Reputation: 2105
I want to convert a string like "abc" to an MD5 hash. I want to do this in iOS and Swift. I have tried using the solutions below but they were not working for me:
Importing CommonCrypto in a Swift framework
How to use CC_MD5 method in swift language.
http://iosdeveloperzone.com/2014/10/03/using-commoncrypto-in-swift/
To be more clear, I want to achieve an output in Swift similar to this PHP code's output:
$str = "Hello";
echo md5($str);
Output: 8b1a9953c4611296a827abf8c47804d7
Upvotes: 149
Views: 127662
Reputation: 2629
Swift 5.3: Building on @Radu Ursache and @mluisbrown answers: a simple extension on String
import CryptoKit
extension String {
func md5() -> String {
Insecure.MD5.hash(data: self.data(using: .utf8)!).map { String(format: "%02hhx", $0) }.joined()
}
}
Usage:
"My awesome String".md5()
// edit: By now I would prefer a computed property over a function without parameters.
import CryptoKit
extension String {
var md5: String {
Insecure.MD5.hash(data: self.data(using: .utf8)!).map { String(format: "%02hhx", $0) }.joined()
}
}
Usage:
"My awesome String".md5
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 1494
As already suggested you can use CryptoSwift and do something like this:
import CryptoSwift
...
print("==== Hello \("Hello".md5())")
--> Hello 8b1a9953c4611296a827abf8c47804d7
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 14928
As of iOS 13 Apple has added the CryptoKit
framework so you no longer need to import CommonCrypto or deal with its C API:
import Foundation
import CryptoKit
func MD5(string: String) -> String {
let digest = Insecure.MD5.hash(data: Data(string.utf8))
return digest.map {
String(format: "%02hhx", $0)
}.joined()
}
Upvotes: 138
Reputation: 1509
in Swift 5.3 you can do
import CryptoKit
func md5Hash(_ source: String) -> String {
return Insecure.MD5.hash(data: source.data(using: .utf8)!).map { String(format: "%02hhx", $0) }.joined()
}
Upvotes: 27
Reputation: 33
import CryptoKit
private func MD5Base64(_ string: String) -> String {
let digest = Insecure.MD5.hash(data: string.data(using: .utf8) ?? Data())
let digestString = digest.map { String(format: "%02hhx", $0) }.joined()
return digestString.toBase64()
}
extension String {
func toBase64() -> String {
return Data(self.utf8).base64EncodedString()
}
}
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 27221
An answer for Swift 5 with proper memory management and without String
class inside the method:
typealias CBridgeCryptoMethodType = (UnsafeRawPointer?,
UInt32,
UnsafeMutablePointer<UInt8>?)
-> UnsafeMutablePointer<UInt8>?
private enum HashType {
// MARK: - Cases
case md5
case sha1
case sha224
case sha256
case sha384
case sha512
}
extension Data {
var hexString: String {
let localHexString = reduce("", { previous, current in
return previous + String(format: "%02X", current)
})
return localHexString
}
var md5: Data {
return hashed(for: .md5)
}
var sha1: Data {
return hashed(for: .sha1)
}
var sha224: Data {
return hashed(for: .sha224)
}
var sha256: Data {
return hashed(for: .sha256)
}
var sha384: Data {
return hashed(for: .sha384)
}
var sha512: Data {
return hashed(for: .sha512)
}
private func hashed(for hashType: HashType) -> Data {
return withUnsafeBytes { (rawBytesPointer: UnsafeRawBufferPointer) -> Data in
guard let bytes = rawBytesPointer.baseAddress?.assumingMemoryBound(to: Float.self) else {
return Data()
}
let hashMethod: CBridgeCryptoMethodType
let digestLength: Int
switch hashType {
case .md5:
hashMethod = CC_MD5
digestLength = Int(CC_MD5_DIGEST_LENGTH)
case .sha1:
hashMethod = CC_SHA1
digestLength = Int(CC_SHA1_DIGEST_LENGTH)
case .sha224:
hashMethod = CC_SHA224
digestLength = Int(CC_SHA224_DIGEST_LENGTH)
case .sha256:
hashMethod = CC_SHA256
digestLength = Int(CC_SHA256_DIGEST_LENGTH)
case .sha384:
hashMethod = CC_SHA384
digestLength = Int(CC_SHA384_DIGEST_LENGTH)
