Extreme Hacking
Advanced Ethical Hacking Institute in Pune
We are going to start a new session on Password cracking, that will include all sorts of tech needed to break the password. It will be a sort of building block if you are planning to be CEH certified. CEH is one of the most powerful course around, but I have seen many times students lack in basic knowledge’s. We want students who are good at networking, databases and programming. EC-Council dont produce script kiddies. These sessions will be free and for every one. So enjoy your stay here.
The first session will be on getting introduced to all sorts of hashes present around you.
So lets start…
If you have any difficulty in understanding the hashes you can shoot your query on instructor@arizonainfotech.com.
Credits: Matthewh
DES(Unix)
Example: IvS7aeT4NzQPM
Used in Linux and other similar OS.
Length: 13 characters.
Description: The first two characters are the salt (random characters; in our example the salt is the string “Iv”), then there follows the actual hash.
Notes: [1] [2]
Domain Cached Credentials
Example: Admin:b474d48cdfc4974d86ef4d24904cdd91
Used for caching passwords of Windows domain.
Length: 16 bytes.
Algorithm: MD4(MD4(Unicode($pass)).Unicode(strtolower($username)))
Note: [1]
MD5(Unix)
Example: $1$12345678$XM4P3PrKBgKNnTaqG9P0T/
Used in Linux and other similar OS.
Length: 34 characters.
Description: The hash begins with the $1$ signature, then there goes the salt (up to 8 random characters; in our example the salt is the string “12345678″), then there goes one more $ character, followed by the actual hash.
Algorithm: Actually that is a loop calling the MD5 algorithm 2000 times.
Notes: [1] [2]
MD5(APR)
Example: $apr1$12345678$auQSX8Mvzt.tdBi4y6Xgj.
Used in Linux and other similar OS.
Length: 37 characters.
Description: The hash begins with the $apr1$ signature, then there goes the salt (up to 8 random characters; in our example the salt is the string “12345678″), then there goes one more $ character, followed by the actual hash.
Algorithm: Actually that is a loop calling the MD5 algorithm 2000 times.
Notes: [1] [2]
MD5(phpBB3)
Example: $H$6723456785DAERgALpsri.D9z3ht120
Used in phpBB 3.x.x.
Length: 34 characters.
Description: The hash begins with the $H$ signature, then there goes one character (most often the number ’9′), then there goes the salt (8 random characters; in our example the salt is the string “12345678″), followed by the actual hash.
Algorithm: Actually that is a loop calling the MD5 algorithm 2048 times.
Notes: [1] [2]
MD5(WordPress)
Example: $P$B123456780BhGFYSlUqGyE6ErKErL01
Used in WordPress.
Length: 34 characters.
Description: The hash begins with the $P$ signature, then there goes one character (most often the number ‘B’), then there goes the salt (8 random characters; in our example the salt is the string “12345678″), followed by the actual hash.
Algorithm: Actually that is a loop calling the MD5 algorithm 8192 times.
Notes: [1] [2]
MySQL
Example: 606717496665bcba
Used in the old versions of MySQL.
Length: 8 bytes.
Description: The hash consists of two DWORDs, each not exceeding the value of 0x7fffffff.
MySQL5
Example: *E6CC90B878B948C35E92B003C792C46C58C4AF40
Used in the new versions of MySQL.
Length: 20 bytes.
Algorithm: SHA-1(SHA-1($pass))
Note: The hashes are to be loaded to the program without the asterisk that stands in the beginning of each hash.
RAdmin v2.x
Example: 5e32cceaafed5cc80866737dfb212d7f
Used in the application Remote Administrator v2.x.
Length: 16 bytes.
Algorithm: The password is padded with zeros to the length of 100 bytes, then that entire string is hashed with the MD5 algorithm.
MD5
Example: c4ca4238a0b923820dcc509a6f75849b
Used in phpBB v2.x, Joomla version below 1.0.13 and many other forums and CMS.
Length: 16 bytes.
Algorithm: Same as the md5() function in PHP.
md5($pass.$salt)
Example: 6f04f0d75f6870858bae14ac0b6d9f73:1234
Used in WB News, Joomla version 1.0.13 and higher.
Length: 16 bytes.
Note: [1]
md5($salt.$pass)
Example: f190ce9ac8445d249747cab7be43f7d5:12
Used in osCommerce, AEF, Gallery and other CMS.
Length: 16 bytes.
Note: [1]
md5(md5($pass))
Example: 28c8edde3d61a0411511d3b1866f0636
Used in e107, DLE, AVE, Diferior, Koobi and other CMS.
