Internet-Draft | Digest Fields | November 2021 |
Polli & Pardue | Expires 20 May 2022 | [Page] |
This document defines HTTP fields that support integrity checksums. The Digest field can be used for the integrity of HTTP representations. The Content-Digest field can be used for the integrity of HTTP message content. Want-Digest and Want-Content-Digest can be used to indicate a sender's desire to receive integrity fields respectively.¶
This document obsoletes RFC 3230.¶
RFC EDITOR: please remove this section before publication¶
Discussion of this draft takes place on the HTTP working group mailing list (ietf-http-wg@w3.org), which is archived at https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/ietf-http-wg/.¶
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HTTP does not define a means to protect the integrity of representations. When HTTP messages are transferred between endpoints, the protocol might choose to make use of features of the lower layer in order to provide some integrity protection; for instance, TCP checksums or TLS records [RFC2818].¶
This document defines two digest integrity mechanisms for HTTP. First, representation data integrity, which acts on representation data (Section 3.2 of [SEMANTICS]). Second, content digest integrity, which acts on conveyed content (Section 6.4 of [SEMANTICS]). Both mechanisms operate independent of transport integrity, offering the potential to detect programming errors and corruption of data in flight or at rest. They can be used across multiple hops in order to provide end-to-end integrity guarantees, which can aid fault diagnosis when resources are transferred across hops and system boundaries. Finally, they can be used to validate integrity when reconstructing a resource fetched using different HTTP connections.¶
This document obsoletes [RFC3230].¶
This document is structured as follows:¶
This document defines the Digest
request and response header and trailer
field; see Section 3. At a high level, the value contains a checksum, computed
over selected representation data
(Section 3.2 of [SEMANTICS]), that the recipient can use to
validate integrity. Basing Digest
on the selected representation makes it
straightforward to apply it to use-cases where the transferred data requires
some sort of manipulation to be considered a representation or conveys a
partial representation of a resource, such as Range Requests (see Section 14.2 of [SEMANTICS]).¶
To support use-cases where a simple checksum of the content bytes is required,
this document introduces the Content-Digest
request and response header and trailer field; see
Section 4.¶
Digest
and Content-Digest
support algorithm agility. The Want-Digest
and
Want-Content-Digest
fields allows endpoints to express interest in Digest
and
Content-Digest
respectively, and preference of algorithms in either.¶
Digest field calculations are tied to the Content-Encoding
and Content-Type
header fields. Therefore, a given resource may have multiple
different checksum values when transferred with HTTP.¶
Digest fields do not provide integrity for HTTP messages or fields. However, they can be combined with other mechanisms that protect metadata, such as digital signatures, in order to protect the phases of an HTTP exchange in whole or in part.¶
This specification does not define means for authentication, authorization or privacy.¶
Historically, the Content-MD5
header field provided an HTTP integrity mechanism
but HTTP/1.1 ([RFC7231], Appendix B) obsoleted it due to inconsistent handling
of partial responses. [RFC3230] defined the concept of "instance" digests and a
more flexible integrity scheme to help address issues with Content-MD5
. It first
introduced the Digest
and Want-Digest
fields. HTTP terminology has evolved
since [RFC3230] was published. The concept of "instance" has been superseded by
selected representation
.¶
This document replaces [RFC3230]. The changes described in the following paragraphs are intended to be semantically compatible with existing implementations where possible.¶
The Digest
and Want-Digest
field definitions are updated to align with the
terms and notational conventions in [SEMANTICS].¶
Negotiation of Content-MD5
is deprecated and has been replaced by
Content-Digest
negotiation via Want-Content-Digest
.¶
Sections 4.1.1 and 4.2 of [RFC3230] defined field parameters. This document
obsoletes the usage of parameters with Digest
