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    crack-hashcat

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    About

    Advanced password recovery and hash cracking tool supporting multiple algorithms and attack modes...

    SKILL.md

    Hashcat Password Recovery

    Overview

    Hashcat is the world's fastest password recovery tool, supporting over 300 hash algorithms and multiple attack modes. This skill covers authorized password auditing, forensic password recovery, and security research applications.

    IMPORTANT: Password cracking must only be performed on hashes you are authorized to crack. Unauthorized password cracking is illegal. Always ensure proper authorization and legal compliance.

    Quick Start

    Basic password cracking:

    # Identify hash type
    hashcat --example-hashes | grep -i md5
    
    # Dictionary attack on MD5 hash
    hashcat -m 0 -a 0 hashes.txt wordlist.txt
    
    # Show cracked passwords
    hashcat -m 0 hashes.txt --show
    
    # Benchmark system performance
    hashcat -b
    

    Core Workflow

    Password Cracking Workflow

    Progress: [ ] 1. Verify authorization for password cracking [ ] 2. Identify hash algorithm type [ ] 3. Prepare hash file and wordlists [ ] 4. Select appropriate attack mode [ ] 5. Execute cracking operation [ ] 6. Analyze cracked passwords [ ] 7. Document password policy weaknesses [ ] 8. Securely delete hash files and results

    Work through each step systematically. Check off completed items.

    1. Authorization Verification

    CRITICAL: Before any password cracking:

    • Confirm written authorization from data owner
    • Verify legal right to crack captured hashes
    • Understand data handling and retention requirements
    • Document chain of custody for forensic cases
    • Ensure secure storage of cracked passwords

    2. Hash Identification

    Identify hash algorithm:

    # Show all supported hash types
    hashcat --example-hashes
    
    # Common hash types
    hashcat --example-hashes | grep -i "MD5"
    hashcat --example-hashes | grep -i "SHA"
    hashcat --example-hashes | grep -i "NTLM"
    
    # Use hash-identifier (separate tool)
    hash-identifier
    # Paste hash when prompted
    
    # Hashcat mode numbers (common)
    # 0 = MD5
    # 100 = SHA1
    # 1000 = NTLM
    # 1400 = SHA256
    # 1800 = sha512crypt
    # 3200 = bcrypt
    # 5600 = NetNTLMv2
    # 13100 = Kerberos 5 TGS-REP
    

    3. Hash File Preparation

    Prepare hash files:

    # Simple hash file (one hash per line)
    echo "5f4dcc3b5aa765d61d8327deb882cf99" > hashes.txt
    
    # Hash with username (username:hash format)
    cat > hashes.txt <<EOF
    admin:5f4dcc3b5aa765d61d8327deb882cf99
    user1:098f6bcd4621d373cade4e832627b4f6
    EOF
    
    # Hash with salt (hash:salt format for some algorithms)
    echo "hash:salt" > hashes.txt
    
    # From /etc/shadow (Linux)
    sudo cat /etc/shadow | grep -v "^#" | grep -v ":\*:" | grep -v ":!:" > shadow_hashes.txt
    
    # From NTDS.dit (Active Directory)
    secretsdump.py -ntds ntds.dit -system SYSTEM -hashes lmhash:nthash LOCAL > ad_hashes.txt
    

    4. Attack Modes

    Choose appropriate attack mode:

    Dictionary Attack (Mode 0):

    # Basic dictionary attack
    hashcat -m 0 -a 0 hashes.txt rockyou.txt
    
    # Multiple wordlists
    hashcat -m 0 -a 0 hashes.txt wordlist1.txt wordlist2.txt
    
    # With rules
    hashcat -m 0 -a 0 hashes.txt rockyou.txt -r rules/best64.rule
    

    Combinator Attack (Mode 1):

    # Combine words from two wordlists
    hashcat -m 0 -a 1 hashes.txt wordlist1.txt wordlist2.txt
    

    Brute-Force Attack (Mode 3):

    # All lowercase letters, 8 characters
    hashcat -m 0 -a 3 hashes.txt ?l?l?l?l?l?l?l?l
    
    # Mixed case and numbers, 6 characters
    hashcat -m 0 -a 3 hashes.txt ?1?1?1?1?1?1 -1 ?l?u?d
    
    # Custom charset
    hashcat -m 0 -a 3 hashes.txt ?1?1?1?1?1?1?1?1 -1 abc123
    

    Mask Attack (Mode 3 with patterns):

    # Password format: Uppercase + 6 lowercase + 2 digits
    hashcat -m 0 -a 3 hashes.txt ?u?l?l?l?l?l?l?d?d
    
    # Year pattern: word + 4 digits (2019-2024)
    hashcat -m 0 -a 3 hashes.txt password?d?d?d?d
    
    # Common patterns
    hashcat -m 0 -a 3 hashes.txt ?u?l?l?l?l?l?d?d?s  # Capital + word + numbers + special
    

    Hybrid Attacks (Modes 6 & 7):

    # Wordlist + mask (append)
    hashcat -m 0 -a 6 hashes.txt wordlist.txt ?d?d?d?d
    
    # Mask + wordlist (prepend)
    hashcat -m 0 -a 7 hashes.txt ?d?d?d?d wordlist.txt
    

    Character Sets:

