2.0 KiB
Sub-Resource Integrity Hash Generator Scripts
Basic scripts to generate SRI hashes. POSIX-compliant shell script for use on *nix and PowerShell for use on Windows.
common features
- Hash individual files or a quoted space-delimited list of files.
- Hash all files within a specified directory with one command.
- Hash a filtered-list of files within a directory with one command.
- Process a list of files and a directory (filtered or not) at the same time, saving you typing!
linux script
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This script requires openssl be installed and will exit if it cannot find openssl.
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You can rename sri to anything you like.
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I suggest copying sri somewhere like /usr/local/bin or /usr/bin so it can be run easier and from anywhere (see note below).
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Complete help is included in the script. Simply run without any parameters or run with '--help'.
./sri --help
copy to path location
Copying the script to a location within your path makes running it more convenient. For example:
Assuming you store it in your home directory /Downloads and need to hash files in your webroot (eg: /var/www/css/...)
~/SRIhelper/sri -f /var/www/css/style.css
Whereas, if it's in your path, you can omit the source path and just run
sri -f /var/www/css/style.css
To make this work, just copy the file to a location in your path. There are no dependencies or anything to worry about, the file is self-contained and POSIX compliant.
# copy to local/bin
cp ~/SRIhelper/sri /usr/local/bin/sri
# copy and rename to something else
cp ~/SRIhelper/sri /usr/local/bin/hashSRI
# copy to your global bin directory (usually local is preferred!)
cp ~/SRIhelper/sri /usr/bin/sri
troubleshooting
About the only thing that can go wrong is the script not being marked executable. In that case, simply make it executable:
# make executable
chmod +x /path/to/sri
# verify
ls -lA /path/to/sri
# output something like:
# -rwxr-xr-x 1 user user 3622 Jun 20 01:18 sri
# note the x's --> -rwXr-Xr-X (capitals for emphasis)