because this feature has not
been widely deployed and complicates field-value processing. [RFC3230] intended
field parameters to provide a common way to attach additional information to a
representation-data-digest. However, if parameters are used as an input to
validate the checksum, an attacker could alter them to steer the validation
behavior. A digest-algorithm can still be parameterized by defining its own way
to encode parameters into the representation-data-digest, in such a way as to
mitigate security risks related to its computation.¶
The algorithm table has been updated to reflect the current state of the art, (see Section 6).¶
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.¶
This document uses the Augmented BNF defined in [RFC5234] and updated by [RFC7405] along with the "#rule" extension defined in Section 5.6.1 of [SEMANTICS] and the "qvalue" rule defined in Section 12.4.2 of [SEMANTICS].¶
The definitions "representation", "selected representation", "representation data", "representation metadata", and "content" in this document are to be interpreted as described in [SEMANTICS].¶
Algorithm names respect the casing used in their definition document (e.g. SHA-1, CRC32c) whereas digest-algorithm tokens are quoted (e.g. "sha", "crc32c").¶
The representation digest is an integrity mechanism for HTTP resources which uses a checksum that is calculated independently of the content (see Section 6.4 of [SEMANTICS]). It uses the representation data (see Section 8.1 of [SEMANTICS]), that can be fully or partially contained in the content, or not contained at all.¶
This takes into account the effect of the HTTP semantics on the messages;
for example, the content can be affected by Range Requests or methods such as HEAD,
while the way the content is transferred "on the wire" is dependent on other
transformations (e.g. transfer codings for HTTP/1.1 - see Section 6.1 of [HTTP11]). To help illustrate how such things affect Digest
,
several examples are provided in Appendix A.¶
A representation digest consists of
the value of a checksum computed on the entire selected representation data
(see Section 8.1 of [SEMANTICS]) of a resource identified according to Section 6.4.2 of [SEMANTICS]
together with an indication of the algorithm used:¶
representation-data-digest = digest-algorithm "=" <encoded digest output>¶
When a message has no representation data it is still possible to assert that no representation data was sent computing the representation digest on an empty string (see Section 8.3).¶
The checksum is computed using one of the digest-algorithms listed in the HTTP Digest Algorithm Values Registry (see Section 6) and then encoded in the associated format.¶
The Digest
field contains a comma-separated list of one or more representation digest values as
defined in Section 2. It can be used in both requests and
responses.¶
Digest = 1#representation-data-digest¶
For example:¶
A Digest
field MAY contain multiple representation-data-digest values.
For example, a server may provide representation-data-digest values using different algorithms,
allowing it to support a population of clients with different evolving capabilities;
this is particularly useful in support of transitioning away
from weaker algorithms should the need arise (see Section 8.6).¶
A recipient MAY ignore any or all of the representation-data-digests in a Digest field. This allows the recipient to choose which digest-algorithm(s) to use for validation instead of verifying every received representation-data-digest.¶
A sender MAY send a representation-data-digest using a digest-algorithm without knowing whether the recipient supports the digest-algorithm, or even knowing that the recipient will ignore it.¶
Digest
can be sent in a trailer section.
In this case,
Digest
MAY be merged into the header section; see Section 6.5.1 of [SEMANTICS].¶
When an incremental digest-algorithm is used, the sender and the receiver can dynamically compute the digest value while streaming the content.¶
A non-comprehensive set of examples showing the impacts of
representation metadata, payload transformations and HTTP methods on Digest
is
provided in Appendix B and Appendix C.¶
The Content-Digest
field contains a comma-separated list of one or more content digest
values.
A content digest value is computed by applying a digest-algorithm to the actual message content
(see Section 6.4 of [SEMANTICS]).
