John the Ripper is a free password cracking software tool. Initially
developed for the Unix operating system, it now runs on fifteen
different platforms (eleven of which are architecture-specific versions
of Unix, DOS, Win32, BeOS, and OpenVMS). It is one of the most popular
password testing and breaking programs as it combines a number of
password crackers into one package, autodetects password hash types, and
includes a customizable cracker. It can be run against various
encrypted password formats including several crypt password hash types
most commonly found on various Unix versions (based on DES, MD5, or
Blowfish), Kerberos AFS, and Windows NT/2000/XP/2003 LM hash. Additional
modules have extended its ability to include MD4-based password hashes
and passwords stored in LDAP, MySQL, and others. Cracking password in
Kali Linux using John the Ripper is very straight forward. In this post,
I will demonstrate that.
John the Ripper is different from tools like Hydra. Hydra does blind brute-forcing by trying username/password combinations on a service daemon like ftp server or telnet server. John however needs the hash first. So the greater challenge for a hacker is to first get the hash that is to be cracked. Now a days hashes are more easily crackable using free rainbow tables available online. Just go to one of the sites, submit the hash and if the hash is made of a common word, then the site would show the word almost instantly. Rainbow tables basically store common words and their hashes in a large database. Larger the database, more the words covered.
One of the modes John the Ripper can use is the dictionary attack. It
takes text string samples (usually from a file, called a wordlist,
containing words found in a dictionary or real passwords cracked
before), encrypting it in the same format as the password being examined
(including both the encryption algorithm and key), and comparing the
output to the encrypted string. It can also perform a variety of
alterations to the dictionary words and try these. Many of these
alterations are also used in John’s single attack mode, which modifies
an associated plaintext (such as a username with an encrypted password)
and checks the variations against the hashes.
John also offers a brute force mode. In this type of attack, the program goes through all the possible plaintexts, hashing each one and then comparing it to the input hash. John uses character frequency tables to try plaintexts containing more frequently used characters first. This method is useful for cracking passwords which do not appear in dictionary wordlists, but it takes a long time to run.
John the Ripper uses a 2 step process to cracking a password. First it will use the passwd and shadow file to create an output file. Next, you then actually use dictionary attack against that file to crack it. In short, John the Ripper will use the following two files:
I will also add john to sudo group, assign /bin/bash as his shell. There’s a nice article I posted last year which explains user creating in Linux in great details. It’s a good read if you are interested to know and understand the flags and this same structure can be used to almost any Linux/Unix/Solaris operating system. Also, when you create a user, you need their home directories created, so yes, go through creating user in Linux post if you have any doubts. Now, that’s enough mambo jumbo, let’s get to business.
First let’s create a user named john and assign password as his password. (very secured..yeah!)
Then make “mypasswd” available to your non-root user account that you will run John under. No further commands will need to be run as root.
If your system is ancient enough that it keeps passwords right in the world-readable /etc/passwd, simply make a copy of that file.
If you’re going to be cracking Kerberos AFS passwords, use John’s “unafs” utility to obtain a passwd-like file.
Similarly, if you’re going to be cracking Windows passwords, use any of the many utilities that dump Windows password hashes (LM and/or NTLM) in Jeremy Allison’s PWDUMP output format. Some of these utilities may be obtained here:
It is highly recommended that you obtain a larger wordlist than John’s default password.lst and edit the “Wordlist = …” line in the configuration file (see CONFIG) before running John. Some wordlists may be obtained here:
3. If you’ve got some passwords cracked, they are stored in $JOHN/john.pot. The john.pot file is not meant to be human-friendly. You should be using John itself to display the contents of its “pot file” in a convenient format:
You might notice that many accounts have a disabled shell. You can make John skip those in the report. Assuming that the disabled shell is called “/etc/expired”, the command would be:
If you have more files to crack, it is preferable to load them at the same time:
5. To catch weak passwords not derived from readily available users’ personal information, you should proceed with cracking modes demanding more processor time. First, let’s try a tiny wordlist with word mangling rules enabled:
Depending on target hash type, the number of different salts (if applicable), the size of your wordlist, rules, and processor performance, wordlist-based cracking may take anywhere from under a second to many days.
