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GENPASS(1)	      User Contributed Perl Documentation	    GENPASS(1)

NAME
       genpass - Quickly and easily create secure passwords

VERSION
       version 2.34

SYNOPSIS
       genpass [-rlnsv] [long options...]

	Options:
		 --configfile	   configuration file to read (YAML, JSON, INI, etc.)
	   -r	 --readable	   create readable passwords
	   -l	 --length	   password length
	   -n	 --number	   how many passwords to create
	   -s	 --special	   use special characters (clashes with readable opt)
	   -v	 --verify	   verify types of characters
		 --lowercase	   what lowercase characters to use
		 --uppercase	   what uppercase characters to use
		 --numerical	   what numerical characters to use
		 --specials	   what characters are considered special
		 --unreadable	   what characters are considered unreadable
		 --usage	   brief usage output
		 --help		   what you're currently reading

DESCRIPTION
       genpass creates passwords in a fast and comfortable maner. The idea is
       to be able to do plenty without necessarily needing to.

       The way genpass works is by compiling a list of known characters by
       types (numerical, lowercase, uppercase, etc.) and a list of unreadable
       characters - which are basically characters that can be confused with
       each other (0, O, I, l, 1 and so on). It generates a random by possible
       characters, excluding the non-readable ones, if any exist.

       genpass allows you to pick which characters it will use to create the
       passwords via the longer options for lowercase, uppercase, numerical,
       specials and unreadable.

       Also, any boolean option (readable, special) can be negated using "no",
       such as genpass --nospecial which negates genpass --special.

       genpass also supports configuration files, so you don't have to
       remember all your favorite options and insert them each time. First it
       tries to read a ".genpass.yaml" in your home folder (works with Linux,
       BSD, MacOS, Windows and anything File::HomeDir supports) and if that
       doesn't exist (or is simply unreadable), it looks for a global Unix-
       style conf named "/etc/genpass.yaml".

       You will read below how you can specifically ask to read a completely
       different file instead of the default ones mentioned above.

       Read below for more options and examples.

OPTIONS
       --configfile
	   genpass can work with most configuration formats, such as YAML,
	   JSON, INI (Apache) and so on. You can configure any part of genpass
	   and ask genpass to read a configuration file as such:

	       genpass --configfile ~/.genpass.yaml

	   Or a global one as such:

	       genpass --configfile /etc/genpass.json

	   Default: YourHomeFolder/.genpass.yaml, then /etc/genpass.yaml.

       -r | --readable
	   A flag to decide whether passwords should be readable. The purpose
	   of readability is to create passwords you can give to users or read
	   to someone - both of which aren't necessarily good practices, but
	   commonly used.

	   Readable passwords do not contain the additional type of special
	   characters, which is something to consider. Sometimes it doesn't
	   matter as much (such as a Windows user on a local LAN machine that
	   has no critical data or access anywhere.

	       genpass --readable

	   Since readable is on by default, you can negate this if you want by
	   using the noreadable option:

	       genpass --noreadable

	   This will turn on the special and possibly unreadable characters
	   option.

	   Please view unreadable below for more details.

	   Default: on.

       -l | --length
	   The length of the password.

	       # create a 50 character long password
	       genpass --length 50

	       # create a 7 character long password
	       genpass -l 7

	   If your configuration requires a certain variety of characters but
	   you've asked for a shorter password (one which cannot contain that
	   variety), genpass will complain and try to explain what the problem
	   is.

	       $ genpass -l 2
	       You wanted a longer password that the variety of characters you've selected.
	       You requested 3 types of characters but only have 2 length.

	   Default: 10.

       -n | --number
	   How many passwords to create.

	       # generate 30 passwords
	       genpass -n 30

	   Default: 1.

       -s | --special
	   Indicates whether to use special characters or not. This basically
	   means symbols such as period, exclamation mark, percentage sign,
	   etc.

	       genpass --special

	   You can negate this flag by doing:

	       genpass --nospecial

	   Default: no.

       -v | --verify
	   Whether to verify that the variety of characters you requested is
	   included.

	   Disabling this gains you speed if you create a rather large number
	   of passwords that have a rather large number of characters. Then
	   you don't need to worry as much about having that variety since
	   probability says you probably will.

	   You can negate this using:

	       genpass --noverify

	   Best to keep it on though.

	   Default: yes.

       --lowercase
	   Which characters are considered lowercase?

       --uppercase
	   Which characters are considered uppercase?

       --numerical
	   Which characters are considered numerical?

       --specials
	   Which characters are considered special ones?

       --unreadable
	   Which characters are considered unreadable?

	   This includes a short list of characters that are easily confused
	   and the above sequences are stripped of such characters.

EXAMPLES
	   # create a 10 character length password
	   genpass -l 10

	   # create 30 passwords using all possible characters
	   genpass -n 30 --noreadable

	   # create 5 new passwords of length of 30, long options
	   genpass --number 5 --length 30

AUTHOR
       Sawyer X <xsawyerx@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
       This software is copyright (c) 2011 by Sawyer X.

       This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
       the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.

perl v5.20.2			  2015-08-31			    GENPASS(1)
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