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hashing algorithms

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  • J James Simpson

    I see the uses behind it, but I dont fully understand how the algorithms can take any peice of data and effectivly shrink or grow it to a fixed size (say 128 bit) and still keep it unique! I think from what I have read that it can not gaurentee its uniqueness, but reduce the chances of two items having the same hash value to a very very very small value! James Simpson Web Developer imebgo@hotmail.com P S - This is what part of the alphabet would look like if Q and R were eliminated
    Mitch Hedberg

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    Daniel Turini
    wrote on last edited by
    #9

    James Simpson wrote: I see the uses behind it, but I dont fully understand how the algorithms can take any peice of data and effectivly shrink or grow it to a fixed size (say 128 bit) and still keep it unique! You are right: one can do it only for finite and small sets of data. James Simpson wrote: I think from what I have read that it can not gaurentee its uniqueness, but reduce the chances of two items having the same hash value to a very very very small value! Yes, in this case we have what we call a "collision". So, normally your hash table entries are not strings, like in my sample, but linked lists (or arrays) of strings. So, you still can deal with collisions, and a good hash function will keep it at a minimum. If you want to look a program that generates perfect hash functions for limited sets of data take a look at gperf[^] Trying to make bits uncopyable is like trying to make water not wet. -- Bruce Schneier

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    • J James Simpson

      Can someone please elighten me as to how these are possible? Is a 'hash' a peice of data that can be used to validate data eg: Data -> Hash Algorithm -> Hash value the same data creates the same hash value but you can not recreate the data from the same algorithm? In my ignorance I must ask, what is the point of the hash value? surely the data represents itself - and the hash value could not uniquely identify the item of data? If this is not suitable for the lounge - I apologise, I will remain confused! James Simpson Web Developer imebgo@hotmail.com P S - This is what part of the alphabet would look like if Q and R were eliminated
      Mitch Hedberg

      M Offline
      M Offline
      markkuk
      wrote on last edited by
      #10

      Data validation is the use for cryptographically secure, "one way" hashing algorithms. There are other uses for hash functions that have different requirements, e.g. quick searching of data.

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      • J James Simpson

        Can someone please elighten me as to how these are possible? Is a 'hash' a peice of data that can be used to validate data eg: Data -> Hash Algorithm -> Hash value the same data creates the same hash value but you can not recreate the data from the same algorithm? In my ignorance I must ask, what is the point of the hash value? surely the data represents itself - and the hash value could not uniquely identify the item of data? If this is not suitable for the lounge - I apologise, I will remain confused! James Simpson Web Developer imebgo@hotmail.com P S - This is what part of the alphabet would look like if Q and R were eliminated
        Mitch Hedberg

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        L Offline
        l a u r e n
        wrote on last edited by
        #11

        for example... a user signs up with a web site giving a username and password .. everytime they log in u dont want to be sending the password over the wire so u create a hash of the password and send that instead and u store a hash of the same password on the server no-one can get the password from packet sniffing the wire cos it isnt sent :)


        "there is no spoon"
        biz stuff   about me

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        • L l a u r e n

          for example... a user signs up with a web site giving a username and password .. everytime they log in u dont want to be sending the password over the wire so u create a hash of the password and send that instead and u store a hash of the same password on the server no-one can get the password from packet sniffing the wire cos it isnt sent :)


          "there is no spoon"
          biz stuff   about me

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          ColinDavies
          wrote on last edited by
          #12

          l a u r e n wrote: no-one can get the password from packet sniffing the wire cos it isnt sent True but the hash was sent. And the dealers will be happy. :-) Regardz Colin J Davies

          *** WARNING *
          This could be addictive
          **The minion's version of "Catch :bob: "

          It's a real shame that people as stupid as you can work out how to use a computer. said by Christian Graus in the Soapbox

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          • C ColinDavies

            l a u r e n wrote: no-one can get the password from packet sniffing the wire cos it isnt sent True but the hash was sent. And the dealers will be happy. :-) Regardz Colin J Davies

            *** WARNING *
            This could be addictive
            **The minion's version of "Catch :bob: "

            It's a real shame that people as stupid as you can work out how to use a computer. said by Christian Graus in the Soapbox

            S Offline
            S Offline
            Shog9 0
            wrote on last edited by
            #13

            :laugh::laugh:

            Your sincerity about keeping the soapbox organized and civilized is so obvious. I solute your effort. -- Anonymous, 10/18/03

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            • C ColinDavies

              l a u r e n wrote: no-one can get the password from packet sniffing the wire cos it isnt sent True but the hash was sent. And the dealers will be happy. :-) Regardz Colin J Davies

              *** WARNING *
              This could be addictive
              **The minion's version of "Catch :bob: "

              It's a real shame that people as stupid as you can work out how to use a computer. said by Christian Graus in the Soapbox

              J Offline
              J Offline
              Jorgen Sigvardsson
              wrote on last edited by
              #14

              Ooooh! Tomorrow I'll be pushing SHA-1 and MD5 to kids on school yards. The first 32 bits are free... -- Your life as it has been is over. From this time forward you will service us.

