vote up 1 vote down star

Hi folks,

I have some code i'm revewing, which is used to convert some text into an MD5 Hash. Works great. It's used to create an MD5Hhash for a gravatar avatar. Here it is :-

static MD5CryptoServiceProvider md5CryptoServiceProvider = null;

public static string ToMD5Hash(this string value)
{
    //creating only when needed
    if (md5CryptoServiceProvider == null)
    {
        md5CryptoServiceProvider = new MD5CryptoServiceProvider();
    }

    byte[] newdata = Encoding.Default.GetBytes(value);
    byte[] encrypted = md5CryptoServiceProvider.ComputeHash(newdata);
    return BitConverter.ToString(encrypted).Replace("-", "").ToLower();
}

Notice how we create a MD5CryptoServiceProvider the first time this method is called? (lets not worry about race-conditions here, for simplicity).

I was wondering, is it more computationally expensive if i change the lines that are used to create the provider, to this...

using(var md5CryptoServiceProvider = new MD5CryptoServiceProvider())
{
    ... snip snip snip ....
}

Now, how is this method used/consumed? Well, imagine it's the home page of StackOverflow -> for each post, generate an md5 hash of the user, so we can generate their gravatar url. So the view could call this method a few dozen times.

Without trying to waste too much time stressing over premature optimzation, etc ... which would be better?

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4 Answers

vote up 5 vote down check

I'd be more interested in the thread-safefy... MSDN doesn't (unless I missed it) say that MD5CryptoServiceProvider is thread-safe, so IMO the best option is to have one per call...

It doesn't matter how quickly you can get the wrong answer ;-p

What you probably don't want to do (to fix the thread-safety issue) is have a static instance and lock around it... that'll serialize all your crypto code, when it could run in parallel on different requests.

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So you're suggesting for him to apply the "Using" statement, right? – Overhed May 20 at 15:06
I'm suggesting he use the second example that already includes the "using" statement, if that is what you mean. – Marc Gravell May 20 at 19:27
If I static + lock, all that will do will be to block other parallel calls .. when i don't need to lock, right? It will work, but be waaay slower that it could be. (I'm not intending to do that, but just trying to understand your answer 100%). – Pure.Krome May 21 at 1:43
Re "when I don't need to lock"; with separate providers per call you don't need to lock; with one shared provider it looks like you might, but it unclear. Re "way slower" - that depends how long it takes to run ;-p It'll certainly introduce a potential pinch-point - but how critical that is would only show up through profiling. The other alternative would be to mark the field [ThreadStatic] - not sure if that is a great idea, but it would work, I suppose. – Marc Gravell May 21 at 4:07
vote up 3 vote down

Test it and time it. The first is more performant, but it is probably not significant.

using System;
using System.Diagnostics;
using System.Security.Cryptography;
using System.Text;

namespace ConsoleApplication11
{
    class Program
    {
        static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            Stopwatch timer=new Stopwatch();
            int iterations = 100000;
            timer.Start();
            for (int i = 0; i < iterations; i++)
            {
                string s = "test" + i;
                string t=s.ToMd5Hash0();
            }
            timer.Stop();
            Console.WriteLine(timer.ElapsedTicks);

            timer.Reset();
            timer.Start();
            for (int i = 0; i < iterations; i++)
            {
                string s = "test" + i;
                string t = s.ToMd5Hash1();
            }
            timer.Stop();
            Console.WriteLine(timer.ElapsedTicks);

            Console.ReadKey();
        }
    }
    public static class Md5Factory
    {
        private static MD5CryptoServiceProvider md5CryptoServiceProvider;
        public static string ToMd5Hash0(this string value)
        {
            if (md5CryptoServiceProvider == null)
            {
                md5CryptoServiceProvider = new MD5CryptoServiceProvider();
            }
            byte[] newData = Encoding.Default.GetBytes(value);
            byte[] encrypted = md5CryptoServiceProvider.ComputeHash(newData);
            return BitConverter.ToString(encrypted).Replace("-", "").ToLower();
        }
        public static string ToMd5Hash1(this string value)
        {
            using (var provider = new MD5CryptoServiceProvider())
            {
                byte[] newData = Encoding.Default.GetBytes(value);
                byte[] encrypted = provider.ComputeHash(newData);
                return BitConverter.ToString(encrypted).Replace("-", "").ToLower();
            }
        }
    }
}
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vote up 2 vote down

I personnally can't see why it would matter either way, think of the lashing of other code that has to run just to generate a page. Its six of one and half a dozen of the other, the savings either way will be tiny.

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vote up 2 vote down

The existing code I would expect to be very slightly faster, as it saves reconstructing the MD5CryptoServiceProvider on every call, but I'd also expect the time to be dominated by the call to ComputeHash().

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