$ ./hashgen_amd64.bin -m 0 -w rockyou.txt -o /dev/null
2023/11/02 19:10:51 Starting...
2023/11/02 19:10:51 Processing file: rockyou.txt
2023/11/02 19:10:51 Hash function: 0
2023/11/02 19:10:51 CPU Threads: 16
2023/11/02 19:10:52 Finished hashing 15053568 lines in 0.500 sec (30.123 M lines/sec)
As of the this writing, hashgen (go) has a 2,519% faster md5 hashrate vs the next fastest publicly available CPU based hash generator (see benchmarks). While this is extremely fast, these hashrates can be beat by improved code optimization and/or coding in faster programming languages (I'm looking at you C, Rust and Zig).
Since version v2023-10-30.1600
, hashgen has a top recorded hasharate of 30,228,048 md5/sec on the test rig's Ryzen 7 3700X CPU! Much faster hashrates have been seen on higher end CPU's.
Hashgen is a CLI hash generator written in Go and can be cross compiled for Linux, Raspberry Pi, Windows & Mac, although testing and compiling is mainly done on debian 12 linux.
To use hashgen, type your mode, wordlist input & hash output files with a simple command line.
- Supports multiple hashing functions (see list below)
- Encode & decode base64
- Supports ASCII, UTF-8 and $HEX[] wordlist input
- Can also be used to dehex a wordlist by setting mode to "-m plaintext" which will output wordlist to plaintext
Useage Examples | Command Line |
---|---|
read wordlist.txt, hash to md5 and write to output.txt | ./hashgen -m md5 -w wordlist.txt -o output.txt |
pipe wordlist into hashgen and write to stdout | cat wordlist.txt | ./hashgen -m md5 |
dehex hex_wordlist to plaintext wordlist | ./hashgen -m plaintext -w hex_wordlist.txt -o wordlist.txt |
Function: | Hashcat Mode: |
---|---|
base64encode | |
base64decode | |
morsecode | (ITU-R M.1677-1) |
crc32 | |
11500 | 11500 (hashcat compatible CRC32) |
crc64 | |
md4 | 900 |
md5 | 0 |
ntlm | 1000 |
plaintext | 99999 (can be used to dehex wordlist) |
ripemd-160 | 6000 |
sha1 | 100 |
sha2-224 | 1300 |
sha2-256 | 1400 |
sha2-384 | 10800 |
sha2-512 | 1700 |
sha2-512-224 | |
sha2-512-256 | |
sha3-224 | 17300 |
sha3-256 | 17400 |
sha3-384 | 17500 |
sha3-512 | 17600 |
keccak-256 | 17800 |
keccak-512 | 18000 |
- https://github.com/cyclone-github/hashgen-testing/tree/main/benchmarks
- In addition to hashgen (go), I have also written hashgen in python, php, C, and Rust, although Rust and C need a lot of work to unlock their full performance potential. If you speak C or Rust, I'd be curious to see how fast you can push hashgen!
- If you want the latest features, compiling from source is the best option since the release version may run several revisions behind the source code.
- This assumes you have Go and Git installed
git clone https://github.com/cyclone-github/hashgen.git
cd hashgen
go mod init hashgen
go mod tidy
go build -ldflags="-s -w" hashgen.go
- Compile from source code how-to:
- Go Package Documentation: https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/cyclone-github/hashgen
- Hashcat Wiki: https://hashcat.net/wiki/
- Hashkiller Forum: https://forum.hashkiller.io/index.php?threads/cyclone-hashgen.63140/
- Softpedia: https://www.softpedia.com/get/System/File-Management/hashgen-go.shtml
- Several antivirus programs on VirusTotal incorrectly detect hashgen as a false positive. This issue primarily affects the Windows executable binary, but is not limited to it. If this concerns you, I recommend carefully reviewing hashgen's source code, then proceed to compile the binary yourself.
- Uploading your compiled hashgen binaries to https://virustotal.com and leaving an upvote or a comment would be helpful.
- Why write hashgen? hashgen is nothing new (to me) as this project started several years ago while needing a way to quickly convert wordlists to md5 or sha1 on linux terminal. Several versions of hashgen have been written over the years in several languages: python, php, Go, C and Rust. While the actively maintained version is hashgen (go), which offers enhanced features and superior performance, the "hashgen-testing" repository linked below contains testing versions of hashgen in different programming languages:
- Why write hashgen in Go instead of xyz language? I did this to push my Go coding skills while also seeing how fast I could push Go. During early testing, I was not expecting hashgen to be all that fast, but I have been pleasantly surprised!
- When I realized hashgen (go) was competitively fast compared to other publicly available hash generators, I decided to publish hashgen's code and binaries for others to use. I've really enjoyed this project and I hope you find it useful.
- If you found hashgen to be helpful, please consider giving this repository a star!