diff mbox series

[v5,10/12] Add a base implementation of SHA-256 support

Message ID 20181104234458.139223-11-sandals@crustytoothpaste.net (mailing list archive)
State New, archived
Headers show
Series Base SHA-256 implementation | expand

Commit Message

brian m. carlson Nov. 4, 2018, 11:44 p.m. UTC
SHA-1 is weak and we need to transition to a new hash function.  For
some time, we have referred to this new function as NewHash.  Recently,
we decided to pick SHA-256 as NewHash.  The reasons behind the choice of
SHA-256 are outlined in the thread starting at [1] and in the commit
history for the hash function transition document.

Add a basic implementation of SHA-256 based off libtomcrypt, which is in
the public domain.  Optimize it and restructure it to meet our coding
standards.  Pull in the update and final functions from the SHA-1 block
implementation, as we know these function correctly with all compilers.
This implementation is slower than SHA-1, but more performant
implementations will be introduced in future commits.

Wire up SHA-256 in the list of hash algorithms, and add a test that the
algorithm works correctly.

Note that with this patch, it is still not possible to switch to using
SHA-256 in Git.  Additional patches are needed to prepare the code to
handle a larger hash algorithm and further test fixes are needed.

[1] https://public-inbox.org/git/20180609224913.GC38834@genre.crustytoothpaste.net/

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
---
 Makefile               |   4 +
 cache.h                |  12 ++-
 hash.h                 |  19 +++-
 sha1-file.c            |  45 ++++++++++
 sha256/block/sha256.c  | 196 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 sha256/block/sha256.h  |  26 ++++++
 t/helper/test-sha256.c |   7 ++
 t/helper/test-tool.c   |   1 +
 t/helper/test-tool.h   |   1 +
 t/t0015-hash.sh        |  25 ++++++
 10 files changed, 332 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)
 create mode 100644 sha256/block/sha256.c
 create mode 100644 sha256/block/sha256.h
 create mode 100644 t/helper/test-sha256.c

Comments

Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason Nov. 5, 2018, 11:39 a.m. UTC | #1
On Sun, Nov 04 2018, brian m. carlson wrote:

> SHA-1 is weak and we need to transition to a new hash function.  For
> some time, we have referred to this new function as NewHash.  Recently,
> we decided to pick SHA-256 as NewHash.  The reasons behind the choice of
> SHA-256 are outlined in the thread starting at [1] and in the commit
> history for the hash function transition document.

Nit: In some contradiction now to what's said in
hash-function-transition.txt, see 5988eb631a ("doc
hash-function-transition: clarify what SHAttered means", 2018-03-26).

> +	{
> +		"sha256",
> +		/* "s256", big-endian */

The existing entry/comment for sha1 is:

		"sha1",
		/* "sha1", big-endian */

So why the sha256/s256 difference in the code/comment? Wondering if I'm
missing something and we're using "s256" for something.

>  const char *empty_tree_oid_hex(void)
> diff --git a/sha256/block/sha256.c b/sha256/block/sha256.c
> [...]

I had a question before about whether we see ourselves perma-forking
this implementation based off libtomcrypt, as I recall you said yes.

Still, I think it would be better to introduce this in at least two-four
commits where the upstream code is added as-is, then trimmed down to
size, then adapted to our coding style, and finally we add our own
utility functions.

It'll make it easier to forward-port any future upstream changes.

> +	perl -E "for (1..100000) { print q{aaaaaaaaaa}; }" | \
> +		test-tool sha256 >actual &&
> +	grep cdc76e5c9914fb9281a1c7e284d73e67f1809a48a497200e046d39ccc7112cd0 actual &&
> +	perl -E "for (1..100000) { print q{abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz}; }" | \
> +		test-tool sha256 >actual &&

I've been wanting to make use depend on perl >= 5.10 (previous noises
about that on-list), but for now we claim to support >=5.8, which
doesn't have the -E switch.

