/vishnu

Golang port-knocking PoC

Primary LanguageGo

Vishnu(The Hidden Backdoor)

RS{JOIN_REDTEAM}

Taken from the Trimurit, the triple deity of supreme divinity. Vishnu is known as "The Preserver". This program is a proof of concept code to test the idea of port-knocking in golang.

Most backdoors usually have port listening and they can be easily be found by doing a port scan on the machine. This backdoor acts like as a packet sniffer, hence the need of libpcap, and looks for the secret ports you defined. When these ports are noticed, it creates a bind shell on a random port for you to connect to. To detect the random port, you can run nmap to find the new port.

  • Note: This backdoor is not perfect, this was written in one night and again, it was a PoC :)

Technical Details

At the beginning of the file, there are some configurations that needs to be set. Like what interface you want to listen to and what type of filter you want.

With the use of gopacket which is a wrapper around libpcap, the program is able to read every packets that comes through the specific network interface. With this PoC, it is looking for SYN packets(this can be changed to whatever), if it is not, the packets are ignored. If the packet is a SYN, it looks at the destination port.

In order for the hidden port to be open, the sequence of destination ports have to match what's in the array. For example, if the secret ports are 80, 81, 82, 83, you have to send SYN packets in exactly that way. 81, 80, 83, 82 would not work.

After the comparison is done and matches, a random port between 100 and 65535 will be open by using the program inetd. You can learn more about here. Basically, it's an easy way to listen for connection on certain ports and you can decide what user should run a service and what service you want to run. In my case, I use this <port> stream tcp nowait root /bin/bash bash. When connected on that port, you are presented with a root bash bind shell.

NOTE: This doesn't work well with VPN, you have to be on the same network

How to compile and Use

Linux

There is one static value that is needed in order for this to work properly on Linux. It is listed below:

  • The string value being returned, found in spec/spec_linux.go, in the GetAdapter() function. It is set to return "ens160" by default. Modify this value as you see fit.

To compile, you need libpcap. On linux, you can install by running sudo apt install libpcap-dev.

For the port opening, make sure you have inetd installed. If you are not sure, run apt install openbsd-inetd.

Then you can use make agent-linux to generate the binary.

Windows

In order for the binary to work correctly on Windows, npcap / winpcap needs to be installed. You can find it here: https://nmap.org/npcap/

Once this is done, run make agent-windows to create the executable.

Customizations

There are few other modifications that can be made in the targetInfo struct. Go to the sInit function in main.go and modify the values as you see fit listed below:

  • secretPorts : this int array holds the ports that will be used for knocking
  • connectBack : boolean value for linux for a bind or connectback shell
  • connectBackPort : if connectback is being used, this string value is the port that will be utilized.

Connectback Shell Info

You can optionally have the backdoor operate in connectback mode - where after successfully knocking a shell is sent back to the knocking IP on a predetermined port.

Be careful doing this behind NAT as while knocking will work, the shell won't get back to you. You'll need to do port forwarding or listen for the shell on a public IP.

For use on Windows, the connectback method is used.

Potential future works

Disclaimers

The author is in no way responsible for any illegal use of this software. It is provided purely as an educational proof of concept. I am also not responsible for any damages or mishaps that may happen in the course of using this software. Use at your own risk.