The xsukax All-In-One Wordlist is a massive, aggregated security testing file designed for password recovery and penetration testing. It is famously known for its enormous size, reaching 128 GB when unzipped (though variations like the "xsukax-Wordlist-All.txt" on Weakpass may vary in specific size depending on the version). Key Specifications
RAM/GPU: Unless you have high-end hardware (e.g., an NVIDIA RTX 4090), processing this list can take days. Experts often recommend using dedicated rulesets (like OneRuleToRuleThemAll) on smaller lists before resorting to this behemoth. 3. Practical Use Cases xsukax All-In-One WORDLIST - 128 GB WHEN UNZIPP...
Unlike standard wordlists like rockyou.txt (which is a modest 14 million entries and 139 MB) or SecLists (which is broken down into categories), xsukax took the "nuclear option." The creator (or collective known as "xsukax") scraped, merged, and de-duplicated: The xsukax All-In-One Wordlist is a massive, aggregated
The marketing (if we can call it that) emphasizes "128 GB WHEN UNZIPPED" for a reason. The compression ratio is absurd. Text compresses beautifully (like a 7z file with LZMA2 algorithm). Because a wordlist has repeating patterns (123456, 1234567, 12345678), the archive shrinks to ~15% of its original size. Merged Leaked Databases: It aggregates passwords from famous
This keeps the data compressed in RAM, reducing disk I/O bottlenecks.
System administrators use these lists to audit their organization's password policies by testing their own users' password hashes against the list to identify weak passwords.
Downloading 128 GB of passwords is useless if you don't have a strategy. You cannot feed 128 GB directly into Hashcat in one go without running into CL_OUT_OF_RESOURCES errors.