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pwdlyser - Python-based CLI Password Analyser (Reporting Tool)

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The 'pwdlyser' tool is a Python-based CLI script that automates the arduous process of manually reviewing cracked passwords during password audits following security assessments or penetration tests. There are likely some false positives/negatives, so please use at your own discretion.

Installation
The installation of this tool is fairly straight forward. Use the following steps:
git clone https://www.github.com/ins1gn1a/pwdlyser.git
cd pwdlyser/
chmod +x setup.sh
./setup.sh

Input: Passwords
Lists can be specified using the -p [path/to/file] argument, and should be colon delimited as username:password, or just password (however, this will just assess passwords and use a generic username for each). No headers are necessary.
Should you only want to analyse passwords, just enter a colon (":") before each password in the list, which will just output blank usernames. To automate this I've added a script 'add-delimit.py' that will input a list of passwords (only) and append the colon to the start.

Summary Output
One of the newest features of pwdlyser is the ability to quickly generate a management-level summary of the password health within the organisation. This output is provided in a paragraph format and dynamically details each of the respective checks (i.e. keyboard patterns, common passwords, etc). I would suggest using this for management summaries, whilst the -oR option should be used for a more technical reporting output.

Reporting Output
The -oR argument can be used to generate a list of usernames and passwords that have been analysed within each of the respective checks (shared password reuse, variation of usernames as passwords, etc) in a more technical level. The passwords are masked, except the start and a certain amount of end characters (e.g. P*****rd1). This output is more suitable for a technical commentary within a penetration testing or security assessment report.

General Usage
There are a range of input arguments that can be used, but for a simple 'common password' search through a list use the -c argument to initiate the check. This will import the default pwd_common.conf file and use it as a basis to compare against the password list. Passwords and the common passwords are both converted to lower-case, with the inputted passwords also being 'de-leeted' and converted back to alpha characters (i.e. 3 to e). The reason for this, even though some passwords may end up reading 'iadmin' instead of '!admin' is that this is only a basic comparison, but it seems to work well.
Other arguments also include the check for any users that have their username as part of their password. This can be run using the -up or --user-as-pass arugments.
To display any passwords that have a minimum length less than 9 characters use -l 9. The int can be changed to whatever the password policy is, although you should also really ensure that you verify against best-practice too.
Basic ('de-leeted') searches can be run using -S [word], with an exact search can be run using --exact [word]. The exact search does not modify any characters for comparison and thus allows you to check for any passwords containing '123' or 'P4$$', for example.
Organisation names often appear within passwords, at least from my experience during internal penetration tests. To check for this, a similar search to the 'basic' search is run, although the only difference is that the 'Description' will state 'Organisation name: [name]' on screen instead. Run this using -o [orgname or acronym].
If you want to verify whether you were able to crack the passwords for any admin accounts then you can put the usernames (only) in a file and use --admin [path/to/file] to display any of the admin passwords that could be cracked. This is of course useful for any escalation or pivoting that you may need to do, or to ensure that administrators are not using weak or reusing passwords.
For simple searches for usernames that may be in the password list use -u [username/part of username]. This list also works with email:passwords, it doesn't discriminate. Part, or excerpts of usernames can also be used.
To just identify the top N of passwords, i.e. frequency analysis, use the -f [int] argument and specify the number of passwords you want to return. This will need to be an integer.
Other options can be seen within the -h menu or below:
usage: pwdlyser [-h] [--all] [--admin ADMIN_PATH] [-c] [--char-analysis]
[--date] [-e] [--exact EXACT_SEARCH] [-f FREQ_ANAL]
[-fl FREQ_LEN] [-k] [-l MIN_LENGTH] [-m]
[-mc MASKS_RESULTS_COUNT] [-o ORG_NAME] [-oR] -p PASS_LIST
[-S BASIC_SEARCH] [-s] [-u USER_SEARCH] [-up] [-w] [--summary]

Password Analyser

optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--all, -A Run all standard tests. Can be combined with -o [org-
name], --summary, --admin [path]
--admin ADMIN_PATH Import line separated list of Admin usernames to check
password list
-c, --common Check against list of common passwords
--char-analysis Perform character-level analysis
--date Check for common date/day passwords
-e, --entropy Output estimated entropy for the top 10 passwords (by
frequency used)
--exact EXACT_SEARCH Perform a search using the exact string.
-f FREQ_ANAL, --frequency FREQ_ANAL
Perform frequency analysis
-fl FREQ_LEN, --length-frequency FREQ_LEN
Perform frequency analysis on password length
-k, --keyboard-pattern
Identify common keyboard pattern usage within password
lists
-l MIN_LENGTH, --length MIN_LENGTH
Display passwords that do not meet the minimum length
-m, --mask Perform common Hashcat mask analysis
-mc MASKS_RESULTS_COUNT, --mask-count MASKS_RESULTS_COUNT
(Optional) Specify the number of mask to output for
the -m / --masks option
-o ORG_NAME, --org-name ORG_NAME
Enter the organisation name to identify any users that
will be using a variation of the word for their
password. Note: False Positives are possible
-oR Output format set for reporting with "- " prefix
-p PASS_LIST, --pass-list PASS_LIST
Enter the path to the list of passwords, either in the
format of passwords, or username:password.
-S BASIC_SEARCH, --search BASIC_SEARCH
Run a basic search using a keyword. Non-alpha
characters will be stripped, i.e. syst3m will become
systm (although this will be compared against the same
stripped passwords
-s, --shared Display any reused/shared passwords.
-u USER_SEARCH, --user USER_SEARCH
Return usernames that match string (case insensitive)
-up, --user-as-pass Check for passwords that use part of the username
-w, --clean-wordlist Enable this flag to append cleaned (no trailing
numerics) to a wordlist at wordlist-cleaned.txt
--summary Use --summary to provide a concise report-friendly
output.

