diff mbox series

[1/1] mailmap: support hashed entries in mailmaps

Message ID 20201213010539.544101-2-sandals@crustytoothpaste.net (mailing list archive)
State New, archived
Headers show
Series Hashed mailmap support | expand

Commit Message

brian m. carlson Dec. 13, 2020, 1:05 a.m. UTC
Many people, through the course of their lives, will change either a
name or an email address.  For this reason, we have the mailmap, to map
from a user's former name or email address to their current, canonical
forms.  Normally, this works well as it is.

However, sometimes people change a name or an email address and wish to
wholly disassociate themselves from that former name or email address.
For example, a person may have left a company which engaged in a deeply
unethical act with which the person does not want to be associated, or
they may have changed their name to disassociate themselves from an
abusive family or partner.  In such a case, using the former name or
address in any way may be undesirable and the person may wish to replace
it as completely as possible.

For projects which wish to support this, introduce hashed forms into the
mailmap.  These forms, which start with "@sha256:" followed by a SHA-256
hash of the entry, can be used in place of the form used in the commit
field.  This form is intentionally designed to be unlikely to conflict
with legitimate use cases.  For example, this is not a valid email
address according to RFC 5322.  In the unlikely event that a user has
put such a form into the actual commit as their name, we will accept it.

While the form of the data is designed to accept multiple hash
algorithms, we intentionally do not support SHA-1.  There is little
reason to support such a weak algorithm in new use cases and no
backwards compatibility to consider.  Moreover, SHA-256 is faster than
the SHA1DC implementation we use, so this not only improves performance,
but simplifies the current implementation somewhat as well.

Note that it is, of course, possible to perform a lookup on all commit
objects to determine the actual entry which matches the hashed form of
the data.  However, a project for which this feature is valuable may
simply insert entries for many contributors in order to make discovery
of "interesting" entries significantly less convenient.

Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
---
 mailmap.c          | 39 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--
 t/t4203-mailmap.sh | 35 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 2 files changed, 72 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)

Comments

Johannes Sixt Dec. 13, 2020, 9:34 a.m. UTC | #1
Am 13.12.20 um 02:05 schrieb brian m. carlson:
> Many people, through the course of their lives, will change either a
> name or an email address.  For this reason, we have the mailmap, to map
> from a user's former name or email address to their current, canonical
> forms.  Normally, this works well as it is.
> 
> However, sometimes people change a name or an email address and wish to
> wholly disassociate themselves from that former name or email address.
> For example, a person may have left a company which engaged in a deeply
> unethical act with which the person does not want to be associated, or
> they may have changed their name to disassociate themselves from an
> abusive family or partner.  In such a case, using the former name or
> address in any way may be undesirable and the person may wish to replace
> it as completely as possible.
> 
> For projects which wish to support this, introduce hashed forms into the
> mailmap.  These forms, which start with "@sha256:" followed by a SHA-256
> hash of the entry, can be used in place of the form used in the commit
> field.  This form is intentionally designed to be unlikely to conflict
> with legitimate use cases.  For example, this is not a valid email
> address according to RFC 5322.  In the unlikely event that a user has
> put such a form into the actual commit as their name, we will accept it.
> 
> While the form of the data is designed to accept multiple hash
> algorithms, we intentionally do not support SHA-1.  There is little
> reason to support such a weak algorithm in new use cases and no
> backwards compatibility to consider.  Moreover, SHA-256 is faster than
> the SHA1DC implementation we use, so this not only improves performance,
> but simplifies the current implementation somewhat as well.
> 
> Note that it is, of course, possible to perform a lookup on all commit
> objects to determine the actual entry which matches the hashed form of
> the data.  However, a project for which this feature is valuable may
> simply insert entries for many contributors in order to make discovery
> of "interesting" entries significantly less convenient.
> 
> Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
> ---

...

