xref: /freebsd/sbin/md5/md5.1 (revision 7aa383846770374466b1dcb2cefd71bde9acf463)
1.\" $FreeBSD$
2.Dd September 7, 2008
3.Dt MD5 1
4.Os
5.Sh NAME
6.Nm md5 , sha1 , sha256, rmd160
7.Nd calculate a message-digest fingerprint (checksum) for a file
8.Sh SYNOPSIS
9.Nm md5
10.Op Fl pqrtx
11.Op Fl s Ar string
12.Op Ar
13.Nm sha1
14.Op Fl pqrtx
15.Op Fl s Ar string
16.Op Ar
17.Nm sha256
18.Op Fl pqrtx
19.Op Fl s Ar string
20.Op Ar
21.Nm rmd160
22.Op Fl pqrtx
23.Op Fl s Ar string
24.Op Ar
25.Sh DESCRIPTION
26The
27.Nm md5 , sha1 , sha256
28and
29.Nm rmd160
30utilities take as input a message of arbitrary length and produce as
31output a
32.Dq fingerprint
33or
34.Dq message digest
35of the input.
36It is conjectured that it is computationally infeasible to
37produce two messages having the same message digest, or to produce any
38message having a given prespecified target message digest.
39The
40.Tn MD5 , SHA-1 , SHA-256
41and
42.Tn RIPEMD-160
43algorithms are intended for digital signature applications, where a
44large file must be
45.Dq compressed
46in a secure manner before being encrypted with a private
47(secret)
48key under a public-key cryptosystem such as
49.Tn RSA .
50.Pp
51.Tn MD5
52has been completely broken as far as finding collisions is
53concerned, and should not be relied upon to produce unique outputs.
54This also means that
55.Tn MD5
56should not be used as part of a cryptographic signature scheme.
57At the current time (2009-01-06) there is no publicly known method to
58.Dq reverse
59MD5, i.e., to find an input given a hash value.
60.Pp
61.Tn SHA-1
62currently (2009-01-06) has no known collisions, but an attack has been
63found which is faster than a brute-force search, placing the security of
64.Tn SHA-1
65in doubt.
66.Pp
67It is recommended that all new applications use
68.Tn SHA-256
69instead of one of the other hash functions.
70.Pp
71The following options may be used in any combination and must
72precede any files named on the command line.
73The hexadecimal checksum of each file listed on the command line is printed
74after the options are processed.
75.Bl -tag -width indent
76.It Fl s Ar string
77Print a checksum of the given
78.Ar string .
79.It Fl p
80Echo stdin to stdout and append the checksum to stdout.
81.It Fl q
82Quiet mode - only the checksum is printed out.
83Overrides the
84.Fl r
85option.
86.It Fl r
87Reverses the format of the output.
88This helps with visual diffs.
89Does nothing
90when combined with the
91.Fl ptx
92options.
93.It Fl t
94Run a built-in time trial.
95.It Fl x
96Run a built-in test script.
97.El
98.Sh EXIT STATUS
99The
100.Nm md5 , sha1 , sha256
101and
102.Nm rmd160
103utilities exit 0 on success,
104and 1 if at least one of the input files could not be read.
105.Sh SEE ALSO
106.Xr cksum 1 ,
107.Xr md5 3 ,
108.Xr ripemd 3 ,
109.Xr sha 3 ,
110.Xr sha256 3
111.Rs
112.%A R. Rivest
113.%T The MD5 Message-Digest Algorithm
114.%O RFC1321
115.Re
116.Rs
117.%A J. Burrows
118.%T The Secure Hash Standard
119.%O FIPS PUB 180-2
120.Re
121.Rs
122.%A D. Eastlake and P. Jones
123.%T US Secure Hash Algorithm 1
124.%O RFC 3174
125.Re
126.Pp
127RIPEMD-160 is part of the ISO draft standard
128.Qq ISO/IEC DIS 10118-3
129on dedicated hash functions.
130.Pp
131Secure Hash Standard (SHS):
132.Pa http://csrc.nist.gov/cryptval/shs.html .
133.Pp
134The RIPEMD-160 page:
135.Pa http://www.esat.kuleuven.ac.be/~bosselae/ripemd160.html .
136.Sh ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
137This program is placed in the public domain for free general use by
138RSA Data Security.
139.Pp
140Support for SHA-1 and RIPEMD-160 has been added by
141.An Oliver Eikemeier Aq eik@FreeBSD.org .
142