Crates.io | boxxy |
lib.rs | boxxy |
version | 0.13.1 |
source | src |
created_at | 2017-10-27 17:13:05.828144 |
updated_at | 2022-07-17 16:47:46.678996 |
description | Linkable sandbox explorer |
homepage | |
repository | https://github.com/kpcyrd/boxxy-rs |
max_upload_size | |
id | 37148 |
size | 145,890 |
"If you implement boundaries and nobody is around to push them, do they even exist?". Have you ever wondered how your sandbox looks like from the inside? Tempted to test if you can escape it, if only you had a shell to give it a try? boxxy is a library that can be linked into a debug build of an existing program and drop you into an interactive shell. From there you can step through various stages of your sandbox and verify it actually contains™.
cargo run --example boxxy
Just put a dev-dependencies in your Cargo.toml and copy examples/boxxy.rs
to
your examples/
folder. Modify to include your sandbox.
[dev-dependencies]
boxxy = "0.*"
There is an example program, check the Makefile to see how it's built.
make cboxxy
[%]> # just RET to prompt
[%]> jit ww==
[%]> # print ohai and exit
[%]> jit 6xpeuAEAAABIice6BQAAAA8FuDwAAABIMf8PBejh////b2hhaQo=
You can use the objdump
utility to generate shellcode from assembly:
make sc/ohai && cargo run --example objdump sc/ohai
See autoboxxy for tooling to load boxxy from php, even if
shell_exec
and friends are disabled by php.ini.
You may need to build a fully static binary, this is possible using the
x86_64-unknown-linux-musl
target.
cargo build --release --example boxxy --target x86_64-unknown-linux-musl
strip target/x86_64-unknown-linux-musl/release/examples/boxxy
There is a special ipc binary that automatically swaps its stdio interface with an unix domain socket so it can be used to debug security settings of a systemd unit.
Prepare ipc-boxxy
:
cargo build --release --example ipc-boxxy
install -Dm755 target/release/examples/ipc-boxxy /usr/local/bin/ipc-boxxy
Prepare systemd unit:
sudo tee /etc/systemd/system/ipc-boxxy@.service <<EOF
[Unit]
Description=ipc boxxy debugger
[Service]
User=root
ExecStart=/usr/local/bin/ipc-boxxy /run/boxxy-%i.sock
NoNewPrivileges=yes
ProtectSystem=strict
ProtectHome=true
PrivateTmp=true
PrivateDevices=true
ProtectKernelTunables=true
ProtectKernelModules=true
ProtectControlGroups=true
RestrictAddressFamilies=AF_UNIX
MemoryDenyWriteExecute=true
CapabilityBoundingSet=
InaccessiblePaths=-/etc/ssh
EOF
Attach to shell:
sudo target/debug/ipc-listener /run/boxxy-foo.sock 'systemctl start ipc-boxxy@foo'
You can run arbitrary commands with exec
:
exec bash -i
The example folder contains a reimplementation of lambdash, it automatically deploys boxxy as an aws lambda and allows you to execute commands on it. The client supports cross account access, but needs a preconfigured role that the lambda should use. You need to build a static binary first.
cargo run --features=aws --example lambdash -- \
--assume-role arn:aws:iam::133713371337:role/AdminRole \
--role arn:aws:iam::133337133337:role/lambda-test-role
eu-west-1 boxxy
There are vulnerable sandboxes (examples/vuln-*
) as a challenge that can be
exploited using the boxxy shell (no need to compile any exploits).
DO NOT POST SPOILERS
Start a challenge using eg. cargo run --example vuln-chroot
The shell is a basic interface for human input, do not write actual scripts, there be dragons.
Do not include boxxy in production builds.
This project is free software released under the LGPL3+ license.