> diff --git a/t/t4203-mailmap.sh b/t/t4203-mailmap.sh
> index 586c3a86b1..794133ba5d 100755
> --- a/t/t4203-mailmap.sh
> +++ b/t/t4203-mailmap.sh
> @@ -62,6 +62,41 @@ test_expect_success 'check-mailmap --stdin arguments' '
>  	test_cmp expect actual
>  '
>  
> +test_expect_success 'hashed mailmap' '
> +	test_config mailmap.file ./hashed &&
> +	hashed_author_name="@sha256:$(printf "$GIT_AUTHOR_NAME" | test-tool sha256)" &&
> +	hashed_author_email="@sha256:$(printf "$GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL" | test-tool sha256)" &&
> +	cat >expect <<-EOF &&
> +	$GIT_COMMITTER_NAME <$GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL>
> +	EOF
...
> +	cat >hashed <<-EOF &&
> +	$GIT_COMMITTER_NAME <$GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL> <$hashed_author_email>
> +	EOF
> +	git check-mailmap  "$GIT_AUTHOR_NAME <$GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL>" >actual &&
> +	test_cmp expect actual

I don't understand the concept. A mailmap entry of the form

   A <a@b> <x@y>

tells that the former address <x@y>, which is recorded in old project
history, should be replaced by A <a@b> when a commit is displayed. I am
assuming that the idea is that old <x@y> should be the "banned" address.
How does a hashed entry help when the hashed value appears at the right
side of a mailmap entry and that literal string never appears anywhere
in the history?

-- Hannes
Johannes Sixt Dec. 13, 2020, 9:45 a.m. UTC | #2
Am 13.12.20 um 10:34 schrieb Johannes Sixt:
> I don't understand the concept. A mailmap entry of the form
> 
>    A <a@b> <x@y>
> 
> tells that the former address <x@y>, which is recorded in old project
> history, should be replaced by A <a@b> when a commit is displayed. I am
> assuming that the idea is that old <x@y> should be the "banned" address.
> How does a hashed entry help when the hashed value appears at the right
> side of a mailmap entry and that literal string never appears anywhere
> in the history?

Never mind, I got it: A wants to be disassociated from <x@y>, but not
from their contributions whose authorship was recorded as <x@y>.
Therefore, Git must always compute the hash of all of <x@y>, <a@b>, etc,
just in case that the hashed form appears anywhere in the mailmap file.

-- Hannes
brian m. carlson Dec. 13, 2020, 8:38 p.m. UTC | #3
On 2020-12-13 at 09:45:58, Johannes Sixt wrote:
> Am 13.12.20 um 10:34 schrieb Johannes Sixt:
> > I don't understand the concept. A mailmap entry of the form
> > 
> >    A <a@b> <x@y>
> > 
> > tells that the former address <x@y>, which is recorded in old project
> > history, should be replaced by A <a@b> when a commit is displayed. I am
> > assuming that the idea is that old <x@y> should be the "banned" address.
> > How does a hashed entry help when the hashed value appears at the right
> > side of a mailmap entry and that literal string never appears anywhere
> > in the history?
> 
> Never mind, I got it: A wants to be disassociated from <x@y>, but not
> from their contributions whose authorship was recorded as <x@y>.
> Therefore, Git must always compute the hash of all of <x@y>, <a@b>, etc,
> just in case that the hashed form appears anywhere in the mailmap file.

Yup, exactly.  You can't specify the hashed one on the new side
because it has to map to it, but you can on the old side.  Sorry if
that wasn't clear.

Come to think of it, this probably needs documentation as well, so I'll
wait for any other feedback and then reroll with that in there.
Hopefully that will clear up any potential confusion.
Junio C Hamano Dec. 14, 2020, 12:09 a.m. UTC | #4
"brian m. carlson" <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net> writes:

> Come to think of it, this probably needs documentation as well, so I'll
> wait for any other feedback and then reroll with that in there.
> Hopefully that will clear up any potential confusion.

Not just "where does the hashed entry can appear in the file", but
"how exactly does it gets computed" needs to be described.  If it is
sufficient to do something like

	set x $(echo doe@example.com | sha256sum) &&
	echo "@sha256sum:$2"

that exact procedure must be described to the users in the
documentation (note: I know the above is not correct as I looked at
the tests---it is a demonstration of the need for a procedure using
commonly available tools).

