Control Things Modbus
The goal of ctmodbus is to become the security professional's Swiss army knife for interacting with Modbus devices. Once completed, features will include support for:
- RTU and ASCII versions of serial Modbus (DONE)
- TCP and UDP versions of TCP/IP Modbus (DONE)
- Client and server options (DONE in lib, server IN PROGRESS)
- All standard Modbus functions (reads DONE, writes IN PROGRESS)
- Arbitrary custom Modbus functions
- Reading addresses specified in lists and ranges (DONE)
- Interval based polling
- Clone feature to quickly create base data for simulator
- Proxy feature between two modbus endpoints
- Export to cthistorian and database
Installation:
As long as you have git and Python 3.6 or later installed, all you should need to do is:
git clone https://github.com/ControlThingsTools/ctmodbus.git
cd ctmodbus
pip3 install -r requirements.txt
Examples of current user interface commands once you start ctmodbus:
> connect tcp:10.10.10.1 # start a client session
> connect rtu:/dev/serial # works with serial too
> connect ascii:com2 # and and windows
> connect udp:10.10.10.1:10502 # even udp with custom ports
> read id # read device identifiers
> read discrete_inputs 1 # read coils and registers
> read coils 1,3,5,7 # with comma separated values
> read input_register 5,10-30,90-99 # and ranges
> read holding_register 50 9 # or start address and count
> write coils 128 0 # write single values
> write coils 76 01101001 # or multiple values
> write holding_register 1000 14302 188 305 # registers support int
Planned ui commands once complete:
> write holding_register 1000 "My name is Mud" # and strings
> write holding_register 1400 DEADBEEF # or raw hex
> poll holding_register 1-10,15-19 1 # poll registers every second
> tags add input1 input_register 1 # define tag names
> tags add config2 holding_register 50-69 # tags can define ranges
> tags add config3 holding_register 70 20 # and work with start & count
> read tags input1 config2 config3 # tags simplify reads & writes
> tags group configs config1 config2 config3 # create tag groups
> tags export saved.tags # export and share tags
> tags import saved.tags # import other's tags
> clone tcp:10.10.10.10 coils 1-100 # clone coils from a device
> clone tcp:10.10.10.10 all 1-100 # or all types of values
> simulate tcp:127.0.0.1:10502 # so you can later simulate
> proxy tcp:10.10.10.1:10502 rtu:com4 # proxy requests to device
> function 33 0000 DEADBEEF # send custom functions
> function 8 [0000-FFFF] 0000 # brackets for enumeration
> function 8 [0000-00FF] (0000)5 # parenths for random fuzzing
> raw 1234 0001 06 01 0000 0010 # or full raw modbus payloads
> tunnel listen tcp::6666 # setup modbus tunnel service
> tunnel connect tcp:10.1.1.1:6666 # connect from another comp
> tunnel send exfiltration.txt # send files through tunnel
> tunnel shell # or open a terminal session
> historian tcp:10.1.1.1:9300 # transactions to cthistorian
This tool is built upon these to key library:
Copyright 2019 Justin Searle
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.