You do not have to leave John running on a (pseudo-)terminal. If running John on a Unix-like system, you can simply disconnect from the server, close your xterm, etc. John will catch the SIGHUP (“hangup” signal) and continue running. Alternatively, you may prefer to start it in the background right away:
You may further enhance this by specifying a session name:
To view the status of a running session, use:
Any interrupted sessions may be continued with:
To only crack accounts with a “good” shell (in general, the shell, user, and group filters described above work for all cracking modes as well):
Note that the default wordlist rules include “:” (a no-op – try words as they are in the list) on the first line. If you already ran through a wordlist without using rules, and then decided to also try the same wordlist with rules, you’d better comment this line out.
6. The most powerful cracking mode in John is called “incremental” (not a proper name, but kept for historical reasons). You can simply run:
Don’t expect “incremental” mode sessions to terminate in a reasonable time (unless all the passwords are weak and get cracked), read MODES for an explanation of this.
In some cases it is faster to use some other pre-defined incremental mode parameters and only crack simpler passwords, from a limited character set. The following command will try 10 different characters only, passwords from “0” to “99999999999999999999” (in an optimal order):
If you’ve got many password files from a particular country, organization, etc., it might be useful to use all of them for the charset file that you then use to crack even more passwords from these files or from some other password files from the same place:
8. Finally, you might want to e-mail all users with weak passwords to tell them to change their passwords. (This is not always a good idea, though, since lots of people do not check their e-mail or ignore such messages, and the messages can be a hint for crackers.) Edit the “mailer” script supplied with John: the message it sends and possibly the mail command (especially if the password file is from a different machine). Then run:
1. Let’s assume that you notice that in some password file a lot of users have their passwords set to login names with “?!” appended. Then you just make a new “single crack” mode rule (seeRULES for information on the syntax) and place it somewhere near the beginning:
All the same applies to wordlist mode rules as well.
2. If you generate a custom charset file (described above) you will also need to define a configuration file section with the “incremental” mode parameters. In the simplest case it will be like this (where “Custom” can be replaced with any name you like):
You can also use CharCount to limit the number of different characters that John tries, even if the charset file has more:
To make John try passwords of certain lengths only, use the following lines:
On the contrary, you may want to set “MaxLen” low if you think there are a lot of short passwords.
3. Another example: a lot of users at some site use short duplicated words as their passwords, such as “fredfred”. As the number of such potential passwords is fairly low, it makes sense to code a new external cracking mode that tries them all, up to some length.
You can find the actual implementation of such a cracking mode with lots of comments in the default configuration file supplied with John. Please refer to EXTERNAL for information on the programming language used.
John the Ripper is different from tools like Hydra. Hydra does blind brute-forcing by trying username/password combinations on a service daemon like ftp server or telnet server. John however needs the hash first. So the greater challenge for a hacker is to first get the hash that is to be cracked. Now a days hashes are more easily crackable using free rainbow tables available online. Just go to one of the sites, submit the hash and if the hash is made of a common word, then the site would show the word almost instantly. Rainbow tables basically store common words and their hashes in a large database. Larger the database, more the words covered.
John also offers a brute force mode. In this type of attack, the program goes through all the possible plaintexts, hashing each one and then comparing it to the input hash. John uses character frequency tables to try plaintexts containing more frequently used characters first. This method is useful for cracking passwords which do not appear in dictionary wordlists, but it takes a long time to run.