I wonder if somebody may want to do a dedicated tool that lets you

 (1) given an e-mail and/or a name, look-up existing entries and
     show what <name, e-mail> pair it maps to;

 (2) take a new <name, e-mail> pair and add mapping from it to some
     other <name, e-mail> pair.

 (3) take an existing mailmap file, and obfuscate all the existing
     entries.

The first one is covered by "check-mailmap", so the other two could
be new features added to the command to be triggered with a command
line option.

> +	cat >hashed <<-EOF &&
> +	$GIT_COMMITTER_NAME <$GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL> $hashed_author_name <$GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL>
> +	EOF
> +	git check-mailmap  "$GIT_AUTHOR_NAME <$GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL>" >actual &&

The two spaces after "check-mailmap" is not significant but drew my
attention.  Let's not do so.
Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason Dec. 14, 2020, 11:54 a.m. UTC | #5
On Sun, Dec 13 2020, brian m. carlson wrote:

> Many people, through the course of their lives, will change either a
> name or an email address.  For this reason, we have the mailmap, to map
> from a user's former name or email address to their current, canonical
> forms.  Normally, this works well as it is.
>
> However, sometimes people change a name or an email address and wish to
> wholly disassociate themselves from that former name or email address.
> For example, a person may have left a company which engaged in a deeply
> unethical act with which the person does not want to be associated, or
> they may have changed their name to disassociate themselves from an
> abusive family or partner.  In such a case, using the former name or
> address in any way may be undesirable and the person may wish to replace
> it as completely as possible.
>
> [...]
>
> Note that it is, of course, possible to perform a lookup on all commit
> objects to determine the actual entry which matches the hashed form of
> the data.

The commit message & cover letter are subtly different in a way that I
didn't even notice at first glance. E.g. I assume based on the cover
letter that one part of this this is a proposed solution do the whole
"deadname" problem. It would be nice if v2 were more explicit and
attempted to explicitly summarize the use-cases in the commit message.

But for now I'll attempt to read between the lines from having read
both.

I don't understand why either the problem of "I don't want to see my old
name again" or "I want to hide from other abusive people" (as an aside:
but not so much that you'd still take the risk of submitting a patch to
.mailmap?) require a hashing solution, as opposed to just some encoding
in the .mailmap file such as base64.

You can still trivially get the same information in the end, on git.git
running --pretty=format:"%aN %aE %an %ae" takes under a second. A part
of your commit message seems to address this:

> However, a project for which this feature is valuable may
> simply insert entries for many contributors in order to make discovery
> of "interesting" entries significantly less convenient.

But I don't get how that's helped at all by a sha256 hash. Since you can
trivially re-expand these again using log/check-mailmap the hashing
offers no extra protection beyond a trivial layer of obscurity in those
cases. You'd get the same safety in numbers by having everything a large
un-hashed .mailmap file, would you not?

I think the underlying use-case is legitimate, but I read it as
primarily a social signaling feature by a trivial addition of
obscurity. Someone called X would like not to be called Y anymore, or
not be found in a search engine or "git grep" when searching for "Y".

So I'd think purely from the perspective of the feature's appearance to
users matching its underlying security we'd be better served with
support for encoding of some sort. E.g. URL encoding, Base64, or even
just string_reverse() (ROT13 is out as not working for non-ASCII names).

The encoding versions of this have the added bonus of expanding the
use-case beyond what you're suggesting. If you're trying to map e.g. a
non-UTF-8 E-Mail address (in your project due to some encoding error)
you'd be able to put it into .mailmap without making the project
maintainers deal with invalid non-UTF-8 encoding in the file (the
existing support is sufficient to map names in most such cases).

Another reason I'd prefer some encoding solution is because .mailmap
isn't just used by git itself. Since the format got added it's become
how a lot of downstream systems do this mapping. E.g. I worked once on a
change management system that mapped lots of user actions across
different systems, and piggy-backed on .mailmap files in git to resolve
E-Mail addresses even in cases where the originating data wasn't within
git.

Now because of the trivialness of the format it's easy to e.g. import it
into a DB table and do a JOIN against it (or the same after converting
it from some trivial encoding). Use-cases like that would become a full
history walk for each project to extract the real E-Mails (or a re
implementation of the SHA256 trick in some sub-SELECT in the database).