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              • C ColinDavies

                l a u r e n wrote: no-one can get the password from packet sniffing the wire cos it isnt sent True but the hash was sent. And the dealers will be happy. :-) Regardz Colin J Davies

                *** WARNING *
                This could be addictive
                **The minion's version of "Catch :bob: "

                It's a real shame that people as stupid as you can work out how to use a computer. said by Christian Graus in the Soapbox

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                D Offline
                Daniel Turini
                wrote on last edited by
                #15

                That's why I love CP: today I've learned a new meaning for "hash" :) Trying to make bits uncopyable is like trying to make water not wet. -- Bruce Schneier

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                • J James Simpson

                  Can someone please elighten me as to how these are possible? Is a 'hash' a peice of data that can be used to validate data eg: Data -> Hash Algorithm -> Hash value the same data creates the same hash value but you can not recreate the data from the same algorithm? In my ignorance I must ask, what is the point of the hash value? surely the data represents itself - and the hash value could not uniquely identify the item of data? If this is not suitable for the lounge - I apologise, I will remain confused! James Simpson Web Developer imebgo@hotmail.com P S - This is what part of the alphabet would look like if Q and R were eliminated
                  Mitch Hedberg

                  P Offline
                  P Offline
                  peterchen
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #16

                  one use that has not been mentioned is speeding up lookup e.g. in an associative map. Imagine you have a dictionary [key, value] with quite a many long words as keys. Instead of using string comparisons, you just compare the hashes. The hashes of the strings in the dicitonary can be precalculated, and the dicitonary indexed by the hash instead of the string. of course there's a slight chance of two keys have the same hash - this must be treated separately, so you end up with a dictionary [key-hash, [ vector([key,value]) ] ] However, with a well-chosen hash this can be much faster.


                  "Vierteile den, der sie Hure schimpft mit einem türkischen Säbel."
                  sighist | Agile Programming | doxygen

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                  • D Daniel Turini

                    There are lots of uses. One example is password checking: you don't need to store a password, you can store only the hash of the password, and compare the hashes when you need to check it. Another use is a hash table. Suppose you have 100,000 elements you want to search. If you can create (and often you can) a hash function which will give a unique number to each of these elements, you can search things 100,000 times faster. Like this: string "test" -> hash value 5 -> a[5] = "test"; string "another" -> hash value 10 -> a[10] = "another"; When you need to search for "test", you only compute its hash value (5) and look at a[5], without need to search through all the array. Trying to make bits uncopyable is like trying to make water not wet. -- Bruce Schneier

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                    Paul Oss
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #17

                    Daniel Turini wrote: When you need to search for "test", you only compute its hash value (5) and look at a[5], without need to search through all the array. Assuming that your hash algorithm is truly generating unique #'s for each unique string. Ie, if your algorithm takes two completely different strings, and due to weaknesses in your math, return the same hash value, you're screwed. ;) Paul

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                    • J James Simpson

                      I see the uses behind it, but I dont fully understand how the algorithms can take any peice of data and effectivly shrink or grow it to a fixed size (say 128 bit) and still keep it unique! I think from what I have read that it can not gaurentee its uniqueness, but reduce the chances of two items having the same hash value to a very very very small value! James Simpson Web Developer imebgo@hotmail.com P S - This is what part of the alphabet would look like if Q and R were eliminated
                      Mitch Hedberg

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                      D Offline
                      David Crow
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #18

                      In the context of hashing, this "uniqueness" you speak of is called collision. It's not always a bad thing. In some instances, the normalization (spreading out) of data is all that's required (i.e., collision is expected). If your specific implementation will not tolerate collision, it must be dealt with using a variety of methods (e.g., separate chaining and open addressing).


                      Five birds are sitting on a fence. Three of them decide to fly off. How many are left?

