The source code for RoboHash.org.
It basically copy/pastes various robot pictures together, using bits from the SHA hash. It’s not perfect, and not entirely secure, but it gives a good gut-check to “Hey, this SHA is wrong.”
Just the library:
$ pip install robohash
Or if you also want the web frontend:
$ pip install robohash[web]
from robohash import Robohash
hash = "whatever-hash-you-want"
rh = Robohash(hash)
rh.assemble(roboset='any')
with open("path/to/new/file.png", "w") as f:
rh.img.save(f, format="png")
RoboHash comes with three image sets, named “set1”, “set2”, and “set3”.
Specify which set you want in the assemble()
method. Alternatively,
specify the string “any”, and RoboHash will pick an image set for you,
based on the provided hash.
The “set1” artwork was created by Zikri Kader. The “set2” artwork was created by Hrvoje Novakovic. The “set3” artwork was created by Julian Peter Arias. The Cats/"set4" were created by David Revoy, used under CC-BY-4.0 https://www.peppercarrot.com/en/article391/cat-avatar-generator
The Python Code is available under the MIT/Expat license. See the
LICENSE.txt
file for the full text of this license. Copyright (c)
2011, Colin Davis.
The RoboHash images are available under the CC-BY-3.0 license.
OK, I’ll admit I’m a crappy programmer. Compounding this, I wrote this code initially to be internal-only. It’s ugly, and could be a LOT nicer.
Sorry about that.