-Following hashes are predefined by default:
-
-* sha-256:sha256 -- standardized name; standard command in many OSes
- May be fast on hardware accelerated CPUs.
-* sha-512:sha512 -- standardized name; standard command in many OSes
- Faster on 64-bit CPUs than software sha-256.
-* skein-256:skein256 -- non-standardized name; out-of-box command in FreeBSD
- Faster than software sha-*/shake*.
-* skein-512:skein512 -- non-standardized name; out-of-box command in FreeBSD
- Faster on 64-bit CPUs than skein-256.
-* shake128:goshake128 -- standardized name; non-standard command
- Faster than software sha-*. Much faster on hardware.
-* shake256:goshake256 -- standardized name; non-standard command
- Same speed as sha-512 on 64-bit CPUs.
- Much faster on hardware.
-* streebog-256:streebog256sum -- non-standardized name; command is in contrib/
-* streebog-512:streebog512sum -- non-standardized name; command is in contrib/
-* blake3-256:b3sum -- non-standardized name; additional package in most OSes
- Fastest parallelizeable software hash
-
-SHA2 and SHA3 (SHAKE*) are USA's NIST standards. Streebog is Russian
-Federation's government standard. Skein is SHA3-finalist. BLAKE3 is
-reduced round Merklee-tree-based BLAKE2 descendant. BLAKE2 is reduced
-round BLAKE, that also was one of SHA3-finalists.
+meta4ra-hash utility can be used to hash the data with a single hash
+algorithm. It could be useful if you want to use the best found
+algorithm on current system, whatever it is.