PayloadsAllTheThings/Methodology and Resources/Network Discovery.md
2023-01-19 16:33:11 +01:00

7.0 KiB

Network Discovery

Summary

Nmap

  • Ping sweep (No port scan, No DNS resolution)
nmap -sn -n --disable-arp-ping 192.168.1.1-254 | grep -v "host down"
-sn : Disable port scanning. Host discovery only.
-n : Never do DNS resolution
  • Basic NMAP
sudo nmap -sSV -p- 192.168.0.1 -oA OUTPUTFILE -T4
sudo nmap -sSV -oA OUTPUTFILE -T4 -iL INPUTFILE.csv

• the flag -sSV defines the type of packet to send to the server and tells Nmap to try and determine any service on open ports
• the -p- tells Nmap to check all 65,535 ports (by default it will only check the most popular 1,000)
• 192.168.0.1 is the IP address to scan
• -oA OUTPUTFILE tells Nmap to output the findings in its three major formats at once using the filename "OUTPUTFILE"
• -iL INPUTFILE tells Nmap to use the provided file as inputs
  • CTF NMAP

This configuration is enough to do a basic check for a CTF VM

nmap -sV -sC -oA ~/nmap-initial 192.168.1.1

-sV : Probe open ports to determine service/version info
-sC : to enable the script
-oA : to save the results

After this quick command you can add "-p-" to run a full scan while you work with the previous result
  • Aggressive NMAP
nmap -A -T4 scanme.nmap.org
• -A: Enable OS detection, version detection, script scanning, and traceroute
• -T4: Defines the timing for the task (options are 0-5 and higher is faster)
  • Using searchsploit to detect vulnerable services
nmap -p- -sV -oX a.xml IP_ADDRESS; searchsploit --nmap a.xml
  • Generating nice scan report
nmap -sV IP_ADDRESS -oX scan.xml && xsltproc scan.xml -o "`date +%m%d%y`_report.html"
  • NMAP Scripts
nmap -sC : equivalent to --script=default

nmap --script 'http-enum' -v web.xxxx.com -p80 -oN http-enum.nmap
PORT   STATE SERVICE
80/tcp open  http
| http-enum:
|   /phpmyadmin/: phpMyAdmin
|   /.git/HEAD: Git folder
|   /css/: Potentially interesting directory w/ listing on 'apache/2.4.10 (debian)'
|_  /image/: Potentially interesting directory w/ listing on 'apache/2.4.10 (debian)'

nmap --script smb-enum-users.nse -p 445 [target host]
Host script results:
| smb-enum-users:
|   METASPLOITABLE\backup (RID: 1068)
|     Full name:   backup
|     Flags:       Account disabled, Normal user account
|   METASPLOITABLE\bin (RID: 1004)
|     Full name:   bin
|     Flags:       Account disabled, Normal user account
|   METASPLOITABLE\msfadmin (RID: 3000)
|     Full name:   msfadmin,,,
|     Flags:       Normal user account

List Nmap scripts : ls /usr/share/nmap/scripts/

Spyse

Searching for subdomains

spyse -target xbox.com --subdomains

Reverse IP Lookup

spyse -target 52.14.144.171 --domains-on-ip

Searching for SSL certificates

spyse -target hotmail.com --ssl-certificates
spyse -target "org: Microsoft" --ssl-certificates

Getting all DNS records

spyse -target xbox.com --dns-all

Masscan

masscan -iL ips-online.txt --rate 10000 -p1-65535 --only-open -oL masscan.out
masscan -e tun0 -p1-65535,U:1-65535 10.10.10.97 --rate 1000

# find machines on the network
sudo masscan --rate 500 --interface tap0 --router-ip $ROUTER_IP --top-ports 100 $NETWORK -oL masscan_machines.tmp
cat masscan_machines.tmp | grep open | cut -d " " -f4 | sort -u > masscan_machines.lst

# find open ports for one machine
sudo masscan --rate 1000 --interface tap0 --router-ip $ROUTER_IP -p1-65535,U:1-65535 $MACHINE_IP --banners -oL $MACHINE_IP/scans/masscan-ports.lst


# TCP grab banners and services information
TCP_PORTS=$(cat $MACHINE_IP/scans/masscan-ports.lst| grep open | grep tcp | cut -d " " -f3 | tr '\n' ',' | head -c -1)
[ "$TCP_PORTS" ] && sudo nmap -sT -sC -sV -v -Pn -n -T4 -p$TCP_PORTS --reason --version-intensity=5 -oA $MACHINE_IP/scans/nmap_tcp $MACHINE_IP

# UDP grab banners and services information
UDP_PORTS=$(cat $MACHINE_IP/scans/masscan-ports.lst| grep open | grep udp | cut -d " " -f3 | tr '\n' ',' | head -c -1)
[ "$UDP_PORTS" ] && sudo nmap -sU -sC -sV -v -Pn -n -T4 -p$UDP_PORTS --reason --version-intensity=5 -oA $MACHINE_IP/scans/nmap_udp $MACHINE_IP

Reconnoitre

Dependencies:

  • nbtscan
  • nmap
python2.7 ./reconnoitre.py -t 192.168.1.2-252 -o ./results/ --pingsweep --hostnames --services --quick

If you have a segfault with nbtscan, read the following quote.

Permission is denied on the broadcast address (.0) and it segfaults on the gateway (.1) - all other addresses seem fine here.So to mitigate the problem: nbtscan 192.168.0.2-255

Netdiscover

netdiscover -i eth0 -r 192.168.1.0/24
Currently scanning: Finished!   |   Screen View: Unique Hosts

20 Captured ARP Req/Rep packets, from 4 hosts.   Total size: 876
_____________________________________________________________________________
IP            At MAC Address     Count     Len  MAC Vendor / Hostname
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
192.168.1.AA    68:AA:AA:AA:AA:AA     15     630  Sagemcom
192.168.1.XX    52:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX      1      60  Unknown vendor
192.168.1.YY    24:YY:YY:YY:YY:YY      1      60  QNAP Systems, Inc.
192.168.1.ZZ    b8:ZZ:ZZ:ZZ:ZZ:ZZ      3     126  HUAWEI TECHNOLOGIES CO.,LTD  

Responder

responder -I eth0 -A # see NBT-NS, BROWSER, LLMNR requests without responding.
responder.py -I eth0 -wrf

Alternatively you can use the Windows version

Bettercap

bettercap -X --proxy --proxy-https -T <target IP>
# better cap in spoofing, discovery, sniffer
# intercepting http and https requests,
# targetting specific IP only

SSL MITM with OpenSSL

This code snippet allows you to sniff/modify SSL traffic if there is a MITM vulnerability using only openssl. If you can modify /etc/hosts of the client:

sudo echo "[OPENSSL SERVER ADDRESS] [domain.of.server.to.mitm]" >> /etc/hosts  # On client host

On our MITM server, if the client accepts self signed certificates (you can use a legit certificate if you have the private key of the legit server):

openssl req -subj '/CN=[domain.of.server.to.mitm]' -batch -new -x509 -days 365 -nodes -out server.pem -keyout server.pem

On our MITM server, we setup our infra:

mkfifo response
sudo openssl s_server -cert server.pem -accept [INTERFACE TO LISTEN TO]:[PORT] -quiet < response | tee | openssl s_client -quiet -servername [domain.of.server.to.mitm] -connect[IP of server to MITM]:[PORT] | tee | cat > response

In this example, traffic is only displayed with tee but we could modify it using sed for example.

References