Each module provides the functions module_constraints, module_generate_hash and module_verify_hash.
The module_constraints function should return the minimum and maximum length of the password, salt and the combination of password and salt in following order: password (pure), salt (pure), password (optimized), salt (optimized) and combination (optimized).
Each pair should be set to -1 if the hash mode is not supporting the appropriate field. For example, if a hash-mode does not support a salt, it should be set to -1. The last field (combination) is important if the the password and the salt is stored in the same buffer in the kernel (typically raw hashes only).
The first parameter to module_generate_hash is the password, which can be either in ASCII or binary (packed) form. The second parameter is the salt *which can be undefined for unsalted hash modes).
The module_verify_hash function accepts a line from the cracks file, without the newline characters.
During single and passthrough tests the module_generate_hash function must provide random values (e.g. salt) for hash generation if necessary. The test.pl script offers a few handy functions like random_hex_string, random_numeric_string and random_bytes. You can implement your own salt generation functions, if your mode has specific requirements.
During verify tests the module_verify_hash function must parse the hash:password line and calculate a hash by passing all necessary data to module_generate_hash. How you pass it is up to you, as long as the first parameter is the password.
Important: You have to call pack_if_HEX_notation as soon as you have parsed the password, or your tests will fail on passwords in the $HEX[...] format.
If the algorithm has ambiguous hashes (e.g. partial case-insensetivity), the test module can provide an optional function module_preprocess_hashlist. It recieves a reference to the hashlist array and can unify the hashes in a way that guarantees the match with the output of module_verify_hash.