Difference between revisions of "LlMD5String"
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<lsl> | |||
llSay(0, llMD5String("Hello, Avatar!", 0)); // returns 112abd47ceaae1c05a826828650434a6 | llSay(0, llMD5String("Hello, Avatar!", 0)); // returns 112abd47ceaae1c05a826828650434a6 | ||
</ | </lsl> | ||
====Linux Example==== | ====Linux Example==== |
Revision as of 13:29, 31 March 2008
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Summary
Function: string llMD5String( string src, integer nonce );258 | Function ID |
0.0 | Forced Delay |
10.0 | Energy |
Returns a string of 32 hex characters that is the MD5 checksum of src with a salt of ":"+nonce.
• string | src | |||
• integer | nonce |
Specification
nonce is converted then appended to src after a colon (src+":"+(string)nonce). This is important to know if you are calculating a hash in another language and wish to compare with one calculated in LSL.
LSL strings are stored in the UTF-8 format.
Caveats
Examples
<lsl> llSay(0, llMD5String("Hello, Avatar!", 0)); // returns 112abd47ceaae1c05a826828650434a6 </lsl>
Linux Example
$ echo -n 'Hello, Avatar!:0' | openssl md5 112abd47ceaae1c05a826828650434a6