But most importantly you aren't even using -E features here, and this
isn't very idoimatic Perl. Instead do, respectively:

    perl -e 'print q{aaaaaaaaaa} x 100000'
    perl -e "print q{abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz} x 100000"
brian m. carlson Nov. 7, 2018, 1:30 a.m. UTC | #2
On Mon, Nov 05, 2018 at 12:39:14PM +0100, Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason wrote:
> On Sun, Nov 04 2018, brian m. carlson wrote:
> > +	{
> > +		"sha256",
> > +		/* "s256", big-endian */
> 
> The existing entry/comment for sha1 is:
> 
> 		"sha1",
> 		/* "sha1", big-endian */
> 
> So why the sha256/s256 difference in the code/comment? Wondering if I'm
> missing something and we're using "s256" for something.

Ah, good question.  The comment refers to the format_id field which
follows this comment.  The value is the big-endian representation of
"s256" as a 32-bit value.  I picked that over "sha2" to avoid confusion
in case we add SHA-512 in the future, since that's also an SHA-2
algorithm.

Config files and command-line interfaces will use "sha1" or "sha256",
and binary formats will use those 32-bit values ("sha1" or "s256").

> >  const char *empty_tree_oid_hex(void)
> > diff --git a/sha256/block/sha256.c b/sha256/block/sha256.c
> > [...]
> 
> I had a question before about whether we see ourselves perma-forking
> this implementation based off libtomcrypt, as I recall you said yes.

Yes.

> Still, I think it would be better to introduce this in at least two-four
> commits where the upstream code is added as-is, then trimmed down to
> size, then adapted to our coding style, and finally we add our own
> utility functions.

At this point, the only code that's actually used from libtomcrypt is
the block transform.  The upstream code is split over multiple files in
multiple directories and won't compile in our codebase without many
files and a lot of work, so I don't feel good about either including
code that doesn't compile or including large numbers of files that don't
meet our coding standards (and that may still not compile because of
platform issues).

> It'll make it easier to forward-port any future upstream changes.

I don't foresee many, if any, changes to this code.  It either
implements the specification or it doesn't, and it's objectively easy to
determine which.  There's not even an argument to port performance
improvements, since almost everyone will be using a crypto library to
provide this code because libraries perform so dramatically better.
I've tried to not make the code perform worse than it did originally,
but that's it.

Furthermore, the modified code carries a relatively small amount of
resemblance to the original, so if we did port changes forward, we'd
probably have conflicts.

It seems like you really want to include the upstream code as a separate
commit and I understand where you're coming from with wanting to have
this split out into logical commits, but due to the specific nature of
this code, I see a lot of downsides and not a lot of upsides.

> > +	perl -E "for (1..100000) { print q{aaaaaaaaaa}; }" | \
> > +		test-tool sha256 >actual &&
> > +	grep cdc76e5c9914fb9281a1c7e284d73e67f1809a48a497200e046d39ccc7112cd0 actual &&
> > +	perl -E "for (1..100000) { print q{abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz}; }" | \
> > +		test-tool sha256 >actual &&
> 
> I've been wanting to make use depend on perl >= 5.10 (previous noises
> about that on-list), but for now we claim to support >=5.8, which
> doesn't have the -E switch.

Good point.  I'll fix that.  After having written a lot of one-liners,
I always write -E, and this was originally a one-liner.

> But most importantly you aren't even using -E features here, and this
> isn't very idoimatic Perl. Instead do, respectively:
> 
>     perl -e 'print q{aaaaaaaaaa} x 100000'
>     perl -e "print q{abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz} x 100000"

I considered the more idiomatic version originally, but the latter could
allocate a decent amount of memory in one chunk, and I wanted to avoid
that.  I think what I'd like to do, actually, is turn on autoflush and
use a postfix for, which would be more idiomatic and could potentially
provide better testing of the chunking code.  I'll add a comment to that
effect.
Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason Nov. 10, 2018, 3:52 p.m. UTC | #3
On Wed, Nov 07 2018, brian m. carlson wrote:

> On Mon, Nov 05, 2018 at 12:39:14PM +0100, Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason wrote:
>> On Sun, Nov 04 2018, brian m. carlson wrote:
>> > +	{
>> > +		"sha256",
>> > +		/* "s256", big-endian */
>>
>> The existing entry/comment for sha1 is:
>>
>> 		"sha1",
>> 		/* "sha1", big-endian */
>>
>> So why the sha256/s256 difference in the code/comment? Wondering if I'm
>> missing something and we're using "s256" for something.
>
> Ah, good question.  The comment refers to the format_id field which
> follows this comment.  The value is the big-endian representation of
> "s256" as a 32-bit value.  I picked that over "sha2" to avoid confusion
> in case we add SHA-512 in the future, since that's also an SHA-2
> algorithm.
>
> Config files and command-line interfaces will use "sha1" or "sha256",
> and binary formats will use those 32-bit values ("sha1" or "s256").

