.TH B256SUM 1 blakesum .SH NAME b256sum - Compute and check BLAKE-256 message digests .SH SYNOPSIS .B b256sum [-S salt] [-c | -B | -L | -U] [-xz] .RI [ file "] ..." .SH DESCRIPTION Print or check BLAKE-256 checksums. .SH OPTIONS The .B b256sum utility conforms to the Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1-2017, .IR "Section 12.2" , .IR "Utility Syntax Guidelines" . .PP The following options are supported: .TP .B -B Output checksums in binary representation. This suppresses the filenames and checksum delimiters. Only the checksums are printed. .TP .B -c Read BLAKE-256 sums from the file and check them against the files on your systems. The input files files should be formatted as the output of this program, or similarly. This is not going to work if any of the filenames in the input files starts with or , or if they contain a , unless the .B -z option is also used. .TP .B -L Output checksums in lower-case hexadecimal representation. (Default) .TP .BI "-S " salt Specify a 16-byte salt that the BLAKE-256 algorithm shall use. This salt shall be expressed in full length hexadecimal: 32 hexadecimal digits, or rather 16 pairs of hexadecimal digits, ordered from left to right to specify the values from index 0 to the last byte. In each pair, the left digit stores the high bits of the byte, and the right digit stores the low bits of the byte. For example, the digit pair .B 80 represents a byte with the decimal value 128, whereas the digit pair .B 08 represents a byte with the decimal value 8. The pairs are joined without any delimiters, and no byte may be omitted. So, for a salt where each byte's value is its index, the salt is expressed as .BR 000102030405060708090a0b0c0d0e0f , however each letter may be either small or capital. If no salt is specified, an all-zeroes salt is used. .TP .B -U Output checksums in upper-case hexadecimal representation. .TP .B -x Convert input files from hexadecimal form to binary form before calculating the checksums. .TP .B -z Lines end with NUL instead of LF. If used with .BR -c , this applies to read files (not the output), but it will also apply more strict parsing and allow any whitespace in file names. .SH OPERANDS The following operands are supported: .TP .I file File to read. The standard input will be used .B - or no .I file is specified. .SH EXIT STATUS .TP 0 Successful completion. .TP 1 Checksums did not match or a file did not exist. .TP 2 An error occurred. .SH SEE ALSO .BR bsum (1), .BR b2sum (1), .BR b224sum (1), .BR b384sum (1), .BR b512sum (1)