Pentesting Network
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Discovering hosts from the outside
This is going to be a brief section about how to find IPs responding from the Internet. In this situation you have some scope of IPs (maybe even several ranges) and you just to find which IPs are responding.
ICMP
This is the easiest and fastest way to discover if a host is up or not.
You could try to send some ICMP packets and expect responses. The easiest way is just sending an echo request and expect from the response. You can do that using a simple ping
or using fping
for ranges.
You could also use nmap to send other types of ICMP packets (this will avoid filters to common ICMP echo request-response).
TCP Port Discovery
It's very common to find that all kind of ICMP packets are being filtered. Then, all you can do to check if a host is up is try to find open ports. Each host has 65535 ports, so, if you have a "big" scope you cannot test if each port of each host is open or not, that will take too much time. Then, what you need is a fast port scanner (masscan) and a list of the ports more used:
You could also perform this step with nmap
, but it slower and somewhat nmap
has problems identifying hosts up.
HTTP Port Discovery
This is just a TCP port discovery useful when you want to focus on discovering HTTP services:
UDP Port Discovery
You could also try to check for some UDP port open to decide if you should pay more attention to a host. As UDP services usually don't respond with any data to a regular empty UDP probe packet it is difficult to say if a port is being filtered or open. The easiest way to decide this is to send a packet related to the running service, and as you don't know which service is running, you should try the most probable based on the port number:
The nmap line proposed before will test the top 100 UDP ports in every host inside the /24 range but even only this will take >20min. If need fastest results you can use udp-proto-scanner: ./udp-proto-scanner.pl 199.66.11.53/24
This will send these UDP probes to their expected port (for a /24 range this will just take 1 min): DNSStatusRequest, DNSVersionBindReq, NBTStat, NTPRequest, RPCCheck, SNMPv3GetRequest, chargen, citrix, daytime, db2, echo, gtpv1, ike,ms-sql, ms-sql-slam, netop, ntp, rpc, snmp-public, systat, tftp, time, xdmcp.
SCTP Port Discovery
Here you can find a nice guide of all the well known Wifi attacks at the time of the writing.
Discovering hosts from the inside
If you are inside the network one of the first things you will want to do is to discover other hosts. Depending on how much noise you can/want to do, different actions could be performed:
Passive
You can use these tools to passively discover hosts inside a connected network:
Active
Note that the techniques commented in Discovering hosts from the outside (TCP/HTTP/UDP/SCTP Port Discovery) can be also applied here. But, as you are in the same network as the other hosts, you can do more things:
Active ICMP
Note that the techniques commented in Discovering hosts from the outside (ICMP) can be also applied here. But, as you are in the same network as the other hosts, you can do more things:
If you ping a subnet broadcast address the ping should be arrive to each host and they could respond to you:
ping -b 10.10.5.255
Pinging the network broadcast address you could even find hosts inside other subnets:
ping -b 255.255.255.255
Use the
-PEPM
flag ofnmap
to perform host discovery sending ICMPv4 echo, timestamp, and subnet mask requests:nmap -PEPM -sP āvvv -n 10.12.5.0/24
Wake On Lan
Wake On Lan is used to turn on computers through a network message. The magic packet used to turn on the computer is only a packet where a MAC Dst is provided and then it is repeated 16 times inside the same paket. Then this kind of packets are usually sent in an ethernet 0x0842 or in a UDP packet to port 9. If no [MAC] is provided, the packet is sent to broadcast ethernet (and the broadcast MAC will be the one being repeated).
Scanning Hosts
Once you have discovered all the IPs (external or internal) you want to scan in depth, different actions can be performed.
TCP
Open port: SYN --> SYN/ACK --> RST
Closed port: SYN --> RST/ACK
Filtered port: SYN --> [NO RESPONSE]
Filtered port: SYN --> ICMP message
UDP
There are 2 options to scan an UDP port:
Send a UDP packet and check for the response ICMP unreachable if the port is closed (in several cases ICMP will be filtered so you won't receive any information inf the port is close or open).
Send a formatted datagrams to elicit a response from a service (e.g., DNS, DHCP, TFTP, and others, as listed in nmap-payloads). If you receive a response, then, the port is open.
Nmap will mix both options using "-sV" (UDP scans are very slow), but notice that UDP scans are slower than TCP scans:
SCTP Scan
SCTP sits alongside TCP and UDP. Intended to provide transport of telephony data over IP, the protocol duplicates many of the reliability features of Signaling System 7 (SS7), and underpins a larger protocol family known as SIGTRAN. SCTP is supported by operating systems including IBM AIX, Oracle Solaris, HP-UX, Linux, Cisco IOS, and VxWorks.
