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CKSUM(1) General Commands Manual CKSUM(1)

cksumdisplay file checksums and block counts

cksum [-bcpqrtx] [-a algorithms] [-C checklist] [-h hashfile] [-s string] [file ...]

The cksum utility writes to the standard output a single line for each input file. The format of this line varies with the algorithm being used as follows:

cksum
The output line consists of three whitespace separated fields: a CRC checksum, the number of octets in the input, and name of the file or string. If no file name is specified, the standard input is used and no file name is written.
all others
Unless the -r option is specified (see below), output lines consist of four whitespace separated fields: the name of the algorithm used, the name of the file or string in parentheses, an equals sign, and the cryptographic hash of the input. If no file name is specified, the standard input is used and only the cryptographic hash is output.

The options are as follows:

algorithms
Use the specified algorithm(s) instead of the default (cksum). Supported algorithms include cksum, md5, rmd160, sha1, sha224, sha256, sha384, sha512/256, and sha512. Multiple algorithms may be specified, separated by a comma or whitespace. Additionally, multiple -a options may be specified on the command line. Case is ignored when matching algorithms. The output format may be specified on a per-algorithm basis by using a single-character suffix, e.g. “sha256b”. If the algorithm has a ‘b’ suffix, the checksum will be output in base64 format. If the algorithm has an ‘x’ suffix, the checksum will be output in hex format. If an algorithm with the same output format is repeated, only the first instance is used. Note that output format suffixes are not supported for the cksum algorithm.
Output checksums in base64 notation, not hexadecimal by default. A ‘b’ or ‘x’ suffix on the algorithm will override this default. This option is ignored for the cksum algorithm.
checklist
Compare the checksum of each file against the checksums in the checklist. Any specified file that is not listed in the checklist will generate an error.
If this option is specified, the file options become checklists. Each checklist should contain hash results, which will be verified against the specified paths. Both normal (BSD) and reverse (GNU) forms are supported in either hexadecimal or base64 format. Output consists of the digest used, the file name, and an OK, FAILED, or MISSING for the result of the comparison. Entries in normal format can be validated using any of the supported checksums. Entries in reverse format are validated using the specified algorithm (or the default algorithm if none is specified). If no file is given, stdin is used. The -c option may not be used in conjunction with more than a single -a option.
hashfile
Place the checksum into hashfile instead of stdout.
Echo stdin to stdout and append the checksum to stdout.
Only print the checksum (quiet mode) or if used in conjunction with the -c flag, only print the failed cases.
Reverse the format of the hash algorithm output, similar to the checksum output format (but without the number of octets). This is also the format used by the GNU cksum utility.
string
Print a checksum of the given string.
Run a built-in time trial. Specifying -t multiple times results in the number of rounds being multiplied by 10 for each additional flag.
Run a built-in test script.

The default CRC used is based on the polynomial used for CRC error checking in the networking standard ISO/IEC 8802-3:1996. The other available algorithms are described in their respective man pages in section 3 of the manual.

The cksum utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.

md5(1)

The default calculation is identical to that given in pseudo-code in the following ACM article:

Dilip V. Sarwate, Computation of Cyclic Redundancy Checks Via Table Lookup, Communications of the ACM, August 1988.

The cksum utility is compliant with the IEEE Std 1003.1-2008 (“POSIX.1”) specification.

All the flags are extensions to that specification.

The cksum utility appeared in 4.3BSD-Net/2.

Do not use the cksum or md5 algorithms to verify file integrity. An attacker can trivially produce modified payload that has the same checksum as the original version. Use a cryptographic checksum instead.

October 31, 2023 OpenBSD-current