// Copyright (c) 2020 Tailscale Inc & AUTHORS All rights reserved. // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. // Package deephash hashes a Go value recursively, in a predictable order, // without looping. The hash is only valid within the lifetime of a program. // Users should not store the hash on disk or send it over the network. // The hash is sufficiently strong and unique such that // Hash(x) == Hash(y) is an appropriate replacement for x == y. // // The definition of equality is identical to reflect.DeepEqual except: // * Floating-point values are compared based on the raw bits, // which means that NaNs (with the same bit pattern) are treated as equal. // * Types which implement interface { AppendTo([]byte) []byte } use // the AppendTo method to produce a textual representation of the value. // Thus, two values are equal if AppendTo produces the same bytes. // // WARNING: This package, like most of the tailscale.com Go module, // should be considered Tailscale-internal; we make no API promises. package deephash import ( "bufio" "crypto/sha256" "encoding/binary" "encoding/hex" "fmt" "hash" "math" "reflect" "sync" "time" "unsafe" ) // There is much overlap between the theory of serialization and hashing. // A hash (useful for determing equality) can be produced by printing a value // and hashing the output. The format must: // * be deterministic such that the same value hashes to the same output, and // * be parsable such that the same value can be reproduced by the output. // // The logic below hashes a value by printing it to a hash.Hash. // To be parsable, it assumes that we know the Go type of each value: // * scalar types (e.g., bool or int32) are printed as fixed-width fields. // * list types (e.g., strings, slices, and AppendTo buffers) are prefixed // by a fixed-width length field, followed by the contents of the list. // * slices, arrays, and structs print each element/field consecutively. // * interfaces print with a 1-byte prefix indicating whether it is nil. // If non-nil, it is followed by a fixed-width field of the type index, // followed by the format of the underlying value. // * pointers print with a 1-byte prefix indicating whether the pointer is // 1) nil, 2) previously seen, or 3) newly seen. Previously seen pointers are // followed by a fixed-width field with the index of the previous pointer. // Newly seen pointers are followed by the format of the underlying value. // * maps print with a 1-byte prefix indicating whether the map pointer is // 1) nil, 2) previously seen, or 3) newly seen. Previously seen pointers // are followed by a fixed-width field of the index of the previous pointer. // Newly seen maps are printed as a fixed-width field with the XOR of the // hash of every map entry. With a sufficiently strong hash, this value is // theoretically "parsable" by looking up the hash in a magical map that // returns the set of entries for that given hash. const scratchSize = 128 // hasher is reusable state for hashing a value. // Get one via hasherPool. type hasher struct { h hash.Hash bw *bufio.Writer scratch [scratchSize]byte visitStack visitStack } func (h *hasher) reset() { if h.h == nil { h.h = sha256.New() } if h.bw == nil { h.bw = bufio.NewWriterSize(h.h, h.h.BlockSize()) } h.bw.Flush() h.h.Reset() } // Sum is an opaque checksum type that is comparable. type Sum struct { sum [sha256.Size]byte } func (s1 *Sum) xor(s2 Sum) { for i := 0; i < sha256.Size; i++ { s1.sum[i] ^= s2.sum[i] } } func (s Sum) String() string { return hex.EncodeToString(s.sum[:]) } var ( once sync.Once seed uint64 ) func (h *hasher) sum() (s Sum) { h.bw.Flush() // Sum into scratch & copy out, as hash.Hash is an interface // so the slice necessarily escapes, and there's no sha256 // concrete type exported and we don't want the 'hash' result // parameter to escape to the heap: copy(s.sum[:], h.h.Sum(h.scratch[:0])) return s } var hasherPool = &sync.Pool{ New: func() interface{} { return new(hasher) }, } // Hash returns the hash of v. func Hash(v interface{}) (s Sum) { h := hasherPool.Get().