Okey.

>> >  const char *empty_tree_oid_hex(void)
>> > diff --git a/sha256/block/sha256.c b/sha256/block/sha256.c
>> > [...]
>>
>> I had a question before about whether we see ourselves perma-forking
>> this implementation based off libtomcrypt, as I recall you said yes.
>
> Yes.
>
>> Still, I think it would be better to introduce this in at least two-four
>> commits where the upstream code is added as-is, then trimmed down to
>> size, then adapted to our coding style, and finally we add our own
>> utility functions.
>
> At this point, the only code that's actually used from libtomcrypt is
> the block transform.  The upstream code is split over multiple files in
> multiple directories and won't compile in our codebase without many
> files and a lot of work, so I don't feel good about either including
> code that doesn't compile or including large numbers of files that don't
> meet our coding standards (and that may still not compile because of
> platform issues).
>
>> It'll make it easier to forward-port any future upstream changes.
>
> I don't foresee many, if any, changes to this code.  It either
> implements the specification or it doesn't, and it's objectively easy to
> determine which.  There's not even an argument to port performance
> improvements, since almost everyone will be using a crypto library to
> provide this code because libraries perform so dramatically better.
> I've tried to not make the code perform worse than it did originally,
> but that's it.
>
> Furthermore, the modified code carries a relatively small amount of
> resemblance to the original, so if we did port changes forward, we'd
> probably have conflicts.
>
> It seems like you really want to include the upstream code as a separate
> commit and I understand where you're coming from with wanting to have
> this split out into logical commits, but due to the specific nature of
> this code, I see a lot of downsides and not a lot of upsides.

Yeah sorry to keep bringing this up. Your way makes sense, and I'd
forgotten the details since last time . I'll shut up about it:)

>> > +	perl -E "for (1..100000) { print q{aaaaaaaaaa}; }" | \
>> > +		test-tool sha256 >actual &&
>> > +	grep cdc76e5c9914fb9281a1c7e284d73e67f1809a48a497200e046d39ccc7112cd0 actual &&
>> > +	perl -E "for (1..100000) { print q{abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz}; }" | \
>> > +		test-tool sha256 >actual &&
>>
>> I've been wanting to make use depend on perl >= 5.10 (previous noises
>> about that on-list), but for now we claim to support >=5.8, which
>> doesn't have the -E switch.
>
> Good point.  I'll fix that.  After having written a lot of one-liners,
> I always write -E, and this was originally a one-liner.
>
>> But most importantly you aren't even using -E features here, and this
>> isn't very idoimatic Perl. Instead do, respectively:
>>
>>     perl -e 'print q{aaaaaaaaaa} x 100000'
>>     perl -e "print q{abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz} x 100000"
>
> I considered the more idiomatic version originally, but the latter could
> allocate a decent amount of memory in one chunk, and I wanted to avoid
> that.

~2.5MB for the latter, so trivial.

> I think what I'd like to do, actually, is turn on autoflush and
> use a postfix for, which would be more idiomatic and could potentially
> provide better testing of the chunking code.  I'll add a comment to that
> effect.

Okey. Maybe better to use syswrite() instead, or maybe print with
autoflush is more idiomatic, I don't know.
diff mbox series

Patch

diff --git a/Makefile b/Makefile
index 68169a7abb..e99b7712f6 100644
--- a/Makefile
+++ b/Makefile
@@ -739,6 +739,7 @@  TEST_BUILTINS_OBJS += test-run-command.o
 TEST_BUILTINS_OBJS += test-scrap-cache-tree.o
 TEST_BUILTINS_OBJS += test-sha1.o
 TEST_BUILTINS_OBJS += test-sha1-array.o
+TEST_BUILTINS_OBJS += test-sha256.o
 TEST_BUILTINS_OBJS += test-sigchain.o
 TEST_BUILTINS_OBJS += test-strcmp-offset.o
 TEST_BUILTINS_OBJS += test-string-list.o
@@ -1633,6 +1634,9 @@  endif
 endif
 endif
 
