proxmox

Client Project: Hashcat Testing With an AMD Epyc Supermicro

Client Project: Hashcat Testing With an AMD Epyc Supermicro Nvidia GPU Server Using Proxmox

#Client #Project #Hashcat #Testing #AMD #Epyc #Supermicro

“Lawrence Systems”

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28 Comments

  1. This should be viewed as a PSA not to buy Supermicro trash. Imagine if you've got many of these servers and you deploy bios changes via IPMI. No settings should ever brick a server like that, good lord.

  2. awesome project! congrats, I was struggling with the same box a year ago. For future convenience and scalability, you might consider adding each GPU in a named resource. so you can easily migrate like: host1-gpu1 to host2-gpu1

  3. Thank you for the content. I always enjoy. I would love to see a video on the process for GPU pass through with 30 series cards. I am catching trouble with VM using a LLVMpipe instead of my GPU. Maybe someone in the comments can point me in the right direction. Thanks ahead of time.

  4. Now that vmware was sold to the horrible company Broadcom and they announced that they would stop the perpetual licenses for subscription licenses I have looked at proxmox as an alternative. It is a shame as I have invested a lot of education with vmware but the small to medium business space we are in oftentimes stretches to buy the perpetual license they will not tolerate any more subscriptions. 365 is bad enough. So far I have only seen proxmox once in the wild in a business environment but I have been using it with my homelab and am fine with it.

  5. Passwords YES, pass phrases NO. IF you had a pass phrase that contained only dictionary words, non-sensical but well known words, foreign words, only lower case and no punctuation or digits but contained at least 16 words then that would be the same as a 16 digit combination lock where each cylinder had 1.5 million digits. I challenge you to crack "hey diddle diddle the cat stole the fiddle and the cow jumped over the spoon" and tell me how long it took your server to crack it WITHOUT you giving it any information on the content of that phrase (let it assume upper case, punctuation and digits etc"

    p.s that phrase is only 15 words so that should make it easier right?

    What makes a "password" secure is not its contents but its LENGTH. Having passwords like "%gT1:hC" makes it absolutely impossible for a human to remember it but absolutely trivial for a computer to crack it even if its a 30 year old computer.

  6. Would love to see more enterprise gear and showcases of your projects for clients on the channel. More configuration and troubleshooting of that segment of the market would be awesome too.

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