
Recently I made some significant
changes and updates to my website and as obvious I generated a complete
backup of the site on my server. I downloaded this backup onto my PC
and deleted the original one on the server. But after a few days
something went wrong and I wanted to restore the backup that I
downloaded. When I tried to restore the backup I was shocked! The backup
file that I used to restore was corrupted. That means, the backup file
that I downloaded onto my PC wasn’t exactly the one that was on my
server. The reason is that there occured some data loss during the
download process. Yes, this data loss can happen often when a file is
downloaded from the Internet. The file can be corrupted due to any of
the following reasons.
- Data loss during the download process, due to instability in the Internet connection/server
- The file can be tampered due to virus infections or
- Due to Hacker attacks
So whenever you download
any valuable data from the Internet it is completely necessary that you
check the integrity of the downloaded file. That is you need to ensure
that the downloaded file is exactly the same as that of the original
one. In this scenario the MD5 hash can become handy. All you have to do
is generate MD5 hash (or MD5 check-sum) for the intended file on your
server. After you download the file onto your PC, again generate MD5
hash for the downloaded file. Compare these two hashes and if it matches
then it means that the file is downloaded perfectly without any data
loss.
A MD5 hash is nothing but a 32 digit hexadicimal number which can be something as follows
A Sample MD5 Hash
e4d909c290d0fb1ca068ffaddf22cbd0
This hash is unique for every
file irrespective of it’s size and type. That means two .exe files with
the same size will not have the same MD5 hash even though they are of
same type and size. So MD5 hash can be used to uniquely identify a
file.
How to use MD5 Hash to check the Integrity of Files?
For UNIX:
md5sum backup.tar
When you hit ENTER you’ll see something as follows
e4d909c290d0fb1ca068ffaddf22cbd0
This is the MD5 hash for the file backup.tar.
After you download this file onto your PC, you can cross check it’s
integrity by again re-generating MD5 hash for the downloaded file. If
both the hash matches then it means that the file is perfect. Otherwise
it means that the file is corrupt. To generate the MD5 hash for the
downloaded file on your Windows PC use the following freeware tool
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