GPU610/DPS915 MCM Decrypt

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Revision as of 19:19, 1 November 2013 by Matthew Conner Maceachern (talk | contribs) (Assignment 2)
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MySQL Decrypt

Team Members

  1. Matt MacEachern

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Progress

Assignment 1

Topic

I have always been interested in computer security, and especially interested in the algorithms used encrypt the passwords that are stored in various databases. After browsing around multiple open source code repositories I found a relatively simplistic C program (which I am planning on converting to C++ at a later date) that is used to decrypt MYSQL passwords given the MYSQL hash of the password.

Required Files

https://drive.google.com/#folders/0B63ZcmSNsUsqX3MyTGNSeFBuSlU

Compilation And Running

Below you will see a compilation and example run of the application with the hash 29bad1457ee5e49e (which equals the password pass (a small password so I could test the application in a short period of time). Mysql compilation.png

Output

Mysql run 1.png
Mysql run 2.png
Mysql run 3.png

Profile

After looking at the code and profiling it, I believe that there are multiple areas which could be parallelized and optimised to reduce the execution time significantly. Most of the execution time takes place in the brute(char const*) and hash_password(unsigned long*, char const*) functions, so I will focus most of my effort and time into those areas when the time comes to optimise them.

Mysql profile.png
Mysql graph.png

Assignment 2

Kernel Attempts

So far I have made attempts to convert different pieces of compute heavy code into kernels in order to obtain the same results as the original code but none have been successful.

__global__ void testKernel(unsigned char *data, unsigned int max, unsigned int* pos) {
if(data[threadIdx.x] != max) {
data[threadIdx.x]++;
*pos=threadIdx.x;
//break;
}
}

Assignment 3