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Crunchy

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nimble install crunchy

API reference

About

Crunchy provides pure Nim implementations of common hashes and data integrity checks (cyclic redundancy checks and checksums). These implementations are intended to be high-performance, including amd64 and arm64 SIMD implementations or using instruction set intrinsics.

Function Scalar SIMD: amd64 arm64
SHA-1
SHA-256
CRC-32
CRC-32C
Adler-32

Crunchy is a new repo so keep an eye on releases for more functions and SIMD optimization.

Examples

Runnable examples using Crunchy can be found in the examples/ folder.

Here is a basic example that prints the hex-encoded SHA-256 of a string:

import crunchy

let data = "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog"
echo sha256(data).toHex()

Or calculating the CRC-32 of a string:

import crunchy

let data = "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog"
echo crc32(data)

Now, lets say you want to compute the CRC-32 of a file. Many approaches are possible, but lets look at these two:

First, the easy way. Just read the file into memory and compute:

import crunchy

let data = readFile("tests/data/zlib.rfc")
echo crc32(data)

Alternatively, to avoid copying the file, memory-map the file and compute instead:

import crunchy, std/memfiles

var memFile = memfiles.open("tests/data/zlib.rfc")
echo crc32(memFile.mem, memFile.size)
memFile.close()

Memory-mapping the file is great if the file is very large or you want to avoid copying a large file's contents. This uses Crunchy's pointer + len API.

Testing

nimble test