Common digest package used across the container ecosystem.
Please see the godoc for more information.
A digest is just a hash.
The most common use case for a digest is to create a content identifier for use in Content Addressable Storage systems:
id := digest.FromBytes([]byte("my content"))
In the example above, the id can be used to uniquely identify the byte slice "my content". This allows two disparate applications to agree on a verifiable identifier without having to trust one another.
An identifying digest can be verified, as follows:
if id != digest.FromBytes([]byte("my content")) {
return errors.New("the content has changed!")
}
A Verifier
type can be used to handle cases where an io.Reader
makes more sense:
rd := getContent()
verifier := id.Verifier()
io.Copy(verifier, rd)
if !verifier.Verified() {
return errors.New("the content has changed!")
}
Using Merkle DAGs, this can power a rich, safe, content distribution system.
While the godoc is considered the best resource, a few important items need to be called out when using this package.
Make sure to import the hash implementations into your application or the package will panic. You should have something like the following in the main (or other entrypoint) of your application:
import (
_ "crypto/sha256"
_ "crypto/sha512"
)
This may seem inconvenient but it allows you replace the hash implementations with others, such as https://github.com/stevvooe/resumable.
Even though digest.Digest
may be assemblable as a string, always verify your input with digest.Parse
or use Digest.Validate
when accepting untrusted input.
While there are measures to avoid common problems, this will ensure you have valid digests in the rest of your application.
While alternative encodings of hash values (digests) are possible (for example, base64), this package deals exclusively with hex-encoded digests.
The Go API, at this stage, is considered stable, unless otherwise noted.
As always, before using a package export, read the godoc.
This package is considered fairly complete. It has been in production in thousands (millions?) of deployments and is fairly battle-hardened. New additions will be met with skepticism. If you think there is a missing feature, please file a bug clearly describing the problem and the alternatives you tried before submitting a PR.
Participation in the OpenContainers community is governed by OpenContainer's Code of Conduct.
If you find an issue, please follow the security protocol to report it.
Copyright © 2019, 2020 OCI Contributors
Copyright © 2016 Docker, Inc.
All rights reserved, except as follows.
Code is released under the Apache 2.0 license.
This README.md
file and the CONTRIBUTING.md
file are licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License under the terms and conditions set forth in the file LICENSE.docs
.
You may obtain a duplicate copy of the same license, titled CC BY-SA 4.0, at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/.