using comma separated IDs
3.9 KiB
xxhsum(1) -- print or check xxHash non-cryptographic checksums
SYNOPSIS
xxhsum [<OPTION>] ... [<FILE>] ...
xxhsum -b [<OPTION>] ...
xxh32sum
is equivalent to xxhsum -H0
xxh64sum
is equivalent to xxhsum -H1
xxh128sum
is equivalent to xxhsum -H2
DESCRIPTION
Print or check xxHash (32, 64 or 128 bits) checksums. When is -
, read
standard input.
xxhsum
supports a command line syntax similar but not identical to
md5sum(1). Differences are:
xxhsum
doesn't have text/binary mode switch (-b
, -t
);
xxhsum
always treats files as binary file;
xxhsum
has a hash bit width switch (-H
);
As xxHash is a fast non-cryptographic checksum algorithm,
xxhsum
should not be used for security related purposes.
xxhsum -b
invokes benchmark mode. See OPTIONS and EXAMPLES for details.
OPTIONS
-
-V
,--version
: Displays xxhsum version and exits -
-H
: Hash selection. means0
=32bits,1
=64bits,2
=128bits. Default value is1
(64bits) -
--little-endian
: Set output hexadecimal checksum value as little endian convention. By default, value is displayed as big endian. -
-h
,--help
: Displays help and exits
The following four options are useful only when verifying checksums (-c
)
-
-c
,--check
: Read xxHash sums from and check them -
-q
,--quiet
: Don't print OK for each successfully verified file -
--strict
: Return an error code if any line in the file is invalid, not just if some checksums are wrong. This policy is disabled by default, though UI will prompt an informational message if any line in the file is detected invalid. -
--status
: Don't output anything. Status code shows success. -
-w
,--warn
: Emit a warning message about each improperly formatted checksum line.
The following options are useful only benchmark purpose
-
-b
: Benchmark mode. See EXAMPLES for details. -
-b#
: Specify ID of variant to be tested. Multiple variants can be selected, separated by a ',' comma. -
-B
: Only useful for benchmark mode (-b
). See EXAMPLES for details. specifies benchmark mode's test data block size in bytes. Default value is 102400 -
-i
: Only useful for benchmark mode (-b
). See EXAMPLES for details. specifies number of iterations in benchmark. Single iteration lasts approximately 1000 milliseconds. Default value is 3
EXIT STATUS
xxhsum
exit 0
on success, 1
if at least one file couldn't be read or
doesn't have the same checksum as the -c
option.
EXAMPLES
Output xxHash (64bit) checksum values of specific files to standard output
$ xxhsum -H1 foo bar baz
Output xxHash (32bit and 64bit) checksum values of specific files to standard
output, and redirect it to xyz.xxh32
and qux.xxh64
$ xxhsum -H0 foo bar baz > xyz.xxh32
$ xxhsum -H1 foo bar baz > qux.xxh64
Read xxHash sums from specific files and check them
$ xxhsum -c xyz.xxh32 qux.xxh64
Benchmark xxHash algorithm.
By default, xxhsum
benchmarks xxHash main variants
on a synthetic sample of 100 KB,
and print results into standard output.
The first column is the algorithm,
the second column is the source data size in bytes,
the third column is the number of hashes generated per second (throughput),
and finally the last column translates speed in megabytes per second.
$ xxhsum -b
In the following example, the sample to hash is set to 16384 bytes, the variants to be benched are selected by their IDs, and each benchmark test is repeated 10 times, for increased accuracy.
$ xxhsum -b1,2,3 -i10 -B16384
BUGS
Report bugs at: https://github.com/Cyan4973/xxHash/issues/
AUTHOR
Yann Collet
SEE ALSO
md5sum(1)