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All four BLAKE2 variants (blake2b, blake2bp, blake2s, blake2sp) with stream support for Node.js

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node-blake2

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Why BLAKE2 for hashing? Because "BLAKE2 outperforms MD5, SHA-1, SHA-2, and SHA-3 on recent Intel CPUs" and has "no known security issues, whereas SHA-1, MD5, and SHA-512 are susceptible to length-extension". https://blake2.net/

node-blake2 provides a stream-compatible blake2b, blake2bp, blake2s, and blake2sp Hash and KeyedHash for node 4+.

node-blake2 was tested to work on

  • Ubuntu 14.04 (g++ 4.8.2)
  • Ubuntu 14.04 (clang++ 3.6.2-svn238746-1~exp1)
  • Ubuntu 15.04 (g++ 4.9.2)
  • Windows 8.1 x64 (VS2013)
  • OS X 10.10 (Apple LLVM 6.1.0)

Install

On Windows, first install Python 2.7.13 so that node-gyp works.

In your project, run:

npm install blake2 --save

or install from the GitHub repo:

npm install ludios/node-blake2 --save

Examples

Unkeyed BLAKE2b

var blake2 = require('blake2');
var h = blake2.createHash('blake2b');
h.update(new Buffer("test"));
console.log(h.digest("hex"));

blake2.createHash works like node's crypto.createHash.

Keyed BLAKE2b

var blake2 = require('blake2');
var h = blake2.createKeyedHash('blake2b', new Buffer('key - up to 64 bytes for blake2b, 32 for blake2s'));
h.update(new Buffer("test"));
console.log(h.digest("hex"));

blake2.createKeyedHash takes a key argument like crypto.createHmac. Although it is not an HMAC, a keyed hash serves the same purpose.

Important notes

  • blake2.create{Hash,KeyedHash} support algorithms blake2b, blake2bp, blake2s, and blake2sp.
  • Data passed to .update on blake2.{Hash,KeyedHash} must be a Buffer.
  • Keys passed to blake2.createKeyedHash(algo, key) must be a Buffer.
  • Just as with crypto.Hash, .digest() can only be called once.

With streams

This works exactly like it does with crypto.Hash. See b2sum.js.

Custom digest length

BLAKE2 can generate digests between 1-64 bytes for BLAKE2b and 1-32 bytes for BLAKE2s. Pass digestLength as an option to use a digest shorter than the default (maximum length):

var blake2 = require('blake2');
var h = blake2.createHash('blake2b', {digestLength: 16});
h.update(new Buffer("test"));
h.digest(); // Returns a Buffer with 16 bytes

or with a key:

var blake2 = require('blake2');
var h = blake2.createKeyedHash('blake2b', new Buffer('my key'), {digestLength: 16});
h.update(new Buffer("test"));
h.digest(); // Returns a Buffer with 16 bytes

Note that BLAKE2 will generate completely different digests for shorter digest lengths; they are not simply a slice of the default digest.

Copying a hash object

You can call .copy() on a Hash or KeyedHash, which will return a new object with all of the internal BLAKE2 state copied from the source object.

var blake2 = require('blake2');
var h = blake2.createHash('blake2b');
h.update(new Buffer("test"));

// Call .copy() before .digest(), because .digest() finalizes internal state
var j = h.copy();

// h is unaffected by updates to j
j.update(new Buffer("more"));

console.log(h.digest());
console.log(j.digest());

Storing and restoring the hash state

In case you need to continue with a partial hash later on, the .saveState() and .restoreState() methods are for you!

var blake2 = require('blake2');
var h = blake2.createHash('blake2b');
h.update(new Buffer("test"));

// Call .saveState() before .digest(), because .digest() finalizes internal state
var state = h.saveState();

h.update(new Buffer("more"));
console.log(h.digest());

// Much, MUCH later, in another process in another galaxy
var j = blake2.createHash('blake2b');
j.restoreState(state);

// h is unaffected by updates to j
j.update(new Buffer("more"));

// This will be the same as h.digest()
console.log(j.digest());

Known issues

  • On Windows, node-blake2 requires AVX instructions due to some SSE2 build problems. This shouldn't be too hard to fix.

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All four BLAKE2 variants (blake2b, blake2bp, blake2s, blake2sp) with stream support for Node.js

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