12-24-2016, 11:03 PM
For what it is worth, you can use mdxfind for that.
For example, to generate MD5's from a list call "words.txt":
echo | mdxfind -z words.txt >words.md5
The -z causes it to "match" all of the hashes; the echo | gives it a null hash list. You can do the same with -f /dev/null
You can also generate more than one type of hash at the same time:
echo | mdxfind -z -h ^md5$,^sha1$,^sha256$,^sha512$ words.txt >words.many
will generate md5, sha1, sha256 and sha512 hashes for every word.
For example, to generate MD5's from a list call "words.txt":
echo | mdxfind -z words.txt >words.md5
The -z causes it to "match" all of the hashes; the echo | gives it a null hash list. You can do the same with -f /dev/null
You can also generate more than one type of hash at the same time:
echo | mdxfind -z -h ^md5$,^sha1$,^sha256$,^sha512$ words.txt >words.many
will generate md5, sha1, sha256 and sha512 hashes for every word.