cURL is a command line tool created in 1998 by Daniel Stenberg, a Swedish Developper/Programmer.
Daniel Stenberg's website: https://daniel.haxx.se
The latest version of the Tool and the code is open source right here on GitHub: https://github.com/curl/curl
I am not a cURL expert and it's quite difficult giving an exact explanation so I will try and give the most basic explanation.
cURL means Client URL
and you already know from above that it's a command line tool, so it's basically a tool that permits/enables data transfer over many network protocols (HTTPS, HTTP, FTP, it also supports SSL Certificates). The tool communicates with a web server with a URL and tells the server the data to be sent or received. (yes you read that correctly, the tool can do both π€)
cURL is fairly easy to use, and if you have never opened your Terminal before, now is the time to do so π€©.
I simply installed cURL with Homebrew
Install Command:
$ brew install curl
Once you have installed cURL, you can also install Grep: (more info on grep
later on)
Install Command:
$ brew install grep
Now that you have everything installed, we are good to go β
, so let's have a look at some commands for OSINT (Open-Source Intelligence).
Commands for finding the IP address of the device you are on: (type each command separately, each command does the same thing)
$ curl api.ipify.org
$ curl ipinfo.io/ip
$ curl ifconfig.me
Commands to get your IPV4 and IPV6 addresses:
$ curl -4 icanhazip.com
$ curl -6 icanhazip.com
Example below, we can see my IP (ProtonVPN) π :
$ curl ipinfo.io
Example below, we can see that there is a lot more information on my IP such as city, country, organization, timezone, GPS coordinates:
It also works well with this command (.json format)
$ curl ipinfo.io/json
Below is another command to make sure we really get the JSON
and not the homepage html
$ curl -H "Accept: application/json" ipinfo.io
-H takes a single parameter of an extra header to include in the request and Accept adds the Accept request headers to the request
Let's do more tests using Google's IP address.
Below are the commands when you know the IP address of the target , and as an example below, you want to know the city.
$ curl ipinfo.io/8.8.8.8/city
Results:
Get the Country:
$ curl ipinfo.io/8.8.8.8/country
Get the Organization:
$ curl ipinfo.io/8.8.8.8/org
I particularly like this easy command to get Whois information, this is not my work, it's the work of Sector035 and was shared on an article called dial cURL for Content on OSINTCuriou.us
$ curl cli.fyi/inputdomainhere
Let's test with the website of the French Presidential Palace:
$ curl cli.fyi/elysee.fr
Perfect results: π
I will add my personal touch to this command, with some added color, the color doesn't show as a big difference with these results, but wait until you see how it works further on below with messy results and how the jq
command can really make a difference.
$ curl cli.fyi/elysee.fr | jq --color-output
I really like this command below:
curl -s http://ip-api.com/json/[input Domain or IP address] | jq -r .as
With this API you can input either a domain
or an IP address
, the commands after the IP or domain are jq
which we will talk about further on below, and -r
which means range, you can use -r
or --range
, and depending on the information you require about the domain, you can put: .org or .isp or .city or .country or .RegionName or .as.
-s
just means silent (hiding progress)
Let's try this command:
$ curl -s http://ip-api.com/json/visitiran.ir | jq -r .city
We can see the city is: `Tehran` for the domain we tested on.
There are many sites you can get a Free API Key
from.
One site I like is whoisfreaks, just head over and join and you will get your API Key with 100 API calls.
This is a command for historical whois information:
$ curl -s https://api.whoisfreaks.com/v1.0/whois\?apiKey\=API_Key_here\&whois\=historical\&domainName\=cnn.com | jq --color-output
Don't forget that you can also use grep
if you just want to see email addresses and not the full information.
Grep Website: https://www.gnu.org/software/grep/manual/grep.html
grep prints lines that contain a match for one or more patterns | Regex (Regular Expressions)
Why is it called grep?:
- g/re/p: globally search for a regular expression and print matching lines
This is not my work, this is a fantastic email scraper with a cURL command, grep + regex string.
It was shared by @Spiderfoot:
$ curl -s [YOUR DOMAIN HERE] | grep -E -o "\b[A-Za-z0-9._%+-]+@[A-Za-z0-9.-]+\.[A-Za-z]{2,6}\b"
Let's honor Spiderfoot by taking their domain as an example:
$ curl -s https://www.spiderfoot.net | grep -E -o "\b[A-Za-z0-9._%+-]+@[A-Za-z0-9.-]+\.[A-Za-z]{2,6}\b"
Great result!!! I timed it, it took less than 2 seconds.
It's quite easy becoming a fan of using cURL and Grep and learning about regex (regular expressions)
I enjoyed reading the Spiderfoot explanation below in regards to this cURL + grep command:
The curl command simply prints the HTTP response to https://www.spiderfoot.net, and the grep command contains a regular expression (regex) that finds and prints all emails within the source code. You can see that in this case, it found one, [email protected]. A similar process could be followed to extract other information such as phone numbers, names, hostnames, etc.
