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Essential Cryptography for JavaScript Developers

You're reading from   Essential Cryptography for JavaScript Developers A practical guide to leveraging common cryptographic operations in Node.js and the browser

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801075336
Length 220 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Alessandro Segala Alessandro Segala
Author Profile Icon Alessandro Segala
Alessandro Segala
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1 – Getting Started
2. Chapter 1: Cryptography for Developers FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Dealing with Binary and Random Data 4. Part 2 – Using Common Cryptographic Operations with Node.js
5. Chapter 3: File and Password Hashing with Node.js 6. Chapter 4: Symmetric Encryption in Node.js 7. Chapter 5: Using Asymmetric and Hybrid Encryption in Node.js 8. Chapter 6: Digital Signatures with Node.js and Trust 9. Part 3 – Cryptography in the Browser
10. Chapter 7: Introduction to Cryptography in the Browser 11. Chapter 8: Performing Common Cryptographic Operations in the Browser 12. Other Books You May Enjoy

An overview of hashing functions

Before we jump into the code, it's worth spending a few moments explaining what hashing functions are, how they are different from ciphers (which are functions that are used to encrypt and decrypt data), and their properties and uses.

Properties of hashing functions, and how they differ from encryption

While encryption is a two-way operation (you can encrypt a message and then decrypt it to get the original message once again), hashing is just one-way. That is, after you hash a message, you cannot retrieve the original plaintext in any way.

There are five defining characteristics of modern hashing functions:

  1. As we mentioned previously, you cannot retrieve the original message from its hash (also called a digest) as hashing functions are designed as one-way operations.
  2. Regardless of the size of the input message, the output hash has a fixed length. For example, SHA-256 hashes are always 32 bytes (256-bit) long, regardless of...
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