Digest(3) OCaml library Digest(3)NAMEDigest - MD5 message digest.
Module
Module DigestDocumentation
Module Digest
: sig end
MD5 message digest.
This module provides functions to compute 128-bit 'digests' of arbi‐
trary-length strings or files. The digests are of cryptographic qual‐
ity: it is very hard, given a digest, to forge a string having that
digest. The algorithm used is MD5. This module should not be used for
secure and sensitive cryptographic applications. For these kind of
applications more recent and stronger cryptographic primitives should
be used instead.
type t = string
The type of digests: 16-character strings.
val compare : t -> t -> int
The comparison function for 16-character digest, with the same specifi‐
cation as Pervasives.compare and the implementation shared with
String.compare . Along with the type t , this function compare allows
the module Digest to be passed as argument to the functors Set.Make and
Map.Make .
Since 4.00.0
val string : string -> t
Return the digest of the given string.
val substring : string -> int -> int -> t
Digest.substring s ofs len returns the digest of the substring of s
starting at character number ofs and containing len characters.
val channel : Pervasives.in_channel -> int -> t
If len is nonnegative, Digest.channel ic len reads len characters from
channel ic and returns their digest, or raises End_of_file if
end-of-file is reached before len characters are read. If len is nega‐
tive, Digest.channel ic len reads all characters from ic until
end-of-file is reached and return their digest.
val file : string -> t
Return the digest of the file whose name is given.
val output : Pervasives.out_channel -> t -> unit
Write a digest on the given output channel.
val input : Pervasives.in_channel -> t
Read a digest from the given input channel.
val to_hex : t -> string
Return the printable hexadecimal representation of the given digest.
val from_hex : string -> t
Convert a hexadecimal representation back into the corresponding
digest. Raise Invalid_argument if the argument is not exactly 32 hexa‐
decimal characters.
Since 4.00.0
OCamldoc 2013-10-24 Digest(3)