+LIB_OBJS += sha256/block/sha256.o
+BASIC_CFLAGS += -DSHA256_BLK
+
 ifdef SHA1_MAX_BLOCK_SIZE
 	LIB_OBJS += compat/sha1-chunked.o
 	BASIC_CFLAGS += -DSHA1_MAX_BLOCK_SIZE="$(SHA1_MAX_BLOCK_SIZE)"
diff --git a/cache.h b/cache.h
index 9e5d1dd85a..48ce1565e6 100644
--- a/cache.h
+++ b/cache.h
@@ -48,11 +48,17 @@  unsigned long git_deflate_bound(git_zstream *, unsigned long);
 /* The block size of SHA-1. */
 #define GIT_SHA1_BLKSZ 64
 
+/* The length in bytes and in hex digits of an object name (SHA-256 value). */
+#define GIT_SHA256_RAWSZ 32
+#define GIT_SHA256_HEXSZ (2 * GIT_SHA256_RAWSZ)
+/* The block size of SHA-256. */
+#define GIT_SHA256_BLKSZ 64
+
 /* The length in byte and in hex digits of the largest possible hash value. */
-#define GIT_MAX_RAWSZ GIT_SHA1_RAWSZ
-#define GIT_MAX_HEXSZ GIT_SHA1_HEXSZ
+#define GIT_MAX_RAWSZ GIT_SHA256_RAWSZ
+#define GIT_MAX_HEXSZ GIT_SHA256_HEXSZ
 /* The largest possible block size for any supported hash. */
-#define GIT_MAX_BLKSZ GIT_SHA1_BLKSZ
+#define GIT_MAX_BLKSZ GIT_SHA256_BLKSZ
 
 struct object_id {
 	unsigned char hash[GIT_MAX_RAWSZ];
diff --git a/hash.h b/hash.h
index 1bcf7ab6fd..a9bc624020 100644
--- a/hash.h
+++ b/hash.h
@@ -15,6 +15,8 @@ 
 #include "block-sha1/sha1.h"
 #endif
 
+#include "sha256/block/sha256.h"
+
 #ifndef platform_SHA_CTX
 /*
  * platform's underlying implementation of SHA-1; could be OpenSSL,
@@ -34,6 +36,18 @@ 
 #define git_SHA1_Update		platform_SHA1_Update
 #define git_SHA1_Final		platform_SHA1_Final
 
+#ifndef platform_SHA256_CTX
+#define platform_SHA256_CTX	SHA256_CTX
+#define platform_SHA256_Init	SHA256_Init
+#define platform_SHA256_Update	SHA256_Update
+#define platform_SHA256_Final	SHA256_Final
+#endif
+
+#define git_SHA256_CTX		platform_SHA256_CTX
+#define git_SHA256_Init		platform_SHA256_Init
+#define git_SHA256_Update	platform_SHA256_Update
+#define git_SHA256_Final	platform_SHA256_Final
+
 #ifdef SHA1_MAX_BLOCK_SIZE
 #include "compat/sha1-chunked.h"
 #undef git_SHA1_Update
@@ -52,12 +66,15 @@ 
 #define GIT_HASH_UNKNOWN 0
 /* SHA-1 */
 #define GIT_HASH_SHA1 1
+/* SHA-256  */
+#define GIT_HASH_SHA256 2
 /* Number of algorithms supported (including unknown). */
-#define GIT_HASH_NALGOS (GIT_HASH_SHA1 + 1)
+#define GIT_HASH_NALGOS (GIT_HASH_SHA256 + 1)
 
 /* A suitably aligned type for stack allocations of hash contexts. */
 union git_hash_ctx {
 	git_SHA_CTX sha1;
+	git_SHA256_CTX sha256;
 };
 typedef union git_hash_ctx git_hash_ctx;
 
diff --git a/sha1-file.c b/sha1-file.c
index 9bdd04ea45..c97d93a14a 100644
--- a/sha1-file.c
+++ b/sha1-file.c
@@ -40,10 +40,20 @@ 
 #define EMPTY_TREE_SHA1_BIN_LITERAL \
 	 "\x4b\x82\x5d\xc6\x42\xcb\x6e\xb9\xa0\x60" \
 	 "\xe5\x4b\xf8\xd6\x92\x88\xfb\xee\x49\x04"
+#define EMPTY_TREE_SHA256_BIN_LITERAL \
+	"\x6e\xf1\x9b\x41\x22\x5c\x53\x69\xf1\xc1" \
+	"\x04\xd4\x5d\x8d\x85\xef\xa9\xb0\x57\xb5" \
+	"\x3b\x14\xb4\xb9\xb9\x39\xdd\x74\xde\xcc" \
+	"\x53\x21"
 