John the Ripper uses a 2 step process to cracking a password. First it will use the passwd and shadow file to create an output file. Next, you then actually use dictionary attack against that file to crack it. In short, John the Ripper will use the following two files:
/etc/passwd /etc/shadow
Cracking password using John the Ripper
In Linux, password hash is stored in /etc/shadow file. For the sake of this exercise, I will create a new user names john and assign a simple password ‘password’ to him.I will also add john to sudo group, assign /bin/bash as his shell. There’s a nice article I posted last year which explains user creating in Linux in great details. It’s a good read if you are interested to know and understand the flags and this same structure can be used to almost any Linux/Unix/Solaris operating system. Also, when you create a user, you need their home directories created, so yes, go through creating user in Linux post if you have any doubts. Now, that’s enough mambo jumbo, let’s get to business.
First let’s create a user named john and assign password as his password. (very secured..yeah!)
root@kali:~# useradd -m john -G sudo -s /bin/bash root@kali:~# passwd john Enter new UNIX password: <password> Retype new UNIX password: <password> passwd: password updated successfully root@kali:~#
Unshadowing password
Now that we have created our victim, let’s start with unshadow commands. The unshadow command will combine the extries of /etc/passwd and /etc/shadow to create 1 file with username and password details. When you just type in unshadow, it shows you the usage anyway.root@kali:~# unshadow Usage: unshadow PASSWORD-FILE SHADOW-FILE root@kali:~# unshadow /etc/passwd /etc/shadow > /root/johns_passwdI’ve redirected the output to /root/johns_passwd file because I got the ticks for organizing things. Do what you feel like here.
Cracking process with John the Ripper
At this point we just need a dictionary file and get on with cracking. John comes with it’s own small password file and it can be located in /usr/share/john/password.lst. I’ve showed the size of that file using the following command.root@kali:~# ls -ltrah /usr/share/john/password.lstYou can use your own password lists too or download a large one from Internet (there’s lots of dictionary file in terabyte size).
root@kali:~# john --wordlist=/usr/share/john/Looks like it worked. So we can now use john –show option to list cracked passwords. Note that it’s a simple password that existed in the dictionary so it worked. If it wasn’t a simple password, then you would need a much bigger dictionary and lot longer to to crack it.password.lst /root/johns_passwd Created directory: /root/.john Warning: detected hash type "sha512crypt", but the string is also recognized as "crypt" Use the "--format=crypt" option to force loading these as that type instead Using default input encoding: UTF-8 Loaded 2 password hashes with 2 different salts (sha512crypt, crypt(3) $6$ [SHA512 128/128 SSE2 2x]) Will run 2 OpenMP threads Press 'q' or Ctrl-C to abort, almost any other key for status password (john) 1g 0:00:00:06 DONE (2015-11-06 13:30) 0.1610g/s 571.0p/s 735.9c/s 735.9C/s modem..sss Use the "--show" option to display all of the cracked passwords reliably Session completed root@kali:~#
root@kali:~# john --show /root/johns_passwd john:password:1000:1001::/home/john:/bin/bash 1 password hash cracked, 1 left root@kali:~#
John the Ripper advanced commands:
Now that we have completed the basics of John the Ripper and cracked a password using it, it’s possibly time to move on to bigger and more complex things. For that you should check the documentation on cracking MODES and examples of John the Ripper usage.John the Ripper's cracking modes - Click to expand
John the Ripper’s cracking modes.
Mode descriptions here are short and only cover the basic things. Check other documentation files for information on customizing the modes.Wordlist mode.
