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Message-ID: <AANLkTikXH-sKfsaGcKgDQ5wU57eLCp8fY-+9EqqZx5XZ@mail.gmail.com> Date: Tue, 16 Nov 2010 15:22:56 -0600 From: Eric <eric.h.security@...il.com> To: john-users@...ts.openwall.com Subject: Cracking a known password shape I use JtR often for basic cracking of NTLM, MD5, Cisco, PIX, etc and I have going through modifying the rulesets and I have a number of great dictionaries. I use the incremental modes for shorter passwords, as well. However, in this case, I have a password. I know a few characters in it. It begins with an 'L' (or 'l') and the second letter is a 'o' or '0'. The fifth letter is likely a '-' or '_'. The 8th character is probably 'n' or 'N' and I need to brute-force the remaining 4-5 characters. I cannot figure out the best method to do this. I've spent half the day looking through archives and how-tos, but most focus on the very basics of JtR usage. I presume some sort of external function might suffice, but I'm not familiar with how those are executed. Before I set out trying to learn the whole external filter functionality, can anyone offer suggestions on how to attack a password that is partially known. I know I can brute-force a 5 character password in a reasonable amount of time, but how to specify known characters within that? Thanks!
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