 #define EMPTY_BLOB_SHA1_BIN_LITERAL \
 	"\xe6\x9d\xe2\x9b\xb2\xd1\xd6\x43\x4b\x8b" \
 	"\x29\xae\x77\x5a\xd8\xc2\xe4\x8c\x53\x91"
+#define EMPTY_BLOB_SHA256_BIN_LITERAL \
+	"\x47\x3a\x0f\x4c\x3b\xe8\xa9\x36\x81\xa2" \
+	"\x67\xe3\xb1\xe9\xa7\xdc\xda\x11\x85\x43" \
+	"\x6f\xe1\x41\xf7\x74\x91\x20\xa3\x03\x72" \
+	"\x18\x13"
 
 const unsigned char null_sha1[GIT_MAX_RAWSZ];
 const struct object_id null_oid;
@@ -53,6 +63,12 @@  static const struct object_id empty_tree_oid = {
 static const struct object_id empty_blob_oid = {
 	EMPTY_BLOB_SHA1_BIN_LITERAL
 };
+static const struct object_id empty_tree_oid_sha256 = {
+	EMPTY_TREE_SHA256_BIN_LITERAL
+};
+static const struct object_id empty_blob_oid_sha256 = {
+	EMPTY_BLOB_SHA256_BIN_LITERAL
+};
 
 static void git_hash_sha1_init(git_hash_ctx *ctx)
 {
@@ -69,6 +85,22 @@  static void git_hash_sha1_final(unsigned char *hash, git_hash_ctx *ctx)
 	git_SHA1_Final(hash, &ctx->sha1);
 }
 
+
+static void git_hash_sha256_init(git_hash_ctx *ctx)
+{
+	git_SHA256_Init(&ctx->sha256);
+}
+
+static void git_hash_sha256_update(git_hash_ctx *ctx, const void *data, size_t len)
+{
+	git_SHA256_Update(&ctx->sha256, data, len);
+}
+
+static void git_hash_sha256_final(unsigned char *hash, git_hash_ctx *ctx)
+{
+	git_SHA256_Final(hash, &ctx->sha256);
+}
+
 static void git_hash_unknown_init(git_hash_ctx *ctx)
 {
 	BUG("trying to init unknown hash");
@@ -110,6 +142,19 @@  const struct git_hash_algo hash_algos[GIT_HASH_NALGOS] = {
 		&empty_tree_oid,
 		&empty_blob_oid,
 	},
+	{
+		"sha256",
+		/* "s256", big-endian */
+		0x73323536,
+		GIT_SHA256_RAWSZ,
+		GIT_SHA256_HEXSZ,
+		GIT_SHA256_BLKSZ,
+		git_hash_sha256_init,
+		git_hash_sha256_update,
+		git_hash_sha256_final,
+		&empty_tree_oid_sha256,
+		&empty_blob_oid_sha256,
+	}
 };
 