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                      • J James Simpson

                        I see the uses behind it, but I dont fully understand how the algorithms can take any peice of data and effectivly shrink or grow it to a fixed size (say 128 bit) and still keep it unique! I think from what I have read that it can not gaurentee its uniqueness, but reduce the chances of two items having the same hash value to a very very very small value! James Simpson Web Developer imebgo@hotmail.com P S - This is what part of the alphabet would look like if Q and R were eliminated
                        Mitch Hedberg

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                        B Offline
                        BrainJar
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #19

                        That's because hashing algorithms don't grow or shrink the input data, and they don't generate unique values. If a particular hash algorithm generates a 128 bit value, it generally means that it has a 16 byte array (or vector) of initial values. It takes the first 16 bytes of the input data and performs some addition and bit shifting and/or other operations to combine those values with the internal 16 bytes. (These 16 bytes are generally processed as four, 32-bit integers rather than as 16, 8-bit integers, but you get the point.) This changes data in the interal 16 byte vector. The program then repeats the operations on it with the next 16 bytes of input, then the next 16 bytes and so on. In the end, the program just outputs whatever result is left in the internal vector. In fact, most hashes must perform some type of padding on the input to get an even multiple of 16 (or whatever the vector length is) bytes. It doesn't matter how large or small the input length is, only 16 bytes are done at a time and only 16 bytes will be outputed. Increasing the input length just increases the number of times thru the computation loop. The trick to a good hash, like MD4, MD5 or SHA1, is to use computations that result in an avalanche effect: a small change in the input, like a single character in a 10MB file, radically alters the output. It's possible to have two different inputs hash to the same 128-bit value, it fact it's inevitable. But your chances of finding two out of the 2^128 possibilities are pretty slim.

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                        • D Daniel Turini

                          That's why I love CP: today I've learned a new meaning for "hash" :) Trying to make bits uncopyable is like trying to make water not wet. -- Bruce Schneier

                          N Offline
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                          Nitron
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #20

                          :omg: You mean you never knew that people used this to identify data? ;P - Nitron


                          "Those that say a task is impossible shouldn't interrupt the ones who are doing it." - Chinese Proverb

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                          • P peterchen

                            one use that has not been mentioned is speeding up lookup e.g. in an associative map. Imagine you have a dictionary [key, value] with quite a many long words as keys. Instead of using string comparisons, you just compare the hashes. The hashes of the strings in the dicitonary can be precalculated, and the dicitonary indexed by the hash instead of the string. of course there's a slight chance of two keys have the same hash - this must be treated separately, so you end up with a dictionary [key-hash, [ vector([key,value]) ] ] However, with a well-chosen hash this can be much faster.


                            "Vierteile den, der sie Hure schimpft mit einem türkischen Säbel."
                            sighist | Agile Programming | doxygen

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                            T Offline
                            Terry Denham
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #21

                            This is exactly what I did with an ADO Recordset class that was generated using the #import directive. One of my peers was needing to pull back a fairly large set of data but do to some requirements we weren't able to build the data with a set of joins so we had to have this data represented in the recordset. Some of the records would be linked to other records in the same set. The process was taking about 14 hours to process about 140000 records due to the large number of loops that it had. I had them remove one of the loop and wrote a CAdoRecordsetIndex class that would be an associative map on the records in the CAdoRecordset class based on what what columns you told it to build the index on. Then when you needed to find the values you would pass in the array of values that you wanted to search for, the index class would turn this into a key, find the bookmark to the record that had this key, I used the Vector as the value incase there were multiple records that had the same nonunique key. Just this change alone took the processing from 14 Hours to 15 Minutes just by using the associative hash. This could have been improved some more if I would have changed the hash bucket size. I used the default of 17 (which is usually a prime number). If I would have used a larger prime I would have reduced the amount of time looking in the vector.

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                            • P peterchen

                              one use that has not been mentioned is speeding up lookup e.g. in an associative map. Imagine you have a dictionary [key, value] with quite a many long words as keys. Instead of using string comparisons, you just compare the hashes. The hashes of the strings in the dicitonary can be precalculated, and the dicitonary indexed by the hash instead of the string. of course there's a slight chance of two keys have the same hash - this must be treated separately, so you end up with a dictionary [key-hash, [ vector([key,value]) ] ] However, with a well-chosen hash this can be much faster.


