Scans domains for data on their HTTPS configuration and assorted other things.
Most of the work is farmed out to other command line tools. The point of this project is to coordinate those tools and produce consistent data output.
Can be used with any domain, or CSV where domains are the first column, such as the official .gov domain list.
The requirements here can be quite diverse, because this tool is just a coordinator for other tools. Communication between tools is handled via CLI and STDOUT.
The overall tool requires Python 3. To install dependencies:
pip install -r requirements.txtThe individual scanners each require their own dependencies. You only need to have the dependencies installed for the scanners you plan to use.
inspectscanner: Ruby and site-inspector, version 1.0.2 only.tlsscanner: Go and ssllabs-scan, stable branch.sslyzescanner: Python 2 and sslyze, ideally installed withpyenvviapip install sslyze.pageloadscanner: Node and phantomas, installed through npm.
By default, domain-scan will expect the paths to any executables to be on the system PATH.
If you need to point it to a local directory instead, you'll need to set environment variables to override this.
You can set environment variables in a variety of ways -- this tool's developers use autoenv to manage environment variables with a .env file.
However you set them:
-
Override the path to the
site-inspectorexecutable by setting theSITE_INSPECTOR_PATHenvironment variable. -
Override the path to the
ssllabs-scanexecutable by setting theSSLLABS_PATHenvironment variable. -
Override the path to the
sslyze.pyexecutable by setting theSSLYZE_PATHenvironment variable. An env var ofPYENV_VERSION=2.7.11is passed by default, override version withSSLYZE_PYENV. -
Override the path to the
phantomasexecutable by setting thePHANTOMAS_PATHenvironment variable.
Scan a domain. You must specify at least one "scanner" with --scan.
./scan whitehouse.gov --scan=inspectScan a list of domains from a CSV. The CSV's header row will be ignored if the first cell starts with "Domain" (case-insensitive).
./scan domains.csv --scan=inspectRun multiple scanners on each domain:
./scan whitehouse.gov --scan=inspect,tlsIt's important to understand that scans run in parallel by default, and so the order of result data is unpredictable.
By default, each scanner will run up to 10 parallel tasks, which you can override with --workers.
Some scanners may limit this. For example, the tls scanner, which hits the SSL Labs API, maxes out at 5 tasks at once (which cannot be overridden with --workers).
To disable this and run sequentially through each domain (1 worker), use --serial.
Parallelization will also cause the resulting domains to be written in an unpredictable order. If the row order is important to you, disable parallelization, or use the --sort parameter to sort the resulting CSVs once the scans have completed. (Note: Using --sort will cause the entire dataset to be read into memory.)
Scanners:
inspect- HTTP/HTTPS/HSTS configuration.tls- TLS configuration, using the SSL Labs API.sslyze- TLS configuration, using the localsslyzecommand line tool.analytics- Participation in an analytics program.pageload- Page load and rendering metrics.a11y- Accessibility data with thepa11yCLI tool via AWS Lambda (requires an AWS account and some additional setup, described further down this document).
General options:
--scan- Required. Comma-separated names of one or more scanners.--sort- Sort result CSVs by domain name, alphabetically. (Note: this causes the entire dataset to be read into memory.)--serial- Disable parallelization, force each task to be done simultaneously. Helpful for testing and debugging.--debug- Print out more stuff. Useful with--serial.--workers- Limit parallel threads per-scanner to a number.--output- Where to output thecache/andresults/directories. Defaults to./.--force- Ignore cached data and force scans to hit the network. For thetlsscanner, this also tells SSL Labs to ignore its server-side cache.--suffix- Add a suffix to all input domains. For example, a--suffixofvirginia.govwill add.virginia.govto the end of all input domains.
Scanner-specific options
--analytics- For theanalyticsscanner. Point this to either a file or a URL that contains a CSV of participating domains.
All output files are placed into cache/ and results/ directories, whose location defaults to the current directory (./). Override the output home with --output.
- Cached full scan data about each domain is saved in the
cache/directory, named after each scan and each domain, in JSON.
Example: cache/inspect/whitehouse.gov.json
- Formal output data in CSV form about all domains are saved in the
results/directory in CSV form, named after each scan.
Example: results/inspect.csv
You can override the output directory by specifying --output.
It's possible for scans to save multiple CSV rows per-domain. For example, the tls scan may have a row with details for each detected TLS "endpoint".
- Scan metadata with the start time, end time, and scan command will be placed in the
results/directory asmeta.json.
Example: results/meta.json
If using Docker Compose, it is as simple as cloning this GitHub repository and running:
docker-compose upThen to scan, prefix commands with docker-compose run, like:
docker-compose run scan <domain> --scan=<scanner>This tool also includes a facility for gathering domain names that end in a given suffix (e.g. .gov) from various sources.
By default, only fetches third-level and higher domains (excluding second-level domains).
Usage:
./gather [source] [options]Where source is one of:
censys- Walks the Censys.io API, which has hostnames gathered from observed certificates. Censys provides certificates observed from a nightly zmap scan of the IPv4 space, as well as certificates published to public Certificate Transparency logs.
General options:
--suffix: Required. suffix to filter on (e.g..gov)--parents: A path or URL to a CSV whose first column is second-level domains. Any subdomain not contained within these second-level domains will be excluded.--include-parents: Include second-level domains. (Defaults to false.)--debug: display extra output
To configure, set two environment variables from your Censys account page:
CENSYS_UID: Your Censys API ID.CENSYS_API_KEY: Your Censys secret.
Options:
--start: Page number to start on (defaults to1)--end: Page number to end on (defaults to value of--start)--delay: Sleep between pages, to meet API limits. Defaults to 5s. If you have researcher access, shorten to 2s.
Example:
Find .gov certificates in the first 2 pages of Censys API results, waiting 5 seconds between pages:
./gather censys --suffix=.gov --start=1 --end=2 --delay=5Because scanning 1,000+ domains with pa11y takes a prohibitively long time, we're relying on AWS Lambda to provide parallelization.
This requires:
- An AWS account with access to Lambda
- A
pa11y-lambdafunction (follow the instructions here).
Once those are set up, copy the .env.example file, rename it .env and fill in the following values:
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_IDAWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEYAWS_REGION_NAME(us-east-1should work fine)AWS_LAMBDA_PA11Y_FUNCTION_NAME(whatever you ended up naming the Lambda function)
A brief note on redirects:
For the accessibility scans we're running at 18F, we're using the inspect scanner to follow redirects before the accessibility scan runs. For example, if aaa.gov redirects to bbb.gov, pa11y will run against bbb.gov (but the result will be recorded for aaa.gov).
In order to get the benefits of the inspect scanner, all a11y scans must include it. For example, to scan gsa.gov:
./scan gsa.gov --scanner=inspect,a11y
Because of domain-scan's caching, all the results of an inspect scan will be saved in the cache/inspect folder, and probably does not need to be re-run for every single ally scan.
This project is in the worldwide public domain. As stated in CONTRIBUTING:
This project is in the public domain within the United States, and copyright and related rights in the work worldwide are waived through the CC0 1.0 Universal public domain dedication.
All contributions to this project will be released under the CC0 dedication. By submitting a pull request, you are agreeing to comply with this waiver of copyright interest.