementation of the BLAKE2b cryptographic hash function created by Jean-Philippe Aumasson, Samuel Neves, Zooko Wilcox-O'Hearn, and Christian Winnerlein. (See Blake2 project site for details and authoritative information about the BLAKE2b digest.)
This implementation was made with close attention to the reference C
implementation of Samuel Neves ([email protected]). The quite excellent Go
implementation by Dmitry Chestnykh was also reviewed and referenced for optimization inspirations.
This library is provided in 3 pure Java variants (master
, unsafe
, and varhandles
branches). See the performance document for details. (Note: varhandles
and unsafe
have equivalent performance.)
This implementation is provided with a suite of tests miminally covering the reference implementation KAT
and Keyed-KAT
, covering basic digest and MAC features (respectively). These may be inspected in the src/test/
source fork of this repository.
Additionally, a C
test program emitting a tree based hash was used to confirm the Blake2b.Tree
output. Augmenting the C
test program to test salt, and personal is on the TODO list. But do note that these 2 features have not been tested yet, though the confidence level for these is fairly maximal. (It is on the TODO list.)
Written by Joubin Mohammad Houshyar, 2014-2018
To the extent possible under law, the author has dedicated all copyright and related and neighboring rights to this software to the public domain worldwide. This software is distributed without any warranty. http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
Blake2b
provides full support for the algorithm per the reference C
implementation on the JVM
, as adapted for Java
semantics.
The API
very closely follows the MessageDigest
's relevant public
methods e.g. void update (byte[] input, int offset, int len)
, etc.
As of now, fully configurable Digest, MAC, and incremental hash (aka Tree) are provided.
(The parallel implementation of the algorithm is on the immediate TODO list.)
First you need to clone this repo and install the product in your local .m2
repository. (Getting this project to a central maven repository is on the TODO list.)
So, clone it in some happy place:
git clone https://github.com/alphazero/blake2b
Go there:
cd blake2b
And build and (locally) install it:
mvn install
To include Blake2b
as a dependency in your Maven
project, add the following to the <dependencies>
section of your project pom.xml
:
<dependency>
<groupId>ove</groupId>
<artifactId>ove.blake2b</artifactId>
<version>alpha.0</version>
</dependency>
If you just want the jar
, you can grab it from the project target/
after mvn install
or mvn package
:
<blake2b-dir>/target/ove.blake2b-alpha.0.jar
The hashing API
is defined by the top level Blake2b
interface. This interface is implemented by the Blake2b.Engine
and it is indirectly accessible via the semantic inner classes of Blake2b
. These methods allow for both "streaming" and basic hashing of byte[]
input data.
The API
mimics the relevant sub-set of the standard Java MessageDigest
class and Blake2b.Param
implements the (tag) interface AlgorithmParameterSpec
, as preparatory support for possible JCA
compliance. But that is not on my TODO list as of now. But care has been taken to make that path easy for you, should you wish to do so yourself.
*** A note regarding input constraint checks ***
Typically one prefers a maximally defensive and pedantic implementation of functions that assert
constraints on input arguments. But given that Blake2b
is intended for high performance applications, the reference implementation (Blake2b.Engine
) does not do so. So, pass in null
and expect a NullPointerException
, etc. Do note it.
update(..)
is typically (*) used for sequential ("stream") updates of the digest.
The (3) variants of update
:
void update (byte input)
to update with a single bytevoid update (byte[] input)
to update with abyte[]
void update (byte[] input, int offset, int len)
to update with a slice of abyte[]
Update methods treat all input args as immutable (const
equivalent).
(*) Note that if your use case requires the (final) digest output of the algorithm to be copied to a slice of (user) supplied byte[]
, even in the non-streaming case, you need to invoke an update
.
Given that final
is a keyword in Java and finalize
has specific semantics in context of Java Object
s, digest(..)
is the Java equivalent of a hash final(..)
method.
The (3) variants of digest
:
byte[] digest()
to emit the final hash of theBLAKE2b
state.byte[] digest(byte[] input)
to update the state withinput
and emit the final hash.void digest(byte[] out, int off, int len)
writes the final hash to the givenbyte[]
All digest(..)
methods returning byte[]
are guaranteed to return a non-null
value.
