genpw - Generate random password (support patterns + wordlists)
This document describes version 0.007 of genpw (from Perl distribution App-genpw), released on 2018-05-01.
Usage:
% genpw [options] [num]
This is yet another utility to generate random password. Features:
Allow specifying pattern(s), e.g. '%8a%s' means 8 random alphanumeric characters followed by a symbol.
Use words from wordlists.
Use strong random source (Math::Random::Secure) when available, otherwise fallback to Perl's builtin rand().
rand()
Examples:
By default generate letters/digits 8-20 characters long:
% genpw J9K3ZjBVR
Generate 5 passwords instead of 1:
% genpw 5 wAYftKsS knaY7MOBbcvFFS3L1wyW oQGz62aF sG1A9reVOe Zo8GoFEq
Generate random digits between 10 and 12 characters long:
% genpw -p '%10$12d' 55597085674
Generate password in the form of a random word + 4 random digits. Words will be fed from STDIN:
% genpw -p '%w%4d' < /usr/share/dict/words shafted0412
Like the above, but words will be fetched from WordList::* modules. You need to install the genpw-wordlist CLI. By default, will use wordlist from WordList::EN::Enable:
WordList::*
% genpw-wordlist -p '%w%4d' sedimentologists8542
Generate a random GUID:
% genpw -p '%8h-%4h-%4h-%4h-%12h' ff26d142-37a8-ecdf-c7f6-8b6ae7b27695
Like the above, but in uppercase:
% genpw -p '%8h-%4h-%4h-%4h-%12h' 22E13D9E-1187-CD95-1D05-2B92A09E740D
Use configuration file to avoid typing the pattern every time, put this in ~/genpw.conf:
~/genpw.conf
[profile=guid] patterns = "%8h-%4h-%4h-%4h-%12h"
then:
% genpw -P guid 008869fa-177e-3a46-24d6-0900a00e56d5
* marks required options.
*
Force casing.
Default value:
"default"
Valid values:
["default","random","lower","upper","title"]
`default` means to not change case. `random` changes casing some letters randomly to lower-/uppercase. `lower` forces lower case. `upper` forces UPPER CASE. `title` forces Title case.
If no pattern is supplied, will generate random alphanum characters with this exact length.
If no pattern is supplied, will generate random alphanum characters with this maximum length.
If no pattern is supplied, will generate random alphanum characters with this minimum length.
1
Pattern(s) to use.
A pattern is string that is similar to a printf pattern. %P (where P is certain letter signifying a format) will be replaced with some other string. %Nw (where N is a number) will be replaced by a word of length N, %N$MP (where N and M is a number) will be replaced by a word of length between N and M. Anything else will be used as-is. Available conversions:
%l Random Latin letter (A-Z, a-z) %d Random digit (0-9) %h Random hexdigit (0-9a-f) %a Random letter/digit (Alphanum) (A-Z, a-z, 0-9; combination of %l and %d) %s Random ASCII symbol, e.g. "-" (dash), "_" (underscore), etc. %x Random letter/digit/ASCII symbol (combination of %a and %s) %m Base64 character (A-Z, a-z, 0-9, +, /) %b Base58 character (A-Z, a-z, 0-9 minus IOl0) %B Base56 character (A-Z, a-z, 0-9 minus IOol01) %% A literal percent sign %w Random word
Can be specified multiple times.
Pattern(s) to use (JSON-encoded).
See --pattern.
--pattern
Shortcut for --case=lower.
See --case.
--case
Shortcut for --case=upper.
Set path to configuration file.
Set configuration profile to use.
Do not use any configuration file.
Do not read environment for default options.
Choose output format, e.g. json, text.
undef
Set output format to json.
When outputing as JSON, strip result envelope.
0
By default, when outputing as JSON, the full enveloped result is returned, e.g.:
[200,"OK",[1,2,3],{"func.extra"=>4}]
The reason is so you can get the status (1st element), status message (2nd element) as well as result metadata/extra result (4th element) instead of just the result (3rd element). However, sometimes you want just the result, e.g. when you want to pipe the result for more post-processing. In this case you can use `--naked-res` so you just get:
[1,2,3]
Display help message and exit.