Let's take a minute to analyze another Regex string that works for discovering emails:
How an email is structured: support[1]@[2]spiderfoot[3].[4]com[5]
[a-zA-Z0-9._-]\+@[a-zA-Z]\+.[a-zA-Z]\+
- [1] [a-zA-Z0-9._-] The text/username before the @ can be lowercase a-z, uppercase A-Z, numbers 0-9, a period, underscore or hyphen
- [2] [+@] Obviously, this can only be an @ sign,
\+
this just means we want to combine the pattern without breaking it - [3] [a-zA-Z] Same as number 1, we can see here that this regex string does not include numbers, you could have numbers in a domain name, I prefer the string of Spiderfoot.
- [4] [+.] We know there is always a period/dot
.
before acom
ornet
ororg
orus
orgov
, whatever π€ - [5] [a-zA-Z] Lowercase or Uppercase letter for com or net/org/us/io/gov/app/it (as above).
Remember also that the -s
command that Spiderfoot used means silent, and you can do -s
or --silent
to implement it, it does not show the progress meter or error messages but will still output the data βοΈ
$ curl https://www.domain.com
Above, this is the most basic of commands for beginners and will show the full response of the web server hosting that domain, the information returned is long and messy but can be very useful.
*Notice that I put https://www.
in front of the domain name, if I don't, I won't get a correct response, the response will be that the document has moved permanently.
You can avoid typing https://www.
and can avoid the response of a permanent move
with this command:
$ curl -L github.com
-L, or --location
= Follow redirects
View Headers Response with the --head
command:
$ curl --head https://github.com
or
$ curl -I https://github.com
Searching for Tracelabs.org
subdomains.
I did this simple command by looking around at how crt.sh
works:
$ curl -s https://crt.sh/?q=tracelabs.org&output=json | jd --color-output
I added \&output\=json
at the end of the link, and as I mentionned previously, adding | jq --color-output
puts some nice color in the results and jq
seems to act like pprint
in python and sorts results, making them look much neater.
I could also have added -o TL_results.txt
if I just wanted the results in a .txt file, and the -o
command lets us choose the name of the file and format of the file.
Results in .txt:
Let's take this Interpol PDF file as an example that I found with some Dorking: https://rm.coe.int/3148-3-2-eurojust-presentation-interpol-approach-ukim-v2/1680791601
- -o will save your file as you name it, meaning you need to choose a name
- -O will save the file as it was called on the server
$ curl -o interpol.pdf https://rm.coe.int/3148-3-2-eurojust-presentation-interpol-approach-ukim-v2/1680791601
$ curl -O https://rm.coe.int/3148-3-2-eurojust-presentation-interpol-approach-ukim-v2/1680791601
Fantastic and fast! here is my downloaded file as I wanted it with the name I chose:
Below is a command I really like π₯³, you can request a progress bar for large files that take a long time to download:
Use the command
--progress-bar
or-#
, they both do the same thing.
$ curl --progress-bar -o interpol.pdf https://rm.coe.int/3148-3-2-eurojust-presentation-interpol-approach-ukim-v2/1680791601
You can also download multiple files at the same time which is awesome:
$ curl -O url -O url -O url
We downloaded the file using cURL, how about finding emails on it without even opening the file?
cURL and grep are great working together, but for this one, OUT goes cURL and IN comes grep! π
Let's use the below command to see if the interpol file has some emails on it:
$ grep -a -E -o "\b[A-Za-z0-9._%+-]+@[A-Za-z0-9.-]+\.[A-Za-z]{2,6}\b" interpol.pdf
I put the -a
command to force grep to treat the binary file as text, if I don't put it there I keep getting Binary File matches
, without an email being printed.
-E
= extended regular expression (regex)-o
= only matching | Meaning in this case Printing email addresses only
The email was found in a matter of milliseconds, it didn't even reach 1 sec, the PDF is over 20 pages and the email is on the last page so it would have taken much longer to find it, this proves how useful cURL and grep are.
How about searching through domain source code for exact words or phrases? π΅π»ββοΈ
A lot can be found within source code, things can be intentionally hidden there, and if you compete in CTF events, the below command can help you to find something quick within the source code.
This is a fantastic example of combining cURL and grep:
I hid a quote from Mr.Robot (fsociety) in the source code, this is not visible on the website, and manually going through source code can be quite annoying and time consuming.
Let's use the grep -i
command.
grep -i
enables the command to be case insensitive, meaning grep will search for uppercase or lowercase strings that matches the word or phrase.
Command:
$ curl -L tacs-sys.com | grep -i illusion
Bingo!
I created this one in a simple way, I know that I have Google Analytics.
I will need to use cURL and grep together, and these 2 make a deadly team. πͺ
- I want a command that can return a Google UA code fast from any website I choose
- I want to track the progress within my terminal
- I don't want to have to type
https://www.
before the domain name - I will need to use grep and to create a regex string: "UA-[0-9]+", I know that all Google Analytics codes start with UA, a hyphen after the UA, and it can only be numbers after the hyphen and never letters, so pretty easy right?
