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SP64(1) User Commands SP64(1)

NAME

sp64 - word generator based on per-position Markov chains

SYNOPSIS

sp64 [options]... hcstat-file [filter-mask]

DESCRIPTION

Statsprocessor is a word generator based on per-position Markov chains packed into a single stand-alone binary. The resulting words can then, for example, be postprocessed and fed into Hashcat or other password recovery tools.

sp by atom, High-Performance word generator based on hashcat markov stats

* Startup:

-V, --version
Print version
-h, --help
Print help

* Increment:

--pw-min=NUM
Start incrementing at NUM
--pw-max=NUM
Stop incrementing at NUM

* Markov:

--markov-disable
Emulates maskprocessor output
--markov-classic
No per-position tables
--threshold=NUM
Filter out chars after NUM chars added Set to 0 to disable

* Misc:

--combinations
Calculate number of combinations
--hex-charset
Assume charset is given in hex

* Resources:

-s, --skip=NUM
skip number of words (for restore)
-l, --limit=NUM
limit number of words (for distributed)

* Files:

-o, --output-file=FILE
Output-file

* Custom charsets:

-1, --custom-charset1=CS
User-defineable charsets
-2, --custom-charset2=CS
Example:

-3, --custom-charset3=CS --custom-charset1=?dabcdef

-4, --custom-charset4=CS
sets charset ?1 to 0123456789abcdef

* Built-in charsets:

?l = abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz ?u = ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ ?d = 0123456789 ?s = !"#$%&'()*+,-./:;<=>?@[\]^_`{|}~ ?a = ?l?u?d?s ?h = 8 bit characters from 0xc0 - 0xff ?D = 8 bit characters from german alphabet ?F = 8 bit characters from french alphabet ?R = 8 bit characters from russian alphabet

EXAMPLE

The following example was made just to see what comes out of statsprocessor.

$ ./sp64.bin --pw-min 5 --pw-max 5 hashcat.hcstat ?l?l?l?l?l | head -9

In Markov chains we have a statistic generated which letter is following which letter based on the analysis of the original input dictionary used to generate the .hcstat. In this case the most used letter on the first position is the letter "s". The program then looks up the Markov table with the key "s" to get the most used letter after the letter "s" on position 0. In our case, it's the letter "a". This chain continues until the end of the word, iterating through all letters stored in the Markov table.

REPORTING BUGS

Please report bugs upstream to the statsprocessor issue tracker on GitHub: https://github.com/hashcat/statsprocessor/issues

COPYRIGHT

This tool is developed and maintained by Jens Steube under the MIT License.
September 2018 sp64 v0.012