Display program's version and exit.
This script has shell tab completion capability with support for several shells.
To activate bash completion for this script, put:
complete -C genpw genpw
in your bash startup (e.g. ~/.bashrc). Your next shell session will then recognize tab completion for the command. Or, you can also directly execute the line above in your shell to activate immediately.
It is recommended, however, that you install modules using cpanm-shcompgen which can activate shell completion for scripts immediately.
To activate tcsh completion for this script, put:
complete genpw 'p/*/`genpw`/'
in your tcsh startup (e.g. ~/.tcshrc). Your next shell session will then recognize tab completion for the command. Or, you can also directly execute the line above in your shell to activate immediately.
It is also recommended to install shcompgen (see above).
For fish and zsh, install shcompgen as described above.
This script can read configuration files. Configuration files are in the format of IOD, which is basically INI with some extra features.
By default, these names are searched for configuration filenames (can be changed using --config-path): ~/.config/genpw.conf, ~/genpw.conf, or /etc/genpw.conf.
--config-path
All found files will be read and merged.
To disable searching for configuration files, pass --no-config.
--no-config
You can put multiple profiles in a single file by using section names like [profile=SOMENAME] or [SOMESECTION profile=SOMENAME]. Those sections will only be read if you specify the matching --config-profile SOMENAME.
[profile=SOMENAME]
[SOMESECTION profile=SOMENAME]
--config-profile SOMENAME
You can also put configuration for multiple programs inside a single file, and use filter program=NAME in section names, e.g. [program=NAME ...] or [SOMESECTION program=NAME]. The section will then only be used when the reading program matches.
program=NAME
[program=NAME ...]
[SOMESECTION program=NAME]
Finally, you can filter a section by environment variable using the filter env=CONDITION in section names. For example if you only want a section to be read if a certain environment variable is true: [env=SOMEVAR ...] or [SOMESECTION env=SOMEVAR ...]. If you only want a section to be read when the value of an environment variable has value equals something: [env=HOSTNAME=blink ...] or [SOMESECTION env=HOSTNAME=blink ...]. If you only want a section to be read when the value of an environment variable does not equal something: [env=HOSTNAME!=blink ...] or [SOMESECTION env=HOSTNAME!=blink ...]. If you only want a section to be read when an environment variable contains something: [env=HOSTNAME*=server ...] or [SOMESECTION env=HOSTNAME*=server ...]. Note that currently due to simplistic parsing, there must not be any whitespace in the value being compared because it marks the beginning of a new section filter or section name.
env=CONDITION
[env=SOMEVAR ...]
[SOMESECTION env=SOMEVAR ...]
[env=HOSTNAME=blink ...]
[SOMESECTION env=HOSTNAME=blink ...]
[env=HOSTNAME!=blink ...]
[SOMESECTION env=HOSTNAME!=blink ...]
[env=HOSTNAME*=server ...]
[SOMESECTION env=HOSTNAME*=server ...]
List of available configuration parameters:
case (see --case) format (see --format) len (see --len) max_len (see --max-len) min_len (see --min-len) naked_res (see --naked-res) num (see --num) patterns (see --pattern)
Specify additional command-line options.
~/.config/genpw.conf
/etc/genpw.conf
Please visit the project's homepage at https://metacpan.org/release/App-genpw.
Source repository is at https://github.com/perlancar/perl-App-genpw.
Please report any bugs or feature requests on the bugtracker website https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Dist/Display.html?Name=App-genpw
When submitting a bug or request, please include a test-file or a patch to an existing test-file that illustrates the bug or desired feature.
genpw-base56.
genpw-base64.
genpw-id.
genpw-wordlist.
perlancar <perlancar@cpan.org>
This software is copyright (c) 2018 by perlancar@cpan.org.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
To install App::genpw, copy and paste the appropriate command in to your terminal.
cpanm
cpanm App::genpw
CPAN shell
perl -MCPAN -e shell install App::genpw
For more information on module installation, please visit the detailed CPAN module installation guide.