::::::::: :::::::: ::::::::: :::::::::: :+: :+: :+: :+: :+: :+: :+: +:+ +:+ +:+ +:+ +:+ +:+ +#++:++#+ +#++:++#++ +#++:++#: :#::+::# +#+ +#+ +#+ +#+ +#+ +#+ #+# #+# #+# #+# #+# #+# #+# ######### ######## ### ### ### http://blacksun.box.sk _____________________________ ______________________I Topic: I_____________________ \ I I / \ HTML by: I Cracking Unix password I Written by: / > I files for beginners I Caboom < / Martin L. I_____________________________I R a v e N \ /___________________________> <_________________________\ |
Version 1.0
Date: 14/1/2000
I guess you're a newbie in pass-cracking like I was and you've probably started
John the Ripper full of enthusiasm, and got.... nothing. So the first thought
you have is 'my god this must be hard, and I'm a newbie'. Forget it!!! You're
always a newbie, and we all are... in pass cracking world, pardon, pass recovering
world (or any world else) you always have something to learn. Sometimes, even
if you are experienced in password cracking, you won't be able to crack the
password or even get your own password. This is a pure technical manual and
will give you only the recipe for cracking, but every password needs different
approach...
OK, so a good way to get somewhere is to start getting somewhere...
What you're about to learn is to crack *nix(Unix/Linux/etc.) password files.
It does not mean that you need to have some Unix distribution on your box, but
it means you'll have to stop clicking your ass off all around the screen...
'What this fool is trying to say', you'll probably ask... This fool is trying
to say that john is a DOS program (there is also Linux/Unix version, but I guess
that most of the people that read this tutorial have win boxes). I will try
to put this tutorial through the examples so it wouldn't look like a boring
script with incredible amount of switches. After reading this text it wouldn't
be a bad idea to look at the texts you get with John. I learnt it all from there,
but that, of course, was the hard way, and you want the easy way, right? Right.
First, it wouldn't be a bad idea to get yourself John the Ripper, I guess... if you don't have it you can find it at:
1) packetstorm.securify.com (look at archives, password cracking)
2) neworder.box.sk (do some searching by yourself)
John can be found practically anywhere. For example: try going to altavista.com and running a search for 'john the ripper'.
Second thing you'll need is.... a HUUUUGE amount of password dictionaries (I'll
explain what these are in a minute). The best dictionary around is at www.theargon.com
and packetstorm (look at the archives) and is called theargonlistserver1 and
is about 20Mb packed, and over 200Mb
unpacked... get it!!!! The people at theargon did a terrific job.
You should also get some smaller dictionary files (I'll explain why later).
2) Do we look like *nix?
So now you have john, loaded with that huuuuge pass dictionary, and you think
that you can crack anything... If you plan to live for 100000 years, that wouldn't
be a problem, but you only have some 80 years left in the best case scenario
(unless, of course, scientists find a way to... oh, nevermind).
Now, the first thing is that you have to make sure your password file really looks like a Unix password file (were talking about the /etc/passwd file).
Let's see how Unix pass files look like
owner:Ejrt3EJUnh5Ms:510:102:Some free text:/home/subdir/owner:/bin/bash
The important part is the username and the encrypted password, which are the first and the second parts (each line is divided into seven parts by : symbols)
owner:Ejrt3EJUnh5Ms
Owner is the username and 'that other thing' is the crypted password (encrypted in altered DES (Data Encryption Standard) encryption). For the other part you can put anything that looks like that but the structure must be same so the john could recognize it as unix pass. In fact the other part
:510:102:Some free text:/home/subdir/owner:/bin/bash
Is just some information about the user, his home directory, etc...
Sometimes you'll have passes that have only the first and second part, such as password files that you got from a webboard running matt's web board script.
owner:Ejrt3EJUnh5Ms
You'll have to put the other part so that password would look like unix pass, and you can do a copy-paste from another pass, you can even use
:510:102:His name:/home/subdir/owner:/bin/bash
What you have now should look like:
owner:Ejrt3EJUnh5Ms:510:102:His name:/home/subdir/owner:/bin/bash
Hell, you can even put
owner:Ejrt3EJUnh5Ms:a:a:a:a:a
It won't matter to john at all.
