hashrat(1) | hashing tool supporting several hashes and recursivity | hashrat(1) |
hashrat - hashing tool supporting several hashes and recursivity
hashrat [options] [paths to hash] hashrat -c [options] [input file of hashes]
Hashrat is a hash-generation utility that supports the md5, sha1, sha256, sha512, whirlpool, jh-224, jh256, jh-384 and jh-512 hash functions, and also the HMAC versions of those functions. It can output in traditional format (same as md5sum and shasum and the like) or it's own format.
Hashes can be output in octal, decimal, hexadecimal, uppercase hexadecimal or base64.
Hashrat also supports directory recursion, hashing entire devices, and generating a hash for an entire directory. It has a CGI mode that can be used as a web-page to lookup hashes.
Hashrat can also detect if it's being run under any of the following names (e.g., via symlinks):
Hashrat can be used to generate strong passwords for websites. So, you don't have to remember the strong password, if it be always regenerate with hashrat. You need to remember a handful of moderately decent passwords, i.e., things that I can't find by grepping in the '10,000 most popular passwords' list[1], and an additional personal pin. Now, you need to combine the website name, one of passwords, and the personal pin, into a string and feed them into hashrat:
Obviously, a good password isn't 'password' and a good pin isn't '1234', but you get the idea. This gives a 28-character string that should take "8.02 trillion centuries" to crack with a "massive cracking array", according to Steve Gibson's Password haystacks utility[2]. This is what I then use as my password. Unfortunately some websites won't take a 28-character password, and for these you can truncate to the appropriate length (using the -n flag), but the results are still stronger than anything you could remember, and nothing needs storing on disk (as with password managers).
$ echo "facebook.com password 1234" | hashrat -sha1 -64
There are some dangers to using the 'echo' method shown above if you are on a shared machine, or if someone gets hold of your computer/harddrive. On a shared machine someone could type 'ps ax' to see all commands running, and if they time it right, they might see your command-line with your password in it. Another danger lies in using a shell (like bash) that will record your typed commands so you can recall them later. Bash stores this information on disk in the file .bash_history, so if you use the 'echo' method shown above your password will be saved on disk. To combat this hashrat has line mode:
This reads lines from stdin, so type into hashrat and then press ENTER, and you'll be given the hash of the line you typed. By this method your password is neither visible in 'ps ax', nor is ever stored on disk.
$ hashrat -sha1 -64 -lines
A -lines will produce a different hash to the 'echo' method listed above, because it strips any trailing whiespace off the lines read. If you want strict compatibility with 'echo' (by default echo adds a newline to the end of the text to output) then use rawlines mode:
Finally, you can prevent shoulder-surfers seeing you type your password by using the -hide-input or -star-input options to hide what you type.
$ hashrat -sha1 -64 -rawlines
[1] https://github.com/discourse/discourse/blob/master/lib/common_passwords/10k-common-passwords.txt
[2] https://www.grc.com/haystack.htm
Like md5sum/shasum etc, hashrat can be used to detect changes in files that might indicate malicious activity. For instance, in order to get early warning of malware like cryptolocker (that encrypts files on a users disk, or on network shares, and then demands a ransom for file recovery) you can scatter about the disk a number of Canary files that should not change. You need record their hashes and regularly check them. If they change, you will know something is going on.
Hashes generated by hashrat can be output to a file, or stored in extended file attributes, or in a memcached server.
Similarly these can then be used to check files later:
$ hashrat -sha256 -r . > /tmp/files.sha256
$ hashrat -sha256 -r . -xattr
$ hashrat -sha256 -r . -memcached
Note that -c checks only check the files in the supplied list. The -C flag instead checks all files in a directory (supplied on command line) and expects to find those in the list. This means that -C can find new files that aren't in the list, whereas -c can't.
$ cat /tmp/files.sha256 | hashrat -c -sha256
$ hashrat -C . -sha256 -xattr
$ hashrat -C /tmp -sha256 -memcached
Using the -m flag hashrat can be told to read a range of hashes from stdin, and then search for files matching those hashes. For Example:
The last command will search recursively under /usr for files with hashes matching those in APT1-AppendixE-MD5s.txt. The input on stdin must begin with a hash, anything written after the hash will be treated as a comment to be displayed if a file matching the hash is found.
$ cat APT1-AppendixE-MD5s.txt | hashrat -r -m /usr
Hashtypes other than md5 can be used thusly:
Hashes can also be loaded into a memcached server, so that the same file list can be checked on a number of machines, without needing to store the hashlist on those machines. First you need load the hashes:
$ cat sha1-list.lst | hashrat -r -sha1 -m /usr
The last line loads the hashes to a memcached server at 192.168.1.5. You can then search against the memcached server by:
$ cat APT1-AppendixE-MD5s.txt | hashrat -lm -memcached 192.168.1.5
$ hashrat -r -m -memcached 192.168.1.5 /usr
Using the -dups flag (usually in combination with the -r recursive flag) hashrat can be set to search for duplicate files and output any found to stdout.
Hookscripts, defined using the -h or -hook command-line options, are scripts that are run for each hashed item. -h and -hook options take an argument that is the path to the script. Hookscripts behave differently in different modes:
If hashrat is run with the -cgi flag, or if it's run with a name of hashrat.cgi (either by renaming the hashrat executable, or via a symbolic link) it will output a webpage that allows users to look up hashes over the web. This allows one to look-up your strong passwords even if you don't have access to a local version of hashrat.
CGI Mode can be configured using an options file. The file path is passed in the url, like this:
hashrat.cgi?OptionsFile=/etc/hashrat.options
If an options file is used, then CGI mode uses the options in the file as its defaults. The options file contains the following :
HashType=sha256 Encoding=base64 LineEnding=none OutputLength=12 SegmentLength=4 SegmentChar=+ NoOptions=Y
Hashrat can use extended filesystem attributes where these are supported. This allows a hash to be stored in the filesystem metadata of the target file. This can then be used for checking hashes, or for caching hashes to produce faster output during hashing runs. There are two types of filesystem attribute, trusted attributes, which can only be set and read by root, and user attributes, which can be set and read by any user that has the appropriate permissions for the file.
Hashes can be stored against files by using the -xattr option to set user attributes:
And using the -txattr flag to set trusted attributes (you must be root to set trusted attributes):
$ hashrat -sha256 -r . -xattr
When checking either flag can be used, but hashrat will always use trusted attributes when running as root, if those are available, otherwise it will fall back to user attributes.
# hashrat -sha256 -r . -txattr
The -cache option allows using stored hashes rather than regenerating hashes. It only considers hashes stored in user attributes at current.
$ hashrat -c -sha256 -r . -xattr
This makes getting a report of hashes considerably faster, but it runs the risk that the hashes may not be accurate. Hashrat will only output a hash stored in file attributes if the storage time of the hash is younger than the modify time (mtime) of the file, however, this means an attacker could change the modify time of the file to hide changes they've made. Thus this feature should not be used for security checking purposes (but should be safe for uses like finding files that have changed and need to be backed up, for instance).
$ hashrat -r . -cache
The hashrat was written by Colum Paget <colums.projects@gmail.com>.
This manual page was written by Joao Eriberto Mota Filho <eriberto@debian.org> for the Debian project (but may be used by others).
Jan 2015 | HASHRAT 1.5 |