I was wondering if someone could help me to get this method converted to ruby, is this possible at all?

public static string getSHA512(string str){
    UnicodeEncoding UE = new UnicodeEncoding();
    byte[] HashValue = null;
    byte[] MessageBytes = UE.GetBytes(str);
    System.Security.Cryptography.SHA512Managed SHhash = new System.Security.Cryptography.SHA512Managed();
    string strHex = "";
    HashValue = SHhash.ComputeHash(MessageBytes);
    foreach (byte b in HashValue){
        strHex += string.Format("{0:x2}", b);
    }
    return strHex;
}

Thanks in advance


UPDATE:

I just would like to make it clear that unfortunately it's method is not just for SHA512 generation but a custom one. I believe that the Digest::SHA512.hexdigest would be just the SHHast instance, but if you carefully look for the method you can see that it differs a bit from a simple hash generation. Follows the result of both functions.

# in C#
getSHA512("hello") => "5165d592a6afe59f80d07436e35bd513b3055429916400a16c1adfa499c5a8ce03a370acdd4dc787d04350473bea71ea8345748578fc63ac91f8f95b6c140b93"

# in Ruby
Digest::SHA512.hexdigest("hello") || Digest::SHA2 => "9b71d224bd62f3785d96d46ad3ea3d73319bfbc2890caadae2dff72519673ca72323c3d99ba5c11d7c7acc6e14b8c5da0c4663475c2e5c3adef46f73bcdec043" 
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What you have you tried so far? – Sjoerd Jun 23 '10 at 13:11
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2 Answers

up vote 3 down vote accepted
require 'digest/sha2'

class String
  def sha512
    Digest::SHA2.new(512).hexdigest(encode('UTF-16LE'))
  end
end

'hello'.sha512 # => '5165d592a6afe59f80d07436e35bd…5748578fc63ac91f8f95b6c140b93'

As with all my code snippets on StackOverflow, I always assume the latest version of Ruby. Here's one that also works with Ruby 1.8:

require 'iconv'
require 'digest/sha2'

class String
  def sha512(src_enc='UTF-8')
    Digest::SHA2.new(512).hexdigest(Iconv.conv(src_enc, 'UTF-16LE', self))
  end
end

'hello'.sha512 # => '5165d592a6afe59f80d07436e35bd…5748578fc63ac91f8f95b6c140b93'

Note that in this case, you have to know and tell Ruby about the encoding the string is in explicitly. In Ruby 1.9, Ruby always knows what encoding a string is in, and will convert it accordingly, when required. I chose UTF-8 as default encoding because it is backwards-compatible with ASCII, is the standard encoding on the internet and also otherwise widely used. However, for example both .NET and Java use UTF-16LE, not UTF-8. If your string is not UTF-8 or ASCII-encoded, you will have to pass in the encoding name into the sha512 method.


Off-Topic: 9 lines of code reduced to 1. I love Ruby!

Well, actually that is a little bit unfair. You could have written it something like this:

var messageBytes = new UnicodeEncoding().GetBytes(str);
var hashValue = new System.Security.Cryptography.SHA512Managed().
    ComputeHash(messageBytes);
return hashValue.Aggregate<byte, string>("",
    (s, b) => s += string.Format("{0:x2}", b)
);

Which is really only 3 lines (broken into 5 for StackOverflow's layout) and most importantly gets rid of that ugly 1950s-style explicit for loop for a nice 1960s-style fold (aka. reduce aka. inject aka. Aggregate aka. inject:into: … it's all the same).

There's probably an even more elegant way to write this, but a) I don't actually know C# and .NET and b) this question is about Ruby. Focus, Jörg, focus! :-)

Aaand … found it:

return string.Join("", from b in hashValue select string.Format("{0:x2}", b));

I knew there had to be an equivalent to Ruby's Enumerable#join somewhere, I just was looking in the wrong place.

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Hi Jörg, unfortunately it's not so simple :( this is just the SHhash instance as Sjoerd recommended too. I've updated my question with the examples. So you can see the difference between them :) – zanona Jun 23 '10 at 14:45
@ludicco: Sorry, I missed the fact that you are transcoding to UTF-16LE first. Fixed now. – Jörg W Mittag Jun 23 '10 at 15:02
sorry the ignorance again Jörg but I am getting this when using your method NoMethodError: undefined method `encode' for "hello":String how can I use this encode correctly? – zanona Jun 23 '10 at 15:48
@ludicco: It appears you are using an older version of Ruby. Multilingualization support has massively improved in Ruby 1.9. To be more precise: before Ruby 1.9, there was no m17n support, all m17n had to be handled explicitly by the programmer. In Ruby 1.8, you will have to use the iconv library from the standard library. – Jörg W Mittag Jun 23 '10 at 16:01
Ha! Thanks Jörg you're brilliant! And knows lots about programming, I'm amazed. – zanona Jun 23 '10 at 16:08
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Use the Digest::SHA2 class.

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hi Sjoerd I'm afraid I already used Digest::SHA512.digest but I have no clue on how to use the other classes in there, like UnicodeEncoding, GetBytes, ComputeHash :( . On this method the Digest::SHA512.digest would be just the SHhash instance. – zanona Jun 23 '10 at 13:46
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