Prerequisites
Wifi Pineapple
Raspberry Pi 2
You could call this particular column the Internet of Toolsmith. As much as I am a curmudgeonly buzzword, catch-phrase hater (I lose my mind at RSA and refuse to go any more), the Internet of Things, or IoT is all the rage for good reason. Once obscure items are now connected and as such, at risk. The ability to load a full operating system and a plethora of functionality on a micro device has become trivial thanks to the likes of Raspberry Pi and Arduino. I’d like to point out that the Pwnie Express PwnPlug Elite, built on a Sheevaplug, as discussed in March 2012’s
toolsmith, was amongst those devices that met the IoT bar before IoT was all the rage. Kudos to that crazy pack o’ hackers for seeing the imminent future of security challenges with smart devices. In 2013 Chris Clearfield wrote
Rethinking Security for the Internet ofThings wherein he stated that “the growing Internet of Things, the connection of physical devices to the internet, will rapidly expand the number of connected devices integrated into our everyday lives. They also have the potential to allow cyber attackers into the physical world in which we live as they seize on security holes in these new systems.” It is in that mindset that we’ll converge security assessment tools and services, as implemented on a couple of tiny devices I’m fond of, with ISSA Journal’s topic of the month. Normally, toolsmith focuses on free and open source tools, and the software we’ll discuss this month continues to meet that bar. That said, it’s impossible to explore IoT without some related “things”, so you’ll need to make a small investment in one or both of the devices we’ll discuss, or experiment similarly on related platforms. If you were to purchase the Wifi Pineapple and the Raspberry Pi 2 (RPI2) kits I own, you’d spend a grand total of $229. Much as the Pwnie Express crew did, the hak5 team started building WiFi penetration testing platforms on tiny hardware as early as 2008. The Raspberry Pi project has enabled all sorts of makers to build miniature attack or assessment systems on devices the size of a pack of playing cards. We’ll drop Kali Linux on a Raspberry Pi 2 here. I chuckled a bit as I wrote this as I was reminded that WiFi Pineapple, intended for WFi hacking, was itself popped at
Defcon 22. The language in the resulting message is too salty to print here but it starts with “Dear Lamer” and ends with “criminally insecure” which should convey the general concepts. 😉 That said, the Hak5 team addressed the issues quickly, and the device really is a sound, capable investment; let’s start there.
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Figure 1 – WiFi Pineapple |
Wifi Pineapple use is about as easy as plugging in, connecting the included Cat5 cable to a DHCP-enabled NIC, and browsing to
http://172.16.42.1:1471. “The WiFi
Pineapple firmware is a heavily modified version of OpenWRT, packed with tools to aid your pen testing.” Initial username is root, you’ll assign a password during initial setup. I did flash my Pineapple to the latest firmware, 2.3.0 as this was written, using the WiFi Pineapple MK5 Infusion. Using the Network Infusion, I put my Pineapple in Client Mode, so I could connect to the Internet for updates and install additional Infusions. Using the AutoSSG Infusion I setup the AutoSSH service so I could interact with a remote shell and download/upload file via SCP. Real fun with a Wifi Pineapple can be had when you add Infusions. I immediately added
sitesurvey,
status,
monitor,
logcheck,
connectedclients,
notify, and
wifimanager as seen in
Figure 2.
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Figure 2 – Installing Infusions |
Make sure you install all Infusions to SD storage as there is much more available in the SD card, you’ll quickly clog internal storage if you’re not careful.
While WiFI Pineapple is first and foremost a Wifi attack platform, I believe it can be used as a defensive platform as well, in particular a monitoring sensor particularly in an area where many WiFi connected devices are in play and you’d like to monitor the local IoT.
In the Logs Infusion I followed the /tmp/pineap.log which logs probes for SSIDs by MAC addresses.
The PineAP Infusion, with MK5 Karma enabled, will allow you to filter under the Log tab as well. From the Pineapple information content under the PineAP Infusion states that “MK5 Karma is a module of the PineAP suite intended to host spoofed Access Points, or honeypots. This is achieved by replying to probe requests with appropriately crafted probe responses.” You can tweak MK5 Karma and Pine AP as a honeypot to ensure only trusted, known devices connect in your environment. You can then blacklist and whitelist both clients and SSIDs, then send notifications via email or Pushover based on specific rules if you so choose. All the related Infusions are noted in Figure 3.
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Figure 3 – Monitor and notify with Pineapple Infusions |
As a result, WiFi Pineapple, while a fantastic red team tool, can also be used for defensive monitoring in a highly connected environment where only trusted devices are a requirement.