Those are all solvable problems that are rather trivial in the end. I
just wonder if we're not making things needlessly hard to achieve the
stated aims. And to be fair, most of those aims I inferred (and might
have incorrectly inferred), since as noted above the patch itself
doesn't discuss the tradeoffs of potential alternate solutions).

> Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
> ---
>  mailmap.c          | 39 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--
>  t/t4203-mailmap.sh | 35 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>  2 files changed, 72 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
>
> [...]
>
>  int map_user(struct string_list *map,
>  	     const char **email, size_t *emaillen,
>  	     const char **name, size_t *namelen)
> @@ -324,7 +359,7 @@ int map_user(struct string_list *map,
>  		 (int)*namelen, debug_str(*name),
>  		 (int)*emaillen, debug_str(*email));
>  
> -	item = lookup_prefix(map, *email, *emaillen);
> +	item = lookup_one(map, *email, *emaillen);
>  	if (item != NULL) {
>  		me = (struct mailmap_entry *)item->util;
>  		if (me->namemap.nr) {
> @@ -334,7 +369,7 @@ int map_user(struct string_list *map,
>  			 * simple entry.
>  			 */
>  			struct string_list_item *subitem;
> -			subitem = lookup_prefix(&me->namemap, *name, *namelen);
> +			subitem = lookup_one(&me->namemap, *name, *namelen);
>  			if (subitem)
>  				item = subitem;
>  		}

If you turn on DEBUG_MAILMAP=1 at the top of the file and run e.g. an
unbounded --pretty=format=:%aE you can see we'll call map_user() in a
loop for each commit shown. What I'm suggesting above can be read as
"can't we have some solution that achieves the same aims, but which we
can handle purely in add_mapping()?". Both for our case, and for
external parsers/re-implementations.

In any case it would be interesting if v2 amended
t/perf/p4205-log-pretty-formats.sh to test e.g. the impact of linux.git
with all-sha256 entries to see what the cost in the tight loop could be.
Phillip Wood Dec. 15, 2020, 11:13 a.m. UTC | #6
Hi Brian

On 13/12/2020 01:05, brian m. carlson wrote:
> Many people, through the course of their lives, will change either a
> name or an email address.  For this reason, we have the mailmap, to map
> from a user's former name or email address to their current, canonical
> forms.  Normally, this works well as it is.
> 
> However, sometimes people change a name or an email address and wish to
> wholly disassociate themselves from that former name or email address.
> For example, a person may have left a company which engaged in a deeply
> unethical act with which the person does not want to be associated, or
> they may have changed their name to disassociate themselves from an
> abusive family or partner.

I think we should be clear in the documentation that by adding a hashed 
.mailmap entry people are still publicly associating their old identity 
with their new identity it's just that the association is obscured. They 
should not rely on it for their safety. An abusive partner knows the old 
identity so all they have to do to find the new identity is hash the old 
identity and see if it is in the .mailmap file.

Having said that I think this is a useful step forward in may cases.

