Openwall's John the Ripper (JtR) is a fast password cracker, currently available for many flavors of Unix and for Windows. Its primary purpose is to detect weak Unix passwords. Besides several crypt(3) password hash types most commonly found on various Unix systems, supported out of the box are Windows LM hashes, various macOS password hashes, as well as many non-hashes such as SSH private keys, encrypted filesystems such as macOS .dmg files and "sparse bundles", encrypted archives such as ZIP, RAR, and 7z, encrypted document files such as PDF and Microsoft Office's, plus lots of other hashes and ciphers.
- Introduction
- Windows Package
- Snap Package
- macOS Package
- Flatpak Package
- Docker Image
- Checksums
- Package Security
- About This Project
- Contribute
- Acknowledgments and Contact
- License
We produce software in short cycles, ensuring that the software can be reliably released at any time, following a pipeline through a "production-like environment".
Latest |
Prerelease |
|
---|---|---|
Available Technology | Rollout Status |
---|---|
Docker image with the tag bleeding |
|
Snap package from the edge channel |
|
Windows 64bits package |
Click on the link to learn more about our packages Building Environments.
All continuous integration (CI) and continuous delivery (CD) procedures are fully automated, builds and tests are performed whenever requested by the packager. Manual procedures are required just to start the process.
Click on the link to learn more about our Continuous Integration and Continuous Delivery procedures.
Snap and Flatpak are cool new ways of distributing Linux applications among a wide range of different distros. They are technologies to deploy applications in a secure, sandboxed and containerized way.
A Docker image is a read-only template used to execute code in a Docker container. An image is an immutable file that contains the binaries, configuration files, libraries, dependencies, tools, and other files needed for John the Ripper application to run.
When the Docker user runs an image, it becomes one instance (it becomes a container, in other words, a running instance of the application).
Delivered using Microsoft-hosted Windows 2022 Server in Azure
Supported architecture: amd64
To install John the Ripper by downloading the .7z file and installing it manually, follow these steps:
- Download the compressed file to your machine.
- Navigate to where you downloaded the file and double-click the compressed file.
- Extract it to a directory such as
C:\john-the-ripper
. - Start a command prompt.
- Navigate to the directory you extracted the compressed file, e.g.,
cd C:\john-the-ripper\run
. - Run JtR:
C:\john-the-ripper\run>john --list=build-info
[...]
Build: cygwin 64-bit x86_64 AVX2 AC OMP OPENCL
SIMD: AVX2, interleaving: MD4:3 MD5:3 SHA1:1 SHA256:1 SHA512:1
[...]
C:\john-the-ripper\run>john --test --format=SHA512crypt
| π More examples of running John The Ripper on Windows.
The highlights (π):
- has fallback for CPU[*] and OMP;
- has OpenCL available (GPU driver installation is needed);
- generic crypt(3) format available;
- security feature Address Space Layout Randomisation (ASLR) enabled;
- security feature Data Execution Prevention (DEP) enabled.
[*] John the Ripper runs using the best SIMD instructions available on the host it's running on.
Using the instructions above, you can install the released version of john
, or the bleeding development version, or an
earlier stable version on your system.
The package contains all the executables and libraries needed to run a fresh John the Ripper installation.
OpenSSF SLSA
SLSA is a framework intended to codify and promote secure software supply-chain practices, it helps trace software artifacts back to the build and source control systems that produced them.
β οΈ NOTE: the release assets from our GitHub Releases are level 1 compliant.
In some situations a non-OpenMP build may be faster. You can ask to fallback to a non-OpenMP build specifying the value of OMP_NUM_THREADS in the command-line. You avail the best SIMD instructions at one's disposal without any OpenMP stuff. E.g.:
PS C:\john-the-ripper\run> set OMP_NUM_THREADS=1
PS C:\john-the-ripper\run> .\john --list=build-info
If John the Ripper is not recognizing your GPU card:
- make sure all required GPU drivers are installed;
- restart your PC, if you have just installed the drivers.
Delivered using Launchpad
Supported architectures: amd64, arm64v8, ppc64le, riscv64, and s390x
A Snap is a gpg signed squashfs file containing an application together with its dependencies, and a description of how it should safely be run on your system.
You can install john
by following the instructions at https://snapcraft.io/john-the-ripper. For distributions
without snap pre-installed, users should enable snap support, then install:
sudo snap install john-the-ripper
Just dance now:
$ john-the-ripper -list=build-info
[...]