Loading Kali on a Raspberry Pi 2 is also quite simple and is spelled out nicely on
Kali.org. Grab a Class 10 SD card and DD the latest image to the card from a *nix host. I ran
dd if= kali-1.1.0-rpi2.img of=/dev/sdb bs=512k, used
gparted to allocate (resize) all the available storage on my 32GB SD, popped the SD card in my RPI2, and powered it up. You’ll login as
root, initial password is
toor as expected (change it), then execute
startx. Follow the steps in the Kali.org guidance to change your SSH keys as all ARM images are pre-configured with the same keys. Initially, this installation is missing almost all of the Kali packages, easily fixed as follows:
3) apt-get install kali-linux-full
A bit of patience as kali-linux-full exceeds 3GB, and voila, you’re running Kali on a kick@$$ wallet-sized computer!
Here’s a scenario I imagine a RPI2 being useful in for a penetration test/red team exercises, given that it is both inexpensive and concealable. You’re assessing an organization that has a significant public area (lobby, customer services offices, conference rooms, and auditorium). The organization offers guest WiFi and does not lock down numerous Cat5 wall jacks. Your recon determines that:
1) There is a keys-to-the-castle health services database on the internal organization network that is your ultimate goal and primary agenda for the assessment
2) There is a location in the public space near a cabinet and a large plant where a WiFi enabled RPI2 (Figure 4) can be plugged into both power and one of the unregulated wall jacks. Even if discovered in a day or two, you only need a few hours.
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Figure 4 – Raspberry Pi 2 (in camera support case) |
After “installing” your device, you can access it over the public WiFI as wlan0 is serving up SSH in the same IP range as your laptop. You’re simply sitting in the organizations public café, seemingly browsing the Intarwebs during lunch. As an added bonus, you find that the wired connection to your RPI2 enjoys unfettered access to the internal (Intranet) environment. You nmap it accordingly and discover a few hosts offering up HTTP and HTTPS. You can kick in a little X11 forwarding on your RPI2 or tunnel through your RPI2 and browse the sites directly from your laptop in the café. Sure enough, after a bit of review, you discover that one of these web servers hosts the front end for that health services database you seek. You quickly recognize that the Security Development Lifecycle long ago left the building (may never have entered) and that this front end is rampant with SQL injections vulns. You ready SQLmap and strike while the iron is hot. You run the following from your RPI2 and in four quick steps have dumped the patient db. Great, now you have to write the report.
1) sqlmap.py –url=”http://vlab02.pneumann.com/patients13/?bill_month=8&sec=HSPO14″ –data=”bill_month” –banner
2) sqlmap.py –url=”http://vlab02.pneumann.com/patients13/?bill_month=8&sec=HSPO14″ –data=”bill_month” –dbs
3) sqlmap.py –url=”http://vlab02.pneumann.com/patients13/?bill_month=8&sec=HSPO14″ –data=”bill_month” -D db337433205 –tables
4) sqlmap.py –url=”http://vlab02.pneumann.com/patients13/?bill_month=8&sec=HSPO14″ –data=”bill_month” –dump -D db337433205 -T dbo337433205.PATIENTS
The above gives you the database banner, the populated databases, the tables in the db337433205 database, and then,yep, there’s the proverbial gold in that dump (Figure 5).
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Figure 5 – SQLmap strikes gold from Kali on Raspberry Pi 2 |
By the way, if want to take screenshots in Kali on and RPI2, you’ll need to run apt-get install xfce4-screenshooter-plugin to enable the app, you’ll find it under Accessories thereafter.
This is but one example of an endless slew of opportunities running Kali and other distros from this credit card-sized device. Grab some spare SD cards and build out a few of your favorites, then swap them in as you want to boot them up. Some RPI2 kits come with NOOBS on an 8GB SD card as well, which will help get you started and your feet wet. Hackers/makers rejoice! I’m going to add sensors and a camera to my kit so I can implement specific scripted actions when movement initiated.
Working with the Raspberry Pi 2 or earlier versions allows you so many options. You’ll recall that FruityWifi, as discussed in November 2014, is specifically tailored to Raspberry Pi, and there are Pwn Pi, Raspberry Pwn (from Pwnie Express), and MyLittlePwny, amongst others. Grab a kit today and get started, it’ll be great for your Linux skills development, and can be used for attack or defense; the options are literally endless. I’d also be remiss if I didn’t mention that Microsoft is releasing
Windows 10 for IoT (Windows 10 IoT Core), currently in Insider Preview mode, so you can play on the Windows front as well.
Ping me via email or Twitter if you have questions (russ at holisticinfosec dot org or @holisticinfosec).
Cheers…until next month.
Continue reading toolsmith: IoT Fruit – Pineapple and Raspberry→