This module implements the SHA-3 standard as defined in FIPS202: "SHA-3 Standard: Permutation-Based Hash and Extendable-Output Functions". More specifically, it implements the constructs:
The module is written as a Python C extension on top of optimized implementation available on the Keccak website. This yields better performance than the pure Python implementation that is available. The code is tested on various versions of Python 2 and 3.
The FIPS202 specification is slightly different from the Keccak version that won the SHA-3 competition a few years ago. Many of the "sha3" or "keccak" libraries out there (including many for Python) are not FIPS202 compatible, so they compute different results.
This module aims to be FIPS202 compatible.
The SHA3*
functions are written to be as similar as possible to hashlib
:
Sample usage:
import sha3
s = sha3.SHA3512() # also 224, 256, 384, 512
# also exposed as the function sha3.sha3_512(...)
s.update('foo')
print(s.hexdigest())
Importing the sha3
module will also add the new modules to hashlib
.
>>> import hashlib
>>> import sha3
>>> hashlib.sha3_512('foo')
<sha3.SHA3512 object at 0x7fcd0fcb7590>
The SHAKE functions are Extendable-Output Functions (XOF:s) which are different from hash functions. The interface is similar to hashlib
. You can either give the output length (in bits) at initialization time or digest computation time:
Alternative 1:
sk = sha3.SHAKE128(512) # also SHAKE256
sk.update('')
print([sk.digest()])
Alternative 2:
sk = sha3.SHAKE128() # also SHAKE256
sk.update('')
print([sk.squeeze(512)])
python setup.py build
This will require a C compiler, as usual, and also the Python development headers.
Optionally, if you want to build a debian package:
debuild -d -us -uc
The test/
directory contains a bunch of unit tests. By convention
the runnable unit tests have a name that begins with test_
, such as
the test/test_usage.py
suite. You can run all the tests with
nosetests:
$ nosetests test/
...
Ran 1530 tests in 0.155s
OK
import sha3
.Please refer to the Keccak website for more information:
This Python module is copyright Björn Edström 2012, 2015 be@bjrn.se
The code is heavily based on the Keccak reference which is available here: