Somewhere along the line I messed up one of my dictionary files and when I ran a combination attack this is what Im seeing.
deadbeef and hamburger are a just a made up example of what the output does look like.
The question really becomes is there a way to not loose the spaces so you can feed the results back into hashcat?
Im on a linux box so I tend to use cat hashcat.pot | cut -c 34- >outputfile.words
Im pretty certain thats not the best approach since it kills both leading and trailing spaces.
Peace
Code:
Hash.Type......: MD5
Time.Started...: Sat Jul 27 15:44:46 2013 (14 secs)
Time.Estimated.: Sat Jul 27 16:31:54 2013 (46 mins, 42 secs)
Speed.GPU.#1...: 5186.5k/s
Recovered......: 0/5110730 (0.00%) Digests, 0/1 (0.00%) Salts
Progress.......: 17821696/3517701976 (0.51%)
Rejected.......: 0/17821696 (0.00%)
HWMon.GPU.#1...: 0% Util, 47c Temp, 36% Fan
deadbeefdeadbeefdeadbeefdeadbeef: hamburger
deadbeef and hamburger are a just a made up example of what the output does look like.
The question really becomes is there a way to not loose the spaces so you can feed the results back into hashcat?
Im on a linux box so I tend to use cat hashcat.pot | cut -c 34- >outputfile.words
Im pretty certain thats not the best approach since it kills both leading and trailing spaces.
Peace