I'm writing an application that uses hashing to speed up file comparisons. Basically I pre-hash file A, and then the app runs and matches files in a folder with previously hashed files. My current criteria for looking for a hash function are as follows:
- It should be fast enough that disk IO is the limiting factor. I'm currently using SHA-256 which works just fine but is way too heavy and makes my application CPU bound.
- Cryptography/security doesn't matter in this case, the user is inputting both files, so if they craft a hash collision intentionally, that's on them.
- Hash collisions should be avoided at almost all costs. I can compare files based on size, and their hash, but if both of those match the files are assumed to be equal. I know it's impossible guarantee this with any hash due to the compression of data, but something with the same sort of uniqueness guarantees as SHA-256 would be nice.
- File sizes range from 10bytes to 2GB
- A streaming algorithm would be nice, as I try to keep the memory usage of the application low, in other words I don't want to load the entire file into memory to hash it.
- Hash size doesn't matter, if I got all the above with 1024bit hashes, I'm completely okay with that.
So what's a good algorithm to use here, I'm using C# but I'm sure most algorithms are available on any platform. Like I said, I'm using SHA-256, but I'm sure there's something better.