Best Wishes

Phillip

> In such a case, using the former name or
> address in any way may be undesirable and the person may wish to replace
> it as completely as possible.
> 
> For projects which wish to support this, introduce hashed forms into the
> mailmap.  These forms, which start with "@sha256:" followed by a SHA-256
> hash of the entry, can be used in place of the form used in the commit
> field.  This form is intentionally designed to be unlikely to conflict
> with legitimate use cases.  For example, this is not a valid email
> address according to RFC 5322.  In the unlikely event that a user has
> put such a form into the actual commit as their name, we will accept it.
> 
> While the form of the data is designed to accept multiple hash
> algorithms, we intentionally do not support SHA-1.  There is little
> reason to support such a weak algorithm in new use cases and no
> backwards compatibility to consider.  Moreover, SHA-256 is faster than
> the SHA1DC implementation we use, so this not only improves performance,
> but simplifies the current implementation somewhat as well.
> 
> Note that it is, of course, possible to perform a lookup on all commit
> objects to determine the actual entry which matches the hashed form of
> the data.  However, a project for which this feature is valuable may
> simply insert entries for many contributors in order to make discovery
> of "interesting" entries significantly less convenient.
> 
> Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net>
> ---
>   mailmap.c          | 39 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--
>   t/t4203-mailmap.sh | 35 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>   2 files changed, 72 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
> 
> diff --git a/mailmap.c b/mailmap.c
> index 962fd86d6d..09d0ad7ca4 100644
> --- a/mailmap.c
> +++ b/mailmap.c
> @@ -313,6 +313,41 @@ static struct string_list_item *lookup_prefix(struct string_list *map,
>   	return NULL;
>   }
>   
> +/*
> + * Convert an email or name into a hashed form for comparison.  The hashed form
> + * will be created in the form
> + * @sha256:c68b7a430ac8dee9676ec77a387194e23f234d024e03d844050cf6c01775c8f6,
> + * which would be the hashed form for "doe@example.com".
> + */
> +static char *hashed_form(struct strbuf *buf, const struct git_hash_algo *algop, const char *key, size_t keylen)
> +{
> +	git_hash_ctx ctx;
> +	unsigned char hashbuf[GIT_MAX_RAWSZ];
> +	char hexbuf[GIT_MAX_HEXSZ + 1];
> +
> +	algop->init_fn(&ctx);
> +	algop->update_fn(&ctx, key, keylen);
> +	algop->final_fn(hashbuf, &ctx);
> +	hash_to_hex_algop_r(hexbuf, hashbuf, algop);
> +
> +	strbuf_addf(buf, "@%s:%s", algop->name, hexbuf);
> +	return buf->buf;
> +}
> +
> +static struct string_list_item *lookup_one(struct string_list *map,
> +					   const char *string, size_t len)
> +{
> +	struct strbuf buf = STRBUF_INIT;
> +	struct string_list_item *item = lookup_prefix(map, string, len);
> +	if (item)
> +		return item;
> +
> +	hashed_form(&buf, &hash_algos[GIT_HASH_SHA256], string, len);
> +	item = lookup_prefix(map, buf.buf, buf.len);
> +	strbuf_release(&buf);
> +	return item;
> +}
> +
>   int map_user(struct string_list *map,
>   	     const char **email, size_t *emaillen,
>   	     const char **name, size_t *namelen)
> @@ -324,7 +359,7 @@ int map_user(struct string_list *map,
>   		 (int)*namelen, debug_str(*name),
>   		 (int)*emaillen, debug_str(*email));
>   
> -	item = lookup_prefix(map, *email, *emaillen);
> +	item = lookup_one(map, *email, *emaillen);
>   	if (item != NULL) {
>   		me = (struct mailmap_entry *)item->util;
>   		if (me->namemap.nr) {
> @@ -334,7 +369,7 @@ int map_user(struct string_list *map,
>   			 * simple entry.
>   			 */
>   			struct string_list_item *subitem;
> -			subitem = lookup_prefix(&me->namemap, *name, *namelen);
> +			subitem = lookup_one(&me->namemap, *name, *namelen);
>   			if (subitem)
>   				item = subitem;
>   		}
> diff --git a/t/t4203-mailmap.sh b/t/t4203-mailmap.sh
> index 586c3a86b1..794133ba5d 100755
> --- a/t/t4203-mailmap.sh
> +++ b/t/t4203-mailmap.sh
> @@ -62,6 +62,41 @@ test_expect_success 'check-mailmap --stdin arguments' '
>   	test_cmp expect actual
>   '
>   
> +test_expect_success 'hashed mailmap' '
> +	test_config mailmap.file ./hashed &&
> +	hashed_author_name="@sha256:$(printf "$GIT_AUTHOR_NAME" | test-tool sha256)" &&
> +	hashed_author_email="@sha256:$(printf "$GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL" | test-tool sha256)" &&
> +	cat >expect <<-EOF &&
> +	$GIT_COMMITTER_NAME <$GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL>
> +	EOF
> +
> +	cat >hashed <<-EOF &&
> +	$GIT_COMMITTER_NAME <$GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL> $hashed_author_name <$GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL>
> +	EOF
> +	git check-mailmap  "$GIT_AUTHOR_NAME <$GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL>" >actual &&
> +	test_cmp expect actual &&
> +
> +	cat >hashed <<-EOF &&
> +	Wrong <wrong@example.org> $GIT_AUTHOR_NAME <$GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL>
> +	$GIT_COMMITTER_NAME <$GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL> $hashed_author_name <$GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL>
> +	EOF
> +	# Check that we prefer literal matches over hashed names.
> +	git check-mailmap  "$hashed_author_name <$GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL>" >actual &&
> +	test_cmp expect actual &&
> +
> +	cat >hashed <<-EOF &&
> +	$GIT_COMMITTER_NAME <$GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL> $hashed_author_name <$hashed_author_email>
> +	EOF
> +	git check-mailmap  "$GIT_AUTHOR_NAME <$GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL>" >actual &&
> +	test_cmp expect actual &&
> +
> +	cat >hashed <<-EOF &&
> +	$GIT_COMMITTER_NAME <$GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL> <$hashed_author_email>
> +	EOF
> +	git check-mailmap  "$GIT_AUTHOR_NAME <$GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL>" >actual &&
> +	test_cmp expect actual
> +'
> +
>   test_expect_success 'check-mailmap bogus contact' '
>   	test_must_fail git check-mailmap bogus
>   '
>
brian m. carlson Dec. 16, 2020, 12:50 a.m. UTC | #7
On 2020-12-14 at 00:09:19, Junio C Hamano wrote:
> "brian m. carlson" <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net> writes:
> 
> > Come to think of it, this probably needs documentation as well, so I'll
> > wait for any other feedback and then reroll with that in there.
> > Hopefully that will clear up any potential confusion.
> 
> Not just "where does the hashed entry can appear in the file", but
> "how exactly does it gets computed" needs to be described.  If it is
> sufficient to do something like
> 
> 	set x $(echo doe@example.com | sha256sum) &&
> 	echo "@sha256sum:$2"
> 
> that exact procedure must be described to the users in the
> documentation (note: I know the above is not correct as I looked at
> the tests---it is a demonstration of the need for a procedure using
> commonly available tools).

