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This unit test is failing:

    public void testDigest() throws NoSuchAlgorithmException {
    String hashExpected = "150a14ed5bea6cc731cf86c41566ac427a8db48ef1b9fd626664b3bfbb99071fa4c922f33dde38719b8c8354e2b7ab9d77e0e67fc12843920a712e73d558e197";
    MessageDigest md = new MessageDigest();
    String hashActual = new String(md.digest("hi"));
    Assert.assertEquals(hashExpected, hashActual);
}

Below is my implementation of my MessageDigest class:


import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.InputStream;
import java.security.NoSuchAlgorithmException;
import java.security.Security;

import org.bouncycastle.crypto.Digest; import org.bouncycastle.crypto.digests.SHA512Digest; import org.bouncycastle.crypto.io.DigestInputStream; import org.bouncycastle.jce.provider.BouncyCastleProvider;

public class MessageDigest { private Digest messageDigest;

public MessageDigest() throws NoSuchAlgorithmException {
    Security.addProvider(new BouncyCastleProvider());
    messageDigest = new SHA512Digest();
}

public byte[] digest(String message) {
    byte[] retValue = new byte[messageDigest.getDigestSize()];
    messageDigest.update(message.getBytes(), 0, message.length());
    messageDigest.doFinal(retValue, 0);
    return retValue;
}

}

The test fails with the following reason:


junit.framework.ComparisonFailure: expected:<150a14ed5bea6cc731cf86c41566ac427a8db48ef1b9fd626664b3bfbb99071fa4c922f33dde38719b8c8354e2b7ab9d77e0e67fc12843920a712e73d558e197> but was:<
í[êlÇ1φÄf¬Bz�´Žñ¹ýbfd³¿»™¤É"ó=Þ8q›ŒƒTâ·«�wàæÁ(C’
q.sÕXá

I have a feeling I'm not using the right encoding scheme when I convert my byte[] digest into a string. Any help would be appreciated.

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3 Answers

up vote 18 down vote accepted

The value you're expecting is a Hex-encoded value. You're creating a String based on the raw bytes, which won't work.

You should use the standard Java Crypto API whenever possible instead of BouncyCastle specific APIs.

Try the following (the Hex library comes from commons-codec):

Security.addProvider(new BouncyCastleProvider());

String data = "hello world";

MessageDigest mda = MessageDigest.getInstance("SHA-512", "BC");
byte [] digesta = mda.digest(data.getBytes());

MessageDigest mdb = MessageDigest.getInstance("SHA-512", "BC");
byte [] digestb = mdb.digest(data.getBytes());

System.out.println(MessageDigest.isEqual(digesta, digestb));

System.out.println(Hex.encodeHex(digesta));
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+1 I like your more-comprehensive answer. Question: when/why would one use MessageDigest.isEqual over Arrays.equals? – Chris Jester-Young Feb 5 '10 at 16:14
They're functionally equivalent. MessageDigest#isEqual() provides a little more semantic meaning but that is debatable. – Kevin Feb 5 '10 at 16:20
1  
They are not entirely equivalent. The Arrays.equals methods consider two null references to be equal, while the MessageDigest.isEqual method would throw a NullPointerException. – jarnbjo Feb 5 '10 at 16:31
1  
Commons Codec is not necessary for the hex conversion. Try System.out.println(new BigInteger(1,m.digest(new byte[]{0x00})).toString(16)); – Janus Troelsen Nov 14 '12 at 13:04

Just an addition to Kevin's answer: Since Java 5, you can use String.format("%0128x", new BigInteger(1, digesta)) instead of commons-codec to format the byte array as a 128 digit hex encoded number with leading zeros.

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Yes, you need to turn your byte array into a hex string. :-) Look into Apache Commons Codec, especially the Hex class.

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