Example Outputs

Basic Search
> pwdlyser -p sample-file -S pass

##### # # ##### # # # #### ###### #####
# # # # # # # # # # # # #
# # # # # # # # #### ##### # #
##### # ## # # # # # # # #####
# ## ## # # # # # # # # #
# # # ##### ###### # #### ###### # #

---- Password analysis & reporting tool -- v1.0.0 ----

------------------------------: ------------------------------ : ------------------------------
Username : Password : Description
------------------------------: ------------------------------ : ------------------------------
user1 : password1 : Variation of pass
: testpass : Variation of pass

User As Pass
> pwdlyser -p sample-file -up

##### # # ##### # # # #### ###### #####
# # # # # # # # # # # # #
# # # # # # # # #### ##### # #
##### # ## # # # # # # # #####
# ## ## # # # # # # # # #
# # # ##### ###### # #### ###### # #

---- Password analysis & reporting tool -- v1.0.0 ----

------------------------------: ------------------------------ : ------------------------------
Username : Password : Description
------------------------------: ------------------------------ : ------------------------------
lenovo : L3n0vo! : Variation of lenovo
Bluecoat : *blu3c0at$ : Variation of Bluecoat
system : sy$t3m! : Variation of system

Common Passwords
> pwdlyser -p sample-file -c

##### # # ##### # # # #### ###### #####
# # # # # # # # # # # # #
# # # # # # # # #### ##### # #
##### # ## # # # # # # # #####
# ## ## # # # # # # # # #
# # # ##### ###### # #### ###### # #

---- Password analysis & reporting tool -- v1.0.0 ----

------------------------------: ------------------------------ : ------------------------------
Username : Password : Description
------------------------------: ------------------------------ : ------------------------------
user1 : password1 : Variation of password
user4 : l3tme1n_* : Variation of letmein

Frequency
> pwdlyser -p sample-file -f 3

##### # # ##### # # # #### ###### #####
# # # # # # # # # # # # #
# # # # # # # # #### ##### # #
##### # ## # # # # # # # #####
# ## ## # # # # # # # # #
# # # ##### ###### # #### ###### # #

---- Password analysis & reporting tool -- v1.0.0 ----

------------------------------: ------------------------------
Password : Frequency
------------------------------: ------------------------------
password1 : 3
blu3c0at! : 1
Friday924 : 1

Report Format (-oR)
> pwdlyser -p sample-file -c -oR

##### # # ##### # # # #### ###### #####
# # # # # # # # # # # # #
# # # # # # # # #### ##### # #
##### # ## # # # # # # # #####
# ## ## # # # # # # # # #
# # # ##### ###### # #### ###### # #

---- Password analysis & reporting tool -- v1.0.0 ----


The following user accounts were found to have a password that was a variation
of the most common user passwords, which can include 'password', 'letmein',
'123456', 'admin', 'iloveyou', 'friday', or 'qwerty':
- user2 : P4****rd1
- user5 : Pa***ord
- user1 : Dec****r16
- user9 : zaq****23

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Mask Analysis
One of the more useful features for active penetration testing is the ability to analyse the more common password masks for the cracked passwords, and to then reuse them within further Hashcat attacks.
pwdlyser -p sample-file.txt -m

##### # # ##### # # # #### ###### #####
# # # # # # # # # # # # #
# # # # # # # # # #### ##### # #
##### # # # # # # # # # # #####
# ## ## # # # # # # # # #
# # # ##### ###### # #### ###### # #

