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README.md |
No More Secrets
This project provides a command line tool called nms
that recreates the
famous data decryption effect seen on screen in the 1992 hacker movie Sneakers.
For reference, you can see this effect at 0:35 in this movie clip.
This command works on piped data. Pipe any ASCII or UTF-8 text to nms
,
and it will apply the hollywood effect, initially showing encrypted data,
then starting a decryption sequence to reveal the original plaintext characters.
Also included in this project is a program called sneakers
that recreates
what we see in the above movie clip. Note that this program requires the
user to select one of the menu options before it terminates.
This project has no dependencies, but it does rely on ANSI/VT100 escape sequences to recreate the effect. Most modern terminal programs support these sequences so this should not be an issue for most users. If yours does not, you may need to use an alternate terminal program like xTerm.
Table of Contents
Download and Install
More and more unix/linux platforms are including this project in their
package manager. You may wish to search your package manager to see if it
is an installation option. If you install form a package manager, please
check that you have the latest version (nms -v
). If not, I suggest
installing from source (see below).
To install this project from source, you will need to have the tools git
,
gcc
, and make
to download and build it. Install them from your package
manager if they are not already installed.
Once you have the necessary tools installed, follow these instructions:
Install:
git clone https://github.com/bartobri/no-more-secrets.git
cd ./no-more-secrets
make
sudo make install
Uninstall:
$ sudo make uninstall
Usage
nms
works on piped data. Pipe any ASCII or UTF-8 characters to it and
enjoy the magic. In the below examples, I use a simple directory listing.
ls -l | nms
ls -l | nms -a // Set auto-decrypt flag
ls -l | nms -f green // Set foreground color to green
ls -l | nms -r 123456 // Set return options
ls -l | nms -c // Clear screen
nms -v // Display version
Note that by default, after the initial encrypted characters are displayed,
nms
will wait for the user to press a key before initiating the decryption
sequence. This is how the decryption functionality is depicted in the movie.
Command Line Options
-a
Set the auto-decrypt flag. This will automatically start the decryption sequence without requiring a key press.
-f <color>
Set the foreground color of the decrypted text to the color specified. Valid options are white, yellow, black, magenta, blue, green, or red. This is blue by default.
-r <options>
Sets the character options that nms
requires the user to choose from
before it terminates execution. This is intended to be used for cases
where the data piped to nms
contains a menu with a set of options. Note
that nms
will print the selection to stdout before terminating.
-c
Clear the screen prior to printing any output. Specifically,
it saves the state of the terminal (all current output), and restores it
once the effect is comlpeted. Note that when using this option, nms
requires
the user to press a key before restoring the terminal.
-v
Display version info.
License
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the the MIT License (MIT). See LICENSE for more details.