table of contents
PYRIT(1) | PYRIT | PYRIT(1) |
NAME¶
pyrit - A GPGPU-driven WPA/WPA2-PSK key crackerSYNOPSIS¶
pyrit [options] commandDESCRIPTION¶
Pyrit exploits the computational power of many-core- and GPGPU-platforms to create massive databases, pre-computing part of the WPA/WPA2-PSK authentication phase in a space-time tradeoff. It is a powerful attack against one of the world's most used security-protocols. This document tries to describe and explain all functions the commandline-client pyrit provides. One or more options may be given on the commandline to customize a command. The exact behaviour of options depends on the command. At the time of this writing, cowpatty is not available in Debian. References to cowpatty and its commands are nevertheless preserved for the sake of completeness.OPTIONS¶
Pyrit recognizes the following options:- -b BSSID
- Specifies a BSSID. Can be used to restrict commands to certain Access-Points.
- -e ESSID
- Specifies the ESSID. Commands usually refer to all ESSIDs in the database when this option is omitted.
- -i infile
- Specifies a filename to read from; the special filename "-" can be used for stdin. The file may be gzip-compressed in which case its name must end in .gz for transparent decompression.
- -o outfile
- Specifies a filename to write to; the special filename "-" can be used for stdout. Filenames that end in .gz cause pyrit to gzip-compress the file on the fly.
- -r capture-file
- Specifies a packet-capture file in pcap format (possibly gzip-compressed) or a device (e.g.: "wlan0") to capture from.
- -u URL
- Specifies the URL of the storage-device in the form of
Pyrit can use the filesystem, a remote Pyrit-Relay-Server
and, if the package python-sqlalchemy is installed, SQL-Databases as
storage. The driver file:// refers to Pyrit's own filesystem-based
storage, http:// connects to a Pyrit-Relay-Server and all other URLs
are passed directly to python-sqlalchemy, if available. The default
storage-URL can also be specified by the key defaultstorage in
pyrit's configuration file (see FILES below).
- --all-handshakes
- The commands attack_batch, attack_db, attack_cowpatty and attack_passthrough automatically use the single handshake of highest quality only. In some cases even this handshake may have been wrongfully reconstructed from the captured data, rendering the attack futile. In case more than one EAPOL-handshake is reconstructed from the capture-file, the option --all-handshakes may be used to attack all handshakes reconstructable from the captured data. Exact behaviour of the commands affected by this option is described below.
COMMANDS¶
- analyze
- Parse one or more packet-capture files (in pcap-format, possibly gzip-compressed) given by the option -r and try to detect Access-Points, Stations and EAPOL-handshakes. For example:
pyrit -r "test*.pcap" analyze
Pyrit shows a list of Access-Points, associated Stations
and EAPOL-handshakes that could be identified from the captured data.
Handshakes are shown ordered by their "quality":
Good: The handshake includes the challenge from
the Access-Point, the response from the Station and the confirmation from the
Access-Point.
Workable: The handshake includes the response from the Station and the
confirmation from the Access-Point. The challenge was not captured.
Bad: The handshake includes the challenge from the Access-Point and the
response from the Station. The confirmation was not captured.
Handshakes of the same quality are ordered by how close the packets that make up
the handshake are to each other.
- attack_batch
- Attack an EAPOL-handshake found in the packet-capture file(s) given by the option -r using the Pairwise Master Keys and passwords stored in the database. The options -b and -e can be used to specify the Access-Point to attack; it is picked automatically if both options are omitted. The password is written to the filename given by the option -o if specified. For example:
pyrit -r test.pcap -e MyNetwork -b 00:de:ad:c0:de:00 \ -o MyNetworkPassword.txt attack_batch
Pairwise Master Keys that previously have been computed
and stored in the database are taken from there; all other passwords are
translated into their respective Pairwise Master Keys and added to the
database for later re-use. ESSIDs are created automatically in the database if
necessary.