Two different scans for SCTP are offered by nmap: -sY and -sZ
****More nmap options****
Revealing Internal IP Addresses
Misconfigured routers, firewalls, and network devices sometimes respond to network probes using nonpublic source addresses. You can use tcpdump used to identify packets received from private addresses during testing. In this case, the eth2 interface in Kali Linux is addressable from the public Internet (If you are behind a NAT of a Firewall this kind of packets are probably going to be filtered).
Sniffing
Sniffing you can learn details of IP ranges, subnet sizes, MAC addresses, and hostnames by reviewing captured frames and packets. If the network is misconfigured or switching fabric under stress, attackers can capture sensitive material via passive network sniffing.
If a switched Ethernet network is configured properly, you will only see broadcast frames and material destined for your MAC address.
TCPDump
Bettercap2
Wireshark
Obviously.
Capturing credentials
You can us tools like https://github.com/lgandx/PCredz to parse credentials from a pcap or a live interface.
LAN attacks
ARP spoofing
ARP Spoofing consist on sending gratuitous ARPResponses to indicate that the IP of a machine has the MAC of our device. Then, the victim will change the ARP table and will contact our machine every time it wants to contact the IP spoofed.
Bettercap2
Arpspoof
MAC Flooding - CAM overflow
Overflow the switchās CAM table sending a lot of packets with different source mac address. When the CAM table is full the switch start behaving like a hub (broadcasting all the traffic).
In modern switches this vulnerability has been fixed.
802.1Q VLAN
Dynamic Trunking
Many switches support the Dynamic Trunking Protocol (DTP) by default, however, which an adversary can abuse to emulate a switch and receive traffic across all VLANs. The tool dtpscan.sh can sniff an interface and reports if switch is in Default mode, trunk, dynamic, auto or access mode (this is the only one that would avoid VLAN hopping). The tool will indicate if the switch is vulnerable or not.
If it was discovered that the the network is vulnerable, you can use Yersinia to launch an "enable trunking" using protocol "DTP" and you will be able to see network packets from all the VLANs.
Attacking specific VLANs
Once you known VLAN IDs and IPs values,you can configure a virtual interface to attack a specific VLAN. If DHCP is not available, then use ifconfig to set a static IP address.
Automatic VLAN Hopper
The discussed attack of Dynamic Trunking and creating virtual interfaces an discovering hosts inside other VLANs are automatically performed by the tool: https://github.com/nccgroup/vlan-hopping---frogger
Double Tagging
If an attacker knows the value of the MAC, IP and VLAN ID of the victim host, he could try to double tag a frame with its designated VLAN and the VLAN of the victim and send a packet. As the victim won't be able to connect back with the attacker, so the best option for the attacker is communicate via UDP to protocols than can perform some interesting actions (like SNMP).
Another option for the attacker is to launch a TCP port scan spoofing an IP controlled by the attacker and accessible by the victim (probably through internet). Then, the attacker could sniff in the second host owned by him if it receives some packets from the victim.
Layer 3 Private VLAN Bypass
In guest wireless networks and other environments, private VLAN (also known as port isolation) settings are used to prevent peers from interacting (i.e., clients connect to a wireless access point but cannot address one another). Depending on network ACLs (or lack thereof), it might be possible to send IP packets up to a router, which are then forwarded back to a neighbouring peer.
This attack will send a specially crafted packet to the IP of a client but with the MAC of the router. Then, the router will redirect the packet to the client. As in Double Tagging Attacks you can exploit this vulnerability by controlling a host accessible by the victim.
STP Attacks
If you cannot capture BPDU frames on your interfaces, it is unlikely that you will succeed in an STP attack.
STP BPDU DoS
Sending a lot of BPDUs TCP (Topology Change Notification) or Conf (the BPDUs that are sent when the topology is created) the switches are overloaded and stop working correctly.
STP TCP Attack
When a TCP is sent, the CAM table of the switches will be deleted in 15s. Then, if you are sending continuously this kind of packets, the CAM table will be restarted continuously (or every 15segs) and when it is restarted, the switch behaves as a hub
STP Root Attack
The attacker simulates the behaviour of a switch to become the STP root of the network. Then, more data will pass through him. This is interesting when you are connected to two different switches. This is done by sending BPDUs CONF packets saying that the priority value is less than the actual priority of the actual root switch.
If the attacker is connected to 2 switches he can be the root of the new tree and all the traffic between those switches will pass through him (a MITM attack will be performed).
CDP Attacks
CISCO Discovery Protocol is the protocol used by CISCO devices to talk among them, discover who is alive and what features does they have. You can make a DoS attack to a CISCO switch by exhausting the device memory simulating real CISCO devices.
You could use Yersina
to capture CDP frames and show the information
You could also use scapy. Be sure to install it with scapy/contrib
package.