    • ?l = lowercase (abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz)
    • ?u = uppercase (ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ)
    • ?d = digits (0123456789)
    • ?s = special characters (!@#$%^&*...)
    • ?a = all characters (l+u+d+s)
    • ?b = all printable ASCII

    5. Performance Optimization

    Optimize cracking performance:

    # Use GPU acceleration
    hashcat -m 0 -a 0 hashes.txt wordlist.txt -w 3
    
    # Workload profiles
    # -w 1 = Low (desktop usable)
    # -w 2 = Default
    # -w 3 = High (dedicated cracking)
    # -w 4 = Nightmare (max performance)
    
    # Specify GPU device
    hashcat -m 0 -a 0 hashes.txt wordlist.txt -d 1
    
    # Show performance benchmark
    hashcat -b
    
    # Optimize kernel
    hashcat -m 0 -a 0 hashes.txt wordlist.txt -O
    
    # Show estimated time
    hashcat -m 0 -a 0 hashes.txt wordlist.txt --runtime=3600
    

    6. Rules and Mutations

    Apply password mutation rules:

    # Use rule file
    hashcat -m 0 -a 0 hashes.txt wordlist.txt -r rules/best64.rule
    
    # Multiple rule files
    hashcat -m 0 -a 0 hashes.txt wordlist.txt -r rules/best64.rule -r rules/leetspeak.rule
    
    # Common Hashcat rules
    # best64.rule - Best 64 rules for speed/coverage
    # dive.rule - Deep mutations
    # toggles1.rule - Case toggles
    # generated2.rule - Complex mutations
    
    # Custom rule examples
    # : = do nothing
    # l = lowercase all
    # u = uppercase all
    # c = capitalize first, lowercase rest
    # $1 = append "1"
    # ^2 = prepend "2"
    # sa@ = replace 'a' with '@'
    

    7. Session Management

    Manage cracking sessions:

    # Save session
    hashcat -m 0 -a 0 hashes.txt wordlist.txt --session=mysession
    
    # Restore session
    hashcat --session=mysession --restore
    
    # Show status
    hashcat --session=mysession --status
    
    # Remove session
    hashcat --session=mysession --remove
    
    # Auto-checkpoint every 60 seconds
    hashcat -m 0 -a 0 hashes.txt wordlist.txt --session=mysession --restore-file-path=/path/to/checkpoint
    

    8. Results and Reporting

    View and export results:

    # Show cracked passwords
    hashcat -m 0 hashes.txt --show
    
    # Show only usernames and passwords
    hashcat -m 0 hashes.txt --show --username
    
    # Export to file
    hashcat -m 0 hashes.txt --show > cracked.txt
    
    # Show cracking statistics
    hashcat -m 0 hashes.txt --show --status
    
    # Left side (uncracked hashes)
    hashcat -m 0 hashes.txt --left
    

    Security Considerations

    Authorization & Legal Compliance

    • Explicit Authorization: Written permission required for all password cracking
    • Forensic Chain of Custody: Maintain evidence integrity
    • Data Protection: Securely handle cracked passwords
    • Scope Limitation: Only crack specifically authorized hashes
    • Legal Jurisdiction: Understand applicable laws (CFAA, GDPR, etc.)

    Operational Security

    • Secure Storage: Encrypt hash files and results
    • Offline Cracking: Perform on air-gapped systems when possible
    • Resource Management: Monitor system resources during cracking
    • Temperature: Ensure adequate cooling for extended GPU usage
    • Power: Use surge protection for hardware safety

    Audit Logging

    Document all password cracking activities:

    • Hash source and acquisition method
    • Authorization documentation
    • Hash algorithm and attack mode used
    • Cracking start and end timestamps
    • Success rate and crack time
    • Wordlists and rules applied
    • Password complexity analysis
    • Secure deletion of artifacts

    Compliance

    • MITRE ATT&CK: T1110 (Brute Force)
      • T1110.002 (Password Cracking)
    • NIST SP 800-63B: Digital Identity Guidelines for passwords
    • PCI-DSS: Password security requirements
    • ISO 27001: A.9.4 Secret authentication information management