case .sha512:
hashMethod = CC_SHA512
digestLength = Int(CC_SHA512_DIGEST_LENGTH)
}
let result = UnsafeMutablePointer<UInt8>.allocate(capacity: digestLength)
_ = hashMethod(bytes, CC_LONG(count), result)
let md5Data = Data(bytes: result, count: digestLength)
result.deallocate()
return md5Data
}
}
}
example
let str = "The most secure string ever"
print("md5", str.data(using: .utf8)?.md5.hexString)
print("sha1", str.data(using: .utf8)?.sha1.hexString)
print("sha224", str.data(using: .utf8)?.sha224.hexString)
print("sha256", str.data(using: .utf8)?.sha256.hexString)
print("sha384", str.data(using: .utf8)?.sha384.hexString)
print("sha512", str.data(using: .utf8)?.sha512.hexString)
Results:
md5 Optional("671C121427F12FBBA66CEE71C44CB62C")
sha1 Optional("A6A40B223AE634CFC8C191DDE024BF0ACA56D7FA")
sha224 Optional("334370E82F2F5ECF5B2CA0910C6176D94CBA12FD6F518A7AB8D12ADE")
sha256 Optional("8CF5ED971D6EE2579B1BDEFD4921415AC03DA45B49B89665B3DF197287EFC89D")
sha384 Optional("04BB3551CBD60035BA7E0BAA141AEACE1EF5E17317A8FD108DA12A7A8E98C245E14F92CC1A241C732209EAC9D600602E")
sha512 Optional("1D595EAFEB2162672830885D336F75FD481548AC463BE16A8D98DB33637213F1AEB36FA4977B9C23A82A4FAB8A70C06AFC64C610D3CB1FE77A609DC8EE86AA68")
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 117
Based on Cody's solution, I have an idea that we should clarify what's the result of MD5, because we may use the result as a hex string, or a Base64 string.
func md5(_ string: String) -> [UInt8] {
let length = Int(CC_MD5_DIGEST_LENGTH)
var digest = [UInt8](repeating: 0, count: length)
if let d = string.data(using: String.Encoding.utf8) {
_ = d.withUnsafeBytes { (body: UnsafePointer<UInt8>) in
CC_MD5(body, CC_LONG(d.count), &digest)
}
}
return digest
}
The function above actually returns a [UInt8]
, and based on this result, we can get any form of string, such as hex, base64.
If a hex string is wanted as the final result(as the question asks), we can keep using the rest part of Cody's solution
extension String {
var md5Hex: String {
let length = Int(CC_MD5_DIGEST_LENGTH)
return (0..<length).reduce("") {
$0 + String(format: "%02x", digest[$1])
}
}
}
If a Base64 string is wanted as the final result
extension String {
var md5Base64: String {
let md5edData = Data(bytes: md5(self))
return md5edData.base64EncodedString()
}
}
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 112873
There are two steps:
1. Create md5 data from a string
2. Covert the md5 data to a hex string
Swift 2.0:
func md5(string string: String) -> String {
var digest = [UInt8](count: Int(CC_MD5_DIGEST_LENGTH), repeatedValue: 0)
if let data = string.dataUsingEncoding(NSUTF8StringEncoding) {
CC_MD5(data.bytes, CC_LONG(data.length), &digest)
}
var digestHex = ""
for index in 0..<Int(CC_MD5_DIGEST_LENGTH) {
digestHex += String(format: "%02x", digest[index])
}
return digestHex
}
//Test:
let digest = md5(string:"Hello")
print("digest: \(digest)")
Output:
digest: 8b1a9953c4611296a827abf8c47804d7
Swift 3.0:
func MD5(string: String) -> Data {
let messageData = string.data(using:.utf8)!
var digestData = Data(count: Int(CC_MD5_DIGEST_LENGTH))
_ = digestData.withUnsafeMutableBytes {digestBytes in
messageData.withUnsafeBytes {messageBytes in
CC_MD5(messageBytes, CC_LONG(messageData.count), digestBytes)
}
}
return digestData
}
//Test:
let md5Data = MD5(string:"Hello")
let md5Hex = md5Data.map { String(format: "%02hhx", $0) }.joined()
print("md5Hex: \(md5Hex)")
let md5Base64 = md5Data.base64EncodedString()
print("md5Base64: \(md5Base64)")
Output:
md5Hex: 8b1a9953c4611296a827abf8c47804d7
md5Base64: ixqZU8RhEpaoJ6v4xHgE1w==
Swift 5.0:
import Foundation
import var CommonCrypto.CC_MD5_DIGEST_LENGTH
import func CommonCrypto.CC_MD5
import typealias CommonCrypto.CC_LONG
func MD5(string: String) -> Data {
let length = Int(CC_MD5_DIGEST_LENGTH)
let messageData = string.data(using:.utf8)!
