Utility for grabbing CDC flags from machines.
Flag slurper contains a utility for automatically attempting default credentials against team's SSH hosts. This works by grabbing the team list from IScorE and a list of all the services. The default credentials it uses are:
root:cdc
cdc:cdc
AutoPWN requires a database. For many cases sqlite will do, but in order to use parallel AutoPWN a server-based database (such as postgres) is required. This is due to sqlite only allowing one writer at a time. The database can be configured in your flagrc file:
[database]
; For sqlite (default)
url=sqlite:///{{ project }}/db.sqlite
; For postgres
url=postgres:///slurper
The {{ project }}
variable is the file path to the current project and is optional.
You first need to create a project and result database:
flag-slurper project init -b ~/cdcs/isu2-18 --name "ISU2 2018"
flag-slurper project create-db
To generate the team and service list you can simply run:
flag-slurper autopwn generate
This will cache the team an service lists into the database. This will be used by other autopwn
commands so they
don't need to keep hitting the IScorE API during the attack phase when the API is getting hammered.
After generating the local files, you can then pwn all the things!
flag-slurper autopwn pwn
This will print out what credentials worked on which machines and any flags found. These results are recorded in the database and can be viewed like this:
flag-slurper autopwn results
Flag slurper has the concept of "projects". These projects tell flag slurper where to find various files such as the
teams.yml
and services.yml
files. It may also contain other configuration options such as where flags are
located. The primary purpose of the project system is to keep data from different CDCs separate.
To create a project run:
flag-slurper project init --base ~/cdcs/isu2-18 --name "ISU2 2018"
This will create a project named "ISU2 2018" in the folder ~/cdcs/isu2-18
. You can then run the following command to
activate the project.
eval $(flag-slurper project env ~/cdcs/isu2-18)
When you want to deactivate a project, run the unslurp
command.
Alternatively, you can specify --project PATH
on each command. For example:
flag-slurper --project ~/cdcs/isu2-18/ autopwn generate
The above command will generate the local cache data and store it in the project.
The Auto PWN feature will automatically look in common directories for flags that look like a flag. You can also specify locations to check. The following project file defines the "Web /root flag"
_version: "1.0"
project: ISU2 2018
base: ~/cdcs/isu2-18
flags:
- service: WWW SSH
type: blue
location: /root
name: team{{ num }}_www_root.flag
search: yes
You can specify as many flags as you want. All of the following fields are required:
- service: The name of the service this flag is associated with. Auto PWN matches against this when determining what flags it should look for when attacking a service.
- type: Which flag type this is
blue
(read) orred
(write). Currently onlyblue
is supported. - location: The directory the flag is supposed to be located in.
- name: The expected file name of the flag. Pay close attention to
{{ num }}
. This is a placeholder that will be replaced with the team number during the attack. - search: Whether Auto PWN should search
location
for any files that are roughly the correct file size. A search is only performed if the flag is not found at it's exact name{{ location }}/{{ name }}
.
Here's an example of an Auto PWN run that obtained flags:
Credentials can be managed through the creds
subcommand. To add a credential:
flag-slurper creds add root cdc
List credentials:
flag-slurper creds ls
Remove credential:
flag-slurper creds rm root cdc
Show details for a credential:
flag-slurper creds show root:cdc