![]() ![]() The only downside is, it was created 5 years ago and hasn’t been updated/maintained since. The third tool is not in Kali’s repository, you can find it on Github: HashTag supports the identification of over 250 hash types along with matching them to over 110 hashcat modes. It’s a small price to pay, but still… you might have to try 3–5 type until one of them is correct and trust me it’s not a quick process with a large dictionary. I provided the same as in the previous example, but the first possible hash is MD2 and only the second is correct. hashid -m -j '48bb6e862e54f2a795ffc4e541caed4d' Analyzing '48bb6e862e54f2a795ffc4e541caed4d' MD2 MD5 MD4 Double MD5 LM RIPEMD-128 Haval-128 Tiger-128 Skein-256(128) Skein-512(128) Lotus Notes/Domino 5 Skype Snefru-128 NTLM Domain Cached Credentials Domain Cached Credentials 2 DNSSEC(NSEC3) RAdmin v2.x The best thing about this tool is that it can print the corresponding hashcat mode code and john format. ![]() The other tool is hashid, which has a little more functionality. Kali comes with at least 2 hash identifier tool that I know about. There quite a few tools out there that can help you identify hashes. ![]() Photo by Arget on Unsplash Identifying different hashes The hash-identifier ![]()
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