3) We're getting somewhere... nowhereNow you're ready to crack. Type in
john -w:words.lst password.file
Where words.lst is password dictionary and password file where you have your password or passwords. If you use it on example i gave to you you'll probably get password because it's really weak pass. You'd be surprised to see that people usually use really weak passes like their names, pet names, or even their username (for example: username=zalabuk, password=zalabuk).
Hint: Don't be stupid! Use strong passes like
p4sswr!@
p@s$w11s
with as many characters you can remember. Hint is to use special characters
and numbers those passes are much harder to crack (I'll explain why in a minute).
The other hint is to use passes as long as you can remember, 8 characters are
sometimes not enough... it depends what box that someone who cracks has... on
dual alpha is certainly not enough... in other words... more than 10 characters
will do fine, even more wouldn't hurt (like 16...). By the way, older *nix have
fixed pass length of 8 chars... that is old DES crypted pass that uses a 64-bit
key... now there are 128-bit keys, and some perverts use even more, so there
is more fun now :)
john -w:words.lst password.file
Wait wait wait! What am I doing here?
Alright, listen up carefully. The DES encryption that Unix uses CANNOT be reversed.
Some encryptions can be reversed using a sometimes simple or sometimes incredibly
complicated algorithm (in the 3rd century AD, Ceasar used to send encrypted
letters which used a formula of "shift by three", which means that
d stands for a, e stands for b etc'. At that time, such an algorithm was just
fine. Today, it isn't).
So anyway, the altered DES encryption that Unix uses for it's password files
cannot be reversed. Why? Because it's a key-based encryption. The encryption
algorithm uses a bunch of letters (lowercase and uppercase), numbers and symbols
within the algorithm. So, in other words, to run the decryption algorithm you
will need this key, which you simply cannot just have, because the key is the
password! You see, when a user picks a password, the system generates an encrypted
password for him, called a hash (which is what you get when you somehow acquire
a password file), which is created by running this altered DES algorithm using
the user's password as a key. If you try to decrypt the password using standard
reversable DES encryption, you get a null string.
So how do John and other password crackers do it? Easy. They try to recreate
this process by taking passwords out of these dictionary files (or wordlists)
and using them as keys for this altered DES algorithm process. Then, they compare
the result to all the encrypted passwords within the password file you've given
them. If the two strings match - there you have it! The password is yours!
If the first step doesn't work, the next step would be to do this:
john -w:words.lst -rules password.file
This switch turn on not only browsing through the dictionary, but it uses some modifications of the words that are word dictionary (like adding a number at the end of pass - fool -> fool1, etc' etc'). This one will take long with huge pass dictionary, but it may give better results... For a start you could do a try with a small pass dictionary, and if it doesn't works you can try it with a huge pass dictionary.
Sometimes people are not stupid when they choose passwords and basic rules won't do a job... aaargh. As you've seen it takes more and more time for your CPU to crack this thing out as we go further. Now you can leave your computer on and go to sleep....
If you want to get even more possible passwords out of your password file, try typing
john -i password.file
This -i stands for incremental cracking, not a really good word for it, but...
Okay, what the hell does it do? It uses the default incremental mode parameters,
which are defined in john.ini.
What does this mean? Do you remember -rules? Yes, well, of course you do, unless
you're either incredibly senile or you've stopped reading after this part and
only came back, like... a couple of years later. That is very much like rules,
but much much more powerful than -rules, and it takes much, much more time.
You can see that in all cases you use so-called dictionary cracking... but hell,
why not just run John on a mode where it tried all possible combinations of
lowercase and uppercase letters, numbers and symbols? I mean, this would be
much more efficient, right? ... WROOOOOOONGG!!!
This method is called 'brute-force' attack (basically, dictionary attack is
also sort of brute-force attack, but most people use the word brute-force for
this specific attack).
What are the differences? First and most important, with dictionary you go through
the selected words that could be passwords and their modifications, and with
brute force cracking you use ALL possible combinations. That means you have
comb=nrch^let
where:
comb - number of possible combinations
nrch - number of chars
let - number of letters used
In case you're dealing with john's default -i 95 character set and, presume,
a 6 letter password you have possible 735091890625 combinations! OUCH!!