DHCP
Enumeration
DoS
Two types of DoS could be performed against DHCP servers. The first one consists on simulate enough fake hosts to use all the possible IP addresses. This attack will work only if you can see the responses of the DHCP server and complete the protocol (Discover (Comp) --> Offer (server) --> Request (Comp) --> ACK (server)). For example, this is not possible in Wifi networks.
Another way to perform a DHCP DoS is to send a DHCP-RELEASE packet using as source code every possible IP. Then, the server will think that everybody has finished using the IP.
A more automatic way of doing this is using the tool DHCPing
You could use the mentioned DoS attacks to force clients to obtain new leases within the environment, and exhaust legitimate servers so that they become unresponsive. So when the legitimate try to reconnect, you can server malicious values mentioned in the next attack.
Set malicious values
You can use Responder DHCP script (/usr/share/responder/DHCP.py) to establish a rogue DHCP server. Setting a malicious gateway is not ideal, because the hijacked connection is only half-duplex (i.e., we capture egress packets from the client, but not the responses from the legitimate gateway). As such, I would recommend setting a rogue DNS or WPAD server to capture HTTP traffic and credentials in particular.
Description | Example |
Our IP address, advertised as a gateway | -i 10.0.0.100 |
The local DNS domain name (optional) | -d example.org |
IP address of the original router/gateway | -r 10.0.0.1 |
Primary DNS server IP address | -p 10.0.0.100 |
Secondary DNS server IP address (optional) | -s 10.0.0.1 |
The netmask of the local network | -n 255.255.255.0 |
The interface to listen for DHCP traffic on | -I eth1 |
WPAD configuration address (URL) | |
Spoof the default gateway IP address | -S |
Respond to all DHCP requests (very noisy) | -R |
EAP
Here are some of the attack tactics that can be used against 802.1X implementations:
Active brute-force password grinding via EAP
Attacking the RADIUS server with malformed EAP content **(exploits)
EAP message capture and offline password cracking (EAP-MD5 and PEAP)
Forcing EAP-MD5 authentication to bypass TLS certificate validation
Injecting malicious network traffic upon authenticating using a hub or similar
If the attacker if between the victim and the authentication server, he could try to degrade (if necessary) the authentication protocol to EAP-MD5 and capture the authentication attempt. Then, he could brute-force this using:
HSRP AND VRRP
Hot Standby Routing Protocol (HSRP) and the Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol (VRRP) are used in high-availability environments to provide failover support. Routers send packets to local multicast groups announcing configuration and priority details.
HSRP is a proprietary Cisco protocol with no RFC, whereas VRRP is standardized. To evaluate HSRP and VRRP support within an environment, use a network sniffer to capture the management traffic. You can use a number of tools to craft HSRP messages (including Scapy and Yersinia), but only Loki provides VRRP support at this time.
For more information about how to attack this protocols go to the book Network Security Assessment: Know Your Network (3rd edition)
RIP
Three versions of the Routing Information Protocol (RIP) existāRIP, RIPv2, and RIPng. RIP and RIPv2 use UDP datagrams sent to peers via port 520, whereas RIPng broadcasts datagrams to UDP port 521 via IPv6 multicast. RIPv2 introduced MD5 authentication support. RIPng does not incorporate native authentication; rather, it relies on optional IPsec AH and ESP headers within IPv6.
For more information about how to attack this protocol go to the book Network Security Assessment: Know Your Network (3rd edition).
EIGRP
The Enhanced Interior Gateway Routing Protocol (EIGRP) is Cisco proprietary and can be run with or without authentication. __Coly supports capture of EIGRP broadcasts and injection of packets to manipulate routing configuration.
For more information about how to attack this protocol go to the book Network Security Assessment: Know Your Network (3rd edition).
OSPF
Most Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) implementations use MD5 to provide authentication between routers. Loki and John the Ripper can capture and attack MD5 hashes to reveal the key, which can then be used to advertise new routes. The route parameters are set by using the Injection tab, and the key set under Connection.
For more information about how to attack this protocol go to the book Network Security Assessment: Know Your Network (3rd edition).
****
You can find some more information about network attacks here. **(TODO: Read it all and all new attacks if any)
Spoofing
The attacker configures all the network parameters (GW, IP, DNS) of the new member of the network sending fake DHCP responses.
ICMPRedirect
ICMP Redirect consist on sending an ICMP packet type 1 code 5 that indicates that the attacker is the best way to reach an IP. Then, when the victim wants to contact the IP, it will send the packet through the attacker.
DNS Spoofing
The attacker will resolve some (or all) the domains that the victim ask for.
Configure own DNS with dnsmasq
Local Gateways
Multiple routes to systems and networks often exist. Upon building a list of MAC addresses within the local network, use gateway-finder.py to identify hosts that support IPv4 forwarding.
