Crates.io | authoscope |
lib.rs | authoscope |
version | 0.8.1 |
source | src |
created_at | 2021-05-26 17:34:08.615274 |
updated_at | 2022-03-23 23:33:54.474576 |
description | Scriptable network authentication cracker |
homepage | |
repository | https://github.com/kpcyrd/authoscope |
max_upload_size | |
id | 402362 |
size | 289,534 |
authoscope is a scriptable network authentication cracker. While the space for common service bruteforce is already very well saturated, you may still end up writing your own python scripts when testing credentials for web applications.
The scope of authoscope is specifically cracking custom services. This is done
by writing scripts that are loaded into a lua runtime. Those scripts represent
a single service and provide a verify(user, password)
function that returns
either true or false. Concurrency, progress indication and reporting is
magically provided by the authoscope runtime.
If you are on an Arch Linux based system, use
pacman -S authoscope
If you are on Mac OSX, use
brew install authoscope
To build from source, make sure you have rust and libssl-dev
installed and run
cargo install
Verify your setup is complete with
authoscope --help
sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get dist-upgrade
sudo apt-get install build-essential libssl-dev pkg-config
curl -sf -L https://static.rust-lang.org/rustup.sh | sh
source $HOME/.cargo/env
cd /path/to/authoscope
cargo install
A simple script could look like this:
descr = "example.com"
function verify(user, password)
session = http_mksession()
-- get csrf token
req = http_request(session, 'GET', 'https://example.com/login', {})
resp = http_send(req)
if last_err() then return end
-- parse token from html
html = resp['text']
csrf = html_select(html, 'input[name="csrf"]')
token = csrf["attrs"]["value"]
-- send login
req = http_request(session, 'POST', 'https://example.com/login', {
form={
user=user,
password=password,
csrf=token
}
})
resp = http_send(req)
if last_err() then return end
-- search response for successful login
html = resp['text']
return html:find('Login successful') != nil
end
Please see the reference and examples for all available functions.
Keep in mind that you can use print(x)
and authoscope oneshot
to debug your
script.
Decode a base64 string.
base64_decode("ww==")
Encode a binary array with base64.
base64_encode("\x00\xff")
Clear all recorded errors to prevent a requeue.
if last_err() then
clear_err()
return false
else
return true
end
Execute an external program. Returns the exit code.
execve("myprog", {"arg1", "arg2", "--arg", "3"})
Hex encode a list of bytes.
hex("\x6F\x68\x61\x69\x0A\x00")
Calculate an hmac with md5. Returns a binary array.
hmac_md5("secret", "my authenticated message")
Calculate an hmac with sha1. Returns a binary array.
hmac_sha1("secret", "my authenticated message")
Calculate an hmac with sha2_256. Returns a binary array.
hmac_sha2_256("secret", "my authenticated message")
Calculate an hmac with sha2_512. Returns a binary array.
hmac_sha2_512("secret", "my authenticated message")
Calculate an hmac with sha3_256. Returns a binary array.
hmac_sha3_256("secret", "my authenticated message")
Calculate an hmac with sha3_512. Returns a binary array.
hmac_sha3_512("secret", "my authenticated message")
Parses an html document and returns the first element that matches the css
selector. The return value is a table with text
being the inner text and
attrs
being a table of the elements attributes.
csrf = html_select(html, 'input[name="csrf"]')
token = csrf["attrs"]["value"]
Same as html_select
but returns all matches instead of the
first one.
html_select_list(html, 'input[name="csrf"]')
Sends a GET
request with basic auth. Returns true
if no WWW-Authenticate
header is set and the status code is not 401
.
http_basic_auth("https://httpbin.org/basic-auth/foo/buzz", user, password)
Create a session object. This is similar to requests.Session
in
python-requests and keeps track of cookies.
session = http_mksession()
Prepares an http request. The first argument is the session reference and cookies from that session are copied into the request. After the request has been sent, the cookies from the response are copied back into the session.
The next arguments are the method
, the url
and additional options. Please
note that you still need to specify an empty table {}
even if no options are
set. The following options are available:
query
- a map of query parameters that should be set on the urlheaders
- a map of headers that should be setbasic_auth
- configure the basic auth header with {"user, "password"}
user_agent
- overwrite the default user agent with a stringjson
- the request body that should be json encodedform
- the request body that should be form encodedbody
- the raw request body as stringreq = http_request(session, 'POST', 'https://httpbin.org/post', {
json={
user=user,
password=password,
}
})
resp = http_send(req)
if last_err() then return end
if resp["status"] ~= 200 then return "invalid status code" end
Send the request that has been built with http_request
.
