7.7 KiB
--- Day 10: Knot Hash ---
You come across some programs that are trying to implement a software emulation of a hash based on knot-tying. The hash these programs are implementing isn't very strong, but you decide to help them anyway. You make a mental note to remind the Elves later not to [invent their own cryptographic functions]{title="NEW CRYPTOSYSTEM WHO DIS"}.
This hash function simulates tying a knot in a circle of string with 256 marks on it. Based on the input to be hashed, the function repeatedly selects a span of string, brings the ends together, and gives the span a half-twist to reverse the order of the marks within it. After doing this many times, the order of the marks is used to build the resulting hash.
4--5 pinch 4 5 4 1
/ \ 5,0,1 / \/ \ twist / \ / \
3 0 --> 3 0 --> 3 X 0
\ / \ /\ / \ / \ /
2--1 2 1 2 5
To achieve this, begin with a list of numbers from 0
to 255
, a
current position which begins at 0
(the first element in the list),
a skip size (which starts at 0
), and a sequence of lengths (your
puzzle input). Then, for each length:
- Reverse the order of that length of elements in the list, starting with the element at the current position.
- Move the current position forward by that length plus the skip size.
- Increase the skip size by one.
The list is circular; if the current position and the length try to reverse elements beyond the end of the list, the operation reverses using as many extra elements as it needs from the front of the list. If the current position moves past the end of the list, it wraps around to the front. Lengths larger than the size of the list are invalid.
Here's an example using a smaller list:
Suppose we instead only had a circular list containing five elements,
0, 1, 2, 3, 4
, and were given input lengths of 3, 4, 1, 5
.
- The list begins as
[0] 1 2 3 4
(where square brackets indicate the current position). - The first length,
3
, selects([0] 1 2) 3 4
(where parentheses indicate the sublist to be reversed). - After reversing that section (
0 1 2
into2 1 0
), we get([2] 1 0) 3 4
. - Then, the current position moves forward by the length,
3
, plus the skip size, 0:2 1 0 [3] 4
. Finally, the skip size increases to1
.
<!-- -->
- The second length,
4
, selects a section which wraps:2 1) 0 ([3] 4
. - The sublist
3 4 2 1
is reversed to form1 2 4 3
:4 3) 0 ([1] 2
. - The current position moves forward by the length plus the skip
size, a total of
5
, causing it not to move because it wraps around:4 3 0 [1] 2
. The skip size increases to2
.
<!-- -->
- The third length,
1
, selects a sublist of a single element, and so reversing it has no effect. - The current position moves forward by the length (
1
) plus the skip size (2
):4 [3] 0 1 2
. The skip size increases to3
.
<!-- -->
- The fourth length,
5
, selects every element starting with the second:4) ([3] 0 1 2
. Reversing this sublist (3 0 1 2 4
into4 2 1 0 3
) produces:3) ([4] 2 1 0
. - Finally, the current position moves forward by
8
:3 4 2 1 [0]
. The skip size increases to4
.
In this example, the first two numbers in the list end up being 3
and
4
; to check the process, you can multiply them together to produce
12
.
However, you should instead use the standard list size of 256
(with
values 0
to 255
) and the sequence of lengths in your puzzle input.
Once this process is complete, what is the result of multiplying the
first two numbers in the list?
Your puzzle answer was 19591
.
--- Part Two ---
The logic you've constructed forms a single round of the Knot Hash algorithm; running the full thing requires many of these rounds. Some input and output processing is also required.
First, from now on, your input should be taken not as a list of numbers,
but as a string of bytes instead. Unless otherwise specified, convert
characters to bytes using their ASCII
codes. This
will allow you to handle arbitrary ASCII strings, and it also ensures
that your input lengths are never larger than 255
. For example, if you
are given 1,2,3
, you should convert it to the ASCII codes for each
character: 49,44,50,44,51
.
Once you have determined the sequence of lengths to use, add the
following lengths to the end of the sequence: 17, 31, 73, 47, 23
. For
example, if you are given 1,2,3
, your final sequence of lengths should
be 49,44,50,44,51,17,31,73,47,23
(the ASCII codes from the input
string combined with the standard length suffix values).
Second, instead of merely running one round like you did above, run a
total of 64
rounds, using the same length sequence in each round.
The current position and skip size should be preserved between
rounds. For example, if the previous example was your first round, you
would start your second round with the same length sequence
(3, 4, 1, 5, 17, 31, 73, 47, 23
, now assuming they came from ASCII
codes and include the suffix), but start with the previous round's
current position (4
) and skip size (4
).
Once the rounds are complete, you will be left with the numbers from 0
to 255
in some order, called the sparse hash. Your next task is to
reduce these to a list of only 16
numbers called the dense hash. To
do this, use numeric bitwise
XOR to combine
each consecutive block of 16
numbers in the sparse hash (there are
16
such blocks in a list of 256
numbers). So, the first element in
the dense hash is the first sixteen elements of the sparse hash XOR'd
together, the second element in the dense hash is the second sixteen
elements of the sparse hash XOR'd together, etc.
For example, if the first sixteen elements of your sparse hash are as
shown below, and the XOR operator is ^
, you would calculate the first
output number like this:
65 ^ 27 ^ 9 ^ 1 ^ 4 ^ 3 ^ 40 ^ 50 ^ 91 ^ 7 ^ 6 ^ 0 ^ 2 ^ 5 ^ 68 ^ 22 = 64
Perform this operation on each of the sixteen blocks of sixteen numbers in your sparse hash to determine the sixteen numbers in your dense hash.
Finally, the standard way to represent a Knot Hash is as a single
hexadecimal string; the
final output is the dense hash in hexadecimal notation. Because each
number in your dense hash will be between 0
and 255
(inclusive),
always represent each number as two hexadecimal digits (including a
leading zero as necessary). So, if your first three numbers are
64, 7, 255
, they correspond to the hexadecimal numbers 40, 07, ff
,
and so the first six characters of the hash would be 4007ff
. Because
every Knot Hash is sixteen such numbers, the hexadecimal representation
is always 32
hexadecimal digits (0
-f
) long.
Here are some example hashes:
- The empty string becomes
a2582a3a0e66e6e86e3812dcb672a272
. AoC 2017
becomes33efeb34ea91902bb2f59c9920caa6cd
.1,2,3
becomes3efbe78a8d82f29979031a4aa0b16a9d
.1,2,4
becomes63960835bcdc130f0b66d7ff4f6a5a8e
.
Treating your puzzle input as a string of ASCII characters, what is the Knot Hash of your puzzle input? Ignore any leading or trailing whitespace you might encounter.
Your puzzle answer was 62e2204d2ca4f4924f6e7a80f1288786
.
Both parts of this puzzle are complete! They provide two gold stars: **
At this point, you should return to your Advent calendar and try another puzzle.
If you still want to see it, you can get your puzzle input.