02-07-2016, 06:34 PM
It does have a restore feature.
I just tried it. It wasn't in linux, however it should be the same as the windows version, if I'm not mistaken.
I haven't been able to get hashcat running on linux yet.
It says "to restore session use parameter -s plus an argument.
It appears the argument is a number containing the last hashes checked. (probably the wrong terminology).
If your system crashed, you won't have that argument to enter after the -s parameter.
-hope the above helps a little. . .
/r
j
I just tried it. It wasn't in linux, however it should be the same as the windows version, if I'm not mistaken.
I haven't been able to get hashcat running on linux yet.
It says "to restore session use parameter -s plus an argument.
It appears the argument is a number containing the last hashes checked. (probably the wrong terminology).
If your system crashed, you won't have that argument to enter after the -s parameter.
-hope the above helps a little. . .
/r
j
(02-07-2016, 06:04 PM)Wolf58 Wrote: [quote='Jiminy' pid='28351' dateline='1454856278']
Did you try hashcat-cli64 --restore
Thanks for your reply.
Yes I did. I'm using Llinux by the way, here is my command and here is the output.
/hashcat/hashcat-cli64.bin --restore
/hashcat/hashcat-cli64.bin: unrecognized option '--restore'
This is why I wonder if --restore is still a proper command in v2.00 ???