05-25-2018, 09:35 PM
Sure. I simply run hashcat -m1000 <hashfile> --show --username --potfile-path potfile
and that generates a show.log file in my hashcat directory. The contents of the show.log file look like it's debugging or something, as it seems to show a lot of what look like environment variables. I know in the past, I've turned on debugging, to know which cracked a hash, but I would have thought that debugging was only on for that specific session and didn't carry on. Other people use the same hashcat server and it doesn't create a show.log for them. Here are the first few lines of the show.log file:
START
user_options->separator :
user_options->encoding_from utf-8
user_options->encoding_to utf-8
user_options->potfile_path potfile
user_options->rule_buf_l :
user_options->rule_buf_r :
user_options->session show
user_options->limit 0
user_options->skip 0
user_options->attack_mode 100
and that generates a show.log file in my hashcat directory. The contents of the show.log file look like it's debugging or something, as it seems to show a lot of what look like environment variables. I know in the past, I've turned on debugging, to know which cracked a hash, but I would have thought that debugging was only on for that specific session and didn't carry on. Other people use the same hashcat server and it doesn't create a show.log for them. Here are the first few lines of the show.log file:
START
user_options->separator :
user_options->encoding_from utf-8
user_options->encoding_to utf-8
user_options->potfile_path potfile
user_options->rule_buf_l :
user_options->rule_buf_r :
user_options->session show
user_options->limit 0
user_options->skip 0
user_options->attack_mode 100