There's only one way to find out
Rules files are applied one at a time, serially, until a final candidate is created. But also notice that some rules have no effect on some strings.
Each rule file must contain a colon if you want to guarantee that all entirely unmodified strings will appear at least once in the candidate list.
Code:
$ cat rule1.list
u
$ cat rule2.list
d
$ cat rule1-colon.list
:
u
$ cat rule2-colon.list
:
d
$ cat list.txt
password
123456
$ cat list.txt | hashcat --stdout -r rule1.list -r rule2.list
PASSWORDPASSWORD
123456123456
$ cat list.txt | hashcat --stdout -r rule1-colon.list -r rule2.list
passwordpassword
123456123456
PASSWORDPASSWORD
123456123456
$ cat list.txt | hashcat --stdout -r rule1.list -r rule2-colon.list
PASSWORD
123456
PASSWORDPASSWORD
123456123456
$ cat list.txt | hashcat --stdout -r rule1-colon.list -r rule2-colon.list
password
PASSWORD
123456
123456
passwordpassword
PASSWORDPASSWORD
123456123456
123456123456
Rules files are applied one at a time, serially, until a final candidate is created. But also notice that some rules have no effect on some strings.
Each rule file must contain a colon if you want to guarantee that all entirely unmodified strings will appear at least once in the candidate list.
~