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Creating a Machine ID hash for MacOS/Windows/Linux.
Utilizes the most static system parameters possible to generate reliable device hashes for licensing your software.
List of parameters that are used on each platform.
system_profiler SPHardwareDataTypeThe command returns information about the computer's hardware characteristics. Parameters used:
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Model Number: This parameter represents the computer or device model number. It is used for uniquely identifying a specific model within the manufacturer's range.
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Serial Number: This parameter is the unique serial number of the computer or device. It is used to identify a specific unit within a particular model.
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Hardware UUID: This parameter represents the hardware UUID of the computer or device. It serves to provide unique identification of a specific unit across different systems and environments.
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Provisioning UDID: This parameter represents the device's unique device identifier (UDID), which can be used in the provisioning process or device setup, usually in a corporate or managed environment.
system_profiler SPSecureElementDataTypeThe command returns information about the Secure Element. This element is used to store encrypted data, such as information about payment cards and other confidential data. Parameters used:
Platform ID: The unique identifier of the platform to which the Secure Element belongs.- SEID: The unique identifier of the Secure Element. Created during the NFC chip firmware at the manufacturer's factory.
PowerShell - expandable automation tool. Parameters used:
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powershell -command "Get-WmiObject Win32_ComputerSystemProduct": Returns the unique product identifier (UUID) of the computer. Usually associated with the computer's motherboard. In rare cases, it may change after replacing or reinstalling the motherboard or after changing the device's BIOS/UEFI. -
powershell -command "Get-WmiObject Win32_BIOS": Returns the computer's BIOS serial number. It usually remains constant and does not change. -
powershell -command "Get-WmiObject Win32_BaseBoard": Returns the serial number of the computer's baseboard. It usually remains constant and does not change. -
powershell -command "Get-WmiObject Win32_Processor": Returns the computer's processor identifier. It should remain unchanged, except in cases of processor replacement.
- machine-id: A machine identifier (ID) that is used to uniquely identify a computer on Linux systems.
Unfortunately this parameter is subject to user modification and no reliable solution for Linux has been found yet.
Add the dependency to Cargo.toml
[dependencies]
mid = "4.0.0"Or install using Cargo CLI
cargo add midlet machine_id = mid::get("mySecretKey").unwrap();Example: 3f9af06fd78d3390ef35e059623f58af03b7f6ca91690f5af031b774fd541977
let mid_data = mid::data("mySecretKey").unwrap();MacOS example: MidData { key: "mySecretKey", result: ["ModelNumber", "SerialNumber", "HardwareUUID", "SEID"], hash: "3f9af06fd78d3390ef35e059623f58af03b7f6ca91690f5af031b774fd541977" }
mid::print("mySecretKey");MacOS example:
MID.print[key]: mySecretKey
MID.print[result]: ["ModelNumber", "SerialNumber", "HardwareUUID", "SEID"]
MID.print[hash]: 3f9af06fd78d3390ef35e059623f58af03b7f6ca91690f5af031b774fd541977
MID key- The secret key for hashingMID result- Array of OS parametersMID hash- SHA-256 hash from result
This data does not contribute to the device hash. Currently available for MacOS only.
let additional_data = mid::additional_data().unwrap();
println!("{:?}", additional_data);AdditionalData { username: "doroved", hostname: "MacBook-Pro--doroved.local", model_name: "MacBook Pro", os_name: "Sequoia", os_version: "15.7", os_full: "Sequoia 15.7", chip: "Apple M1 Pro", chip_short: "m1 pro", memsize: 16, cpu_core_count: 8, languages: ["ru-RU", "bg-RU", "en-RU"] }
Here I will share my developments and projects https://x.com/doroved