Pyrit works down the list of reconstructed EAPOL-handshakes in case the option
--all-handshakes is supplied.
- attack_cowpatty
- Attack an EAPOL-handshake found in the packet-capture file(s) given by the option -r using Pairwise Master Keys from a cowpatty-like file (e.g. generated by ``genpmk'' from cowpatty, or export_cowpatty below) given by the option -f. The options -b and -e can be used to specify the Access-Point to attack; it is picked automatically if both options are omitted. The password is written to the filename given by the option -o if specified. The cowpatty-file may be gzip-compressed and must match the chosen ESSID. For example:
pyrit -r test.pcap -e MyOwnNetwork \ -i MyOwnNetwork.cow.gz -o - attack_cowpatty
Pyrit's own database is not touched by
attack_cowpatty.
Pyrit attacks all EAPOL-handshakes at the same time if the option
--all-handshakes is supplied. This will reduce throughput (e.g.: 33%
throughout in case of three handshakes).
- attack_db
- Attack an EAPOL-handshake found in the packet-capture file(s) given by the option -r using the Pairwise Master Keys stored in the database. The options -b and -e can be used to specify the Access-Point to attack; it is picked automatically if both options are omitted. The password is written to the filename given by the option -o if specified. For example:
pyrit -r test.pcap -e MyOtherNetwork attack_db
Only Pairwise Master Keys that have been computed
previously and are stored in the database are used by attack_db.
Pyrit works down the list of reconstructed EAPOL-handshakes in case the option
--all-handshakes is supplied.
- attack_passthrough
- Attack an EAPOL-handshake found in the packet-capture file(s) given by the option -r using the passwords read from the file given by the option -i. The options -b and -e can be used to specify the Access-Point to attack; it is picked automatically if both options are omitted. The password is written to the filename given by the option -o if specified. For example:
pyrit -r test.pcap -b 00:de:ad:be:ef:00 \ -i words.txt attack_passthrough
This command circumvents Pyrit's database and should only
be used if storage-space is a problem (e.g. on LiveCDs). You should consider
using attack_batch otherwise.
Pyrit attacks all EAPOL-handshakes at the same time if the option
--all-handshakes is supplied.
- batch
-
pyrit -e NETGEAR batch
The option -o can be used to specify a filename
the results should additionally be written to in cowpatty's binary format. The
option -e becomes mandatory and the ESSID is automatically created in
the database if necessary. Pairwise Master Keys that previously have been
computed and stored in the database are exported from there without further
processing. Pyrit stops and exits if an IOError is raised while writing
to the specified file. This makes it very convenient to pipe results directly
to other programs but also keep them for later use. For example:
pyrit -e NETGEAR -o - batch | \ cowpatty -d - -r wpatestcapture.cap -s NETGEAR
- benchmark
- Determine the peak-performance of the available hardware by computing dummy-results. For example:
pyrit benchmark
- check_db
- Unpack the entire database and check for errors like data corruption or reference errors. This function does not check the value of computed results (see verify). For example:
pyrit check_db
- create_essid
- Add new ESSIDs to the database. A single ESSID may be given by the option -e. Multiple ESSIDs can be created by supplying a file (one per line) via the option -i. Re-creating an existing ESSID does not result in an error. For example:
pyrit -e NETGEAR create_essid
- delete_essid
- Delete the ESSID given by -e from the database. This includes all results that may have been stored for that particular ESSID. For example:
pyrit -e NETGEAR delete_essid
- eval
-
pyrit eval
- export_passwords
- Write all passwords that are currently stored in the database to a new file given by -o. Passwords are terminated by a single newline-character ("\n"). Existing files are overwritten without confirmation. For example:
pyrit -o myword.txt.gz export_passwords
- export_cowpatty
- Write all results for the ESSID given by -e to the file given by -o in cowpatty's binary format. Existing files are overwritten without confirmation. For example:
pyrit -o NETGEAR.cow -e NETGEAR export_cowpatty
