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Try to find the password of an encrypted Peercoin (or Bitcoin, Litecoin, etc...) wallet file.

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glv2/bruteforce-wallet

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bruteforce-wallet

The purpose of this program is to try to find the password of an encrypted Peercoin (or Bitcoin, Litecoin, etc...) wallet file (i.e. wallet.dat).

It can be used in two ways:

  • try all the possible passwords given a charset
  • try all the passwords in a file

There is a command line option to specify the number of threads to use.

Sending a USR1 signal to a running bruteforce-wallet process makes it print progress and continue.

Exhaustive mode

The program tries to decrypt one of the encrypted addresses in the wallet by trying all the possible passwords. It is especially useful if you know something about the password (i.e. you forgot a part of your password but still remember most of it). Finding the password of a wallet without knowing anything about it would take way too much time (unless the password is really short and/or weak).

There are command line options to specify:

  • the minimum password length to try
  • the maximum password length to try
  • the beginning of the password
  • the end of the password
  • the character set to use (among the characters of the current locale)

Dictionary mode

The program tries to decrypt one of the encrypted addresses in the wallet by trying all the passwords contained in a file. The file must have one password per line.

Dependencies

The program requires the OpenSSL and BerkeleyDB libraries. Installation on Debian & Ubuntu:

apt install libdb-dev libssl-dev -y

Compilation

If you are building from the raw sources, you must first generate the configuration script:

./autogen.sh

Then, build the program with the commands:

./configure
make

To install it on your system, use the command:

make install

Limitations

The program currently only works on unix-like POSIX systems (e.g. GNU/Linux).

Different versions of BerkeleyDB are usually not compatible with each other. Therefore, for the program to work, you will have to check that the BerkeleyDB version you are using can read the databases created by the BerkeleyDB version your wallet was created with.

Examples

Try to find the password of an encrypted wallet file using 4 threads, trying only passwords with 5 characters:

bruteforce-wallet -t 4 -l 5 -m 5 wallet.dat

Try to find the password of an encrypted wallet file using 8 threads, trying only passwords with 5 to 10 characters beginning with "W4l" and ending with "z":

bruteforce-wallet -t 8 -l 5 -m 10 -b "W4l" -e "z" wallet.dat

Try to find the password of an encrypted wallet file using 8 threads, trying only passwords with 10 characters using the character set "P情8ŭ":

bruteforce-wallet -t 8 -l 10 -m 10 -s "P情8ŭ" wallet.dat

Try to find the password of an encrypted wallet file using 6 threads, trying the passwords contained in a dictionary file:

bruteforce-wallet -t 6 -f dictionary.txt wallet.dat

Print progress info:

pkill -USR1 -f bruteforce-wallet

Print progress info every 30 seconds:

bruteforce-wallet -t 6 -f dictionary.txt -v 30 wallet.dat

Save/restore state between sessions:

bruteforce-wallet -t 6 -f dictionary.txt -w state.txt wallet.dat
  (Let the program run for a few minutes and stop it)
bruteforce-wallet -t 6 -w state.txt wallet.dat

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Try to find the password of an encrypted Peercoin (or Bitcoin, Litecoin, etc...) wallet file.

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