Struct blake2b_simd::Params [−][src]
pub struct Params { /* fields omitted */ }
Expand description
A parameter builder that exposes all the non-default BLAKE2 features.
Apart from hash_length
, which controls the length of the final Hash
,
all of these parameters are just associated data that gets mixed with the
input. For more details, see the BLAKE2 spec.
Several of the parameters have a valid range defined in the spec and documented below. Trying to set an invalid parameter will panic.
Example
// Create a Params object with a secret key and a non-default length. let mut params = Params::new(); params.key(b"my secret key"); params.hash_length(16); // Use those params to hash an input all at once. let hash = params.hash(b"my input"); // Or use those params to build an incremental State. let mut state = params.to_state();
Implementations
Construct a State
object based on these parameters, for hashing input
incrementally.
Set the length of the final hash in bytes, from 1 to OUTBYTES
(64). Apart from
controlling the length of the final Hash
, this is also associated data, and changing it
will result in a totally different hash.
Use a secret key, so that BLAKE2 acts as a MAC. The maximum key length is KEYBYTES
(64).
An empty key is equivalent to having no key at all.
At most SALTBYTES
(16). Shorter salts are padded with null bytes. An empty salt is
equivalent to having no salt at all.
At most PERSONALBYTES
(16). Shorter personalizations are padded with null bytes. An empty
personalization is equivalent to having no personalization at all.
From 0 (meaning unlimited) to 255. The default is 1 (meaning sequential).
From 0 (meaning BLAKE2X B2 hashes), through 1 (the default, meaning sequential) to 255 (meaning unlimited).
From 0 (the default, meaning unlimited or sequential) to 2^32 - 1
.
From 0 (the default, meaning first, leftmost, leaf, or sequential) to 2^64 - 1
.
From 0 (the default, meaning leaf or sequential) to 255.
From 0 (the default, meaning sequential) to OUTBYTES
(64).
Indicates the rightmost node in a row. This can also be changed on the
State
object, potentially after hashing has begun. See
State::set_last_node
.