The Google App Script function computeDigest returns a byte array of the signature. How can I get the string representation of the digest?
I have already tried the bin2String() function.
function sign(){
var signature = Utilities.computeDigest(Utilities.DigestAlgorithm.MD5, "thisisteststring")
Logger.log(bin2String(signature));
}
function bin2String(array) {
var result = "";
for (var i = 0; i < array.length; i++) {
result += String.fromCharCode(parseInt(array[i], 2));
}
return result;
}
but it puts "" in the Logs
If we put Logger.log(signature);
right after the call to computeDigest()
, we get:
[8, 30, -43, 124, -101, 114, -37, 10, 78, -13, -102, 51, 65, -24, -83, 81]
As represented in javascript, the digest includes both positive and negative integers, so we can't simply treat them as ascii characters. The MD5 algorithm, however, should provide us with 8-bit values, in the range 0x00 to 0xFF (255). Those negative values, then, are just a misinterpretation of the high-order bit; taking it to be a sign bit. To correct, we need to add 256 to any negative value.
How to convert decimal to hex in JavaScript? gives us this for retrieving hex characters:
hexString = yourNumber.toString(16);
Putting that together, here's your sign()
function, which is also available as a gist:
function sign(message){
message = message || "thisisteststring";
var signature = Utilities.computeDigest(
Utilities.DigestAlgorithm.MD5,
message,
Utilities.Charset.US_ASCII);
Logger.log(signature);
var signatureStr = '';
for (i = 0; i < signature.length; i++) {
var byte = signature[i];
if (byte < 0)
byte += 256;
var byteStr = byte.toString(16);
// Ensure we have 2 chars in our byte, pad with 0
if (byteStr.length == 1) byteStr = '0'+byteStr;
signatureStr += byteStr;
}
Logger.log(signatureStr);
return signatureStr;
}
And here's what the logs contain:
[13-04-25 21:46:55:787 EDT] [8, 30, -43, 124, -101, 114, -37, 10, 78, -13, -102, 51, 65, -24, -83, 81]
[13-04-25 21:46:55:788 EDT] 081ed57c9b72db0a4ef39a3341e8ad51
Let's see what we get from this on-line MD5 Hash Generator:
I tried it with a few other strings, and they consistently matched the result from the on-line generator.
Just in case this is helpful to anyone else, I've put together a more succinct version of Mogsdad's solution:
function md5(str) {
return Utilities.computeDigest(Utilities.DigestAlgorithm.MD5, str).reduce(function(str,chr){
chr = (chr < 0 ? chr + 256 : chr).toString(16);
return str + (chr.length==1?'0':'') + chr;
},'');
}
One-liner:
Utilities.computeDigest(Utilities.DigestAlgorithm.MD5, "teststring")
.map(function(b) {return ("0" + (b < 0 && b + 256 || b).toString(16)).substr(-2)})
.join("")
Did somebody say succinct? (/fulldecent arrives to party with the drinking hat, including straws, after everyone else already passed out)
Utilities.computeDigest(Utilities.DigestAlgorithm.MD5, "thisisteststring")
.map(function(chr){return (chr+256).toString(16).slice(-2)})
.join('')
Here is an easy way to transform a Byte[] into a String.
Found this in the documentation provided by Google here : https://developers.google.com/apps-script/reference/utilities/utilities#base64Decode(String)
Utilities.newBlob(myByteArray).getDataAsString();
Better late than never. (And since this topic still comes first when searching this topic in Goole, this might help some folks).
From this post:
function string2Bin(str) {
var result = [];
for (var i = 0; i < str.length; i++) {
result.push(str.charCodeAt(i).toString(2));
}
return result;
}