Length: 16 bytes.
md5(md5($pass).$salt)
Example: 6011527690eddca23580955c216b1fd2:wQ6
Used in vBulletin, IceBB.
Length: 16 bytes.
Notes: [1] [3] [4]
md5(md5($salt).md5($pass))
Example: 81f87275dd805aa018df8befe09fe9f8:wH6_S
Used in IPB.
Length: 16 bytes.
Notes: [1] [3]
md5(md5($salt).$pass)
Example: 816a14db44578f516cbaef25bd8d8296:1234
Used in MyBB.
Length: 16 bytes.
Note: [1]
md5($salt.$pass.$salt)
Example: a3bc9e11fddf4fef4deea11e33668eab:1234
Used in TBDev.
Length: 16 bytes.
Note: [1]
md5($salt.md5($salt.$pass))
Example: 1d715e52285e5a6b546e442792652c8a:1234
Used in DLP.
Length: 16 bytes.
Note: [1]
SHA-1
Example: 356a192b7913b04c54574d18c28d46e6395428ab
Used in many forums and CMS.
Length: 20 bytes.
Algorithm: Same as the sha1() function in PHP.
sha1(strtolower($username).$pass)
Example: Admin:6c7ca345f63f835cb353ff15bd6c5e052ec08e7a
Used in SMF.
Length: 20 bytes.
Note: [1]
sha1($salt.sha1($salt.sha1($pass)))
Example: cd37bfbf68d198d11d39a67158c0c9cddf34573b:1234
Used in Woltlab BB.
Length: 20 bytes.
Note: [1]
SHA-256(Unix)
Example: $5$12345678$jBWLgeYZbSvREnuBr5s3gp13vqiKSNK1rkTk9zYE1v0
Used in Linux and other similar OS.
Length: 55 characters.
Description: The hash begins with the $5$ signature, then there goes the salt (up to 8 random characters; in our example the salt is the string “12345678″), then there goes one more $ character, followed by the actual hash.
Algorithm: Actually that is a loop calling the SHA-256 algorithm 5000 times.
Notes: [1] [2]
SHA-512(Unix)
Example: $6$12345678$U6Yv5E1lWn6mEESzKen42o6rbEmFNLlq6Ik9X3reMXY3doKEuxrcDohKUx0Oxf44aeTIxGEjssvtT1aKyZHjs
Used in Linux and other similar OS.
Length: 98 characters.
Description: The hash begins with the $6$ signature, then there goes the salt (up to 8 random characters; in our example the salt is the string “12345678″), then there goes one more $ character, followed by the actual hash.
Algorithm: Actually that is a loop calling the SHA-512 algorithm 5000 times.
Notes: [1] [2]
SHA-1(Django) = sha1($salt.$pass)
Example: sha1$12345678$90fbbcf2b72b5973ae42cd3a19ab4ae8a1bd210b
12345678 is salt (in the hexadecimal format)
90fbbcf2b72b5973ae42cd3a19ab4ae8a1bd210b is SHA-1 hash.
SHA-256(Django) = SHA-256($salt.$pass)
Example: sha256$12345678$154c4c511cbb166a317c247a839e46cac6d9208af5b015e1867a84cd9a56007b
12345678 is salt (in the hexadecimal format)
154c4c511cbb166a317c247a839e46cac6d9208af5b015e1867a84cd9a56007b is SHA-256 hash.
SHA-384(Django) = SHA-384($salt.$pass)
Example: sha384$12345678$c0be393a500c7d42b1bd03a1a0a76302f7f472fc132f11ea6373659d0bd8675d04e12d8016d83001c327f0ab70843dd5
12345678 is salt (in the hexadecimal format)
c0be393a500c7d42b1bd03a1a0a76302f7f472fc132f11ea6373659d0bd8675d04e12d8016d83001c327f0ab70843dd5 is SHA-384 hash.
Notes:
[1] Since the hashing requires not only a password but also a salt (or a user name), which is unique for each user, the attack speed for such hashes will decline proportionally to their count (for example, attacking 100 hashes will go 100 times slower than attacking one hash).
[2] The hash is to be loaded to the program in full, to the “Hash” column – the program will automatically extract the salt and other required data from it.
[3] The ‘:’ character can be used as salt; however, since it is used by default for separating hash and salt in PasswordsPro, it is recommended that you use a different character for separating fields; e.g., space.
[4] Salt can contain special characters – single or double quotes, as well as backslash, which are preceded (after obtaining dumps from MySQL databases) by an additional backslash, which is to be removed manually. For example, the salt to be loaded to the program would be a’4 instead of a\’4, as well as the salts a”4 instead of a\”4 and a\4 instead of a\\4.
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