I believe the difference is that "echo" adds a newline and you probably
wanted "printf" here.  But I get your point: we need documentation to
explain how to do this that's simple and straightforward, and as we've
both pointed out, there isn't any at all.  I'll add some.

> I wonder if somebody may want to do a dedicated tool that lets you
> 
>  (1) given an e-mail and/or a name, look-up existing entries and
>      show what <name, e-mail> pair it maps to;
> 
>  (2) take a new <name, e-mail> pair and add mapping from it to some
>      other <name, e-mail> pair.
> 
>  (3) take an existing mailmap file, and obfuscate all the existing
>      entries.
> 
> The first one is covered by "check-mailmap", so the other two could
> be new features added to the command to be triggered with a command
> line option.

That could be a useful tool.

> > +	cat >hashed <<-EOF &&
> > +	$GIT_COMMITTER_NAME <$GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL> $hashed_author_name <$GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL>
> > +	EOF
> > +	git check-mailmap  "$GIT_AUTHOR_NAME <$GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL>" >actual &&
> 
> The two spaces after "check-mailmap" is not significant but drew my
> attention.  Let's not do so.

That wasn't intentional.  Will fix.
diff mbox series

Patch

diff --git a/mailmap.c b/mailmap.c
index 962fd86d6d..09d0ad7ca4 100644
--- a/mailmap.c
+++ b/mailmap.c
@@ -313,6 +313,41 @@  static struct string_list_item *lookup_prefix(struct string_list *map,
 	return NULL;
 }
 