It can be used in both requests and responses.¶
Content-Digest = 1#content-digest content-digest = digest-algorithm "=" <encoded digest output>¶
For example:¶
A Content-Digest
field MAY contain multiple content-digest values,
similarly to Digest
(see Section 3)¶
A recipient MAY ignore any or all of the content-digests in a Content-Digest field. This allows the recipient to choose which digest-algorithm(s) to use for validation instead of verifying every received content-digest.¶
A sender MAY send a content-digest using a digest-algorithm without knowing whether the recipient supports the digest-algorithm, or even knowing that the recipient will ignore it.¶
Content-Digest
can be sent in a trailer section.
In this case,
Content-Digest
MAY be merged into the header section; see Section 6.5.1 of [SEMANTICS].¶
When an incremental digest-algorithm is used, the sender and the receiver can dynamically compute the digest value while streaming the content.¶
Senders can indicate their integrity checksum preferences using the
Want-Digest
or Want-Content-Digest
fields. These can be used in both
requests and responses.¶
Want-Digest
indicates the sender's desire to receive a representation digest
on messages associated with the request URI and representation metadata, using
the Digest
field.¶
Want-Content-Digest
indicates the sender's desire to receive a content digest
on messages associated with the request URI and representation metadata, using
the Content-Digest
field.¶
Want-Digest = 1#want-digest-value Want-Content-Digest = 1#want-digest-value want-digest-value = digest-algorithm [ ";" "q" "=" qvalue]¶
qvalue
indicates the sender's digest-algorithm preferences.
Section 12.4.2 of [SEMANTICS]) describes qvalue
usage and semantics.¶
Senders can provide multiple digest-algorithm items with the same qvalue.¶
Examples:¶
Digest-algorithm values are used to indicate a specific digest computation.¶
digest-algorithm = token¶
All digest-algorithm token values are case-insensitive but lower case is preferred; digest-algorithm token values MUST be compared in a case-insensitive fashion.¶
Every digest-algorithm defines its computation procedure and encoding output. Unless specified otherwise, comparison of encoded output is case-sensitive.¶
The "HTTP Digest Algorithm Values Registry", maintained by IANA at https://www.iana.org/assignments/http-dig-alg/ registers digest-algorithm values. Registrations MUST include the following fields:¶
Status: the status of the algorithm. Use "standard" for standardized algorithms without known problems; "experimental" or some other appropriate value¶
The associated encoding for new digest-algorithms MUST either be represented as a quoted string or MUST NOT include ";" or "," in the character sets used for the encoding.¶
Insecure digest algorithms MAY be used to preserve integrity against accidental change, but MUST NOT be used in a potentially adversarial setting; for example, when signing the digest of content for authenticity.¶
The registry is initialized with the tokens listed below.¶
When the representation enclosed in a state-changing request does not describe the target resource, the representation digest MUST be computed on the representation-data. This is the only possible choice because representation digest requires complete representation metadata (see Section 2).¶
In responses,¶
Digest
MUST be computed on the enclosed representation
(see Appendix B.8 );¶
Digest
MUST be computed on the selected representation of the referenced resource
even if that is different from the target resource.
That might or might not result in computing Digest
on the enclosed representation.¶
The latter case is done according to the HTTP semantics of the given
method, for example using the Content-Location
header field (see Section 8.7 of [SEMANTICS]).
In contrast, the Location
header field does not affect Digest
because
it is not representation metadata.¶
For example, in PATCH requests, the representation digest will be computed on the patch document because the representation metadata refers to the patch document and not to the target resource (see Section 2 of [PATCH]). In responses, instead, the representation digest will be computed on the selected representation of the patched resource.¶
When a state-changing method returns the Content-Location
header field, the
enclosed representation refers to the resource identified by its value and
Digest
is computed accordingly. An example is given in Appendix B.7.¶
This document specifies a data integrity mechanism that protects HTTP
representation data
or content, but not HTTP header and trailer fields, from
certain kinds of accidental corruption.¶
Digest fields are not intended to be a general protection against malicious tampering with HTTP messages. This can be achieved by combining it with other approaches such as transport-layer security or digital signatures.¶
Digest fields can help detect representation data
or content modification due to implementation errors,
undesired "transforming proxies" (see Section 7.7 of [SEMANTICS])
or other actions as the data passes across multiple hops or system boundaries.