var digestData = Data(count: length)
_ = digestData.withUnsafeMutableBytes { digestBytes -> UInt8 in
messageData.withUnsafeBytes { messageBytes -> UInt8 in
if let messageBytesBaseAddress = messageBytes.baseAddress, let digestBytesBlindMemory = digestBytes.bindMemory(to: UInt8.self).baseAddress {
let messageLength = CC_LONG(messageData.count)
CC_MD5(messageBytesBaseAddress, messageLength, digestBytesBlindMemory)
}
return 0
}
}
return digestData
}
//Test:
let md5Data = MD5(string:"Hello")
let md5Hex = md5Data.map { String(format: "%02hhx", $0) }.joined()
print("md5Hex: \(md5Hex)")
let md5Base64 = md5Data.base64EncodedString()
print("md5Base64: \(md5Base64)")
Output:
md5Hex: 8b1a9953c4611296a827abf8c47804d7
md5Base64: ixqZU8RhEpaoJ6v4xHgE1w==
Notes:
#import <CommonCrypto/CommonCrypto.h>
must be added to a Bridging-Header file
For how to create a Bridging-Header see this SO answer.
In general MD5 should not be used for new work, SHA256 is a current best practice.
MD2, MD4, MD5, SHA1, SHA224, SHA256, SHA384, SHA512 (Swift 3+)
These functions will hash either String or Data input with one of eight cryptographic hash algorithms.
The name parameter specifies the hash function name as a String
Supported functions are MD2, MD4, MD5, SHA1, SHA224, SHA256, SHA384 and SHA512
a
This example requires Common Crypto
It is necessary to have a bridging header to the project:
#import <CommonCrypto/CommonCrypto.h>
Add the Security.framework to the project.
This function takes a hash name and String to be hashed and returns a Data:
name: A name of a hash function as a String string: The String to be hashed returns: the hashed result as Data
func hash(name:String, string:String) -> Data? {
let data = string.data(using:.utf8)!
return hash(name:name, data:data)
}
Examples:
let clearString = "clearData0123456"
let clearData = clearString.data(using:.utf8)!
print("clearString: \(clearString)")
print("clearData: \(clearData as NSData)")
let hashSHA256 = hash(name:"SHA256", string:clearString)
print("hashSHA256: \(hashSHA256! as NSData)")
let hashMD5 = hash(name:"MD5", data:clearData)
print("hashMD5: \(hashMD5! as NSData)")
Output:
clearString: clearData0123456
clearData: <636c6561 72446174 61303132 33343536>
hashSHA256: <aabc766b 6b357564 e41f4f91 2d494bcc bfa16924 b574abbd ba9e3e9d a0c8920a>
hashMD5: <4df665f7 b94aea69 695b0e7b baf9e9d6>
Upvotes: 202
Reputation: 4444
After reading through the other answers on here (and needing to support other hash types as well) I wrote a String extension that handles multiple hash types and output types.
NOTE: CommonCrypto is included in Xcode 10, so you can simply import CommonCrypto
without having to mess with a bridging header if you have the latest Xcode version installed... Otherwise a bridging header is necessary.
UPDATE: Both Swift 4 & 5 use the same String+Crypto.swift file below.
There is a separate Data+Crypto.swift file for Swift 5 (see below) as the api for 'withUnsafeMutableBytes' and 'withUnsafeBytes' changed between Swift 4 & 5.
String+Crypto.swift -- (for both Swift 4 & 5)
import Foundation
import CommonCrypto
// Defines types of hash string outputs available
public enum HashOutputType {
// standard hex string output
case hex
// base 64 encoded string output
case base64
}
// Defines types of hash algorithms available
public enum HashType {
case md5
case sha1
case sha224
case sha256
case sha384
case sha512
var length: Int32 {
switch self {
case .md5: return CC_MD5_DIGEST_LENGTH
case .sha1: return CC_SHA1_DIGEST_LENGTH
case .sha224: return CC_SHA224_DIGEST_LENGTH
case .sha256: return CC_SHA256_DIGEST_LENGTH
case .sha384: return CC_SHA384_DIGEST_LENGTH
case .sha512: return CC_SHA512_DIGEST_LENGTH
}
}
}
public extension String {
/// Hashing algorithm for hashing a string instance.