Build: linux-gnu 64-bit x86_64 AVX2 AC OMP OPENCL
SIMD: AVX2, interleaving: MD4:3 MD5:3 SHA1:1 SHA256:1 SHA512:1
Deploy: sandboxed as a Snap app
[...]
You can also run the software using the official john
alias:
john -list=build-info
John runs confined under a restrictive security sandbox by default. Nevertheless, you can access and audit any file located in your home. Below, an usage example:
john -list=format-tests | cut -f3 > ~/allTests.in
john --format=SHA512crypt ~/allTests.in
For your convenience, the snap installed on your system contains the file
/snap/john-the-ripper/current/snap/manifest.yaml
which field build_url
points to its build log.
The highlights (π):
- has fallback for CPU[*] and OMP;
- has OpenCL available (GPU driver installation is needed);
- John the Ripper is a "featured software" in the security category on Canonical Snap Store;
- John the Ripper is a software with 4-star (ββββ) user reviews on Canonical Snap Store;
- John the Ripper is tagged as safe, confined and auditable software on Canonical Snap Store;
- John the Ripper supports and has a package for all architectures supported by Ubuntu itself.
- also available via the alias john, e.g.
john -list=build-info
; - the latest released version:
- install from the Snapcraft
stable
channel.
- install from the Snapcraft
- a development version is also available:
- install from the Snapcraft
edge
channel.
- install from the Snapcraft
[*] John the Ripper runs using the best SIMD instructions available on the host it's running on.
John the Ripper snap package has approximately eight thousand active users [*].
[*] 7 Day Active Users: the number of unique users who had at least one session within a 7 day period.
You are free to pick and set up aliases. To enable the usage of aliases with John the Ripper snap, run
sudo snap alias john-the-ripper <alias>
. For example:
sudo snap alias john-the-ripper john-snap
sudo snap alias john-the-ripper.dmg2john dmg2john
Once enabled, John itself plus the *2john tools can be invoked using the aliases. In the example, to run John type
john-snap
.
| π More examples of enabling alias for John The Ripper snap.
In some situations a non-OpenMP build may be faster. You can ask to fallback to a non-OpenMP build specifying
OMP_NUM_THREADS=1 john <options>
in the command-line. You avail the best SIMD instructions at one's disposal without
any OpenMP stuff. E.g.:
OMP_NUM_THREADS=1 john --list=build-info
As noted at https://forum.snapcraft.io/t/snaps-and-opencl/8509/17, the use of OpenCL by snaps is a problem. Support for NVIDIA cards is under development.
As a "general" solution (or in the case of AMD hardware), the user can run john out of the sandbox, unconfined (e.g.,
run /snap/john-the-ripper/current/bin/john
).
If you followed the instructions above, you have installed the released version of john
on your system. If you want to
access the hot and bleeding development version of JtR, you must follow the edge channel. For a clean install:
sudo snap install --channel=edge john-the-ripper
If you already have JtR installed:
sudo snap refresh --channel=edge john-the-ripper
If you do so, you will be running the development version available on GitHub.
Delivered using Cirrus CI
Supported architecture: arm64
To install John the Ripper by downloading the .7z file and installing it manually, follow these steps:
- Download the compressed file to your machine.
- Extract it to a directory such as
/Users/Me/bleeding
. - Start a command prompt.
- Navigate to the directory you extracted the compressed file, e.g.,
cd /Users/Me/bleeding
. - Run the software:
Install required Homebrew packages (if not already installed):
brew update
brew install libomp openssl gmp
Execute John the Ripper:
$ run/john -list=build-info
[...]
Build: darwin22.6.0 64-bit arm ASIMD AC OMP OPENCL
SIMD: ASIMD, interleaving: MD4:2 MD5:2 SHA1:1 SHA256:1 SHA512:1
OMP fallback binary: john-arm64
[...]
The highlights (π):
- has fallback for CPU[*] (if that makes sense) and OMP;
- has OpenCL available;
- built using clang from the official Xcode toolchain plus non-system libraries from Homebrew.
[*] John the Ripper runs using the best SIMD instructions available on the host it's running on.
Using the instructions above, you can install the released version of john
, or the bleeding development version, or an
earlier stable version on your system.
The package contains the necessary executables to run a fresh install of John the Ripper. You must install required Homebrew libraries.
OpenSSF SLSA
SLSA is a framework intended to codify and promote secure software supply-chain practices, it helps trace software artifacts back to the build and source control systems that produced them.
β οΈ NOTE: the release assets from our GitHub Releases are level 1 compliant.