Even a simple mechanism for end-to-end representation data
integrity is valuable
because user-agent can validate that resource retrieval succeeded before handing off to a
HTML parser, video player etc. for parsing.¶
Note that using digest fields alone does not provide end-to-end integrity of HTTP messages over multiple hops, since metadata could be manipulated at any stage. Methods to protect metadata are discussed in Section 8.3.¶
Digital signatures are widely used together with checksums to provide the
certain identification of the origin of a message [NIST800-32]. Such signatures
can protect one or more HTTP fields and there are additional considerations when
Digest
is included in this set.¶
Since digest fields are hashes of resource representations, they explicitly
depend on the representation metadata
(e.g. the values of Content-Type
,
Content-Encoding
etc). A signature that protects Digest
but not other
representation metadata
can expose the communication to tampering. For
example, an actor could manipulate the Content-Type
field-value and cause a
digest validation failure at the recipient, preventing the application from
accessing the representation. Such an attack consumes the resources of both
endpoints. See also Section 7.1.¶
Digest fields SHOULD always be used over a connection that provides integrity at the transport layer that protects HTTP fields.¶
A Digest
field using NOT RECOMMENDED digest-algorithms SHOULD NOT be used in
signatures.¶
Using signatures to protect the checksum of an empty representation allows receiving endpoints to detect if an eventual payload has been stripped or added.¶
Any mangling of digest fields, including de-duplication of representation-data-digest values or combining different field values (see Section 5.2 of [SEMANTICS]) might affect signature validation.¶
Before sending digest fields in a trailer section, the sender should consider that intermediaries are explicitly allowed to drop any trailer (see Section 6.5.2 of [SEMANTICS]).¶
When digest fields are used in a trailer section, the field-values are received after the content. Eager processing of content before the trailer section prevents digest validation, possibly leading to processing of invalid data.¶
Not every digest-algorithm is suitable for use in the trailer section, some may require to pre-process the whole payload before sending a message (e.g. see [I-D.thomson-http-mice]).¶
Digest fields may expose details of encrypted payload when the checksum is computed on the unencrypted data.¶
The checksum of an encrypted payload can change between different messages depending on the encryption algorithm used; in those cases its value could not be used to provide a proof of integrity "at rest" unless the whole (e.g. encoded) content is persisted.¶
The security properties of digest-algorithms are not fixed. Algorithm Agility (see [RFC7696]) is achieved by providing implementations with flexibility choose digest-algorithms from the IANA Digest Algorithm Values registry in Section 9.1.¶
To help endpoints distinguish weaker algorithms from stronger ones, this document adds to the IANA Digest Algorithm Values registry a new "Status" field containing the most recent appraisal of the digest-algorithm.¶
An endpoint might have a preference for algorithms,
such as preferring "standard" algorithms over "insecure" ones.
Transition from weak algorithms is supported
by negotiation of digest-algorithm using Want-Digest
or Want-Content-Digest
(see Section 5)
or by sending multiple representation-data-digest values from which the receiver chooses.