---- Password analysis & reporting tool --- v2.4.2 ----

[!] Running analysis with 'user:password' delimitation

------------------------------: ------------------------------ : ------------------------------
Hashcat Mask : Mask Length : Occurrences
------------------------------: ------------------------------ : ------------------------------
?u?l?l?l?l?l?l?u?d : 9 : 601
?u?l?l?l?l?d?d?d : 8 : 266
?u?l?l?l?l?l?l?d?d : 9 : 152
?u?l?l?l?l?l?l?l?l?d : 10 : 132
?u?l?l?l?l?l?l?l?l?l?d?d : 13 : 72
?u?l?l?l?l?l?l?l?l?d?d : 11 : 62
?u?l?l?l?l?d?d?d?d : 9 : 55
?l?l?l?l?l?u?u?u?u?u?d?d?d : 13 : 49
?u?l?l?l?l?l?l?l?d?s : 10 : 48
?u?l?l?l?l?l?l?d : 8 : 46
?u?l?l?l?l?l?d?d?d : 9 : 42
?u?l?l?l?l?l?d?d?d?d : 10 : 38
?u?l?l?l?l?d?d?s : 8 : 30
?u?l?l?l?l?l?l?l?l?d : 10 : 29
?u?l?l?l?l?l?l?d?d?d?d : 11 : 28
?u?l?l?l?l?l?l?l?l?l?d?d : 12 : 21
?u?l?l?l?l?l?l?d?d?d?d : 11 : 20
?u?l?l?l?d?d?d?d : 8 : 19
?u?l?l?l?l?l?l?d?d?s : 10 : 19
?u?l?l?l?l?l?l?d?d?d : 10 : 19
?u?l?l?l?l?l?l?l?d?d?d?d : 12 : 17
?u?l?l?l?l?l?d?d?s : 9 : 15
?u?l?l?l?l?l?l?l?l?d?d?d?d : 13 : 13
?u?l?l?l?l?l?l?l?d?d?s : 11 : 12
?s?l?l?l?l?l?l?l?l?d : 10 : 11

Summary Output (--summary)
pwdlyser -p sample-file.txt --summary -o SAMPLE-ORG --admin admin-user-list.txt
A password audit was performed against the extracted password hashes from the specified system. Password cracking tools and methods were used to enumerate the plaintext password counterparts, and as such not all of the passwords were able to be identified. In total, there were 2448 username and password combinations that were obtained.
As part of the password audit, the top 10 most commonly used passwords within the organisation have been compiled. This list has been broken up with the password, the percentage of the total passwords, and the numeric value of the total passwords:
  • Password01 : 31% | 481/2448
  • Germany01 : 4% | 66/2448
  • 123qwert!ZXC : 3% | 49/2448
  • letm31n! : 2% | 38/2448
  • Password2! : 2% | 35/2448
  • starw4r$ : 0% | 22/2448
  • Password2 : 1% | 14/2448
  • W3lc0ome01 : 0% | 13/2448
  • Bu773rfl1es : 0% | 12/2448
  • letm31n234 : 0% | 10/2448
Alongside the list of the most common passwords used within the organisation, the top 10 most common password lengths were analysed and the results can be seen below in the format of the character length, along with the percentage of the total passwords for each password length:
  • Length : 10 : 41%
  • Length : 8 : 20%
  • Length : 7 : 16%
  • Length : 11 : 7%
  • Length : 13 : 6%
  • Length : 16 : 3%
  • Length : 9 : 1%
  • Length : 15 : 1%
  • Length : 14 : 0%
  • Length : 12 : 0%
One of the biggest threats to organisations in relation to the passwords used by users and administrators is the use of passwords that are exactly the same, or a variation of the more commonly used passwords. Overall, there were 603 passwords that were found to have a variation of one of these common words or phrases. Some of these passwords include 'password', 'qwerty', 'starwars', 'system', 'admin', 'letmein', and 'iloveyou'. Further details can be seen within the 'pwd_common.conf' file at https://www.github.com/ins1gn1a/pwdlyser.
As part of the wider password analysis, each password was assessed and compared to the commonly used keyboard patterns. These keyboard patterns are defined by the QWERTY layout, where a password is made up of characters in close proximity, such as qwer, zxcvbn, qazwsx, and so on. In total, there were 59 passwords in use that had at least one of these variations.
There were 10 passwords that were identified as having a password set that was a variation of the username; this includes additional prefixed or suffixed characters, substitutions within the word (i.e. 3 instead of e), or the username as it appears. Penetration testers, and more importantly attackers, will often check system or administrative accounts that have a variation of the username set as the password, and as such it is critical that organisations do not use this convention for password security.
The organisation name, or a variation of the name (such as an abbreviation) 'SAMPLE-ORG' was found to appear within 14 of the passwords that were able to be obtained during the password audit. For any system or administrative user accounts that have a variation of the company name as their password, it is highly recommended that the passwords are changed to prevent targeted guessing attacks.
Finally, there were 5 Domain administrative accounts (Domain Admins, Enterprise Admins, etc.) that were able to be compromised through password analysis. The account names and their respective passwords (masked) can be seen below:
  • user.admin1 : Run****3!
  • sys.admin : $!x***az1
  • svc-wsus : a4a*****tYc
  • user.admin2 : P4****rd2
  • user2 : P4****rd!2



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