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Generate secure multiword passwords/passphrases, inspired by XKCD

Project description

xkcdpass

Join the chat at https://gitter.im/redacted/XKCD-password-generator

A flexible and scriptable password generator which generates strong passphrases, inspired by XKCD 936:

$ xkcdpass
> correct horse battery staple
http://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/password_strength.png

Install

xkcdpass can be easily installed using pip:

pip install xkcdpass

or manually:

python setup.py install

Source

The latest development version can be found on github: https://github.com/redacted/XKCD-password-generator

Contributions welcome and gratefully appreciated!

Requirements

Python 2 (version 2.7 or later), or Python 3 (version 3.2 or later).

Running xkcdpass

xkcdpass can be called with no arguments:

$ xkcdpass
> pinball previous deprive militancy bereaved numeric

which returns a single password, using the default dictionary and default settings. Or you can mix whatever arguments you want:

$ xkcdpass --count=5 --acrostic='chaos' --delimiter='|' --min=5 --max=6 --valid_chars='[a-z]'
> collar|highly|asset|ovoid|sultan
> caper|hangup|addle|oboist|scroll
> couple|honcho|abbot|obtain|simple
> cutler|hotly|aortae|outset|stool
> cradle|helot|axial|ordure|shale

which returns

  • --count=5 5 passwords to choose from

  • --acrostic='chaos' the first letters of which spell ‘chaos’

  • --delimiter='|' joined using ‘|’

  • --min=5 --max=6 with words between 5 and 6 characters long

  • --valid-chars='[a-z]' using only lower-case letters (via regex).

A concise overview of the available xkcdpass options can be accessed via:

xkcdpass --help

Usage: xkcdpass [options]

Options:
    -h, --help
                                show this help message and exit
    -w WORDFILE, --wordfile=WORDFILE
                                List of valid words for password
    --min=MIN_LENGTH
                                Minimum length of words to make password
    --max=MAX_LENGTH
                                Maximum length of words to make password
    -n NUMWORDS, --numwords=NUMWORDS
                                Number of words to make password
    -i, --interactive
                                Interactively select a password
    -v VALID_CHARS, --valid-chars=VALID_CHARS
                                Valid chars, using regexp style (e.g. '[a-z]')
    -V, --verbose
                                Report various metrics for given options, including word list entropy
    -a ACROSTIC, --acrostic=ACROSTIC
                                Acrostic to constrain word choices
    -c COUNT, --count=COUNT
                                number of passwords to generate
    -d DELIM, --delimiter=DELIM
                                separator character between words

A large wordlist is provided for convenience, but the generator can be used with any word file of the correct format: a file containing one ‘word’ per line. The default word file can be found in xkcdpass/static/default.txt.

The default word list is derived mechanically from 12Dicts by Alan Beale. It is the understanding of the author of xkcdpass that purely mechanical transformation does not imbue copyright in the resulting work. The documentation for the 12Dicts project at http://wordlist.aspell.net/12dicts/ contains the following dedication:

The 12dicts lists were compiled by Alan Beale. I explicitly release them to the public domain, but request acknowledgment of their use.

Using xkcdpass as an imported module

The built-in functionality of xkcdpass can be extended by importing the module into python scripts. An example of this usage is provided in example_import.py, which randomly capitalises the letters in a generated password. example_json.py demonstrates integration of xkcdpass into a Django project, generating password suggestions as JSON to be consumed by a Javascript front-end.

A simple use of import:

from xkcdpass import xkcd_password as xp

# create a wordlist from the default wordfile
# use words between 5 and 8 letters long
wordfile = xp.locate_wordfile()
mywords = xp.generate_wordlist(wordfile=wordfile, min_length=5, max_length=8)

# create a password with the acrostic "face"
print(xp.generate_xkcdpassword(mywords, acrostic="face"))

When used as an imported module, generate_wordlist() takes the following args (defaults shown):

wordfile=None,
min_length=5,
max_length=9,
valid_chars='.'

While generate_xkcdpassword() takes:

wordlist,
numwords=6,
interactive=False,
acrostic=False,
delimiter=" "

Insecure random number generators

xkcdpass uses crytographically strong random number generators where possible (provided by random.SystemRandom() on most modern operating systems). From version 1.7.0 falling back to an insecure RNG must be explicitly enabled, either by using a new command line variable before running the script:

xkcdpass --allow-weak-rng

or setting the appropriate environment variable:

export XKCDPASS_ALLOW_WEAKRNG=1

Filtered word list

While we recommend the standard word list for most purposes, we note that this list is uncensored and, as such, generated passwords could offend. For this reason, a filtered word list can be found in the github repo (filtered by Twig Nyugen and included here with permission).

An important caveat: due to the significant reduction in the size of the filtered word list when compared to the default, the strength of the corresponding passwords is also reduced. Users should expect approximately an order of magnitude reduction in the strength of a five word passphrase. This can be mitigated by increasing the length of generated passphrases.

Changelog

  • 1.8.0 Fix error in wordfile argument handling

  • 1.7.0 require explicit permission to fall back to insecure PRNG

  • 1.6.4 fix broken link in README

  • 1.6.3 ensure deduplication of wordlist

  • 1.6.2 move contributors to stand-alone CONTRIBUTORS file

  • 1.6.0 rename –valid_chars to –valid-chars for consistency

  • 1.5.0 migrate from deprecated optparse to argparse. Users on older python versions (below 2.7 or 3.2) will need to manually install argparse.

  • 1.4.4 move example code out of package

  • 1.4.3 add tests to package

License

This is free software: you may copy, modify, and/or distribute this work under the terms of the BSD 3-Clause license. See the file LICENSE.BSD for details. -

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