///
/// - Parameters:
/// - type: The type of hash to use.
/// - output: The type of output desired, defaults to .hex.
/// - Returns: The requested hash output or nil if failure.
public func hashed(_ type: HashType, output: HashOutputType = .hex) -> String? {
// convert string to utf8 encoded data
guard let message = data(using: .utf8) else { return nil }
return message.hashed(type, output: output)
}
}
SWIFT 5 -- Data+Crypto.swift
import Foundation
import CommonCrypto
extension Data {
/// Hashing algorithm that prepends an RSA2048ASN1Header to the beginning of the data being hashed.
///
/// - Parameters:
/// - type: The type of hash algorithm to use for the hashing operation.
/// - output: The type of output string desired.
/// - Returns: A hash string using the specified hashing algorithm, or nil.
public func hashWithRSA2048Asn1Header(_ type: HashType, output: HashOutputType = .hex) -> String? {
let rsa2048Asn1Header:[UInt8] = [
0x30, 0x82, 0x01, 0x22, 0x30, 0x0d, 0x06, 0x09, 0x2a, 0x86, 0x48, 0x86,
0xf7, 0x0d, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x05, 0x00, 0x03, 0x82, 0x01, 0x0f, 0x00
]
var headerData = Data(rsa2048Asn1Header)
headerData.append(self)
return hashed(type, output: output)
}
/// Hashing algorithm for hashing a Data instance.
///
/// - Parameters:
/// - type: The type of hash to use.
/// - output: The type of hash output desired, defaults to .hex.
/// - Returns: The requested hash output or nil if failure.
public func hashed(_ type: HashType, output: HashOutputType = .hex) -> String? {
// setup data variable to hold hashed value
var digest = Data(count: Int(type.length))
_ = digest.withUnsafeMutableBytes{ digestBytes -> UInt8 in
self.withUnsafeBytes { messageBytes -> UInt8 in
if let mb = messageBytes.baseAddress, let db = digestBytes.bindMemory(to: UInt8.self).baseAddress {
let length = CC_LONG(self.count)
switch type {
case .md5: CC_MD5(mb, length, db)
case .sha1: CC_SHA1(mb, length, db)
case .sha224: CC_SHA224(mb, length, db)
case .sha256: CC_SHA256(mb, length, db)
case .sha384: CC_SHA384(mb, length, db)
case .sha512: CC_SHA512(mb, length, db)
}
}
return 0
}
}
// return the value based on the specified output type.
switch output {
case .hex: return digest.map { String(format: "%02hhx", $0) }.joined()
case .base64: return digest.base64EncodedString()
}
}
}
SWIFT 4 -- Data+Crypto.swift
import Foundation
import CommonCrypto
extension Data {
/// Hashing algorithm that prepends an RSA2048ASN1Header to the beginning of the data being hashed.
///
/// - Parameters:
/// - type: The type of hash algorithm to use for the hashing operation.
/// - output: The type of output string desired.
/// - Returns: A hash string using the specified hashing algorithm, or nil.
public func hashWithRSA2048Asn1Header(_ type: HashType, output: HashOutputType = .hex) -> String? {
let rsa2048Asn1Header:[UInt8] = [
0x30, 0x82, 0x01, 0x22, 0x30, 0x0d, 0x06, 0x09, 0x2a, 0x86, 0x48, 0x86,
0xf7, 0x0d, 0x01, 0x01, 0x01, 0x05, 0x00, 0x03, 0x82, 0x01, 0x0f, 0x00
]
var headerData = Data(bytes: rsa2048Asn1Header)
headerData.append(self)
return hashed(type, output: output)
}
/// Hashing algorithm for hashing a Data instance.
///
/// - Parameters:
/// - type: The type of hash to use.
/// - output: The type of hash output desired, defaults to .hex.