Endpoints are advised that sending multiple values consumes resources,
which may be wasted if the receiver ignores them (see Section 3).¶
An endpoint might receive multiple representation-data-digest values (see Section 3) that use the same digest-algorithm with different or identical digest-values. For example:¶
Digest: sha-256=X48E9qOokqqrvdts8nOJRJN3OWDUoyWxBf7kbu9DBPE=, sha-256=47DEQpj8HBSa+/TImW+5JCeuQeRkm5NMpJWZG3hSuFU=¶
A receiver is permitted to ignore any representation-data-digest value, so validation of duplicates is left as an implementation decision. Endpoints might select all, some, or none of the values for checksum comparison and, based on the intersection of those results, conditionally pass or fail digest validation.¶
Digest fields validation consumes computational resources. In order to avoid resource exhaustion, implementations can restrict validation of the algorithm types, number of validations, or the size of content.¶
This memo sets this specification to be the establishing document for the HTTP Digest Algorithm Values registry.¶
IANA is asked to update the "Reference" for this registry to refer this document and to inizialize the registry with the tokens defined in Section 6.¶
This registry uses the Specification Required policy (Section 4.6 of [RFC8126]).¶
This memo adds the "contentMD5" token in the HTTP Digest Algorithm Values registry:¶
The contentMD5
digest-algorithm token defined in Section 5 of [RFC3230]
has been added to the HTTP Digest Algorithm Values Registry with the "obsoleted" status.¶
All digest-algorithms defined in [RFC3230] are now "insecure".¶
The digest-algorithm tokens for "MD5", "SHA", "SHA-256", "SHA-512" have been updated to lowercase.¶
The status of "MD5" and "SHA" has been updated to "insecure", and their description has been modified accordingly.¶
This section registers the Want-Digest
field in the "Hypertext Transfer
Protocol (HTTP) Field Name Registry" [SEMANTICS].¶
Field name: Want-Digest
¶
Status: permanent¶
This section registers the Digest
field in the "Hypertext Transfer Protocol
(HTTP) Field Name Registry" [SEMANTICS].¶
Field name: Digest
¶
Status: permanent¶
The following examples show how representation metadata, payload transformations and method impacts on the message and content. When the content contains non-printable characters (e.g. when it is compressed) it is shown as a Base64-encoded string.¶
Now the same content conveys a malformed JSON object, because the request does not indicate a content coding.¶
A Range-Request alters the content, conveying a partial representation.¶
The method can also alter the content. For example, the response to a HEAD request does not carry content.¶
Finally, the semantics of an HTTP response might decouple the effective request URI
from the enclosed representation. In the example response below, the
Content-Location
header field indicates that the enclosed representation
refers to the resource available at /authors/123
, even though the request is
directed to /authors/
.¶
The following examples demonstrate interactions where a server responds with a
Digest
or Content-Digest
fields even though the client did not solicit one using
Want-Digest
or Want-Content-Digest
.¶
Some examples include JSON objects in the content. For presentation purposes, objects that fit completely within the line-length limits are presented on a single line using compact notation with no leading space. Objects that would exceed line-length limits are presented across multiple lines (one line per key-value pair) with 2 spaced of leading indentation.¶
Checksum mechanisms defined in this document are media-type agnostic
and do not provide canonicalization algorithms for specific formats.
Examples are calculated inclusive of any space.
While examples can include both fields,
Digest
and Content-Digest
can be returned independently.¶
In this example, the message content conveys complete representation data,
so Digest
and Content-Digest
have the same value.¶
In this example, a HEAD request is used to retrieve the checksum of a resource.¶
The response Digest
field-value is calculated over the JSON object
{"hello": "world"}
, which is not shown because there is no payload
data.
Content-Digest
is computed on empty content.¶
In this example, the client makes a range request and the server responds with
partial content. The Digest
field-value represents the entire JSON object
{"hello": "world"}
, while the Content-Digest
field-value is computed on the
message content "hello"
.¶
The request contains a Digest
field-value calculated on the enclosed
representation. It also includes an Accept-Encoding: br
header field that advertises the
client supports Brotli encoding.¶
The response includes a Content-Encoding: br
that indicates the selected
representation is Brotli-encoded. The Digest
field-value is therefore
different compared to the request.¶
For presentation purposes, the response body is displayed as a Base64-encoded string because it contains non-printable characters.¶
The request Digest
field-value is calculated on the enclosed payload.¶
The response Digest
field-value
depends on the representation metadata header fields, including
Content-Encoding: br
even when the response does not contain content.¶
The response contains two digest values using different algorithms.¶
As the response body contains non-printable characters, it is displayed as a base64-encoded string.¶
The request Digest
field-value is computed on the enclosed representation (see
Section 7).¶
The representation enclosed in the response refers to the resource identified by
Content-Location
(see Section 6.4.2 of [SEMANTICS]). Digest
is thus computed on the enclosed representation.¶
Note that a 204 No Content
response without content but with the same
Digest
field-value would have been legitimate too.