 const char *empty_tree_oid_hex(void)
diff --git a/sha256/block/sha256.c b/sha256/block/sha256.c
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..37850b4e52
--- /dev/null
+++ b/sha256/block/sha256.c
@@ -0,0 +1,196 @@ 
+#include "git-compat-util.h"
+#include "./sha256.h"
+
+#undef RND
+#undef BLKSIZE
+
+#define BLKSIZE blk_SHA256_BLKSIZE
+
+void blk_SHA256_Init(blk_SHA256_CTX *ctx)
+{
+	ctx->offset = 0;
+	ctx->size = 0;
+	ctx->state[0] = 0x6a09e667ul;
+	ctx->state[1] = 0xbb67ae85ul;
+	ctx->state[2] = 0x3c6ef372ul;
+	ctx->state[3] = 0xa54ff53aul;
+	ctx->state[4] = 0x510e527ful;
+	ctx->state[5] = 0x9b05688cul;
+	ctx->state[6] = 0x1f83d9abul;
+	ctx->state[7] = 0x5be0cd19ul;
+}
+
+static inline uint32_t ror(uint32_t x, unsigned n)
+{
+	return (x >> n) | (x << (32 - n));
+}
+
+static inline uint32_t ch(uint32_t x, uint32_t y, uint32_t z)
+{
+	return z ^ (x & (y ^ z));
+}
+
+static inline uint32_t maj(uint32_t x, uint32_t y, uint32_t z)
+{
+	return ((x | y) & z) | (x & y);
+}
+
+static inline uint32_t sigma0(uint32_t x)
+{
+	return ror(x, 2) ^ ror(x, 13) ^ ror(x, 22);
+}
+
+static inline uint32_t sigma1(uint32_t x)
+{
+	return ror(x, 6) ^ ror(x, 11) ^ ror(x, 25);
+}
+
+static inline uint32_t gamma0(uint32_t x)
+{
+	return ror(x, 7) ^ ror(x, 18) ^ (x >> 3);
+}
+
+static inline uint32_t gamma1(uint32_t x)
+{
+	return ror(x, 17) ^ ror(x, 19) ^ (x >> 10);
+}
+
+static void blk_SHA256_Transform(blk_SHA256_CTX *ctx, const unsigned char *buf)
+{
+
+	uint32_t S[8], W[64], t0, t1;
+	int i;
+
+	/* copy state into S */
+	for (i = 0; i < 8; i++)
+		S[i] = ctx->state[i];
+
+	/* copy the state into 512-bits into W[0..15] */
+	for (i = 0; i < 16; i++, buf += sizeof(uint32_t))
+		W[i] = get_be32(buf);
+
+	/* fill W[16..63] */
+	for (i = 16; i < 64; i++)
+		W[i] = gamma1(W[i - 2]) + W[i - 7] + gamma0(W[i - 15]) + W[i - 16];
+
+#define RND(a,b,c,d,e,f,g,h,i,ki)                    \
+	t0 = h + sigma1(e) + ch(e, f, g) + ki + W[i];   \
+	t1 = sigma0(a) + maj(a, b, c);                  \
+	d += t0;                                        \
+	h  = t0 + t1;
+
+	RND(S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],0,0x428a2f98);
+	RND(S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],1,0x71374491);
+	RND(S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],2,0xb5c0fbcf);
+	RND(S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],3,0xe9b5dba5);
+	RND(S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],4,0x3956c25b);
+	RND(S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],5,0x59f111f1);
+	RND(S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],6,0x923f82a4);
+	RND(S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],7,0xab1c5ed5);
+	RND(S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],8,0xd807aa98);
+	RND(S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],9,0x12835b01);
+	RND(S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],10,0x243185be);
+	RND(S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],11,0x550c7dc3);
+	RND(S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],12,0x72be5d74);
+	RND(S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],13,0x80deb1fe);
+	RND(S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],14,0x9bdc06a7);
+	RND(S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],15,0xc19bf174);
+	RND(S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],16,0xe49b69c1);
+	RND(S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],17,0xefbe4786);
+	RND(S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],18,0x0fc19dc6);
+	RND(S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],19,0x240ca1cc);
+	RND(S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],20,0x2de92c6f);
+	RND(S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],21,0x4a7484aa);
+	RND(S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],22,0x5cb0a9dc);
+	RND(S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],23,0x76f988da);
+	RND(S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],24,0x983e5152);
+	RND(S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],25,0xa831c66d);
+	RND(S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],26,0xb00327c8);
+	RND(S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],27,0xbf597fc7);
+	RND(S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],28,0xc6e00bf3);
+	RND(S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],29,0xd5a79147);
+	RND(S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],30,0x06ca6351);
+	RND(S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],31,0x14292967);
+	RND(S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],32,0x27b70a85);
+	RND(S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],33,0x2e1b2138);
+	RND(S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],34,0x4d2c6dfc);
+	RND(S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],35,0x53380d13);
+	RND(S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],36,0x650a7354);
+	RND(S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],37,0x766a0abb);
+	RND(S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],38,0x81c2c92e);
+	RND(S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],39,0x92722c85);
+	RND(S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],40,0xa2bfe8a1);
+	RND(S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],41,0xa81a664b);
+	RND(S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],42,0xc24b8b70);