This is the simplest cracking mode supported by John. All you need to do is specify a wordlist (a text file containing one word per line) and some password files. You can enable word mangling rules (which are used to modify or “mangle” words producing other likely passwords). If enabled, all of the rules will be applied to every line in the wordlist file producing multiple candidate passwords from each source word. The wordlist should not contain duplicate lines. John does not sort entries in the wordlist since that would consume a lot of resources and would prevent you from making John try the candidate passwords in the order that you define (with more likely candidate passwords listed first). However, if you don’t list your candidate passwords in a reasonable order, it’d be better if you sort the wordlist alphabetically: with some hash types, John runs a bit faster if each candidate password it tries only differs from the previous one by a few characters. Most wordlists that you may find on the Net are already sorted anyway. On the other hand, if your wordlist is sorted alphabetically, you do not need to bother about some wordlist entries being longer than the maximum supported password length for the hash type you’re cracking. To give an example, for traditional DES-based crypt(3) hashes only the first 8 characters of passwords are significant. This means that if there are two or more candidate passwords in the wordlist whose first 8 characters are exactly the same, they’re effectively the same 8 character long candidate password which only needs to be tried once. As long as the wordlist is sorted alphabetically, John is smart enough to handle this special case right. In fact, it is recommended that you do not truncate candidate passwords in your wordlist file since the rest of the characters (beyond the length limit of your target hash type) are likely still needed and make a difference if you enable word mangling rules. The recommended way to sort a wordlist for use with default wordlist rule set is:tr A-Z a-z < SOURCE | sort -u > TARGETSee RULES for information on writing your own wordlist rules.
“Single crack” mode.
This is the mode you should start cracking with. It will use the login names, “GECOS” / “Full Name” fields, and users’ home directory names as candidate passwords, also with a large set of mangling rules applied. Since the information is only used against passwords for the accounts it was taken from (and against password hashes which happened to be assigned the same salt), “single crack” mode is much faster than wordlist mode. This permits for the use of a much larger set of word mangling rules with “single crack”, and their use is always enabled with this mode. Successfully guessed passwords are also tried against all loaded password hashes just in case more users have the same password. Note that running this mode on many password files simultaneously may sometimes get more passwords cracked than it would if you ran it on the individual password files separately.“Incremental” mode.
This is the most powerful cracking mode, it can try all possible character combinations as passwords. However, it is assumed that cracking with this mode will never terminate because of the number of combinations being too large (actually, it will terminate if you set a low password length limit or make it use a small charset), and you’ll have to interrupt it earlier. That’s one reason why this mode deals with trigraph frequencies, separately for each character position and for each password length, to crack as many passwords as possible within a limited time. To use the mode you need a specific definition for the mode’s parameters, including password length limits and the charset to use. These parameters are defined in the configuration file sections called [Incremental:MODE], where MODE is any name that you assign to the mode (it’s the name that you will need to specify on John’s command line). You can either use a pre-defined incremental mode definition or define a custom one. As of version 1.8.0, pre-defined incremental modes are “ASCII” (all 95 printable ASCII characters), “LM_ASCII” (for use on LM hashes), “Alnum” (all 62 alphanumeric characters), “Alpha” (all 52 letters), “LowerNum” (lowercase letters plus digits, for 36 total), “UpperNum” (uppercase letters plus digits, for 36 total), “LowerSpace” (lowercase letters plus space, for 27 total), “Lower” (lowercase letters), “Upper” (uppercase letters), and “Digits” (digits only). The supplied .chr files include data for lengths up to 13 for all of these modes except for “LM_ASCII” (where password portions input to the LM hash halves are assumed to be truncated at length 7) and “Digits” (where the supplied .chr file and pre-defined incremental mode work for lengths up to 20). Some of the many .chr files needed by these pre-defined incremental modes might not be bundled with every version of John the Ripper, being available as a separate download. See CONFIG and EXAMPLES for information on defining custom modes.External mode.
You can define an external cracking mode for use with John. This is done with the configuration file sections called [List.External:MODE], where MODE is any name that you assign to the mode. The section should contain program code of some functions that John will use to generate the candidate passwords it tries. The functions are coded in a subset of C and are compiled by John at startup when you request the particular external mode on John’s command line. See EXTERNAL.What modes should I use?
See EXAMPLES for a reasonable order of cracking modes to use.John the Ripper - Usage Examples - Click to expand
John the Ripper usage examples.
These examples are to give you some tips on what John’s features can be used for.Command line.
1. First, you need to get a copy of your password file. If your system uses shadow passwords, you may use John’s “unshadow” utility to obtain the traditional Unix password file, as root:umask 077 unshadow /etc/passwd /etc/shadow > mypasswd(You may need to replace the filenames as needed.)