In that case, Content-Digest
would have been computed on an empty content.¶
The request Digest
field-value is computed on the enclosed representation (see
Section 7).¶
The representation enclosed in the response describes the status of the request,
so Digest
is computed on that enclosed representation.¶
Response Digest
has no explicit relation with the resource referenced by
Location
.¶
This case is analogous to a POST request where the target resource reflects the effective request URI.¶
The PATCH request uses the application/merge-patch+json
media type defined in
[RFC7396].¶
Digest
is calculated on the enclosed payload, which corresponds to the patch
document.¶
The response Digest
field-value is computed on the complete representation of the patched
resource.¶
Note that a 204 No Content
response without content but with the same
Digest
field-value would have been legitimate too.¶
In error responses, the representation-data does not necessarily refer to the target resource. Instead, it refers to the representation of the error.¶
In the following example, a client sends the same request from Figure 25 to patch the resource located at /books/123. However, the resource does not exist and the server generates a 404 response with a body that describes the error in accordance with [RFC7807].¶
The response Digest
field-value is computed on this enclosed representation.¶
An origin server sends Digest
as trailer field, so it can calculate digest-value
while streaming content and thus mitigate resource consumption.
The Digest
field-value is the same as in Appendix B.1 because Digest
is designed to
be independent from the use of one or more transfer codings (see Section 2).¶
The following examples demonstrate interactions where a client solicits a
Digest
using Want-Digest
.
The behavior of Content-Digest
and Want-Content-Digest
is identical.¶
Some examples include JSON objects in the content. For presentation purposes, objects that fit completely within the line-length limits are presented on a single line using compact notation with no leading space. Objects that would exceed line-length limits are presented across multiple lines (one line per key-value pair) with 2 spaced of leading indentation.¶
Checksum mechanisms described in this document are media-type agnostic and do not provide canonicalization algorithms for specific formats. Examples are calculated inclusive of any space.¶
The client requests a digest, preferring "sha". The server is free to reply with "sha-256" anyway.¶
The client requests a only "sha" digest because that is the only algorithm it supports. The server is not obliged to produce a response containing a "sha" digest, it instead uses a different algorithm.¶
Appendix C.2 is an example where a server ignores the client's preferred digest algorithm. Alternatively a server can also reject the request and return an error.¶
In this example, the client requests a "sha" Digest
, and the server returns an
error with problem details [RFC7807] contained in the content. The problem
details contain a list of the digest algorithms that the server supports. This
is purely an example, this specification does not define any format or
requirements for such content.¶
The vast majority of this document is inherited from [RFC3230], so thanks to J. Mogul and A. Van Hoff for their great work. The original idea of refreshing this document arose from an interesting discussion with M. Nottingham, J. Yasskin and M. Thomson when reviewing the MICE content coding.¶
Thanks to Julian Reschke for his valuable contributions to this document, and to the following contributors that have helped improve this specification by reporting bugs, asking smart questions, drafting or reviewing text, and evaluating open issues: Mike Bishop, Brian Campbell, Matthew Kerwin, James Manger, Tommy Pauly, Sean Turner, and Erik Wilde.¶
RFC Editor: Please remove this section before publication.¶
Why remove all references to content-md5?¶
Those were unnecessary to understanding and using this specification.¶