+	RND(S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],43,0xc76c51a3);
+	RND(S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],44,0xd192e819);
+	RND(S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],45,0xd6990624);
+	RND(S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],46,0xf40e3585);
+	RND(S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],47,0x106aa070);
+	RND(S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],48,0x19a4c116);
+	RND(S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],49,0x1e376c08);
+	RND(S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],50,0x2748774c);
+	RND(S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],51,0x34b0bcb5);
+	RND(S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],52,0x391c0cb3);
+	RND(S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],53,0x4ed8aa4a);
+	RND(S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],54,0x5b9cca4f);
+	RND(S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],55,0x682e6ff3);
+	RND(S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],56,0x748f82ee);
+	RND(S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],57,0x78a5636f);
+	RND(S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],58,0x84c87814);
+	RND(S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],59,0x8cc70208);
+	RND(S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],S[3],60,0x90befffa);
+	RND(S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],S[2],61,0xa4506ceb);
+	RND(S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],S[1],62,0xbef9a3f7);
+	RND(S[1],S[2],S[3],S[4],S[5],S[6],S[7],S[0],63,0xc67178f2);
+
+	for (i = 0; i < 8; i++)
+		ctx->state[i] += S[i];
+}
+
+void blk_SHA256_Update(blk_SHA256_CTX *ctx, const void *data, size_t len)
+{
+	unsigned int len_buf = ctx->size & 63;
+
+	ctx->size += len;
+
+	/* Read the data into buf and process blocks as they get full */
+	if (len_buf) {
+		unsigned int left = 64 - len_buf;
+		if (len < left)
+			left = len;
+		memcpy(len_buf + ctx->buf, data, left);
+		len_buf = (len_buf + left) & 63;
+		len -= left;
+		data = ((const char *)data + left);
+		if (len_buf)
+			return;
+		blk_SHA256_Transform(ctx, ctx->buf);
+	}
+	while (len >= 64) {
+		blk_SHA256_Transform(ctx, data);
+		data = ((const char *)data + 64);
+		len -= 64;
+	}
+	if (len)
+		memcpy(ctx->buf, data, len);
+}
+
+void blk_SHA256_Final(unsigned char *digest, blk_SHA256_CTX *ctx)
+{
+	static const unsigned char pad[64] = { 0x80 };
+	unsigned int padlen[2];
+	int i;
+
+	/* Pad with a binary 1 (ie 0x80), then zeroes, then length */
+	padlen[0] = htonl((uint32_t)(ctx->size >> 29));
+	padlen[1] = htonl((uint32_t)(ctx->size << 3));
+
+	i = ctx->size & 63;
+	blk_SHA256_Update(ctx, pad, 1 + (63 & (55 - i)));
+	blk_SHA256_Update(ctx, padlen, 8);
+
+	/* copy output */
+	for (i = 0; i < 8; i++, digest += sizeof(uint32_t))
+		put_be32(digest, ctx->state[i]);
+}
diff --git a/sha256/block/sha256.h b/sha256/block/sha256.h
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..38f02f7e6c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/sha256/block/sha256.h
@@ -0,0 +1,26 @@ 
+#ifndef SHA256_BLOCK_SHA256_H
+#define SHA256_BLOCK_SHA256_H
+
+#include "git-compat-util.h"
+
+#define blk_SHA256_BLKSIZE 64
+
+struct blk_SHA256_CTX {
+	uint32_t state[8];
+	uint64_t size;
+	uint32_t offset;
+	uint8_t buf[blk_SHA256_BLKSIZE];
+};
+
+typedef struct blk_SHA256_CTX blk_SHA256_CTX;
+
+void blk_SHA256_Init(blk_SHA256_CTX *ctx);
+void blk_SHA256_Update(blk_SHA256_CTX *ctx, const void *data, size_t len);
+void blk_SHA256_Final(unsigned char *digest, blk_SHA256_CTX *ctx);
+
+#define platform_SHA256_CTX blk_SHA256_CTX
+#define platform_SHA256_Init blk_SHA256_Init
+#define platform_SHA256_Update blk_SHA256_Update
+#define platform_SHA256_Final blk_SHA256_Final
+
+#endif
diff --git a/t/helper/test-sha256.c b/t/helper/test-sha256.c
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..0ac6a99d5f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/t/helper/test-sha256.c
@@ -0,0 +1,7 @@ 
+#include "test-tool.h"
+#include "cache.h"
+
+int cmd__sha256(int ac, const char **av)
+{
+	return cmd_hash_impl(ac, av, GIT_HASH_SHA256);
+}
diff --git a/t/helper/test-tool.c b/t/helper/test-tool.c
index e009c8186d..2a65193514 100644
--- a/t/helper/test-tool.c
+++ b/t/helper/test-tool.c
@@ -43,6 +43,7 @@  static struct test_cmd cmds[] = {
 	{ "scrap-cache-tree", cmd__scrap_cache_tree },
 	{ "sha1", cmd__sha1 },
 	{ "sha1-array", cmd__sha1_array },
+	{ "sha256", cmd__sha256 },
 	{ "sigchain", cmd__sigchain },
 	{ "strcmp-offset", cmd__strcmp_offset },
 	{ "string-list", cmd__string_list },
diff --git a/t/helper/test-tool.h b/t/helper/test-tool.h
index 19a7e8332a..2e66a8e47b 100644
--- a/t/helper/test-tool.h
+++ b/t/helper/test-tool.h
@@ -39,6 +39,7 @@  int cmd__run_command(int argc, const char **argv);
 int cmd__scrap_cache_tree(int argc, const char **argv);
 int cmd__sha1(int argc, const char **argv);
 int cmd__sha1_array(int argc, const char **argv);
+int cmd__sha256(int argc, const char **argv);
 int cmd__sigchain(int argc, const char **argv);
 int cmd__strcmp_offset(int argc, const char **argv);
 int cmd__string_list(int argc, const char **argv);
diff --git a/t/t0015-hash.sh b/t/t0015-hash.sh
index 8e763c2c3d..f8e639743f 100755
--- a/t/t0015-hash.sh
+++ b/t/t0015-hash.sh
@@ -26,4 +26,29 @@  test_expect_success 'test basic SHA-1 hash values' '
 	grep 4b825dc642cb6eb9a060e54bf8d69288fbee4904 actual
 '
 
