Difference between revisions of "Vanguard"
(→Application Dependencies) |
(→Perl Dependencies) |
||
Line 24: | Line 24: | ||
{{info|LibWhisker2 requires Net::SSLeay. You may need to get this from cpan, compile it in, or install it from your distribution's package manager.}} | {{info|LibWhisker2 requires Net::SSLeay. You may need to get this from cpan, compile it in, or install it from your distribution's package manager.}} | ||
* '''YAML''' | * '''YAML''' | ||
− | * '''Clone''' | + | * '''Clone'''{{notice|You can install these libraries with [[Perl#CPAN|cpan]].}} |
− | {{notice|You can install these libraries with [[Perl#CPAN|cpan]].}} | + | |
==Configuration== | ==Configuration== |
Revision as of 07:29, 9 January 2012
Contents
Description
Vanguard is a comprehensive web penetration testing tool written in Perl that identifies vulnerabilities in web applications. |
Features
Main application features:
- Fully Configurable
- WebCrawlers crawl all open HTTP and HTTPS ports output from nmap
- LibWhisker2 For HTTP IDS Evasion (Same options as nikto)
- Tests via GET,POST, and COOKIE
- SQL injection (This test is signature free!)
- LDAP Injection
- XSS
- File inclusion
- Command Injection
Usage
perl scan.pl -h [hostname] -e [evasion option]
Installation
Application Dependencies
You must have nmap from http://nmap.org installed to run this application correctly. |
Perl Dependencies
LibWhisker2 requires Net::SSLeay. You may need to get this from cpan, compile it in, or install it from your distribution's package manager. |
- YAML
- CloneNotice: You can install these libraries with cpan.
Configuration
Main Configuration
This is the configuration in config.yml. |
Vanguard has a very simple set of configuration options. --- rewrite: 0 use_whitelist: 1 module_whitelist: - WEBAPPS - SHELL - NMAP - CRAWL - XSS_GET - SQL_GET - LFI_GET - RCI_GET rewrite: Specifies whether or not to use the expiremental mod_rewrite data tampering engine. 1 for enabled, 0 for disabled. use_whitelist: Specifies whether or not to use the module_whitelist settings. 1 for enabled, 0 for disabled. module_whitelist: The module_whitelist allows you to specify by directory name in the modules/recon, modules/api and modules/test directories. |
WebCrawler
This configuration is located in /modules/recon/CRAWL/conf.yml |
--- depth: 20
Nmap Module
--- flags: "-P0 --defeat-rst-ratelimit -sSV -F"
Local File Inclusion
You can find this blah |
--- lfi_test: '%2e%2e/%2e%2e/%2e%2e/%2e%2e/%2e%2e/%2e%2e/%2e%2e/%2e%2e/%2e%2e/%2e%2e/%2e%2e/%2e%2e/etc/passwd' lfi_match: "root\:.\:0\:0" lfi_exits: - '%00' -
LDAP
you can find blah |
--- ldap_true: - ")(&" - ")(&)(" ldap_false: - ")(|" - ")(|)("
RFI
You can find this blah |
--- rfi_test: http://asdf.com/ rfi_match: 89asdf.gi
Command Injection
you can find blah |
--- entries: - '|' - ';' - '&&'
SQL injection
You can find these configuration files & options in modules/test/SQL_GET/conf.yml and modules/test/SQL_POST/conf.yml. |
This file defines several variables for automated SQL injection testing. --- sql_spacers: - '%20' - '+' sql_entries: - "" - '%27' - '%bf%27' sql_exits: - -- - /* - )-- - )/* sql_spacers: Different database backends parse spaces differently. Microsoft Access, for example, prefers '+' to be used as a "space" character, however for most linux based database solutions, a simple uri encoded space (%20) will suffice. sql_entries: Because SQL injection utilizes an escape string, entries are used to define what escape string is necessary. Some injections are mis-handled integers and do not require this, hence we have an empty entry. The next entry is a url encoded single quote, and the final entry is an escape string affecting non-utf8 character encodings to bypass php's addslashes() function. sql_exits: Different SQL databases use a different syntax for commenting code. Some engines begin comments with -- while others begin comments with /*. This is used to cancel the rest of the query during the truth/false test. Because some query inputs are nested in parenthesis, the last two exits are listed as fallbacks. |
Download
The end-user is liable for his-or her own actions with the use of this software. Running this against a system you do not own without written authorization is a criminal act. |