Sure, this is useful for passwords like 2405v7, but still... with the computational
powers of today's modern PC, I'd just give up, unless I had access to some University's
supercomputer, which I'd bet noone would ever give me (well, at least not for
free, and certainly not to run a password cracker on it).
As you can see it can take a looooong time until you crack a single one pass,
do a little math and try to calculate how many possible combinations there are
for 10, 12 and 16 chars.
I don't think you'll like the answer :)
Of course, sometimes dictionary attacks are not enough, but john has very powerful
'thinking'. In 'incremental' mode john will do all possible combinations from
0 to 8 characters (by zero password length is considered a hashed empty string,
this sometimes happens). So incremental mode is one sort of brute-force attack
in some way...
If you want to fire all weapons at one then you use
john password.file
this will do first basic dictionary attack, then -rules, then -i
5) What if...Ok, you have to turn off your box from time to time, don't you? If you're doing that haaard password that will take more than 20 hours of cracking you can set john with ctrl+c and then resume with
john -restore
If your box crashes or if there's a power failure, you won't be able to restore
your cracking sessions (sometimes)... well that's just too bad. Hell, it happened
to me once :-(
John is modular, and that is the most powerful thing about john the ripper,
and that is what makes john the most advanced password cracker. John is very,
very modular. John uses modes that are described in john.ini (do you still remember
that incremental cracking i was talking about? Modes for rules and incremental
are described in john.ini).
If you're some inventive guy then you may change the parameters in john.ini.
Here is example how some default parameters for -i look like:
# Incremental modes
[Incremental:All]
File = ~/all.chr
MinLen = 0
MaxLen = 8
CharCount = 95
Ok... what do we have here?
[Incremental:All] - this stands for the beginning of the definition for the
-i:all switch
File - filename of file that has characters used in mode -i:all (whole character
set)
MinLen - logically, minimum length of password that john -i:all would try
MaxLen - even more logical, maximum length of password that will john -i:all
try
CharCount - number of chars used by john when you 'turn on' this switch
So, there are some more switches... heh
Yes there are and down there are all default modes pasted from john the ripper's
documents:
You can list any number of password files on John's command line, and also
specify some of the following options (all of them are case sensitive, but
can be abbreviated; you can also use the GNU-style long options syntax):
I) A good schedule to do your cracking job is
john -w:words.lst password.file
john -w:words.lst -rules password.file
john -w:words.lst password.file
john -i:digits password.file
john -i:all password.file
II) If you have a file that has only passes that look like
owner:*:510:102:His name:/home/subdir/owner:/bin/bash
you have a shadowed passwords file.
Go to the Byte-Me page at blacksun.box.sk and try to find out more about
password files (I'll leave it up to you to do this. It's important that you'll
learn how to find things by yourself).
III) You have some little tools that you get with john, they are all
listed below (from john's docs)
unshadow PASSWORD-FILE SHADOW-FILE
Combines the passwd and shadow files (when you already have access to
both) for use with John. You might need this since if you only used your
shadow file, the GECOS information wouldn't be used by the "single crack"
mode, and also you wouldn't be able to use the '-shells' option. You'll
usually want to redirect the output of 'unshadow' to a file.
unafs DATABASE-FILE CELL-NAME
Gets password hashes out of the binary AFS database, and produces a file
usable by John (again, you should redirect the output yourself).
unique OUTPUT-FILE
Removes duplicates from a wordlist (read from stdin), without changing
the order. You might want to use this with John's '-stdout' option, if
you got a lot of disk space to trade for the reduced cracking time.
mailer PASSWORD-FILE
A shell script to send mail to all the users who got weak passwords. You
should edit the message inside before using.
Ohh, wait, wait!!
Remember, not all password files can be cracked! Smart admins alter the
encryption that they are using, especially when it comes to root passwords.
But there are always other ways to get passwords. These are covered in other
BSRF tutorials. Collect them all (lol) at http://blacksun.box.sk.