Fast Modular Web Interfaces Bruteforcer
Install
python3 -m pip install -r requirements.txt
Usage
$ python3 web-brutator.py -h
__ __ ___. __________ __ __
/ \ / \ ____\_ |__ \______ \_______ __ ___/ |______ _/ |_ ___________
\ \/\/ // __ \| __ \ ______ | | _/\_ __ \ | \ __\__ \ __\ / _ \_ _ _\
\ /\ ___/| \_\ \ /_____/ | | \ | | \/ | /| | / __ \| | ( <_> ) | \/
\__/\ / \___ >___ / |______ / |__| |____/ |__| (____ /__| \____/|__|
\/ \/ \/ \/ \/
Version 0.2
usage: web-brutator.py [-h] [--url URL] [--target TYPE] [-u USERNAME]
[-U USERLIST] [-p PASSWORD] [-P PASSLIST]
[-C COMBOLIST] [-t THREADS] [-s] [-v] [-e MAX_ERRORS]
[--timeout TIMEOUT] [-l]
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--url URL Target URL
--target TYPE Target type
-u, --username USERNAME Single username
-U, --userlist USERLIST Usernames list
-p, --password PASSWORD Single password
-P, --passlist PASSLIST Passwords list
-C, --combolist COMBOLIST Combos username:password list
-t, --threads THREADS Number of threads [1-50] (default: 10)
-s, --stoponsuccess Stop on success
-v, --verbose Print every tested creds
-e, --max-errors MAX_ERRORS Number of accepted consecutive errors (default: 10)
--timeout TIMEOUT Time limit on the response (default: 20s)
-l, --list-modules Display list of modules
Example:
python3 web-brutator.py --target jenkins --url https://mytarget.com -U ./usernames.txt -P ./passwords.txt -s -t 40
More:
https://github.com/koutto/web-brutator
Available Modules
- axis2
- coldfusion
- glassfish
- htaccess
- jboss
- jenkins
- joomla
- railo
- standardform
- tomcat
- weblogic
- websphere
Notice: Some products implement account lockout after a given number of failed authentication attempts, by default (e.g. Weblogic, Tomcat…). web-brutator
notices the user at the beginning of bruteforce attack if it is the case. Take this into account before launching bruteforce on such targets.
Standard web authentication form Auto-Detection
web-brutator
can automatically detect standard web authentication forms and perform bruteforce automatically. This feature is available via the module standardform
, it is still experimental and can lead to false positives/negatives since it is based on several heuristics.
Not supported:
- Web authentication using Javascript;
- Authentication with CAPTCHA;
- 2-step authentication …
Example:
python3 web-brutator.py --target standardform --url https://mytarget.com -U ./usernames.txt -P ./passwords.txt -s -t 40 -v
Demo
Add new module / Contribute
Adding a new authentication bruteforce module is pretty straightforward:
- Create a new file with appropriate name under
lib/core/modules/
- Create a class in this file, using the following template. Development is very easy, check any existing module under
lib/core/modules/
for some examples. Note that HTTP requests should be done via the static methods provided byRequester
class:Requester.get()
,Requester.post()
,Requester.http_auth()
.
#!/usr/bin/env python3 # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- from lib.core.Exceptions import AuthException, RequestException from lib.core.Logger import logger from lib.core.Requester import AuthMode, Requester class Mymodule: def __init__(self, url, verbose=False): self.url = url # Other self variables can go here def check(self): """ This method is used to detect the presence of the targeted authentication interface. :return: Boolean indicating if the authentication interface has been detected """ # Implement code here def try_auth(self, username, password): """ This method is used to perform one authentication attempt. :param str username: Username to check :param str password: Password to check :return: Boolean indicating authentication status :raise AuthException: """ # Implement code here
- Module is then automatically available (check using
-l
option) from the command-line. - Test the module to make sure it is working as expected !
- Make a pull request to add the module to the project 😉
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