I want to compare hashes of two files. But no matter if files are different or not, even with different hashes comparison results True
Here is the code:
import hashlib
hasher1 = hashlib.md5()
afile1 = open('canvas.png', 'rb')
buf1 = afile1.read()
a = hasher1.update(buf1)
print(str(hasher1.hexdigest()))
hasher2 = hashlib.md5()
afile2 = open('img5.png', 'rb')
buf2 = afile2.read()
b = hasher2.update(buf2)
print(str(hasher2.hexdigest()))
print(str(a) == str(b))
The output:
614c9853a7f62c5b60d7d15bde80708f
76dc116b2c1b19b265db5e657846e649
True
Process finished with exit code 0
As a general rule Python methods follow the principle of command-query separation -- so that methods that modify the object (i.e. commands) return None
. This includes,
for example, list.sort
, and dict.update
. It is also true of the hasher1.update
method. So
a = hasher1.update(buf1)
assigns None
to a
. Instead, use
hasher1.update(buf1)
a = hasher1.hexdigest()
and similarly for b
.
import hashlib
digests = []
for filename in ['canvas.png', 'img5.png']:
hasher = hashlib.md5()
with open(filename, 'rb') as f:
buf = f.read()
hasher.update(buf)
a = hasher.hexdigest()
digests.append(a)
print(a)
print(digests[0] == digests[1])