How can I calculate the SHA-256 hash of a string in Android?
Complete answer with use example, thanks to erickson.
public static String getSha256Hash(String password) {
try {
MessageDigest digest = null;
try {
digest = MessageDigest.getInstance("SHA-256");
} catch (NoSuchAlgorithmException e1) {
e1.printStackTrace();
}
digest.reset();
return bin2hex(digest.digest(password.getBytes()));
} catch (Exception ignored) {
return null;
}
}
private static String bin2hex(byte[] data) {
StringBuilder hex = new StringBuilder(data.length * 2);
for (byte b : data)
hex.append(String.format("%02x", b & 0xFF));
return hex.toString();
}
Example of use:
Toast.makeText(this, Utils.getSha256Hash("123456_MY_PASSWORD"), Toast.LENGTH_SHORT).show();
You are along the right lines, but converting the bytes is a little more complicated. This works on my device:
// utility function
private static String bytesToHexString(byte[] bytes) {
// http://stackoverflow.com/questions/332079
StringBuffer sb = new StringBuffer();
for (int i = 0; i < bytes.length; i++) {
String hex = Integer.toHexString(0xFF & bytes[i]);
if (hex.length() == 1) {
sb.append('0');
}
sb.append(hex);
}
return sb.toString();
}
// generate a hash
String password="asdf";
MessageDigest digest=null;
String hash;
try {
digest = MessageDigest.getInstance("SHA-256");
digest.update(password.getBytes());
hash = bytesToHexString(digest.digest());
Log.i("Eamorr", "result is " + hash);
} catch (NoSuchAlgorithmException e1) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e1.printStackTrace();
}
Source: bytesToHexString function is from the IOSched project.
i know this has been answered but i found a Hashing Library at android arsenal and its very easy,simple and just one line of code. can hash MD5, SHA-1, SHA-256, SHA-384, or SHA-512.
first add this to your gradle and sync
implementation 'com.github.1AboveAll:Hasher:1.2'
start hasing
Hasher.Companion.hash("Hello",HashType.SHA_1);
The PHP function bin2hex
means that it takes a string of bytes and encodes it as a hexadecimal number.
In the Java code, you are trying to take a bunch of random bytes and decode them as a string using your platform's default character encoding. That isn't going to work, and if it did, it wouldn't produce the same results.
Here's a quick-and-dirty binary-to-hex conversion for Java:
static String bin2hex(byte[] data) {
StringBuilder hex = new StringBuilder(data.length * 2);
for (byte b : data)
hex.append(String.format("%02x", b & 0xFF));
return hex.toString();
}
This is quick to write, not necessarily quick to execute. If you are doing a lot of these, you should rewrite the function with a faster implementation.