    Common Patterns

    Pattern 1: Windows Domain Password Audit

    # Extract NTLM hashes from NTDS.dit
    secretsdump.py -ntds ntds.dit -system SYSTEM LOCAL > ad_hashes.txt
    
    # Crack NTLM hashes
    hashcat -m 1000 -a 0 ad_hashes.txt rockyou.txt -r rules/best64.rule
    
    # Show cracked Domain Admin accounts
    hashcat -m 1000 ad_hashes.txt --show | grep -i "domain admins"
    

    Pattern 2: Linux Password Audit

    # Extract hashes from /etc/shadow
    sudo unshadow /etc/passwd /etc/shadow > linux_hashes.txt
    
    # Crack SHA-512 crypt hashes
    hashcat -m 1800 -a 0 linux_hashes.txt rockyou.txt
    
    # Analyze password complexity
    hashcat -m 1800 linux_hashes.txt --show | awk -F: '{print length($2), $2}'
    

    Pattern 3: Wi-Fi WPA2 Cracking

    # Convert pcap to hashcat format (using cap2hccapx)
    cap2hccapx capture.cap wpa.hccapx
    
    # Crack WPA2 handshake
    hashcat -m 22000 -a 0 wpa.hccapx rockyou.txt
    
    # With mask attack for numeric passwords
    hashcat -m 22000 -a 3 wpa.hccapx ?d?d?d?d?d?d?d?d
    

    Pattern 4: Web Application Hash Cracking

    # Crack MD5 hashes (web app database dump)
    hashcat -m 0 -a 0 webapp_hashes.txt rockyou.txt -r rules/best64.rule
    
    # Crack bcrypt hashes (slow but secure)
    hashcat -m 3200 -a 0 bcrypt_hashes.txt wordlist.txt -w 3
    
    # SHA256 with salt
    hashcat -m 1400 -a 0 salted_hashes.txt wordlist.txt
    

    Pattern 5: Kerberos TGT Cracking (Kerberoasting)

    # Crack Kerberos 5 TGS-REP
    hashcat -m 13100 -a 0 kerberos_tickets.txt rockyou.txt -r rules/best64.rule
    
    # Focus on service accounts
    hashcat -m 13100 -a 0 kerberos_tickets.txt wordlist.txt --username
    

    Integration Points

    Password Policy Analysis

    #!/bin/bash
    # analyze_passwords.sh - Password policy compliance check
    
    CRACKED_FILE="$1"
    
    echo "Password Length Distribution:"
    awk -F: '{print length($2)}' "$CRACKED_FILE" | sort -n | uniq -c
    
    echo -e "\nPasswords with Dictionary Words:"
    grep -f /usr/share/dict/words "$CRACKED_FILE" | wc -l
    
    echo -e "\nPasswords without Special Characters:"
    grep -v "[!@#$%^&*]" "$CRACKED_FILE" | wc -l
    
    echo -e "\nCommon Password Patterns:"
    grep -E "^password|123456|qwerty" "$CRACKED_FILE" | wc -l
    

    Reporting

    # Generate password audit report
    cat > audit_report.sh <<'EOF'
    #!/bin/bash
    TOTAL=$(wc -l < hashes.txt)
    CRACKED=$(hashcat -m 1000 hashes.txt --show | wc -l)
    PERCENT=$((CRACKED * 100 / TOTAL))
    
    echo "Password Audit Report"
    echo "===================="
    echo "Total Hashes: $TOTAL"
    echo "Cracked: $CRACKED"
    echo "Success Rate: $PERCENT%"
    echo ""
    echo "Recommendations:"
    echo "- Implement minimum password length of 12 characters"
    echo "- Require complex passwords (upper, lower, digit, special)"
    echo "- Enable multi-factor authentication"
    echo "- Implement password history and rotation"
    EOF
    chmod +x audit_report.sh
    

    Troubleshooting

    Issue: Slow Cracking Speed

    Solutions:

    # Use optimized kernel
    hashcat -m 0 -a 0 hashes.txt wordlist.txt -O
    
    # Increase workload
    hashcat -m 0 -a 0 hashes.txt wordlist.txt -w 3
    
    # Check GPU utilization
    hashcat -m 0 -a 0 hashes.txt wordlist.txt --status
    
    # Verify GPU drivers
    nvidia-smi  # For NVIDIA
    rocm-smi    # For AMD
    

    Issue: Out of Memory

    Solutions:

    # Reduce wordlist size
    head -n 1000000 large_wordlist.txt > smaller_wordlist.txt
    
    # Disable optimizations
    hashcat -m 0 -a 0 hashes.txt wordlist.txt (remove -O flag)
    
    # Split hash file
    split -l 1000 hashes.txt hash_chunk_
    

    Issue: Hash Format Errors

    Solutions:

    • Verify hash mode (-m) matches hash type
    • Check hash file format (remove extra spaces, newlines)
    • Ensure proper salt format for salted hashes
    • Use --username flag if hashes include usernames

    Defensive Considerations

    Protect against password cracking:

    Strong Password Policies:

    • Minimum length: 12+ characters
    • Complexity requirements (mixed case, numbers, special)
    • Prohibit common passwords
    • Implement password history
    • Regular password rotation for privileged accounts

    Technical Controls:

    • Use strong hashing algorithms (bcrypt, scrypt, Argon2)
    • Implement salting and key stretching
    • Use adaptive hash functions
    • Enable multi-factor authentication
    • Implement account lockout policies
    • Monitor for brute-force attempts

    Hash Storage Best Practices:

    • Never store plaintext passwords
    • Use strong, modern hashing algorithms
    • Implement per-password unique salts
    • Use appropriate iteration counts (bcrypt cost, PBKDF2 rounds)
    • Regularly update hashing parameters

    References

    • Hashcat Official Wiki
    • Hashcat Documentation
    • MITRE ATT&CK: Brute Force
    • NIST SP 800-63B: Digital Identity Guidelines
    • OWASP Password Storage Cheat Sheet
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