- export_hashdb
- Write all results currently stored in the database to the airolib-ng-database given by -o. The database is created with a default table layout if the file does not yet exist. The option -e can be used to limit the export to a single ESSID. For example:
pyrit -o NETGEAR.db -e NETGEAR export_hashdb
- import_passwords
- Read the file given by -i and import one password per line to the database. The passwords may contain all characters (including NULL-bytes) apart from the terminating newline-character ("\n"). Passwords that are not suitable for being used with WPA-/WPA2-PSK are ignored. Pyrit's storage-implementation guarantees that all passwords remain unique throughout the entire database. For example:
pyrit -i dirty_words.txt import_passwords
- import_unique_passwords
- Read the file given by -i and import one password per line to the database. The passwords may contain all characters (including NULL-bytes) apart from the terminating newline-character ("\n"). Passwords that are not suitable for being used with WPA-/WPA2-PSK are ignored. This command does not check if there are duplicate passwords within the file or between the file and the database; it should be used with caution to prevent the database from getting poisoned with duplicated passwords. This command however can be much faster than import_passwords. For example:
pyrit -i dirty_words.txt import_unique_passwords
- list_cores
- Show a list of all available hardware modules Pyrit currently uses. For example:
pyrit list_cores
- list_essids
- Show a list of all ESSIDs currently stored in the database. This function is faster than eval in case you don't need to know the number of computed results. For example:
pyrit list_essids
- passthrough
-
pyrit -i dirty_words.txt.gz -e NETGEAR \ -o - passthrough | cowpatty -d - \ -r wpatestcapture.cap -s NETGEAR
- relay
-
pyrit -u sqlite://var/local/pyrit.db relay
and the client (where the big GPU is):
pyrit -u http://192.168.0.100:17934 batch
- selftest
- Run an extensive selftest for about 60 seconds. This test includes the entire scheduling-mechanism and all cores that are listed by list_cores. You can use this function to detect broken hardware-modules or malicious network-clients. For example:
pyrit selftest
- serve
-
pyrit serve
and on the client (the server's IP-address has been added
to known_clients and rpc_server is set to 'true'):
pyrit -r test.pcap -b 00:de:ad:be:ef:00 \ -i words.txt attack_passthrough
- strip
-
pyrit -r "large_dumps_*.pcap" -e MyNetwork \ -o tiny_compressed_dump_MyNetwork.dump.gz strip
- stripLive
- Parse a packet-capture file given by the option -r, extract only packets that are necessary for EAPOL-handshake detection and write a new dump to the file given by the option -o. This command differs from strip as the capture-file can be any character device including sockets and other pseudo-files that look like files in pcap-format. stripLive writes relevant packets to the new file given by -o as they arrive instead of trying to read the entire capture-file first.
pyrit -r /temp/kismet_dump -o small_dump.pcap stripLive
- verify
-
pyrit -e NETGEAR verify
EXIT STATUS¶
If command succeeds, pyrit's process exit status is set to 0; otherwise it is set to 1 and (usually) an error message or a python-traceback is written to stderr. The following commands also indicate an error condition in certain cases:analyze: Not at least one valid EAPOL-handshake could be detected.
attack_passthrough, attack_batch, attack_db and attack_cowpatty: The password could not be found.
verify At least one workunit contained invalid results.
check_db Errors in the database were found (and possibly fixed).
FILES¶
- ~/.pyrit/config
- The pyrit configuration file. You can find a documented example in /usr/share/doc/pyrit/examples/config.example.
NOTES¶
The author does not encourage or support using pyrit for the infringement of people's communication-privacy. The exploration and realization of the technology discussed here motivate as a purpose of their own; this is documented by the open development, strictly sourcecode-based distribution and 'copyleft'-licensing.AUTHOR¶
pyrit was written by Lukas Lueg <lukas.lueg@gmail.com>. This manual page was written by Christian Kastner <debian@kvr.at> for the Debian project (but may be used by others).2011-03-28 | pyrit |