Why remove references to instance manipulation?¶
Those were unnecessary for correctly using and applying the specification. An example with Range Request is more than enough. This document uses the term "partial representation" which should group all those cases.¶
How to use Digest
with PATCH
method?¶
Why remove references to delta-encoding?¶
Unnecessary for a correct implementation of this specification. The revised specification can be nicely adapted to "delta encoding", but all the references here to delta encoding don't add anything to this RFC. Another job would be to refresh delta encoding.¶
Why remove references to Digest Authentication?¶
This specification seems to me completely unrelated to Digest Authentication but for the word "Digest".¶
What changes in Want-Digest
?¶
The contentMD5 token defined in Section 5 of [RFC3230] is deprecated by this document.¶
To clarify that Digest
and Want-Digest
can be used in both requests and responses
- [RFC3230] carefully uses sender
and receiver
in their definition -
we added examples on using Want-Digest
in responses to advertise the supported
digest-algorithms and the inability to accept requests with unsupported
digest-algorithms.¶
Does this specification change supported algorithms?¶
Yes. This RFC updates [RFC5843] which is still delegated for all algorithms updates. To simplify a future transition to Structured Fields [I-D.ietf-httpbis-header-structure] we suggest to use lowercase for digest-algorithms.¶
What about mid-stream trailer fields?¶
While mid-stream trailer fields are interesting, since this specification is a rewrite of [RFC3230] we do not think we should face that. As a first thought, nothing in this document precludes future work that would find a use for mid-stream trailers, for example an incremental digest-algorithm. A document defining such a digest-algorithm is best positioned to describe how it is used.¶
RFC Editor: Please remove this section before publication.¶
How can I generate and validate the Digest
values shown in the examples
throughout this document?¶
The following python3 code can be used to generate digests for JSON objects using SHA algorithms for a range of encodings. Note that these are formatted as base64. This function could be adapted to other algorithms and should take into account their specific formatting rules.¶
import base64, json, hashlib, brotli, logging log = logging.getLogger() def encode_item(item, encoding=lambda x: x): indent = 2 if isinstance(item, dict) and len(item) > 1 else None json_bytes = json.dumps(item, indent=indent).encode() return encoding(json_bytes) def digest_bytes(bytes_, algorithm=hashlib.sha256): checksum_bytes = algorithm(bytes_).digest() log.warning("Log bytes: \n[%r]", bytes_) return base64.encodebytes(checksum_bytes).strip() def digest(item, encoding=lambda x: x, algorithm=hashlib.sha256): content_encoded = encode_item(item, encoding) return digest_bytes(content_encoded, algorithm) item = {"hello": "world"} print("Encoding | digest-algorithm | digest-value") print("Identity | sha256 |", digest(item)) # Encoding | digest-algorithm | digest-value # Identity | sha256 | X48E9qOokqqrvdts8nOJRJN3OWDUoyWxBf7kbu9DBPE= print("Encoding | digest-algorithm | digest-value") print("Brotli | sha256 |", digest(item, encoding=brotli.compress)) # Encoding | digest-algorithm | digest-value # Brotli | sha256 | 4REjxQ4yrqUVicfSKYNO/cF9zNj5ANbzgDZt3/h3Qxo= print("Encoding | digest-algorithm | digest-value") print("Identity | sha512 |", digest(item, algorithm=hashlib.sha512)) print("Identity | sha512 |", digest(item, algorithm=hashlib.sha512, encoding=brotli.compress)) # Encoding | digest-algorithm | digest-value # Identity | sha512 | b'WZDPaVn/7XgHaAy8pmojAkGWoRx2UFChF41A2svX+TaPm' # '+AbwAgBWnrIiYllu7BNNyealdVLvRwE\nmTHWXvJwew==' # Brotli | sha512 | b'pxo7aYzcGI88pnDnoSmAnaOEVys0MABhgvHY9+VI+ElE6' # '0jBCwnMPyA/s3NF3ZO5oIWA7lf8ukk+\n5KJzm3p5og=='¶
RFC Editor: Please remove this section before publication.¶
Content-Location
¶