Recently I needed to crack recover a “lost” mysql-password from the hash stored in the database and there is a handy tool called mysqlpassword.c which tries to bruteforce the password. Awesome! :) I was impatient though and implemented userspecific charsets and a wordlist-mode, which yielded much quicker results for me.
You can get the modifications from the git, so have fun: mysqlpassword.c
This is still mysql-4.x hashes only, but that was sufficient for my case ;-)
We arrived in the 21st century and one would assume that with famous software like LaTeX you’d go write the document in whatever language you like, use Unicode or UTF-8 as character encoding for your text (without even thinking about it) and it just works. Unfortunately Knuth was one these people who thought no one would ever need more than 256 characters, so unless you’re typing ASCII, you’re screwed.
I already figured out, that you can use \usepackage[utf8]{inputenc} and German Umlauts start working, but you don’t get full utf8 coverage, as lots of chars Neo allows me to type (like • or → or …) are just not available. Read More...
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