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Special Forums UNIX and Linux Applications John the Ripper application question Post 302378961 by itsjoy2u on Wednesday 9th of December 2009 07:48:10 AM
Old 12-09-2009
John the Ripper application question

Hi Friends

I like to know one thing the how exactly john the ripper works. I have search in google, read lots of tutorial on that.

I have simple question, can I get the password for the encrypted file for the following example.

e.g :

Abc.txt file

contents

"This is Joy"

Now I have encrypted the file using gpg and the password is 123.

I got the file Abc.txt.gpg.

Can I get the password using john the ripper while passing Abc.txt.gpg as input?

Thanks in Advance.

Joy
 

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GPG-PRESET-PASSPHRASE(1)					 GNU Privacy Guard					  GPG-PRESET-PASSPHRASE(1)

NAME
gpg-preset-passphrase - Put a passphrase into gpg-agent's cache SYNOPSIS
gpg-preset-passphrase [options] [command] cache-id DESCRIPTION
The gpg-preset-passphrase is a utility to seed the internal cache of a running gpg-agent with passphrases. It is mainly useful for unat- tended machines, where the usual pinentry tool may not be used and the passphrases for the to be used keys are given at machine startup. Passphrases set with this utility don't expire unless the --forget option is used to explicitly clear them from the cache --- or gpg-agent is either restarted or reloaded (by sending a SIGHUP to it). It is necessary to allow this passphrase presetting by starting gpg-agent with the --allow-preset-passphrase. gpg-preset-passphrase is invoked this way: gpg-preset-passphrase [options] [command] cacheid cacheid is either a 40 character keygrip of hexadecimal characters identifying the key for which the passphrase should be set or cleared. The keygrip is listed along with the key when running the command: gpgsm --dump-secret-keys. Alternatively an arbitrary string may be used to identify a passphrase; it is suggested that such a string is prefixed with the name of the application (e.g foo:12346). One of the following command options must be given: --preset Preset a passphrase. This is what you usually will use. gpg-preset-passphrase will then read the passphrase from stdin. --forget Flush the passphrase for the given cache ID from the cache. The following additional options may be used: -v --verbose Output additional information while running. -P string --passphrase string Instead of reading the passphrase from stdin, use the supplied string as passphrase. Note that this makes the passphrase visible for other users. SEE ALSO
gpg(1), gpgsm(1), gpg-agent(1), scdaemon(1) The full documentation for this tool is maintained as a Texinfo manual. If GnuPG and the info program are properly installed at your site, the command info gnupg should give you access to the complete manual including a menu structure and an index. GnuPG 2.0.15 2010-07-05 GPG-PRESET-PASSPHRASE(1)
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