+test_expect_success 'test basic SHA-256 hash values' '
+	test-tool sha256 </dev/null >actual &&
+	grep e3b0c44298fc1c149afbf4c8996fb92427ae41e4649b934ca495991b7852b855 actual &&
+	printf "a" | test-tool sha256 >actual &&
+	grep ca978112ca1bbdcafac231b39a23dc4da786eff8147c4e72b9807785afee48bb actual &&
+	printf "abc" | test-tool sha256 >actual &&
+	grep ba7816bf8f01cfea414140de5dae2223b00361a396177a9cb410ff61f20015ad actual &&
+	printf "message digest" | test-tool sha256 >actual &&
+	grep f7846f55cf23e14eebeab5b4e1550cad5b509e3348fbc4efa3a1413d393cb650 actual &&
+	printf "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz" | test-tool sha256 >actual &&
+	grep 71c480df93d6ae2f1efad1447c66c9525e316218cf51fc8d9ed832f2daf18b73 actual &&
+	perl -E "for (1..100000) { print q{aaaaaaaaaa}; }" | \
+		test-tool sha256 >actual &&
+	grep cdc76e5c9914fb9281a1c7e284d73e67f1809a48a497200e046d39ccc7112cd0 actual &&
+	perl -E "for (1..100000) { print q{abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz}; }" | \
+		test-tool sha256 >actual &&
+	grep e406ba321ca712ad35a698bf0af8d61fc4dc40eca6bdcea4697962724ccbde35 actual &&
+	printf "blob 0\0" | test-tool sha256 >actual &&
+	grep 473a0f4c3be8a93681a267e3b1e9a7dcda1185436fe141f7749120a303721813 actual &&
+	printf "blob 3\0abc" | test-tool sha256 >actual &&
+	grep c1cf6e465077930e88dc5136641d402f72a229ddd996f627d60e9639eaba35a6 actual &&
+	printf "tree 0\0" | test-tool sha256 >actual &&
+	grep 6ef19b41225c5369f1c104d45d8d85efa9b057b53b14b4b9b939dd74decc5321 actual
+'
+
 test_done