Python Cryptography Tools
Encoding
Integers can be encoded as either binary, decimal, hexadecimal, or Base64 (among others).
>>> bin(95616) '0b10111010110000000' >>> hex(95616) '0x17580' >>> import base64 >>> base64.b64encode(95616) TypeError: a bytes-like object is required, not 'int'
Converting to Bytes
The most straightforward way to convert number-like objects into bytes-like objects seems to involve converting to string first.
>>> bytes(bin(95616), 'ascii') b'0b10111010110000000' >>> bytes(hex(95616), 'ascii') b'0x17580' >>> base64.b64encode(bytes(str(95616), 'ascii')) b'OTU2MTY='
Base64 uses 64 characters (and a padding symbol) to represent numbers in groups of six bits. These don't line up nicely with sequences of bytes.
XOR
decoded_hex1 = bytes.fromhex("1c0111001f010100061a024b53535009181c") decoded_hex2 = bytes.fromhex("686974207468652062756c6c277320657965") xor_result = bytes(a ^ b for a, b in zip(decoded_hex1, decoded_hex2))
Hamming Distance
def hammingDistance(bytes1, bytes2): distance = 0 for a, b in zip(bytes1, bytes2): xor_result = a ^ b distance += bin(xor_result).count("1") return distance