Returns a table with the following keys:
status
- the http status codeheaders
- a table of headerstext
- the response body as stringreq = http_request(session, 'POST', 'https://httpbin.org/post', {
json={
user=user,
password=password,
}
})
resp = http_send(req)
if last_err() then return end
if resp["status"] ~= 200 then return "invalid status code" end
Decode a lua value from a json string.
json_decode("{\"data\":{\"password\":\"fizz\",\"user\":\"bar\"},\"list\":[1,3,3,7]}")
Encode a lua value to a json string. Note that empty tables are encoded to an
empty object {}
instead of an empty list []
.
x = json_encode({
hello="world",
almost_one=0.9999,
list={1,3,3,7},
data={
user=user,
password=password,
empty=nil
}
})
Returns nil
if no error has been recorded, returns a string otherwise.
if last_err() then return end
Connect to an ldap server and try to authenticate with the given user.
ldap_bind("ldaps://ldap.example.com/",
"cn=\"" .. ldap_escape(user) .. "\",ou=users,dc=example,dc=com", password)
Escape an attribute value in a relative distinguished name.
ldap_escape(user)
Connect to an ldap server, log into a search user, search for the target user and then try to authenticate with the first DN that was returned by the search.
ldap_search_bind("ldaps://ldap.example.com/",
-- the user we use to find the correct DN
"cn=search_user,ou=users,dc=example,dc=com", "searchpw",
-- base DN we search in
"dc=example,dc=com",
-- the user we test
user, password)
Hash a byte array with md5 and return the results as bytes.
hex(md5("\x00\xff"))
Connect to a mysql database and try to authenticate with the provided credentials. Returns a mysql connection on success.
sock = mysql_connect("127.0.0.1", 3306, user, password)
Run a query on a mysql connection. The 3rd parameter is for prepared statements.
rows = mysql_query(sock, 'SELECT VERSION(), :foo as foo', {
foo='magic'
})
Prints the value of a variable. Please note that this bypasses the regular writer and may interfer with the progress bar. Only use this for debugging.
print({
data={
user=user,
password=password
}
})
Returns a random u32
with a minimum and maximum constraint. The return value
can be greater or equal to the minimum boundary, and always lower than the
maximum boundary. This function has not been reviewed for cryptographic
security.
rand(0, 256)
Generate the specified number of random bytes.
randombytes(16)
Hash a byte array with sha1 and return the results as bytes.
hex(sha1("\x00\xff"))
Hash a byte array with sha2_256 and return the results as bytes.
hex(sha2_256("\x00\xff"))
Hash a byte array with sha2_512 and return the results as bytes.
hex(sha2_512("\x00\xff"))
Hash a byte array with sha3_256 and return the results as bytes.
hex(sha3_256("\x00\xff"))
Hash a byte array with sha3_512 and return the results as bytes.
hex(sha3_512("\x00\xff"))
Pauses the thread for the specified number of seconds. This is mostly used to debug concurrency.
sleep(3)
Create a tcp connection.
sock = sock_connect("127.0.0.1", 1337)
Send data to the socket.
sock_send(sock, "hello world")
Receive up to 4096 bytes from the socket.
x = sock_recv(sock)
Send a string to the socket. A newline is automatically appended to the string.
sock_sendline(sock, line)
Receive a line from the socket. The line includes the newline.
x = sock_recvline(sock)
Receive all data from the socket until EOF.
x = sock_recvall(sock)
Receive lines from the server until a line contains the needle, then return this line.
x = sock_recvline_contains(sock, needle)
Receive lines from the server until a line matches the regex, then return this line.
x = sock_recvline_regex(sock, "^250 ")
Receive exactly n bytes from the socket.
x = sock_recvn(sock, 4)
Receive until the needle is found, then return all data including the needle.
x = sock_recvuntil(sock, needle)
Receive until the needle is found, then write data to the socket.
sock_sendafter(sock, needle, data)
Overwrite the default \n
newline.
sock_newline(sock, "\r\n")
You can place a config file at ~/.config/authoscope.toml
to set some
defaults.
[runtime]
user_agent = "w3m/0.5.3+git20180125"
[runtime]
# requires CAP_SYS_RESOURCE
# sudo setcap 'CAP_SYS_RESOURCE=+ep' /usr/bin/authoscope
rlimit_nofile = 64000
The authoscope runtime is still very bare bones, so you might have to shell out to your regular python script occasionally. Your wrapper may look like this:
descr = "example.com"
function verify(user, password)
ret = execve("./docs/test.py", {user, password})
if last_err() then return end
if ret == 2 then
return "script signaled an exception"
end
return ret == 0
end
Your python script may look like this:
import sys
try:
if sys.argv[1] == "foo" and sys.argv[2] == "bar":
# correct credentials
sys.exit(0)
else:
# incorrect credentials
sys.exit(1)
except:
# signal an exception
# this requeues the attempt instead of discarding it
sys.exit(2)
GPLv3+