Conversion-Tool

Free online file conversion tools

Conversion-Tool

Free online file conversion tools

HAVAL-192 Hash Generator Online — Free HAVAL-192 Checksum Tool

Use this free online HAVAL-192 hash generator to compute a HAVAL-192 checksum from any text string or file — simply paste your input or upload a local or remote file and get the hash instantly.

Source file

or paste a link

You can either enter a remote URL (e.g. a location where the source file is located), a local file from your device, or textual data in the field below. If both, an URL and a local file are selected then one of them is ignored and the hash is only calculated on one of the files.

How to calculate the HAVAL192 hash?

  1. Select a file or copy and paste the text you want to hash.
  2. Click on "Start conversion" to calculate the HAVAL192 hash.
  3. Enter a HMAC hash key (optional).
  4. Download your HAVAL192 hashed data.







If selected then the returned data is sent as a binary file. This is useful if base64 data is encoded to a binary format.

What is the HAVAL-192 Algorithm?

HAVAL is a variable-length, variable-pass cryptographic hash function designed by Yuliang Zheng, Josef Pieprzyk, and Jennifer Seberry in 1992. Unlike fixed-output algorithms such as MD5 or SHA-1, HAVAL can produce digests of five different lengths — 128, 160, 192, 224, or 256 bits — and can apply between 3 and 5 processing passes over the input data. HAVAL-192 specifically produces a 192-bit (24-byte) hexadecimal digest. More passes increase computational cost and reduce collision probability, making higher-pass variants (e.g. HAVAL-192,5) stronger than the 3-pass default.

HAVAL is not considered suitable for modern security-critical applications such as digital signatures or password storage; contemporary standards favour SHA-256, SHA-3, or bcrypt for those purposes. It remains useful as a non-cryptographic checksum for legacy systems and data-integrity verification in contexts where collision resistance requirements are modest.

What is HAVAL-192 Used For?

  • File integrity checks: Compare the HAVAL-192 digest of a downloaded file against a published checksum to confirm the file has not been altered or corrupted.
  • Legacy application support: Some older software and embedded systems reference HAVAL digests; this tool lets you reproduce those checksums without installing additional software.
  • Research and education: Study how variable-pass hashing affects output and collision resistance compared to fixed algorithms.
  • HMAC generation: Apply a secret key via the HMAC method to produce a keyed message authentication code based on HAVAL-192, useful for verifying both integrity and authenticity.

HAVAL-192 vs. Other HAVAL Variants

All HAVAL variants share the same core compression function but differ in output size and pass count. A 192-bit digest sits between the compact HAVAL-128/HAVAL-160 outputs and the larger HAVAL-224/HAVAL-256 outputs. If you need a shorter digest for storage efficiency, HAVAL-128 or HAVAL-160 may suffice; if maximum collision resistance within the HAVAL family is the priority, HAVAL-256 with five passes is the strongest option. This tool also supports all other HAVAL lengths alongside dozens of other hash algorithms, so you can compare outputs side by side.

Frequently asked questions

What is the output length of a HAVAL-192 hash?

A HAVAL-192 hash produces a 192-bit digest, represented as a 48-character hexadecimal string.

Is this HAVAL-192 tool free to use?

Yes, it is completely free. No account, subscription, or software installation is required.

Can I hash a file as well as text?

Yes. You can type or paste a text string, upload a file from your device, or provide a URL to a remote file, and the tool will compute the HAVAL-192 hash over the full file content.

Are my files and data kept private?

Uploaded files are processed server-side solely to compute the hash and are deleted automatically afterwards. No file content is stored or shared.

Is HAVAL-192 safe to use for passwords or digital signatures?

No. HAVAL is not recommended for password hashing or security-critical signing tasks; use a modern algorithm such as SHA-256 or a dedicated password hashing function like bcrypt instead. HAVAL-192 is suitable for non-security checksums and legacy integrity verification.

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