/// - Returns: The requested hash output or nil if failure.
public func hashed(_ type: HashType, output: HashOutputType = .hex) -> String? {
// setup data variable to hold hashed value
var digest = Data(count: Int(type.length))
// generate hash using specified hash type
_ = digest.withUnsafeMutableBytes { (digestBytes: UnsafeMutablePointer<UInt8>) in
self.withUnsafeBytes { (messageBytes: UnsafePointer<UInt8>) in
let length = CC_LONG(self.count)
switch type {
case .md5: CC_MD5(messageBytes, length, digestBytes)
case .sha1: CC_SHA1(messageBytes, length, digestBytes)
case .sha224: CC_SHA224(messageBytes, length, digestBytes)
case .sha256: CC_SHA256(messageBytes, length, digestBytes)
case .sha384: CC_SHA384(messageBytes, length, digestBytes)
case .sha512: CC_SHA512(messageBytes, length, digestBytes)
}
}
}
// return the value based on the specified output type.
switch output {
case .hex: return digest.map { String(format: "%02hhx", $0) }.joined()
case .base64: return digest.base64EncodedString()
}
}
}
Edit: since the hash actually happens on the Data, I split the hashing algorithm out into a Data extension. This allows the same algorithm to be used for SSL Certificate pinning hash operations as well.
Here's a short example of how you might use it for an SSL Pinning operation:
// Certificate pinning - get certificate as data
let data: Data = SecCertificateCopyData(serverCertificate) as Data
// compare hash of server certificate with local (expected) hash value
guard let serverHash = data.hashWithRSA2048Asn1Header(.sha256, output: .base64), serverHash == storedHash else {
print("SSL PINNING: Server certificate hash does not match specified hash value.")
return false
}
back to the original answer
I tested the hash algorithms using this:
let value = "This is my string"
if let md5 = value.hashed(.md5) {
print("md5: \(md5)")
}
if let sha1 = value.hashed(.sha1) {
print("sha1: \(sha1)")
}
if let sha224 = value.hashed(.sha224) {
print("sha224: \(sha224)")
}
if let sha256 = value.hashed(.sha256) {
print("sha256: \(sha256)")
}
if let sha384 = value.hashed(.sha384) {
print("sha384: \(sha384)")
}
if let sha512 = value.hashed(.sha512) {
print("sha512: \(sha512)")
}
and this is the printed results:
md5: c2a9ce57e8df081b4baad80d81868bbb
sha1: 37fb219bf98bee51d2fdc3ba6d866c97f06c8223
sha224: f88e2f20aa89fb4dffb6bdc62d7bd75e1ba02574fae4a437c3bf49c7
sha256: 9da6c02379110815278b615f015f0b254fd3d5a691c9d8abf8141655982c046b
sha384: d9d7fc8aefe7f8f0a969b132a59070836397147338e454acc6e65ca616099d03a61fcf9cc8c4d45a2623145ebd398450
sha512: 349cc35836ba85915ace9d7f895b712fe018452bb4b20ff257257e12adeb1e83ad780c6568a12d03f5b2cb1e3da23b8b7ced9012a188ef3855e0a8f3db211883
Upvotes: 52
Reputation: 11666
my two cents (if you need quickly md5 for Data/NSData, for example you downloaded or read binary for disk or netwkork)
(shameless from "Swift 5 answer as a String extension (based on the great answer of Invictus Cody")):
extension Data {
var md5Value: String {
let length = Int(CC_MD5_DIGEST_LENGTH)
var digest = [UInt8](repeating: 0, count: length)
_ = self.withUnsafeBytes { body -> String in
CC_MD5(body.baseAddress, CC_LONG(self.count), &digest)
return ""
}
return (0 ..< length).reduce("") {
$0 + String(format: "%02x", digest[$1])
}
}
}
test:
print("test".data.md5Value) /*098f6bcd4621d373cade4e832627b4f6*/
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 796
In swift programming its better to make a string function, so the use will be easy. Here I am making a String extension using one of the above given solution. Thanks @wajih
import Foundation
import CommonCrypto
extension String {
func md5() -> String {
let context = UnsafeMutablePointer<CC_MD5_CTX>.allocate(capacity: 1)
var digest = Array<UInt8>(repeating:0, count:Int(CC_MD5_DIGEST_LENGTH))
CC_MD5_Init(context)
CC_MD5_Update(context, self, CC_LONG(self.lengthOfBytes(using: String.Encoding.utf8)))
CC_MD5_Final(&digest, context)
context.deallocate()
var hexString = ""
for byte in digest {
hexString += String(format:"%02x", byte)
}
return hexString
}
}
Usage
let md5String = "abc".md5()
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 58149
Swift 5 answer as a String extension (based on the great answer of Invictus Cody):
import CommonCrypto
extension String {
var md5Value: String {
let length = Int(CC_MD5_DIGEST_LENGTH)
var digest = [UInt8](repeating: 0, count: length)
if let d = self.data(using: .utf8) {
_ = d.withUnsafeBytes { body -> String in
CC_MD5(body.baseAddress, CC_LONG(d.count), &digest)
return ""
}
}
return (0 ..< length).reduce("") {
$0 + String(format: "%02x", digest[$1])
}
}
}
Usage:
print("test".md5Value) /*098f6bcd4621d373cade4e832627b4f6*/
Upvotes: 9
Reputation: 517
Swift 4.* , Xcode 10 Update :
In Xcode 10 you don't have to use Bridging-Header Anymore , you can directly import using
import CommonCrypto
And Then write a method something like :
func MD5(_ string: String) -> String? {
let length = Int(CC_MD5_DIGEST_LENGTH)
var digest = [UInt8](repeating: 0, count: length)
if let d = string.data(using: String.Encoding.utf8) {
_ = d.withUnsafeBytes { (body: UnsafePointer<UInt8>) in
CC_MD5(body, CC_LONG(d.count), &digest)
}
}
return (0..<length).reduce("") {
$0 + String(format: "%02x", digest[$1])
}
}
Usage :
MD5("This is my string")
Output:
c2a9ce57e8df081b4baad80d81868bbb
Upvotes: 26
Reputation: 81878
I released a pure Swift implementation that does not depend on CommonCrypto or anything else. It's available under MIT license.
