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I'm working on a school project and I have to run John the Ripper through as a Python script.

Currently I'm running the command like this:

subprocess.run(['john --wordlist=/usr/share/john/password.lst --format=sha512crypt /root/Desktop/passwd '], shell=True)

My issue here is that it prints a lot of the process in the command terminal and I can't have anything show up in the terminal.

How can I make it so it doesn't print anything in the terminal?

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  • add > /dev/null to the end of your first argument
    – Rocky Li
    Oct 19, 2018 at 3:51
  • That got rid of part of it, but there are still some parts of the process appearing in the terminal.
    – Jake Young
    Oct 19, 2018 at 4:30
  • is it absolutely necessary to use shell=True? you can always use stdout=PIPE and stderr=PIPE to pipe all output to python by doing .communicate()
    – Rocky Li
    Oct 19, 2018 at 4:50
  • @RockyLi I tried your suggestion and it's throwing me an error for some reason. Saying I can't find a file? Maybe I'm doing something wrong. But I'm not entirely sure.
    – Jake Young
    Oct 21, 2018 at 22:54
  • @RockyLi nevermind. I was doing the parameters wrong in my subprocess.run. Seems to be working!
    – Jake Young
    Oct 21, 2018 at 22:59

1 Answer 1

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You want to redirect the print so it dumps it in a file instead of printing on the terminal. You might want to add something like after your code.

f = open("test.py", "w+")
print(output.stdout,f.write(output.stdout))

If you do cat test.py you should see the output.

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