If you are testing this on your network (which you should be), reconnect a wireless device to capture a handshake. Now you'll need to wait for a device to connect to the target network. Select the channel and width that you found in the previous step. With Wireless Diagnostics open, click on Window > Sniffer.Find the target network, note its channel and width. With Wireless Diagnostics open, click on Window > Scan. Then click "Open Wireless Diagnostics." Determine the channel of your target network To open them, hold down the option key on your keyboard and click on the Wi-Fi icon in the menu bar. Luckily, OSX comes with a suite of wireless diagnostic tools. We've tested this on both Early-2012 and Mid-2015 Macbook Pros with great success. Like the main tutorial, it assumes you have a wireless card that supports monitor mode. This method has been tested on OSX versions 10.10 and 10.12 but will likely work with other versions as well. The following explains how to use built-in MacOS/OSX tools to capture a 4-way handshake and naive-hashcat to determine the password of a WPA/WPA2 wireless network. Huge thanks to for contributing this guide.
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