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− | {{mirc title|$crc Identifier}} | + | {{mirc title|$crc Identifier}}'''$crc''' calculates the [[32-bit checksum]] of a text, {{mirc|binary variables|binary variable}}, or file. Hash is 32-bits, shown as 8 upper-case hexadecimal characters. |
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== Compatibility == | == Compatibility == | ||
− | {{mIRC compatibility|5.6}} | + | For $crc(filename): |
− | {{mIRC compatibility|6.1}} | + | {{mIRC compatibility|5.6}} |
+ | For N=0-2 parameter: | ||
+ | {{mIRC compatibility|6.1}} | ||
== See also == | == See also == | ||
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* [[List of identifiers - mIRC]] | * [[List of identifiers - mIRC]] | ||
{{mIRC identifier list}} | {{mIRC identifier list}} | ||
− | [[Category:mIRC identifiers| | + | [[Category:mIRC identifiers|crc]] |
Latest revision as of 06:25, 21 September 2017
$crc calculates the 32-bit checksum of a text, binary variable, or file. Hash is 32-bits, shown as 8 upper-case hexadecimal characters.
Synopsis[edit]
$crc(plaintext|&binaryvar|filename[,N])
Parameters[edit]
plaintext - Used with N = 0, just the string you want the CRC-32 checksum hash of
&binaryvar - A binary variable, used with N = 1, return the CRC-32 checksum of the content of the binary variable
filename - A filename, used with N = 2, return the CRC-32 checksum of the content of the file
N: Optional integer 0-2, where 0 indicates data is treated as plaintext, 1 indicates a &binary variable, 2 treats data as contents of a filename
If the N parameter isn't used, the default 2 is used (which is different than $sha1 which has default of N=0.) Also different than $sha1, invalid N outside 0-2 range are treated as default 2 instead of creating an error.
Properties[edit]
None
Example[edit]
; Echo the $crc hash of plain text string ''abc'' to the active window: ; The DATA is case-sensitive, so hash of "abc" is different than hash of "ABC" //echo -a abc $crc(abc,0) / ABC $crc(ABC,0)
; Calculate the CRC-32 hash of the 256 bytes from $chr(0) through $chr(255): //var %i 0 | while (%i isnum 0-255) { bset &ascii $calc(1+%i) %i | inc %i } | echo -a $bvar(&ascii,1-) | echo -a $crc(&ascii,1) should be 29058C73 | write -c ascii.dat | bwrite ascii.dat 0 256 &ascii
; display the same CRC of filename ascii.dat as the above binary variable &ascii //echo -a filesize $file(ascii.dat).size $crc(ascii.dat) is the same as $crc(ascii.dat,2) because default N is 2 ; append 4 bytes to ascii.dat to change the CRC value: //bset &b 1 176 84 33 47 | /bwrite ascii.dat -1 4 &b //echo -a filesize $file(ascii.dat).size has different CRC value $crc(ascii.dat,2)
Returns 00000000 if filename does not exist:
//echo -a $crc(no_such_file.txt,2)
Suggested Uses:
- Quick way to compare if 2 files are identical. (First check should always be comparing file sizes.)
- Quick way to check if a file's contents have changed since stored CRC checksum was made.
- Verify downloaded file hasn't been corrupted, matches the sender's original.
Note that because the default is N=2, $crc(versions.txt) is the CRC-32 for the contents of versions.txt (or 00000000 if the file doesn't exist). This differs from $sha1(versions.txt) giving the hash of the plaintext inside the parenthesis because $sha1 has default of N=0.
mIRC v7.x Unicode-encodes plaintext before providing to $crc, so v7.x and v6.x return different answers for //echo -a $crc($chr(233),0)
If the text doesn't have Unicode code points above 255, to avoid having Unicode points 128-255 encoded to 2-byte pairs, the text must be fed to $crc as a binary variable:
//var %name chloé | bset -ta &string1 1 %name | bset -t &string2 1 %name | echo -a $crc(&string1,1) / $crc(&string2,1) / $crc(%name,0)
Note: CRC-32 is good for detecting transfer errors. Any 1 bit changed in a file is guaranteed to change the CRC-32 value, which is not necessarily true for $sha1 or other 1-way hashes. However, CRC-32 is not good for detecting malicious tampering with a file. There is a 4-byte binary string which can change a file from any CRC-32 value to any CRC-32 value, and these 4 bytes can be quickly calculated without brute force testing of the 2^32 possible strings.
Error Messages[edit]
None
$crc differs from $sha1 in that it returns no error messages.
For non-existent filenames, it returns 00000000 instead of halting script with an error. For calculating hash of $null string it returns nothing instead of the checksum of the null-string When given invalid N outside the 0-2 range, it uses default 2 instead of halting script with an error.
Compatibility[edit]
For $crc(filename):
Added: mIRC v5.6
Added on: 03 Jun 1999
Note: Unless otherwise stated, this was the date of original functionality.
Further enhancements may have been made in later versions.
For N=0-2 parameter:
Added: mIRC v6.1
Added on: 29 Aug 2003
Note: Unless otherwise stated, this was the date of original functionality.
Further enhancements may have been made in later versions.