![]() ![]() Create it by pressing CTRL+V, then pressing enter. Then edit the list with vi, and manually remove some JavaScript cruft at the bottom if necessary, then clean it up a bit.įirst put each word on a separate line. Then use sed to strip out the HTML: $ cat wordlist.html | sed -e :a -e 's/]*>//g / wordlist.txt First, use wget to get the source of words that shouldn't be a password: $ mkdir ~/crack I assume we create a directory in your home directory called "crack". With standard Unix/Linux tools, you're good to go. There are good commercial products that can do this kind of stuff automatically, but for the poor man, it's easy enough to just get the stuff from the company website, or the Wikipedia article on them. You then need to build a list of passwords that any cracker would try. ![]() For example you are building an app for a company and want to make sure that easy passwords are excluded. There are plenty of dictionaries around to use to warn (or exclude) users from creating an account with such a password, or for the latter purpose, to brute force the WPA key.Īfter the standard dictionaries, a good next step is to create a password list for specific circumstances. Perhaps you want to assess password strength in an in-house built application, or you want to test the security of the WPA wireless network. ![]() For security purposes, you sometimes want a dictionary with possible passwords. ![]()
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