Then make “mypasswd” available to your non-root user account that you will run John under. No further commands will need to be run as root.
If your system is ancient enough that it keeps passwords right in the world-readable /etc/passwd, simply make a copy of that file.
If you’re going to be cracking Kerberos AFS passwords, use John’s “unafs” utility to obtain a passwd-like file.
Similarly, if you’re going to be cracking Windows passwords, use any of the many utilities that dump Windows password hashes (LM and/or NTLM) in Jeremy Allison’s PWDUMP output format. Some of these utilities may be obtained here:
http://www.openwall.com/passwords/pwdump2. Now, let’s assume you’ve got a password file, “mypasswd”, and want to crack it. The simplest way is to let John use its default order of cracking modes:
john mypasswdThis will try “single crack” mode first, then use a wordlist with rules, and finally go for “incremental” mode. Please refer to MODES for more information on these modes.
It is highly recommended that you obtain a larger wordlist than John’s default password.lst and edit the “Wordlist = …” line in the configuration file (see CONFIG) before running John. Some wordlists may be obtained here:
http://www.openwall.com/wordlists/Of those available in the collection at the URL above, all.lst (downloadable as all.gz) and huge.lst (only available on the CD) are good candidates for the “Wordlist = …” setting.
3. If you’ve got some passwords cracked, they are stored in $JOHN/john.pot. The john.pot file is not meant to be human-friendly. You should be using John itself to display the contents of its “pot file” in a convenient format:
john --show mypasswdIf the account list gets large and doesn’t fit on the screen, you should, of course, use your shell’s output redirection.
You might notice that many accounts have a disabled shell. You can make John skip those in the report. Assuming that the disabled shell is called “/etc/expired”, the command would be:
john --show --shells=-/etc/expired mypasswdor shorter, but will also match “/any/path/expired”:
john --show --shells=-expired mypasswdor if you also want to ignore some other shell, say “/etc/newuser”:
john --show --shells=-expired,newuser mypasswdTo check if any root (UID 0) accounts got cracked:
john --show --users=0 mypasswdor to check for cracked root (UID 0) accounts in multiple files:
john --show --users=0 *passwd* *.pwdTo display the root (username “root”) account only:
john --show --users=root mypasswdAnd finally, to check for privileged groups:
john --show --groups=0,1 mypasswd4. You might prefer to manage the cracking modes manually. It is wise to start with “single crack” mode:
john --single mypasswdor since the GNU-style double dashes are optional and since option names can be abbreviated for as long as they remain unambiguous:
john -si mypasswdYou should not abbreviate options in scripts which you would want to work with future versions of John since what is unambiguous now might become ambiguous with the addition of more options.
If you have more files to crack, it is preferable to load them at the same time:
john --single passwd1 passwd2or even:
john --single *passwd* *.pwdThis way, John will run faster and might even crack more passwords than it would if you ran it on each password file separately.
5. To catch weak passwords not derived from readily available users’ personal information, you should proceed with cracking modes demanding more processor time. First, let’s try a tiny wordlist with word mangling rules enabled:
john --wordlist=password.lst --rules mypasswdor abbreviating the options:
john -w=password.lst -ru mypasswdThen proceed with a larger wordlist, also applying the mangling rules:
john --wordlist=all.lst --rules mypasswdIf you’ve got a lot of spare disk space to trade for performance and the hash type of your password files is relatively slow, you may use John’s “unique” utility to eliminate any duplicate candidate passwords:
john --wordlist=all.lst --rules --stdout | unique mangled.lst john --wordlist=mangled.lst mypasswdIf you know that your target hash type truncates passwords at a given length, you may optimize this even further:
john --wordlist=all.lst --rules --stdout=8 | unique mangled8.lst john --wordlist=mangled8.lst mypasswdAlternatively, you may simply use huge.lst available on Openwall wordlist collection CDs. It has word mangling rules pre-applied for the most common languages and it has any duplicates purged.