Microsoft systems use Link-Local Multicast Name Resolution (LLMNR) and the NetBIOS Name Service (NBT-NS) for local host resolution when DNS lookups fail. Apple Bonjour and Linux zero-configuration implementations use Multicast DNS (mDNS) to discover systems within a network. These protocols are unauthenticated and broadcast messages over UDP; thus, attackers can exploit them to direct users to malicious services.
You can impersonate services that are searched by hosts using Responder to send fake responses. Read here more information about how to Impersonate services with Responder.
Many browsers use Web Proxy Auto-Discovery (WPAD) to load proxy settings from the network. A WPAD server provides client proxy settings via a particular URL (e.g., http://wpad.example.org/wpad.dat) upon being identified through any of the following:
DHCP, using a code 252 entry34
DNS, searching for the wpad hostname in the local domain
Microsoft LLMNR and NBT-NS (in the event of DNS lookup failure)
Responder automates the WPAD attackārunning a proxy and directing clients to a malicious WPAD server via DHCP, DNS, LLMNR, and NBT-NS. Read here more information about how to Impersonate services with Responder.
You can offer different services in the network to try to trick a user to enter some plain-text credentials. More information about this attack in Spoofing SSDP and UPnP Devices.
IPv6 Neighbor Spoofing
This attack is very similar to ARP Spoofing but in the IPv6 world. You can get the victim think that the IPv6 of the GW has the MAC of the attacker.
IPv6 Router Advertisement Spoofing/Flooding
Some OS configure by default the gateway from the RA packets sent in the network. To declare the attacker as IPv6 router you can use:
IPv6 DHCP spoofing
By default some OS try to configure the DNS reading a DHCPv6 packet in the network. Then, an attacker could send a DHCPv6 packet to configure himself as DNS. The DHCP also provides an IPv6 to the victim.
HTTP (fake page and JS code injection)
Internet Attacks
sslStrip
Basically what this attack does is, in case the user try to access a HTTP page that is redirecting to the HTTPS version. sslStrip will maintain a HTTP connection with the client and a HTTPS connection with the server so it ill be able to sniff the connection in plain text.
More info here.
sslStrip+ and dns2proxy for bypassing HSTS
The difference between sslStrip+ and dns2proxy against sslStrip is that they will redirect for example www.facebook.com to wwww.facebook.com (note the extra "w") and will set the address of this domain as the attacker IP. This way, the client will connect to wwww.facebook.com (the attacker) but behind the scenes sslstrip+ will maintain the real connection via https with www.facebook.com.
The goal of this technique is to avoid HSTS because wwww.facebook.com won't be saved in the cache of the browser, so the browser will be tricked to perform facebook authentication in HTTP. Note that in order to perform this attack the victim has to try to access initially to http://www.faceook.com and not https. This can be done modifying the links inside an http page.
More info here, here and here.
sslStrip or sslStrip+ doesn;t work anymore. This is because there are HSTS rules presaved in the browsers, so even if it's the first time that a user access an "important" domain he will access it via HTTPS. Also, notice that the presaved rules and other generated rules can use the flag includeSubdomains
so the wwww.facebook.com example from before won't work anymore as facebook.com uses HSTS with includeSubdomains
.
TODO: easy-creds, evilgrade, metasploit, factory
TCP listen in port
TCP + SSL listen in port
Generate keys and self-signed certificate
Listen using certificate
Listen using certificate and redirect to the hosts
Some times, if the client checks that the CA is a valid one, you could serve a certificate of other hostname signed by a CA. Another interesting test, is to serve a certificate of the requested hostname but self-signed.
Other things to test is to try to sign the certificate with a valid certificate that it is not a valid CA. Or to use the valid public key, force to use an algorithm as diffie hellman (one that do not need to decrypt anything with the real private key) and when the client request a probe of the real private key (like a hash) send a fake probe and expect that the client does not check this.
Bettercap 2
Active Discovery Notes
Take into account that when a UDP packet is sent to a device that do not have the requested port an ICMP (Port Unreachable) is sent.
ARP discover
ARP packets are used to discover wich IPs are being used inside the network. The PC has to send a request for each possible IP address and only the ones that are being used will respond.
mDNS (multicast DNS)
Bettercap send a MDNS request (each X ms) asking for _services_.dns-sd._udp.local the machine that see this paket usually answer this request. Then, it only searchs for machine answering to "services".
Tools
Avahi-browser (--all)
Bettercap (net.probe.mdns)
Responder
NBNS (NetBios Name Server)
Bettercap broadcast packets to the port 137/UDP asking for the name "CKAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA".
SSDP (Simple Service Discovery Protocol)
Bettercap broadcast SSDP packets searching for all kind of services (UDP Port 1900).
WSD (Web Service Discovery)
Bettercap broadcast WSD packets searching for services (UDP Port 3702).
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