A Blake2b
implementation can be used simply with default configuration parameters, or optionally, you may choose to set specific configuration parameters of the algorithm.
Default Settings (Blake2b.Param.Default
)
Digest Length: 64 bytes
Key: none
Salt: none
Personalization: none
Depth: 1
Fanout: 1
Leaf Length: 0
Inner Length: 0
Node Depth: 0
Node Offset: 0
(Note that all Blake2b
semantic factory zero-arg methods use the above default configuration parameters.)
You can change the default configuration via the Blake2b.Param
class.
To obtain an instance of the Param class, simply instantiate it:
// get an instance of the default configuration parameters
Blake2b.Param param = new Blake2b.Param();
Param
exposes a fluent setter API
allowing for chaining of setXXx methods.
For example:
// get an instance of the default configuration parameters
// and customize it with key, salt, and personalization,
// and output a 160bit hash (say for SHA1 replacement)
Blake2b.Param param = new Blake2b.Param().
setDigestLength( 20 ).
setKey ( keyBytes ).
setSalt ( saltBytes ).
setPersonal ( personalizationBytes );
The constraints on the configuration parameter settings are detailed in Blake2b.Spec
.
Note that Blake2b.Param
pedantically asserts all constraints on input args.
Blake2b.Digest
instantiates the reference implementation of Blake2b
isolating you from the current/actual implementation (Blake2b.Engine
).
// using default params
final Blake2b blake2b = Blake2b.Digest.newInstance();
or
// using custom params
final Blake2b blake2b = Blake2b.Digest.newInstance( param );
Blake2b.Digest
also exposes a convenience factory method for the common case of a customized digest length:
// Just config the output digest length - here 160bit output ala SHA1
final Blake2b blake2b = Blake2b.Digest.newInstance( 20 );
Note that you can use the Blake2b
instance obtained via Blake2b.Digest
factory methods to perform any of the features of the BLAKE2b
algorithm with appropriate configuration via Blake2b.Param
, should you prefer.
MAC semantics are exposed by Blake2b.Mac
class. This (convenience) class exposes a few factory methods.
final Blake2b mac = Blake2b.Mac.newInstance ( theKeyBytes ); // basic MAC
and the common case of MAC with custom digest length
final Blake2b mac = Blake2b.Mac.newInstance ( theKeyBytes, 20 ); // 160bit MAC
You can also use a java.security.Key
(which must support encoding
-- see Key javadocs for details) instead of a raw byte[]
array:
import java.security.key;
..
final Key thekey = .. // not provided by Blake2b library
// 160bit MAC with Key
final Blake2b mac = Blake2b.Mac.newInstance ( theKey, 20 );
The Blake2b.Tree
class provides a convenient semantic API
for incremental hasing with Blake2b
.
// incremntally hash a stream of bytes using Blake2b.
// here a tree of depth 2, fanout 3, leaf length of 4096, inner length of 64,
// and a final (tree) hash output of length 20)
Blake2b.Tree tree = Blake2b.Tree (2, 3, 4096, 64, 20);
// assume that we got our 3 chunks obtained elsewhere
// and these are byte[] of max "leaf length" bytes (here 4096).
// Also note that nodes will output a hash of length "inner length"
// hash the chunks
byte[] hash_00 = tree.getNode (0, 0).digest ( chunk00 );
byte[] hash_01 = tree.getNode (0, 1).digest ( chunk01 );
byte[] hash_02 = tree.getNode (0, 2).digest ( chunk02 ); // implicit 'last node'
// get the final tree hash output
final Blake2b digest = tree.getRoot(); // implicit node (1, 0)
digest.update (hash_00);
digest.update (hash_01);
digest.update (hash_02);
final byte[] hash = digest.digest();
To the Eternal Absolute, The One, ~!!! Ahura-Mazda !!!~ *even* ~!!! Al-Aziz-Al-Hakim !!!~,
The Lord of Sentient Realms, The True in Love.
The Friend.
--
Feb. 2014. bushwick. bk. nyc.