Struct blake3::Hash [−][src]
pub struct Hash(_);
An output of the default size, 32 bytes, which provides constant-time equality checking.
Hash implements From and Into for [u8; 32], and it provides an
explicit as_bytes method returning &[u8; 32]. However, byte arrays
and slices don’t provide constant-time equality checking, which is often a
security requirement in software that handles private data. Hash doesn’t
implement Deref or AsRef, to avoid situations where a type
conversion happens implicitly and the constant-time property is
accidentally lost.
Hash provides the to_hex method for converting to hexadecimal. It
doesn’t directly support converting from hexadecimal, but here’s an example
of doing that with the hex crate:
use std::convert::TryInto; let hash_hex = "d74981efa70a0c880b8d8c1985d075dbcbf679b99a5f9914e5aaf96b831a9e24"; let hash_bytes = hex::decode(hash_hex)?; let hash_array: [u8; blake3::OUT_LEN] = hash_bytes[..].try_into()?; let hash: blake3::Hash = hash_array.into();
Implementations
impl Hash[src]
impl Hash[src]pub fn as_bytes(&self) -> &[u8; 32][src]
The bytes of the Hash. Note that byte arrays don’t provide
constant-time equality checking, so if you need to compare hashes,
prefer the Hash type.
pub fn to_hex(&self) -> ArrayString<[u8; 64]>[src]
The hexadecimal encoding of the Hash. The returned ArrayString is
a fixed size and doesn’t allocate memory on the heap. Note that
ArrayString doesn’t provide constant-time equality checking, so if
you need to compare hashes, prefer the Hash type.