- -E : Treats pattern as an extended regular expression
- -o : Prints only matched parts
$ curl --progress-bar -L tacs-sys.com | grep -E -o "UA\-[0-9]+"
*Keep in mind that this string I created would work fine too: "UA+-[0-9]+"
With the UA analytics code found, you can then use a reverse analytics site to check if the UA code is linked to another site: https://dnslytics.com/reverse-analytics
A command we saw higher up for searching for IP addresses would also work nicely for reddit conversations
, just add .json
at the end of the Reddit conversation link.
Example: https://www.reddit.com/r/OSINT/comments/wvnko3/how_to_extract_an_email_from_a_google_maps[.json]
$ curl -H "Accept: application/json" https://www.reddit.com/r/OSINT/comments/wvnko3/how_to_extract_an_email_from_a_google_maps.json
You can probably see that the above results look a little messy, the below command will put some color into the results and will put the json
in a tidy format, this is thanks to the jq
command which acts like pprint
in Python.
$ curl -H "Accept: application/json" https://www.reddit.com/r/OSINT/comments/wvnko3/how_to_extract_an_email_from_a_google_maps.json | jq --color-output
As you can see from the command above, if you add | jq --color-output
, you get tidy results and great color which makes it a lot easier for our eyes.
We can see the unix timestamp
on the photo, it's then quite easy to convert this into a date and time as there is many free online converters.
Maybe you want all the information for your investigation in a file.
Simply add the -o
command, meaning output
, and add the file name you choose.
Command Example for the reddit post to get the information output into a file: π
$ curl -H "Accept: application/json" https://www.reddit.com/r/OSINT/comments/wvnko3/how_to_extract_an_email_from_a_google_maps.json -o reddit.json
Below is the result in .json
format, you can request the output file in .txt
, .html
, and more formats, it's up to you.
I learned these commands from Substack.
You can download sed with this command:
brew install gnu-sed
I found the 2003 CIA World Factbook in a .txt file.
This is one pretty awesome command that I will use below and by using cURL combined with sed we can do a lot of interesting stuff.
SED stands for stream editor.
Wikipedia Def:
Sed helps in operations like selecting the text, substituting text, modifying an original file, adding lines to text, or deleting lines from the text.
Command that will print every word in the book on a new line:
$ curl -s https://www.gutenberg.org/files/27558/27558.txt | gsed -r 's/\s+/\n/g'
If you are on mac and downloaded gnu-sed
, you need to use the gsed
command and not sed
.
Try this command also:
$ echo Tactical OSINT Analyst loves to spend time on GitHub | gsed -r 's/\s+/\n/g'
As you can see, each word is on a new line thanks to SED. SED is basically acting like a white space detector, meaning every time there is white space in between a word, SED will treat that as a new line.
Let's bring grep into the picture, let's request to have the word China on a new line every time it's in the book.
curl -s https://www.gutenberg.org/files/27558/27558.txt | gsed -r 's/\s+/\n/g' | grep -i china
This brought back so many results.
Now I would like to know how many times the word China was mentionned in the 2003 CIA World Factbook:
$ curl -s https://www.gutenberg.org/files/27558/27558.txt | gsed -r 's/\s+/\n/g' | grep -i china | wc -l
On the above command, | wc -l
was added, meaning we can get a word count returned.
Total times the word China was mentionned in the book is: 916
Cheat sheet by Daniel Stenberg (Haxx)
Command | Or | Interpretation |
---|---|---|
-E | --extended-regexp | Extended Regular Expressions (Regex). |
--help | --help | Print a usage message |
-V | --version | Print the version number of grep |
-e | --regexp=patterns | Use patterns for Matching |
-a | --text | Process a binary file as if it were text |
-f | --file=FILE | Get patterns from FILE |
-o | --only-matching | Print only matched parts of matching lines |
-r | --recursive | process files in directory, recursively. |
-F | --fixed-strings | Interpret patterns as fixed strings. |
-i | --ignore-case | Ignore case distinctions in patterns. |
-w | --word-regexp | Lines containing matches for whole words. |
-x | --line-regexp | Matches exacrlt the whole lines |
-c | --count | Print count of selected lines per file |
-s | --no-messages | Suppress error messages |
-q | --silent | Quiet, do not write anything to output |
-G | --basic-regexp | patterns as basic regular expressions |
-v | --invert-match | Invert sense of matching (non matching lines) |
-m | --max-count=NUM | Stop after the first num selected lines |
-n | --line-number | Print line number with output lines |
-H | --with-filename | Print file name with output lines |
-L | --files-without-match | Print names of files with no selected lines |
-l | --files-with-match | Print names of files with selected lines |
More information: https://www.gnu.org/software/grep/manual/grep.html