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I'm looking to create a 32-bit hash of some data objects. Since I don't feel like writing my own hash function and md5 is available, my current approach is to use the first 32 bits (i.e. first 8 hex digits) from an md5 hash. Is this acceptable?

In other words, are the first 32 bits of an md5 hash just as "random" as any other substring? Or is there any reason I'd prefer, say, the last 32 bits? or perhaps XOR'ing the four 32-bit substrings together?

Some preemptive clarifications:

  • These hashes don't need to be cryptographically secure.
  • I'm not concerned with the performance of md5--it is more than fast enough for my needs.
  • These hashes just need to be "random" enough that collisions are rare.
  • In this system, the number of items shouldn't exceed 10,000 (realistically it's probably not going to get half that high). So in the worst case the probability of encountering any collisions at all should be about 1% (assuming a sufficiently "random" hash is found).
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do you already have an MD5 hash computed? (e.g. as part of the metadata of a Subversion checkin) or do you have to compute the MD5 hash yourself? If the latter, I agree w/ @Johannes' comment, CRC32 would be much simpler. – Jason S May 13 at 21:10
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Apparently there is no way on SO to preemptively address the "your question is invalid because you should do it this way instead" comments... – Kip May 13 at 21:14
Sorry, I didn't mean don't use an MD5 hash, I just mean a CRC32 is simpler. You or your customers are the only ones that can judge what algorithms meet your requirements. – Jason S May 13 at 21:18
I don't know whether you knew about this already, but 1% chance of a collision with 10,000 entries is in fact pretty much exactly what you'd expect with a 32-bit hash--see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birthday_problem – mjs Oct 5 at 10:29
@mjs: yes, i'm aware, that's where i got the number from. :) – Kip Oct 5 at 13:01

2 Answers

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For any good hash function the individual bits should be approximately random. You should therefore be safe to use just the first 32 bits of an MD5 hash.

Alternatively you could also use CRC32 which should be much faster to compute (and the code is about 20 lines).

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"I'm not concerned with the performance of md5--it is more than fast enough for my needs." – Kip May 13 at 21:08
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Kip: performance or not, CRC32 gives you a 32 bit hash, which is exactly what you want. – dwc May 13 at 21:12
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In other words, are the first 32 bits of an md5 hash just as "random" as any other substring?

Yes. If the answer were no, MD5 wouldn't be sufficiently secure. (sure, it has some minor cryptographic weaknesses but I'm not aware of any statistical ones)

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MD5 isn't sufficiently secure as numerous attacks have shown :) – Johannes Rössel May 13 at 21:04
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That statement is only true if qualifications are added. It is not sufficiently secure to make all collision attacks infeasible. It is (so far) sufficiently secure to make preimage attacks infeasible. see vpnc.org/hash.html – Jason S May 13 at 21:07
also not to quibble, but my post didn't say MD5 was sufficiently secure. :-) – Jason S May 13 at 21:08
I know; hence the ":-)" – Johannes Rössel May 14 at 5:59
ok, got it. just checking. :) – Jason S May 14 at 10:53

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