Pyrit setup

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Revision as of 16:17, 9 April 2010 by Ivc (talk | contribs) (→‎GPU Cores)
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Pyrit is a tool used to pre-compute all possible SSID:PASSWORD combinations to generate a list of PMK tokens.

Pre-requisite

Pyrit version 0.3.0 and up depend on Scapy2 (package inspection) and SQLAlchemy 0.5.6 (database interface).

Scapy: On a Debian bases distribution, get the package using aptitude. Backtrack 4 final include the Scapy2.

sudo aptitude update
sudo aptitude install python-scapy scapy2

Install

Main App

Download the latest pyrit from pyrit.googlecode.com.

wget http://pyrit.googlecode.com/files/pyrit-0.3.0.tar.gz

Extract, build and install the package.

tar zxvf pyrit-0.3.0.tar.gz
cd pyrit-0.3.0
python setup.py build
sudo python setup.py install

If errors like this occurs:

cpyrit/_cpyrit_cpu.c:21:20: error: Python.h: No such file or directory

On Ubuntu, try to install python2.6-dev along with the other dev packages.

Test to verify the core modules work.

pyrit eval
pyrit list_cores
pyrit -e linksys create_essid

If these operations execute without error, everything should be set.

GPU Cores

Now, to install the GPU accelerated modules.

OpenCL (Nvidia/AMD/Cell): Requires the OpenCL SDK; Nvidia OpenCL SDK or ATI Stream SDK.

But before installing the SDK, the (proprietary) graphics drivers for the video card has to be installed and set-up beforehand. This is normally a procedure covered on great detail in the distro wiki or help forum, as it's something most Linux users need to do to get GPU acceleration up and running (games). For Ubuntu, see Check the ATI Binary Driver Howto and cchtml Installation Guide.

Here is a summary, for ATI Catalyst 10.3 on a 64-bit setup:

Install binary drivers under System->Administration->Hardware Drivers
Enable the Source Code repository from the Synaptic Package Manger
wget https://a248.e.akamai.net/f/674/9206/0/www2.ati.com/drivers/linux/ati-driver-installer-10-3-x86.x86_64.run
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install libqtgui4
sudo sh ./ati-driver-installer-10-3-x86.x86_64.run --buildpkg Ubuntu/karmic # will install needed packages
sudo apt-get install ia32-libs # only for 64-bit systems
sudo dpkg -i *.deb
In case of broken packages, open Synaptic Package Manager and click on Fix Broken Packages from Edit menu
sudo aticonfig --initial # generates /etc/X11/xorg.conf
fglrxinfo # when logged into X window

To install the ATI SDK, follow these steps to set up the paths.

Download the ATI SDK package from the official ATI Stream SDK page.

wget http://download2-developer.amd.com/amd/Stream20GA/ati-stream-sdk-v2.01-lnx64.tgz
tar zxvf ati-stream-sdk-v2.01-lnx64.tgz
mv ati-stream-sdk-v2.01-lnx64 ~/ati-stream-sdk

As per the installation notes, set the paths.

pico ~/.bashrc
paste the following lines and correct the username/64-bit path:
export ATISTREAMSDKROOT=/home/ivc/ati-stream-sdk
export ATISTREAMSDKSAMPLESROOT=/home/ivc/ati-stream-sdk/samples
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$ATISTREAMSDKROOT/lib/x86_64:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH

The cpyrit setup.ph script doesn't know where to find the cl.h header files and will report this error:

_cpyrit_opencl.c:23:19: error: CL/cl.h: No such file or directory

Edit setup.py and at the top add the path for /home/ivc/ati-stream-sdk/include to the list:

for path in ('/usr/local/opencl/OpenCL/common/inc', \
           '/opt/opencl/OpenCL/common/inc', \
           '/home/ivc/ati-stream-sdk/include', \
           '/usr/local/opencl/include'):

I had problems with the build and ld reporting it couldn't find the OpenCL library:

/usr/bin/ld: cannot find -lOpenCL
collect2: ld returned 1 exit status

A quick workaround was to create a symblink of libOpenCL.so to /lib64

sudo ln -s /home/ivc/ati-stream-sdk/lib/x86_64/libOpenCL.so /lib64/

And finally, to build the pyrit OpenCL module.

wget http://pyrit.googlecode.com/files/cpyrit-opencl-0.3.0.tar.gz
tar zxvf cpyrit-opencl-0.3.0
cd cpyrit-opencl-0.3.0
python setup.py build
sudo python setup.py install

Test to verify the new module is ready.

pyrit list_cores
pyrit benchmark

For a dual graphics card and four core processor setup, the core list should look like this:

The following cores seem available...
#1:  'OpenCL-Device 'Cypress
#2:  'OpenCL-Device 'Cypress
#3:  'CPU-Core (SSE2)'
#4:  'CPU-Core (SSE2)'
#5:  'Network-Clients'

Nvidia CUDA cores install in a similar way. I have not tested this method. Make sure the Nvidia graphics drivers work with the graphics card. Next install the CUDA-Toolkit to get the required Nvidia compiler.

To install the pyrit CUDA module.

wget http://pyrit.googlecode.com/files/cpyrit-cuda-0.3.0.tar.gz
tar zxvf cpyrit-cuda-0.3.0
python setup.py build
sudo python setup.py install

Test to verify the new module is ready.

pyrit list_cores

Database setup

The default file container is a blobspace on the local filesystem, but with the -u parameter an external database can be used for storage.

To begin, the current SQLAlchemy version, 0.4.5, is too old to be used with pyrit. Version 0.5.6 or later is required for pyrit 0.3.0.

Get the latest stable release, extract, build and install.

wget http://downloads.sourceforge.net/project/sqlalchemy/sqlalchemy/0.5.8/SQLAlchemy-0.5.8.tar.gz
tar zxvf SQLAlchemy-0.5.8.tar.gz
cd SQLAlchemy-0.5.8
sudo aptitude install python-setuptools
sudo easy_install SQLAlchemy

Next, to use a MySQL database, install the python-mysqldb package.

sudo aptitude install python-mysqldb

Or else an error like this will let you know:

    return __import__('MySQLdb')
ImportError: No module named MySQLdb

References