The code consists of a single swift file that you can just drop into your project. If you prefer you can also use the contained Xcode project with framework and unit test targets.
It's simple to use:
let input = "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog"
let digest = input.utf8.md5
print("md5: \(digest)")
prints: md5: 9e107d9d372bb6826bd81d3542a419d6
The swift file contains documentation and more examples.
Upvotes: 21
Reputation: 7152
MD5 is a hashing algorithm, no need to use the bulky CommonCrypto library for this (and get rejected by Apple review), just use any md5 hashing library.
One such library I use is SwiftHash, a pure swift implementation of MD5 (based on http://pajhome.org.uk/crypt/md5/md5.html)
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 61
Here's an extension based on zaph answer
extension String{
var MD5:String {
get{
let messageData = self.data(using:.utf8)!
var digestData = Data(count: Int(CC_MD5_DIGEST_LENGTH))
_ = digestData.withUnsafeMutableBytes {digestBytes in
messageData.withUnsafeBytes {messageBytes in
CC_MD5(messageBytes, CC_LONG(messageData.count), digestBytes)
}
}
return digestData.map { String(format: "%02hhx", $0) }.joined()
}
}
}
Fully compatible with swift 3.0.you still have to #import <CommonCrypto/CommonCrypto.h>
in your Bridging-Header file
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 4393
SWIFT 3
version of md5 function
:
func md5(_ string: String) -> String {
let context = UnsafeMutablePointer<CC_MD5_CTX>.allocate(capacity: 1)
var digest = Array<UInt8>(repeating:0, count:Int(CC_MD5_DIGEST_LENGTH))
CC_MD5_Init(context)
CC_MD5_Update(context, string, CC_LONG(string.lengthOfBytes(using: String.Encoding.utf8)))
CC_MD5_Final(&digest, context)
context.deallocate(capacity: 1)
var hexString = ""
for byte in digest {
hexString += String(format:"%02x", byte)
}
return hexString
}
Original link from http://iosdeveloperzone.com
Upvotes: 28
Reputation: 6824
Just two notes here:
Using Crypto is too much overhead for achieving just this.
The accepted answer is perfect! Nevertheless I just wanted to share a Swift ier code approach using Swift 2.2.
Please bear in mind that you still have to #import <CommonCrypto/CommonCrypto.h>
in your Bridging-Header file
struct MD5Digester {
// return MD5 digest of string provided
static func digest(string: String) -> String? {
guard let data = string.dataUsingEncoding(NSUTF8StringEncoding) else { return nil }
var digest = [UInt8](count: Int(CC_MD5_DIGEST_LENGTH), repeatedValue: 0)
CC_MD5(data.bytes, CC_LONG(data.length), &digest)
return (0..<Int(CC_MD5_DIGEST_LENGTH)).reduce("") { $0 + String(format: "%02x", digest[$1]) }
}
}
Upvotes: 10
Reputation: 5287
I used Carthage and Cyrpto to do this.
execute 'cartage update'
If you're running from the commandline add in the framework in the swift file
#!/usr/bin/env xcrun swift -F Carthage/Build/Mac
Add import Crypto to your swift file.
then it just works!
print( "convert this".MD5 )
Upvotes: 1