A command line utility for calculating
BLAKE3 hashes, similar to
Coreutils tools like b2sum
or md5sum
.
b3sum 0.3.3
USAGE:
b3sum [FLAGS] [OPTIONS] [file]...
FLAGS:
-h, --help Prints help information
--keyed Uses the keyed mode. The secret key is read from standard
input, and it must be exactly 32 raw bytes.
--no-mmap Disables memory mapping
--no-names Omits filenames in the output
--raw Writes raw output bytes to stdout, rather than hex.
--no-names is implied. In this case, only a single
input is allowed.
-V, --version Prints version information
OPTIONS:
--derive-key <CONTEXT> Uses the key derivation mode, with the given
context string. Cannot be used with --keyed.
-l, --length <LEN> The number of output bytes, prior to hex
encoding (default 32)
--num-threads <NUM> The maximum number of threads to use. By
default, this is the number of logical cores.
If this flag is omitted, or if its value is 0,
RAYON_NUM_THREADS is also respected.
ARGS:
<file>...
Hash the file foo.txt
:
b3sum foo.txt
Time hashing a gigabyte of data, to see how fast it is:
# Create a 1 GB file.
head -c 1000000000 /dev/zero > /tmp/bigfile
# Hash it with SHA-256.
time openssl sha256 /tmp/bigfile
# Hash it with BLAKE3.
time b3sum /tmp/bigfile
The standard way to install b3sum
is:
cargo install b3sum
On Linux for example, Cargo will put the compiled binary in
~/.cargo/bin
. You might want to add that directory to your $PATH
, or
rustup
might have done it for you when you installed Cargo.
If you want to install directly from this directory, you can run cargo install --path .
. Or you can just build with cargo build --release
,
which puts the binary at ./target/release/b3sum
.
By default, b3sum
enables the assembly implementations, AVX-512
support, and multi-threading features of the underlying
blake3
crate. To avoid this (for
example, if your C compiler does not support AVX-512), you can use
Cargo's --no-default-features
flag.