(*hasher) defer hasherPool.Put(h) h.reset() once.Do(func() { seed = uint64(time.Now().UnixNano()) }) h.hashUint64(seed) h.hashValue(reflect.ValueOf(v)) return h.sum() } // Update sets last to the hash of v and reports whether its value changed. func Update(last *Sum, v ...interface{}) (changed bool) { sum := Hash(v) if sum == *last { // unchanged. return false } *last = sum return true } var appenderToType = reflect.TypeOf((*appenderTo)(nil)).Elem() type appenderTo interface { AppendTo([]byte) []byte } func (h *hasher) hashUint8(i uint8) { h.bw.WriteByte(i) } func (h *hasher) hashUint16(i uint16) { binary.LittleEndian.PutUint16(h.scratch[:2], i) h.bw.Write(h.scratch[:2]) } func (h *hasher) hashUint32(i uint32) { binary.LittleEndian.PutUint32(h.scratch[:4], i) h.bw.Write(h.scratch[:4]) } func (h *hasher) hashUint64(i uint64) { binary.LittleEndian.PutUint64(h.scratch[:8], i) h.bw.Write(h.scratch[:8]) } var uint8Type = reflect.TypeOf(byte(0)) func (h *hasher) hashValue(v reflect.Value) { if !v.IsValid() { return } w := h.bw if v.CanInterface() { // Use AppendTo methods, if available and cheap. if v.CanAddr() && v.Type().Implements(appenderToType) { a := v.Addr().Interface().(appenderTo) size := h.scratch[:8] record := a.AppendTo(size) binary.LittleEndian.PutUint64(record, uint64(len(record)-len(size))) w.Write(record) return } } // TODO(dsnet): Avoid cycle detection for types that cannot have cycles. // Generic handling. switch v.Kind() { default: panic(fmt.Sprintf("unhandled kind %v for type %v", v.Kind(), v.Type())) case reflect.Ptr: if v.IsNil() { h.hashUint8(0) // indicates nil return } // Check for cycle. ptr := pointerOf(v) if idx, ok := h.visitStack.seen(ptr); ok { h.hashUint8(2) // indicates cycle h.hashUint64(uint64(idx)) return } h.visitStack.push(ptr) defer h.visitStack.pop(ptr) h.hashUint8(1) // indicates visiting a pointer h.hashValue(v.Elem()) case reflect.Struct: for i, n := 0, v.NumField(); i < n; i++ { h.hashValue(v.Field(i)) } case reflect.Slice, reflect.Array: vLen := v.Len() if v.Kind() == reflect.Slice { h.hashUint64(uint64(vLen)) } if v.Type().Elem() == uint8Type && v.CanInterface() { if vLen > 0 && vLen <= scratchSize { // If it fits in scratch, avoid the Interface allocation. // It seems tempting to do this for all sizes, doing // scratchSize bytes at a time, but reflect.Slice seems // to allocate, so it's not a win. n := reflect.Copy(reflect.ValueOf(&h.scratch).Elem(), v) w.Write(h.scratch[:n]) return } fmt.Fprintf(w, "%s", v.Interface()) return } for i := 0; i < vLen; i++ { // TODO(dsnet): Perform cycle detection for slices, // which is functionally a list of pointers. // See https://github.com/google/go-cmp/blob/402949e8139bb890c71a707b6faf6dd05c92f4e5/cmp/compare.go#L438-L450 h.hashValue(v.Index(i)) } case reflect.Interface: if v.IsNil() { h.hashUint8(0) // indicates nil return } v = v.Elem() h.hashUint8(1) // indicates visiting interface value h.hashType(v.Type()) h.hashValue(v) case reflect.Map: // Check for cycle. ptr := pointerOf(v) if idx, ok := h.visitStack.seen(ptr); ok { h.hashUint8(2) // indicates cycle h.hashUint64(uint64(idx)) return } h.visitStack.push(ptr) defer h.visitStack.pop(ptr) h.hashUint8(1) // indicates visiting a map h.hashMap(v) case reflect.String: s := v.String() h.hashUint64(uint64(len(s))) w.WriteString(s) case