PHP 8.1.31 Released!

sha1_file

(PHP 4 >= 4.3.0, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)

sha1_fileBerechnet den SHA1-Hash einer Datei

Beschreibung

sha1_file(string $filename, bool $binary = false): string|false

Berechnet den SHA1-Hash der Datei spezifiert durch filename unter Verwendung des » US Secure Hash Algorithmus 1 und gibt den Hashwert zurück. Der Hash ist ein 40 Zeichen langer Hexadezimalwert.

Parameter-Liste

filename

Der Dateiname der Datei deren Hash-Wert berechnet wird.

binary

Falls true, wird der SHA1-Extrakt im Raw-Binary-Format mit einer Länge von 20 Zeichen zurückgegeben.

Rückgabewerte

Gibt bei Erfolg einen String zurück, ansonsten false.

Beispiele

Beispiel #1 sha1_file()-Beispiel

<?php
foreach(glob('/home/kalle/meinprojekt/*.php') as $ent)
{
if(
is_dir($ent))
{
continue;
}

echo
$ent . ' (SHA1: ' . sha1_file($ent) . ')', PHP_EOL;
}
?>

Siehe auch

  • hash_file() - Berechnet den Hash des Inhalts einer Datei
  • hash_init() - Initialisiert einen schrittweisen Hashing-Kontext
  • sha1() - Berechnet den SHA1-Hash eines Strings

add a note

User Contributed Notes 3 notes

up
49
xijque at gmail dot com
13 years ago
Just for the record -

As some have pointed out, you have two ways to generate the hash of a file:
Method 1 [this function]: sha1_file($file)
Method 2: sha1(file_get_contents($file))

It's important to realize that these two methods are NOT the same thing. If they were, I seriously doubt this function would exist.

The key difference, as far as I can tell, is how the file's contents are loaded. The second method loads the entirety of $file into memory before passing it to sha1($str). Method two, however, loads the contents of $file as they are needed to create the hash.

If you can guarantee that you'll only ever have to hash relatively small files, this difference means very little. If you have larger ones, though, loading the entirety of file into memory is a bad idea: best case, you slow down your server as it tries to handle the request; worse case, you run out of memory and don't get your hash at all.

Just try to keep this in mind if you decide to load the file's contents yourself, in lieu of using this function. On my system, I was able to use this function to generate the hash of a 2.6GB file in 22 seconds, whereas I could not with the second method, due to an out-of-memory error (which took 185 seconds).
up
3
gubatron at gmail dot com
18 years ago
P2P programs like LimeWire utilize sha1 to identify files. However they do it in base32. Here's an utility class if you want to write a Gnutella client in PHP5

/**
Utility base32 SHA1 class for PHP5
Copyright (C) 2006 Karl Magdsick (original author for Python)
Angel Leon (ported to PHP5)
Lime Wire LLC

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2
of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.

You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.
*/
class SHA1 {
static $BASE32_ALPHABET = 'ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ234567';

/** Given a file it creates a magnetmix */
static function fileSHA1($file) {
$raw = sha1_file($file,true);
return SHA1::base32encode($raw);
} //fileSHA1

/** Takes raw input and converts it to base32 */
static function base32encode($input) {
$output = '';
$position = 0;
$storedData = 0;
$storedBitCount = 0;
$index = 0;

while ($index < strlen($input)) {
$storedData <<= 8;
$storedData += ord($input[$index]);
$storedBitCount += 8;
$index += 1;

//take as much data as possible out of storedData
while ($storedBitCount >= 5) {
$storedBitCount -= 5;
$output .= SHA1::$BASE32_ALPHABET[$storedData >> $storedBitCount];
$storedData &= ((1 << $storedBitCount) - 1);
}
} //while

//deal with leftover data
if ($storedBitCount > 0) {
$storedData <<= (5-$storedBitCount);
$output .= SHA1::$BASE32_ALPHABET[$storedData];
}

return $output;
} //base32encode

}
up
-2
schiros at invisihosting dot com
17 years ago
If you've got a script that allows user file upload, and you want to prevent multiple uploads of the same file:

<?
session_start();
$isDuplicate = false;
if(isset($_FILES["filename"]["tmp_name"]) && file_exists($_FILES["filename"]["tmp_name"])) {
$fileHash = sha1_file($_FILES["filename"]["tmp_name"]);
if(!isset($_SESSION["check_filelist"])) {
$_SESSION["check_filelist"] = array($fileHash);
}
elseif(in_array($fileHash,$_SESSION["check_filelist"])) {
$isDuplicate = true;
}
else {
$_SESSION["check_filelist"][] = $fileHash;
}

if($isDuplicate) {
echo "You've already uploaded that file";
}
else{
// do some stuff
}
}

?>
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