diff --git a/library/core/src/hash/mod.rs b/library/core/src/hash/mod.rs index 9d64c786d67b5..3d168f62a09f5 100644 --- a/library/core/src/hash/mod.rs +++ b/library/core/src/hash/mod.rs @@ -268,10 +268,29 @@ pub use macros::Hash; /// instance (with [`write`] and [`write_u8`] etc.). Most of the time, `Hasher` /// instances are used in conjunction with the [`Hash`] trait. /// -/// This trait makes no assumptions about how the various `write_*` methods are +/// This trait provides no guarantees about how the various `write_*` methods are /// defined and implementations of [`Hash`] should not assume that they work one /// way or another. You cannot assume, for example, that a [`write_u32`] call is -/// equivalent to four calls of [`write_u8`]. +/// equivalent to four calls of [`write_u8`]. Nor can you assume that adjacent +/// `write` calls are merged, so it's possible, for example, that +/// ``` +/// # fn foo(hasher: &mut impl std::hash::Hasher) { +/// hasher.write(&[1, 2]); +/// hasher.write(&[3, 4, 5, 6]); +/// # } +/// ``` +/// and +/// ``` +/// # fn foo(hasher: &mut impl std::hash::Hasher) { +/// hasher.write(&[1, 2, 3, 4]); +/// hasher.write(&[5, 6]); +/// # } +/// ``` +/// end up producing different hashes. +/// +/// Thus to produce the same hash value, [`Hash`] implementations must ensure +/// for equivalent items that exactly the same sequence of calls is made -- the +/// same methods with the same parameters in the same order. /// /// # Examples ///