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sucrack(1) [debian man page]

SUCRACK(1)						      General Commands Manual							SUCRACK(1)

NAME
sucrack - is a multithreaded Linux/UNIX tool for brute-force cracking of local user accounts via su. SYNOPSIS
sucrack [options] wordlist DESCRIPTION
sucrack is a multithreaded Linux/UNIX tool brute-force cracking tool that drives su(1) with referencing a specific user and uses words from a wordlist as passwords. Running sucrack does not require high privileges on the target system. OPTIONS
sucrack allows reading passwords from stdin. In that case, use '-' instead of a filename as wordlist parameter. Common options: -h print help message -a use ansi escape codes for nice looking statistics (requires --enable-statistics configuration flag) -s <seconds> statistics display intervall (requires --enable-statistics configuration flag) -c only print statistics if a key other than `q' is pressed -r enable rewriting of dictionary words (see rules below) -w <num> number of threads to run with. -b <size> size of the word list buffer -u <user> user account to su to -l <rules> specify certain rules for the rewriting process Rewriting rules: A Rewrite word with only upper case characters F Rewrite word with first character as upper case L Rewrite word with last character as upper case a Rewrite word with only lower case characters f Rewrite word with first character as lower case l Rewrite word with last character as lower case D Prepend each digit (0-9) to the word d Append each digit (0-9) to the word e enleet the word x apply all rules to a word ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
SUCRACK_SU_PATH The path to su (usually /bin/su or /usr/bin/su) SUCRACK_AUTH_FAILURE The message su returns on an authentication failure (like "su: Authentication failure" or "su: Sorry") SUCRACK_AUTH_SUCCESS The message that indicates an authentication success. This message must not be a password listed in the wordlist (default is "SUCRACK_SUCCESS") AUTHOR
Nico Leidecker <nfl@portcullis-security.com> http://www.leidecker.info SEE ALSO
su(1) Version 1.2.3 SUCRACK(1)

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WORD-LIST-COMPRESS(1)					 Aspell Abbreviated User's Manual				     WORD-LIST-COMPRESS(1)

NAME
word-list-compress - word list compressor/decompressor for GNU Aspell SYNOPSIS
word-list-compress c[ompress] | d[ecompress] DESCRIPTION
word-list-compress compresses or decompresses sorted word lists for use with the GNU Aspell spell checker. COMMANDS
-c, c, compress compress the plain text word list read from standard input. -d, d, decompress decompress the compressed word list read from standard input. EXAMPLES
Here are a few examples of how you can use word-list-compress word-list-compress d <wordlist.cwl >wordlist.txt Decompress file wordlist.cwl to text file wordlist.txt word-list-compress c <wordlist.wl >wordlist.cwl 2>errors.txt Compress wordlist.wl to wordlist.cwl and send any error messages to a text file named errors.txt LC_COLLATE=C sort -u <wordlist.txt | word-list-compress c >wordlist.cwl Sort a word list, then pipe it to word-list-compress to create a compressed binary wordlist.cwl file. word-list-compress d <words.cwl | aspell create master ./words.rws Decompress a wordlist, then pipe it to aspell(1) to create a spelling list. Please check the aspell(1) info manual for proper usage and options. TIPS
Word-list-compress is best used with sorted word list type files. It is not a general purpose compression program since the resulting files may actually increase in size. Word-list-compress accepts up to 255 text characters in the range of {0x21...0xFF}. If your word list requires a larger character set for certain languages or longer length for multi-word, scientific, medical, technical or other use, then it is recommended that you compress your word list using prezip-bin(1) DIAGNOSTICS
Word-list-compress normally exits with a return code of 0. If it encounters an error, a message is sent to standard error output (stderr), and word-list-compress exits with a non-zero return value. Error messages are listed below: (display help/usage message) Unknown command given on the command line so word-list-compress displays a usage message to standard error output. Corrupt Input This is only for the decompression command d. The input file is of an unknown format or the input file/stream is corrupted. You may have some valid output, but word-list-compress could not complete the process. If the input file is a compressed wordlist but you have no output file, then it may be a newer prezip-bin(1) version of compressed file, if so, try decompressing the file with prezip-bin(1) instead. Output Data Error The output is full, write protected, or has an error and can no longer be written to. SEE ALSO
aspell(1), aspell-import(1), prezip-bin(1), run-with-aspell(1) Aspell is fully documented in its Texinfo manual. See the `aspell' entry in info for more complete documentation. REPORTING BUGS
For help, see the Aspell homepage at <http://aspell.net> and send bug reports/comments to the Aspell user list at the above address. AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Aaron Lehmann <aaronl@vitelus.com>, Brian Nelson <pyro@debian.org> and Jose Da Silva <digital@joescat.com>. GNU
2005-09-05 WORD-LIST-COMPRESS(1)
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