reflect.Bool: if v.Bool() { h.hashUint8(1) } else { h.hashUint8(0) } case reflect.Int8: h.hashUint8(uint8(v.Int())) case reflect.Int16: h.hashUint16(uint16(v.Int())) case reflect.Int32: h.hashUint32(uint32(v.Int())) case reflect.Int64, reflect.Int: h.hashUint64(uint64(v.Int())) case reflect.Uint8: h.hashUint8(uint8(v.Uint())) case reflect.Uint16: h.hashUint16(uint16(v.Uint())) case reflect.Uint32: h.hashUint32(uint32(v.Uint())) case reflect.Uint64, reflect.Uint, reflect.Uintptr: h.hashUint64(uint64(v.Uint())) case reflect.Float32: h.hashUint32(math.Float32bits(float32(v.Float()))) case reflect.Float64: h.hashUint64(math.Float64bits(float64(v.Float()))) case reflect.Complex64: h.hashUint32(math.Float32bits(real(complex64(v.Complex())))) h.hashUint32(math.Float32bits(imag(complex64(v.Complex())))) case reflect.Complex128: h.hashUint64(math.Float64bits(real(complex128(v.Complex())))) h.hashUint64(math.Float64bits(imag(complex128(v.Complex())))) } } type mapHasher struct { h hasher val valueCache // re-usable values for map iteration iter reflect.MapIter // re-usable map iterator } var mapHasherPool = &sync.Pool{ New: func() interface{} { return new(mapHasher) }, } type valueCache map[reflect.Type]reflect.Value func (c *valueCache) get(t reflect.Type) reflect.Value { v, ok := (*c)[t] if !ok { v = reflect.New(t).Elem() if *c == nil { *c = make(valueCache) } (*c)[t] = v } return v } // hashMap hashes a map in a sort-free manner. // It relies on a map being a functionally an unordered set of KV entries. // So long as we hash each KV entry together, we can XOR all // of the individual hashes to produce a unique hash for the entire map. func (h *hasher) hashMap(v reflect.Value) { mh := mapHasherPool.Get().(*mapHasher) defer mapHasherPool.Put(mh) iter := mapIter(&mh.iter, v) defer mapIter(&mh.iter, reflect.Value{}) // avoid pinning v from mh.iter when we return var sum Sum k := mh.val.get(v.Type().Key()) e := mh.val.get(v.Type().Elem()) mh.h.visitStack = h.visitStack // always use the parent's visit stack to avoid cycles for iter.Next() { key := iterKey(iter, k) val := iterVal(iter, e) mh.h.reset() mh.h.hashValue(key) mh.h.hashValue(val) sum.xor(mh.h.sum()) } h.bw.Write(append(h.scratch[:0], sum.sum[:]...)) // append into scratch to avoid heap allocation } // visitStack is a stack of pointers visited. // Pointers are pushed onto the stack when visited, and popped when leaving. // The integer value is the depth at which the pointer was visited. // The length of this stack should be zero after every hashing operation. type visitStack map[pointer]int func (v visitStack) seen(p pointer) (int, bool) { idx, ok := v[p] return idx, ok } func (v *visitStack) push(p pointer) { if *v == nil { *v = make(map[pointer]int) } (*v)[p] = len(*v) } func (v visitStack) pop(p pointer) { delete(v, p) } // pointer is a thin wrapper over unsafe.Pointer. // We only rely on comparability of pointers; we cannot rely on uintptr since // that would break if Go ever switched to a moving GC. type pointer struct{ p unsafe.Pointer } func pointerOf(v reflect.Value) pointer { return pointer{unsafe.Pointer(v.Pointer())} } // hashType hashes a reflect.Type. // The hash is only consistent within the lifetime of a program. func (h *hasher) hashType(t reflect.Type) { // This approach relies on reflect.Type always being backed by a unique // *reflect.rtype pointer. A safer approach is to use a global sync.Map // that maps reflect.Type to some arbitrary and unique index. // While safer, it requires global state with memory that can never be GC'd. rtypeAddr := reflect.ValueOf(t).Pointer() // address of *reflect.rtype h.hashUint64(uint64(rtypeAddr)) }