117

Is there a way to generate MD5 Hash string of type varchar(32) without using fn_varbintohexstr

SUBSTRING(master.dbo.fn_varbintohexstr(HashBytes('MD5', 'email@dot.com')), 3, 32)

So it could be used inside a view with SCHEMABINDING

Grief Coder
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  • See also https://stackoverflow.com/questions/35200452/compute-md5-hash-of-a-utf8-string/35289890#35289890 – Ben Oct 11 '17 at 20:34

9 Answers9

224
CONVERT(VARCHAR(32), HashBytes('MD5', 'email@dot.com'), 2)
Konstantin Tarkus
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74

Use HashBytes

SELECT HashBytes('MD5', 'email@dot.com')

That will give you 0xF53BD08920E5D25809DF2563EF9C52B6

-

SELECT CONVERT(NVARCHAR(32),HashBytes('MD5', 'email@dot.com'),2)

That will give you F53BD08920E5D25809DF2563EF9C52B6

SQLMenace
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20

Solution:

SUBSTRING(sys.fn_sqlvarbasetostr(HASHBYTES('MD5','your text')),3,32)
j0k
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Dellas
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18

None of the other answers worked for me. Note that SQL Server will give different results if you pass in a hard-coded string versus feed it from a column in your result set. Below is the magic that worked for me to give a perfect match between SQL Server and MySql

select LOWER(CONVERT(VARCHAR(32), HashBytes('MD5', CONVERT(varchar, EmailAddress)), 2)) from ...
jmacinnes
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    Using `LOWER()` is only necessary if it is case sensitive. – T.Coutlakis May 17 '14 at 19:42
  • The first conversion turns out to be important. This gives identical `MD5` Hash compared to `MD5()` function of `Postgresql`. I was wonder why the `MD5` hashs differs from `Python` and `Postgresql`. Thanks for the recipe.. – Ben Mar 24 '18 at 13:57
14

For data up to 8000 characters use:

CONVERT(VARCHAR(32), HashBytes('MD5', 'email@dot.com'), 2)

Demo

For binary data (without the limit of 8000 bytes) use:

CONVERT(VARCHAR(32), master.sys.fn_repl_hash_binary(@binary_data), 2)

Demo

slartidan
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5

try this:

select SUBSTRING(sys.fn_sqlvarbasetostr(HASHBYTES('MD5',  'email@dot.com' )),3,32) 
slartidan
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dellasavia
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1
SELECT CONVERT(
      VARCHAR(32),
      HASHBYTES(
                   'MD5',
                   CAST(prescrip.IsExpressExamRX AS VARCHAR(250))
                   + CAST(prescrip.[Description] AS VARCHAR(250))
               ),
      2
  ) MD5_Value;

works for me.

Dharman
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Gita
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1

You didn't explicitly say you wanted the string to be hex; if you are open to the more space efficient base 64 string encoding, and you are using SQL Server 2016 or later, here's an alternative:

select SubString(h, 1, 32) from OpenJson(
    (select HashBytes('MD5', 'email@dot.com') h for json path)
) with (h nvarchar(max));

This produces:

9TvQiSDl0lgJ3yVj75xStg==
N8allan
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0
declare @hash nvarchar(50)
--declare @hash varchar(50)

set @hash = '1111111-2;20190110143334;001'  -- result a5cd84bfc56e245bbf81210f05b7f65f
declare @value varbinary(max);
set @value = convert(varbinary(max),@hash);


select  
 SUBSTRING(sys.fn_sqlvarbasetostr(HASHBYTES('MD5', '1111111-2;20190110143334;001')),3,32) as 'OK'
,SUBSTRING(sys.fn_sqlvarbasetostr(HASHBYTES('MD5', @hash)),3,32) as 'ERROR_01'
,SUBSTRING(sys.fn_sqlvarbasetostr(HASHBYTES('MD5',convert(varbinary(max),@hash))),3,32) as 'ERROR_02'
,SUBSTRING(sys.fn_sqlvarbasetostr(sys.fn_repl_hash_binary(convert(varbinary(max),@hash))),3,32)
,SUBSTRING(sys.fn_sqlvarbasetostr(master.sys.fn_repl_hash_binary(@value)),3,32)
James L.
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