Depending on target hash type, the number of different salts (if applicable), the size of your wordlist, rules, and processor performance, wordlist-based cracking may take anywhere from under a second to many days.
You do not have to leave John running on a (pseudo-)terminal. If running John on a Unix-like system, you can simply disconnect from the server, close your xterm, etc. John will catch the SIGHUP (“hangup” signal) and continue running. Alternatively, you may prefer to start it in the background right away:
john --wordlist=all.lst --rules mypasswd &Obviously, the “&” is specific to Unix shells and will not work on most other platforms.
You may further enhance this by specifying a session name:
john --session=allrules --wordlist=all.lst --rules mypasswd &This ensures that you won’t accidentally interfere with the instance of John running in the background if you proceed to start other sessions.
To view the status of a running session, use:
john --statusfor the default session or:
john --status=allrulesfor any other session. This works for both interrupted and running sessions. To obtain the most up-to-date information from a running session on a Unix-like system, send a SIGHUP to the appropriate “john” process.
Any interrupted sessions may be continued with:
john --restoreor:
john --restore=allrulesFinally, to make John have less impact on other processes, you should set the option “Idle = Y” in the configuration file (see CONFIG). The default may vary depending on the version and build of JtR.
To only crack accounts with a “good” shell (in general, the shell, user, and group filters described above work for all cracking modes as well):
john --wordlist=all.lst --rules --shells=sh,csh,tcsh,bash mypasswdLike with all other cracking modes, it is faster to crack all the files you need cracked simultaneously:
john --wordlist=all.lst --rules passwd1 passwd2You can crack some passwords only. This will try cracking all root (UID 0) accounts in all the password files:
john --wordlist=all.lst --rules --users=0 *passwd*Alternatively, you may wish to not waste time cracking your very own passwords, if you’re sure they’re uncrackable:
john --wordlist=all.lst --rules --users=-root,solar *passwd*Sometimes it is useful to split your password hashes into two sets which you crack separately, like:
john --wordlist=all.lst --rules --salts=2 *passwd* john --wordlist=all.lst --rules --salts=-2 *passwd*This will make John try salts used on two or more password hashes first and then try the rest. Total cracking time will be almost the same, but you will get some passwords cracked earlier, which is useful, for example, for penetration testing and demonstrations to management. Similarly, you may check all password hashes with a small wordlist, but only those that you can check faster (with “–salts=2”) with a larger one. With large numbers of password hashes and/or with a highly non-uniform distribution of salts, it may be appropriate to use a threshold larger than 2 with “–salts” (sometimes even values as high as 1000 will do).
Note that the default wordlist rules include “:” (a no-op – try words as they are in the list) on the first line. If you already ran through a wordlist without using rules, and then decided to also try the same wordlist with rules, you’d better comment this line out.
6. The most powerful cracking mode in John is called “incremental” (not a proper name, but kept for historical reasons). You can simply run:
john --incremental mypasswdor:
john -i mypasswdThis will use the default “incremental” mode parameters, which are defined in the configuration file’s section named either [Incremental:ASCII] (for most hash types) or [Incremental:LM_ASCII] (for Windows LM hashes). By default, the [Incremental:ASCII] parameters are set to use the full printable ASCII character set (95 characters) and to try all possible password lengths from 0 to 13 (if the current hash type has a lower maximum password length, incremental mode’s length limit is reduced accordingly). [Incremental:LM_ASCII] is similar, except that it takes advantage of LM hashes being case-insensitive and of their halves being limited to 7 characters each.
Don’t expect “incremental” mode sessions to terminate in a reasonable time (unless all the passwords are weak and get cracked), read MODES for an explanation of this.
