I'm trying to switch the threading in my code to multiprocessing to measure its performance and hopefully achieve better brute-forcing potential as my program is meant to brute-force password protected .zip files. But whenever I try to run the program I get this:
BruteZIP2.py -z "Generic ZIP.zip" -f Worm.txt
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "C:\Users\User\Documents\Jetbrains\PyCharm\BruteZIP\BruteZIP2.py", line 40, in <module>
main(args.zip, args.file)
File "C:\Users\User\Documents\Jetbrains\PyCharm\BruteZIP\BruteZIP2.py", line 34, in main
p.start()
File "C:\Users\User\AppData\Local\Programs\Python\Python37\lib\multiprocessing\process.py", line 112, in start
self._popen = self._Popen(self)
File "C:\Users\User\AppData\Local\Programs\Python\Python37\lib\multiprocessing\context.py", line 223, in _Popen
return _default_context.get_context().Process._Popen(process_obj)
File "C:\Users\User\AppData\Local\Programs\Python\Python37\lib\multiprocessing\context.py", line 322, in _Popen
return Popen(process_obj)
File "C:\Users\User\AppData\Local\Programs\Python\Python37\lib\multiprocessing\popen_spawn_win32.py", line 65, in __init__
reduction.dump(process_obj, to_child)
File "C:\Users\User\AppData\Local\Programs\Python\Python37\lib\multiprocessing\reduction.py", line 60, in dump
ForkingPickler(file, protocol).dump(obj)
TypeError: cannot serialize '_io.BufferedReader' object
I did find threads that had the same issue as I did but they were both unanswered/unsolved. I also tried inserting Pool
above p.start()
as I believe this was caused due to the fact that I am on a Windows-based machine but it was no help. My code is as follows:
import argparse
from multiprocessing import Process
import zipfile
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description="Unzips a password protected .zip by performing a brute-force attack using either a word list, password list or a dictionary.", usage="BruteZIP.py -z zip.zip -f file.txt")
# Creates -z arg
parser.add_argument("-z", "--zip", metavar="", required=True, help="Location and the name of the .zip file.")
# Creates -f arg
parser.add_argument("-f", "--file", metavar="", required=True, help="Location and the name of the word list/password list/dictionary.")
args = parser.parse_args()
def extract_zip(zip_file, password):
try:
zip_file.extractall(pwd=password)
print(f"[+] Password for the .zip: {password.decode('utf-8')} \n")
except:
# If a password fails, it moves to the next password without notifying the user. If all passwords fail, it will print nothing in the command prompt.
print(f"Incorrect password: {password.decode('utf-8')}")
# pass
def main(zip, file):
if (zip == None) | (file == None):
# If the args are not used, it displays how to use them to the user.
print(parser.usage)
exit(0)
zip_file = zipfile.ZipFile(zip)
# Opens the word list/password list/dictionary in "read binary" mode.
txt_file = open(file, "rb")
for line in txt_file:
password = line.strip()
p = Process(target=extract_zip, args=(zip_file, password))
p.start()
p.join()
if __name__ == '__main__':
# BruteZIP.py -z zip.zip -f file.txt.
main(args.zip, args.file)
As I said before, I believe this is happening mainly because I am on a Windows-based machine right now. I shared my code with a few others who were on Linux based machines and they had no problem running the code above.
My main goal here is to get 8 processes/pools started to maximize the number of attempts done compared to threading, but due to the fact that I cannot get a fix for TypeError: cannot serialize '_io.BufferedReader' object
message I am unsure on what to do here and how can I go on to fix it. Any assistance would be appreciated.