                              "Vierteile den, der sie Hure schimpft mit einem türkischen Säbel."
                              sighist | Agile Programming | doxygen

                              C Offline
                              C Offline
                              ColinDavies
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #22

                              peterchen wrote: of course there's a slight chance of two keys have the same hash - I remmeber writing a routine to see if this would happen once with some data. Probability theory says that it is possible, but with my data it never occured. Just by increasing the Hash a few bytes the probability drops of astronomically. Regardz Colin J Davies

                              *** WARNING *
                              This could be addictive
                              **The minion's version of "Catch :bob: "

                              It's a real shame that people as stupid as you can work out how to use a computer. said by Christian Graus in the Soapbox

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                              • P peterchen

                                one use that has not been mentioned is speeding up lookup e.g. in an associative map. Imagine you have a dictionary [key, value] with quite a many long words as keys. Instead of using string comparisons, you just compare the hashes. The hashes of the strings in the dicitonary can be precalculated, and the dicitonary indexed by the hash instead of the string. of course there's a slight chance of two keys have the same hash - this must be treated separately, so you end up with a dictionary [key-hash, [ vector([key,value]) ] ] However, with a well-chosen hash this can be much faster.


                                "Vierteile den, der sie Hure schimpft mit einem türkischen Säbel."
                                sighist | Agile Programming | doxygen

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                                L Offline
                                leppie
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #23

                                peterchen wrote: However, with a well-chosen hash this can be much faster. Dont you mean longer? :laugh: leppie::AllocCPArticle("Zee blog");
                                Seen on my Campus BBS: Linux is free...coz no-one wants to pay for it.

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                                • J James Simpson

                                  Can someone please elighten me as to how these are possible? Is a 'hash' a peice of data that can be used to validate data eg: Data -> Hash Algorithm -> Hash value the same data creates the same hash value but you can not recreate the data from the same algorithm? In my ignorance I must ask, what is the point of the hash value? surely the data represents itself - and the hash value could not uniquely identify the item of data? If this is not suitable for the lounge - I apologise, I will remain confused! James Simpson Web Developer imebgo@hotmail.com P S - This is what part of the alphabet would look like if Q and R were eliminated
                                  Mitch Hedberg

                                  J Offline
                                  J Offline
                                  Jorgen Sigvardsson
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #24

                                  You need this book[^] :) Buy it and read it. You'll love it :) -- Here I am now, I'm your saviour. You can see I'm the one!

                                  J 1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • J James Simpson

                                    Questions questions! Message digest algorithm. (RFC 1320). The message digest algorithm takes as input a message of arbitrary length and produces as output a "fingerprint" or "message digest" of the input. It is conjectured that it is computationally infeasible to produce two messages having the same message digest, or to produce any message having a given pre-specified target message digest. The above paragraph to me indicates that the message digest is a fixed length value of a peice of data (which is created from a variable length peice of data). How can a fixed length peice of data represent ANY input peice of data? it makes no sense - or am I being totally stupid? Maybe if you knew the length of the input peice of data with the message digest then maybe it would work! Im confused James Simpson Web Developer imebgo@hotmail.com P S - This is what part of the alphabet would look like if Q and R were eliminated
                                    Mitch Hedberg

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                                    Gary R Wheeler
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #25

                                    The point of the hash is not to be able to reproduce the original data from the hash. The point is to produce a smaller value that can be used to validate a similar or equivalent message at a later time. At one point in time, suppose you have a message A1, which has hash value H1. At some later time, suppose you receive message A2. For message A2 you calculate hash H2. If H2 == H1, then you can conclude that messages A1 and A2 are at least similar (if not equivalent), depending upon the hash algorithm.


                                    Software Zen: delete this;

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                                    • P Paul Oss

                                      Daniel Turini wrote: When you need to search for "test", you only compute its hash value (5) and look at a[5], without need to search through all the array. Assuming that your hash algorithm is truly generating unique #'s for each unique string. Ie, if your algorithm takes two completely different strings, and due to weaknesses in your math, return the same hash value, you're screwed. ;) Paul

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                                      D Offline
                                      Daniel Turini
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #26

                                      I explained how to deal with collisions (a bit simplistic, for didactic reasons) on the next post Trying to make bits uncopyable is like trying to make water not wet. -- Bruce Schneier

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                                      • J Jorgen Sigvardsson

                                        You need this book[^] :) Buy it and read it. You'll love it :) -- Here I am now, I'm your saviour. You can see I'm the one!

                                        J Offline
                                        J Offline
                                        James Simpson
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #27

                                        I have this book - bought it a couple of years ago. And yes - I did explain things :) James Simpson Web Developer imebgo@hotmail.com P S - This is what part of the alphabet would look like if Q and R were eliminated
                                        Mitch Hedberg

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