In some situations a non-OpenMP build may be faster. You can ask to fallback to a non-OpenMP build specifying the value of OMP_NUM_THREADS in the command-line. You avail the best SIMD instructions at one's disposal without any OpenMP stuff. E.g.:
OMP_NUM_THREADS=1 run/john --list=build-info
Delivered using GitLab CI
Supported architectures: amd64 and arm64v8
Flatpak is a new framework for desktop applications on Linux, built to be distribution agnostic and allow deployment on any Linux operating system out there.
Flatpak is available for the most common Linux distributions.
To install JtR download the john.flatpak file and run:
# Note that root privileges are required for some operations.
sudo dnf install -y flatpak # or 'yum install', 'apt-get install', etc.
sudo flatpak remote-add --if-not-exists flathub https://flathub.org/repo/flathub.flatpakrepo # flatpak repository
sudo flatpak install -y flathub org.freedesktop.Platform//24.08 # install the runtime (base "container")
flatpak --user install --bundle john.flatpak # per-user installation (not system wide)
John runs confined under a restrictive security sandbox by default. Nevertheless, you can access and audit any file located in your home. Below, an usage example:
flatpak run com.openwall.John -list=build-info
flatpak run com.openwall.John -list=format-tests | cut -f3 > ~/allTests.in
flatpak run com.openwall.John --format=SHA512crypt ~/allTests.in
The highlights (π):
- has fallback for CPU[*] and OMP;
- also available via FlatHub at https://flathub.org/apps/com.openwall.John.
[*] John the Ripper runs using the best SIMD instructions available on the host it's running on.
Using the instructions above, you can install the released version of john
, or the bleeding development version, or an
earlier stable version on your system.
OpenSSF SLSA
SLSA is a framework intended to codify and promote secure software supply-chain practices, it helps trace software artifacts back to the build and source control systems that produced them.
β οΈ NOTE: the release assets from our GitHub Releases are level 1 compliant.
Delivered using GitHub Actions
Supported architectures: amd64 and arm64v8
Docker provides the ability to package and run an application in a loosely isolated environment called a container.
To use it:
# CPU and GPU formats
docker run -it ghcr.io/openwall/john:latest <binary id> <john options>
# To run ztex formats
docker run --device=/dev/ttyUSB0 ghcr.io/openwall/john:v1.9.0J1 ztex <john options>
Run John the Ripper and check if it is working:
docker run ghcr.io/openwall/john # => uses the best SIMD available, tag 'latest' can be omitted
docker run ghcr.io/openwall/john:bleeding # => uses the latest bleeding release
docker run ghcr.io/openwall/john:latest best # => uses the best SIMD available
| π More examples of running John The Ripper on Docker.
The highlights (π):
- OpenSSF SLSA 3 compliant;
- has NVIDIA OpenCL available (GPU driver is required on the host);
- has auto-selection of the best SIMD if user specifies
best
as the<binary id>
:- example:
docker run ghcr.io/openwall/john:latest best -list=build-info
.
- example:
- the latest released version:
- install from the command-line:
docker pull ghcr.io/openwall/john:latest
.
- install from the command-line:
- a development version is also available:
- install from the command-line:
docker pull ghcr.io/openwall/john:bleeding
.
- install from the command-line:
Using the instructions above, you can install the released version of john
, or the bleeding development version, or an
earlier stable version on your system.
OpenSSF SLSA
SLSA is a framework intended to codify and promote secure software supply-chain practices, it helps trace software artifacts back to the build and source control systems that produced them.
β οΈ NOTE: the Docker images from our GitHub Packages are level 3 compliant.
Released packages checksums computed by Build Servers
File verification is the process of using an algorithm for verifying the integrity of a computer file. A popular approach is to store checksums (hashes) of files, also known as message digests, for later comparison. All john packages checksums (hashes) are computed by the CI servers.
By accessing the build logs for each release on GitHub releases you can view the hashes of all relevant files.
You can also go to https://github.com/openwall/john-packages/attestations for a list of our named artifacts along with their digest.
Please inspect all packages prior to running any of them to ensure safety. We already know they're safe, but you should verify the security and contents of any binary from the internet you are not familiar with.
We take security very seriously.
This project aims to create tools and procedures to automate the creation and enable traceability of packages for John the Ripper software, developing a CI and CD pipeline.
We love contributions in the form of issues and pull requests. Read the Contributor Guide before contributing.
Please first consult our Security Policy if you intend to report or contribute a fix related to security vulnerabilities.
Upstream john
project has a big backlog! If you're new to the project, maybe you'd like to open a pull request to
address one of them.
John the Ripper is proudly Powered by Open Source Community:
- Openwall and others.
GNU General Public License v2.0.