RNGCryptoServiceProvider Class (System.Security.Cryptography) (original) (raw)
Definition
Caution
RNGCryptoServiceProvider is obsolete. To generate a random number, use one of the RandomNumberGenerator static methods instead.
Implements a cryptographic Random Number Generator (RNG) using the implementation provided by the cryptographic service provider (CSP). This class cannot be inherited.
public ref class RNGCryptoServiceProvider sealed : System::Security::Cryptography::RandomNumberGenerator[System.Obsolete("RNGCryptoServiceProvider is obsolete. To generate a random number, use one of the RandomNumberGenerator static methods instead.", DiagnosticId="SYSLIB0023", UrlFormat="https://aka.ms/dotnet-warnings/{0}")]
public sealed class RNGCryptoServiceProvider : System.Security.Cryptography.RandomNumberGeneratorpublic sealed class RNGCryptoServiceProvider : System.Security.Cryptography.RandomNumberGenerator[System.Runtime.InteropServices.ComVisible(true)]
public sealed class RNGCryptoServiceProvider : System.Security.Cryptography.RandomNumberGenerator[<System.Obsolete("RNGCryptoServiceProvider is obsolete. To generate a random number, use one of the RandomNumberGenerator static methods instead.", DiagnosticId="SYSLIB0023", UrlFormat="https://aka.ms/dotnet-warnings/{0}")>]
type RNGCryptoServiceProvider = class
inherit RandomNumberGeneratortype RNGCryptoServiceProvider = class
inherit RandomNumberGenerator[<System.Runtime.InteropServices.ComVisible(true)>]
type RNGCryptoServiceProvider = class
inherit RandomNumberGeneratorPublic NotInheritable Class RNGCryptoServiceProvider
Inherits RandomNumberGeneratorInheritance
Attributes
Examples
The following code example shows how to create a random number with the RNGCryptoServiceProvider class.
//The following sample uses the Cryptography class to simulate the roll of a dice.
using System;
using System.IO;
using System.Text;
using System.Security.Cryptography;
class RNGCSP
{
private static RNGCryptoServiceProvider rngCsp = new RNGCryptoServiceProvider();
// Main method.
public static void Main()
{
const int totalRolls = 25000;
int[] results = new int[6];
// Roll the dice 25000 times and display
// the results to the console.
for (int x = 0; x < totalRolls; x++)
{
byte roll = RollDice((byte)results.Length);
results[roll - 1]++;
}
for (int i = 0; i < results.Length; ++i)
{
Console.WriteLine("{0}: {1} ({2:p1})", i + 1, results[i], (double)results[i] / (double)totalRolls);
}
rngCsp.Dispose();
}
// This method simulates a roll of the dice. The input parameter is the
// number of sides of the dice.
public static byte RollDice(byte numberSides)
{
if (numberSides <= 0)
throw new ArgumentOutOfRangeException("numberSides");
// Create a byte array to hold the random value.
byte[] randomNumber = new byte[1];
do
{
// Fill the array with a random value.
rngCsp.GetBytes(randomNumber);
}
while (!IsFairRoll(randomNumber[0], numberSides));
// Return the random number mod the number
// of sides. The possible values are zero-
// based, so we add one.
return (byte)((randomNumber[0] % numberSides) + 1);
}
private static bool IsFairRoll(byte roll, byte numSides)
{
// There are MaxValue / numSides full sets of numbers that can come up
// in a single byte. For instance, if we have a 6 sided die, there are
// 42 full sets of 1-6 that come up. The 43rd set is incomplete.
int fullSetsOfValues = Byte.MaxValue / numSides;
// If the roll is within this range of fair values, then we let it continue.
// In the 6 sided die case, a roll between 0 and 251 is allowed. (We use
// < rather than <= since the = portion allows through an extra 0 value).
// 252 through 255 would provide an extra 0, 1, 2, 3 so they are not fair
// to use.
return roll < numSides * fullSetsOfValues;
}
}
'The following sample uses the Cryptography class to simulate the roll of a dice.
Imports System.IO
Imports System.Text
Imports System.Security.Cryptography
Class RNGCSP
Private Shared rngCsp As New RNGCryptoServiceProvider()
' Main method.
Public Shared Sub Main()
Const totalRolls As Integer = 25000
Dim results(5) As Integer
' Roll the dice 25000 times and display
' the results to the console.
Dim x As Integer
For x = 0 To totalRolls
Dim roll As Byte = RollDice(System.Convert.ToByte(results.Length))
results((roll - 1)) += 1
Next x
Dim i As Integer
While i < results.Length
Console.WriteLine("{0}: {1} ({2:p1})", i + 1, results(i), System.Convert.ToDouble(results(i)) / System.Convert.ToDouble(totalRolls))
i += 1
End While
rngCsp.Dispose()
End Sub
' This method simulates a roll of the dice. The input parameter is the
' number of sides of the dice.
Public Shared Function RollDice(ByVal numberSides As Byte) As Byte
If numberSides <= 0 Then
Throw New ArgumentOutOfRangeException("NumSides")
End If
' Create a byte array to hold the random value.
Dim randomNumber(0) As Byte
Do
' Fill the array with a random value.
rngCsp.GetBytes(randomNumber)
Loop While Not IsFairRoll(randomNumber(0), numberSides)
' Return the random number mod the number
' of sides. The possible values are zero-
' based, so we add one.
Return System.Convert.ToByte(randomNumber(0) Mod numberSides + 1)
End Function
Private Shared Function IsFairRoll(ByVal roll As Byte, ByVal numSides As Byte) As Boolean
' There are MaxValue / numSides full sets of numbers that can come up
' in a single byte. For instance, if we have a 6 sided die, there are
' 42 full sets of 1-6 that come up. The 43rd set is incomplete.
Dim fullSetsOfValues As Integer = [Byte].MaxValue / numSides
' If the roll is within this range of fair values, then we let it continue.
' In the 6 sided die case, a roll between 0 and 251 is allowed. (We use
' < rather than <= since the = portion allows through an extra 0 value).
' 252 through 255 would provide an extra 0, 1, 2, 3 so they are not fair
' to use.
Return roll < numSides * fullSetsOfValues
End Function 'IsFairRoll
End Class
Important
This type implements the IDisposable interface. When you have finished using the type, you should dispose of it either directly or indirectly. To dispose of the type directly, call its Dispose method in a try/catch block. To dispose of it indirectly, use a language construct such as using (in C#) or Using (in Visual Basic). For more information, see the "Using an Object that Implements IDisposable" section in the IDisposable interface topic.
Applies to
Thread Safety
This type is thread safe.