In some cases it is faster to use some other pre-defined incremental mode parameters and only crack simpler passwords, from a limited character set. The following command will try 10 different characters only, passwords from “0” to “99999999999999999999” (in an optimal order):
john -i=digits mypasswdOf course, you can use most of the additional features demonstrated above for wordlist mode with “incremental” mode as well. For example, on a large-scale penetration test, you may have John crack only root (UID 0) accounts in a set of password files:
john -i -u=0 *.pwd7. If you’ve got a password file for which you already have a lot of passwords cracked or obtained by other means, and the passwords are unusual, then you may want to generate a new charset file, based on character frequencies from that password file only:
john --make-charset=custom.chr mypasswdThen use that new file with “incremental” mode.
If you’ve got many password files from a particular country, organization, etc., it might be useful to use all of them for the charset file that you then use to crack even more passwords from these files or from some other password files from the same place:
john --make-charset=custom.chr passwd1 passwd2 [ Configure your custom "incremental" mode now. See below. ] john -i=custom passwd3You can use some pre-defined or custom word filters when generating the charset file to have John consider some simpler passwords only:
john --make-charset=my_alpha.chr --external=filter_alpha mypasswdIf your “pot file” got large enough (or if you don’t have any charset files at all), you might want to use it to generate a new set of main charset files:
makechrwhere “makechr” is a script that invokes “john –make-charset=…” with varying filenames, for all of the external mode word filters defined in the configuration file. In this example, John will overwrite the charset files with new ones that are based on your entire $JOHN/john.pot (John uses the entire “pot file” if you don’t specify any password files).
8. Finally, you might want to e-mail all users with weak passwords to tell them to change their passwords. (This is not always a good idea, though, since lots of people do not check their e-mail or ignore such messages, and the messages can be a hint for crackers.) Edit the “mailer” script supplied with John: the message it sends and possibly the mail command (especially if the password file is from a different machine). Then run:
mailer mypasswd
Configuration file.
Please refer to CONFIG for general information on the configuration file and its possible locations.1. Let’s assume that you notice that in some password file a lot of users have their passwords set to login names with “?!” appended. Then you just make a new “single crack” mode rule (seeRULES for information on the syntax) and place it somewhere near the beginning:
[List.Rules:Single] Az"?!"Hint: if you want to temporarily disable all of the default rules, you can simply rename the section to something John doesn’t use and define a new one with the section’s old name, but be sure to leave the “List.” prefix of the name intact to maintain correct configuration file syntax.
All the same applies to wordlist mode rules as well.
2. If you generate a custom charset file (described above) you will also need to define a configuration file section with the “incremental” mode parameters. In the simplest case it will be like this (where “Custom” can be replaced with any name you like):
[Incremental:Custom] File = custom.chrThis way, John will only use characters from passwords used to generate the charset file only. To make John try some more characters, add:
Extra = !@#$%These extra characters will then be added, but still considered the least probable. If you want to make sure that, with your extra characters, John will try 95 different characters, you can add:
CharCount = 95This will make John print a warning if it only has fewer than 95 characters in its charset.
You can also use CharCount to limit the number of different characters that John tries, even if the charset file has more:
CharCount = 20If you didn’t use any filters when generating the charset file, setting CharCount this low will make John never attempt rare characters and character combinations, not even for really short passwords, spending the time on simple longer candidate passwords instead. However, the default length switching is usually smart enough so that you shouldn’t need this trick.
To make John try passwords of certain lengths only, use the following lines:
MinLen = 6 MaxLen = 8Setting “MinLen” high, as in the example above, is reasonable if shorter passwords weren’t allowed to set on the machine you got the password file from (however, note that root can usually set any password for any user and there are often loopholes in operating systems’ password policy enforcement capabilities).
On the contrary, you may want to set “MaxLen” low if you think there are a lot of short passwords.
3. Another example: a lot of users at some site use short duplicated words as their passwords, such as “fredfred”. As the number of such potential passwords is fairly low, it makes sense to code a new external cracking mode that tries them all, up to some length.
You can find the actual implementation of such a cracking mode with lots of comments in the default configuration file supplied with John. Please refer to EXTERNAL for information on the programming language used.