+/*
+ * Convert an email or name into a hashed form for comparison.  The hashed form
+ * will be created in the form
+ * @sha256:c68b7a430ac8dee9676ec77a387194e23f234d024e03d844050cf6c01775c8f6,
+ * which would be the hashed form for "doe@example.com".
+ */
+static char *hashed_form(struct strbuf *buf, const struct git_hash_algo *algop, const char *key, size_t keylen)
+{
+	git_hash_ctx ctx;
+	unsigned char hashbuf[GIT_MAX_RAWSZ];
+	char hexbuf[GIT_MAX_HEXSZ + 1];
+
+	algop->init_fn(&ctx);
+	algop->update_fn(&ctx, key, keylen);
+	algop->final_fn(hashbuf, &ctx);
+	hash_to_hex_algop_r(hexbuf, hashbuf, algop);
+
+	strbuf_addf(buf, "@%s:%s", algop->name, hexbuf);
+	return buf->buf;
+}
+
+static struct string_list_item *lookup_one(struct string_list *map,
+					   const char *string, size_t len)
+{
+	struct strbuf buf = STRBUF_INIT;
+	struct string_list_item *item = lookup_prefix(map, string, len);
+	if (item)
+		return item;
+
+	hashed_form(&buf, &hash_algos[GIT_HASH_SHA256], string, len);
+	item = lookup_prefix(map, buf.buf, buf.len);
+	strbuf_release(&buf);
+	return item;
+}
+
 int map_user(struct string_list *map,
 	     const char **email, size_t *emaillen,
 	     const char **name, size_t *namelen)
@@ -324,7 +359,7 @@  int map_user(struct string_list *map,
 		 (int)*namelen, debug_str(*name),
 		 (int)*emaillen, debug_str(*email));
 
-	item = lookup_prefix(map, *email, *emaillen);
+	item = lookup_one(map, *email, *emaillen);
 	if (item != NULL) {
 		me = (struct mailmap_entry *)item->util;
 		if (me->namemap.nr) {
@@ -334,7 +369,7 @@  int map_user(struct string_list *map,
 			 * simple entry.
 			 */
 			struct string_list_item *subitem;
-			subitem = lookup_prefix(&me->namemap, *name, *namelen);
+			subitem = lookup_one(&me->namemap, *name, *namelen);
 			if (subitem)
 				item = subitem;
 		}
diff --git a/t/t4203-mailmap.sh b/t/t4203-mailmap.sh
index 586c3a86b1..794133ba5d 100755
--- a/t/t4203-mailmap.sh
+++ b/t/t4203-mailmap.sh
@@ -62,6 +62,41 @@  test_expect_success 'check-mailmap --stdin arguments' '
 	test_cmp expect actual
 '
 
+test_expect_success 'hashed mailmap' '
+	test_config mailmap.file ./hashed &&
+	hashed_author_name="@sha256:$(printf "$GIT_AUTHOR_NAME" | test-tool sha256)" &&
+	hashed_author_email="@sha256:$(printf "$GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL" | test-tool sha256)" &&
+	cat >expect <<-EOF &&
+	$GIT_COMMITTER_NAME <$GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL>
+	EOF
+
+	cat >hashed <<-EOF &&
+	$GIT_COMMITTER_NAME <$GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL> $hashed_author_name <$GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL>
+	EOF
+	git check-mailmap  "$GIT_AUTHOR_NAME <$GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL>" >actual &&
+	test_cmp expect actual &&
+
+	cat >hashed <<-EOF &&
+	Wrong <wrong@example.org> $GIT_AUTHOR_NAME <$GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL>
+	$GIT_COMMITTER_NAME <$GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL> $hashed_author_name <$GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL>
+	EOF
+	# Check that we prefer literal matches over hashed names.
+	git check-mailmap  "$hashed_author_name <$GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL>" >actual &&
+	test_cmp expect actual &&
+
+	cat >hashed <<-EOF &&
+	$GIT_COMMITTER_NAME <$GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL> $hashed_author_name <$hashed_author_email>
+	EOF
+	git check-mailmap  "$GIT_AUTHOR_NAME <$GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL>" >actual &&
+	test_cmp expect actual &&
+
+	cat >hashed <<-EOF &&
+	$GIT_COMMITTER_NAME <$GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL> <$hashed_author_email>
+	EOF
+	git check-mailmap  "$GIT_AUTHOR_NAME <$GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL>" >actual &&
+	test_cmp expect actual
+'
+
 test_expect_success 'check-mailmap bogus contact' '
 	test_must_fail git check-mailmap bogus
 '