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| Subject: | Re: [Full-disclosure] 0trace - traceroute on established connections |
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| Date: | Tue, 09 Jan 2007 03:21:03 -0500 |
LFT is similar to tcptraceroute in that it uses TCP SYN probes. As Michal stated in his original message, 0trace is different as it piggybacks on an already established TCP connection. Regards, Jon Oberheide On Tue, 2007-01-09 at 09:03 +0100, Alessandro Dellavedova wrote:
Hi, am I wrong or the mechanism that you implement is similar to the one implemented in lft (Layer Four Traceroute http://pwhois.org/lft/ ) ? From the homepage: "LFT is the all-in-one traceroute tool because it can launch a variety of different probes using both UDP and TCP layer-4 protocols. For example, rather than only launching UDP probes in an attempt to elicit ICMP "TTL exceeded" from hosts in the path, LFT can send TCP SYN or FIN probes to target arbitrary services. Then, LFT listens for "TTL exceeded" messages, TCP RST (reset), and various other interesting heuristics from firewalls or other gateways in the path. LFT also distinguishes between TCP-based protocols (source and destination), which make its statistics slightly more realistic, and gives a savvy user the ability to trace protocol routes, not just layer-3 (IP) hops. With LFT's verbose output, much can be discovered about a target network." Ciao, Alessandro On Jan 7, 2007, at 12:53 AM, Michal Zalewski wrote:I'd like to announce the availability of a free security reconnaissance / firewall bypassing tool called 0trace. This tool enables the user to perform hop enumeration ("traceroute") within an established TCP connection, such as a HTTP or SMTP session. This is opposed to sending stray packets, as traceroute-type tools usually do. The important benefit of using an established connection and matching TCP packets to send a TTL-based probe is that such traffic is happily allowed through by many stateful firewalls and other defenses without further inspection (since it is related to an entry in the connection table). I'm not aware of any public implementations of this technique, even though the concept itself is making rounds since 2000 or so; because of this, I thought it might be a good idea to give it a try. [ Of course, I might be wrong, but Google seems to agree with my assessment. A related use of this idea is 'firewalk' by Schiffman and Goldsmith, a tool to probe firewall ACLs; another utility called 'tcptraceroute' by Michael C. Toren implements TCP SYN probes, but since the tool does not ride an existing connection, it is less likely to succeed (sometimes a handshake must be completed with the NAT device before any traffic is forwarded). ] A good example of the difference is www.ebay.com (66.135.192.124) - a regular UDP/ICMP traceroute and tcptraceroute both end like this: 14 as-0-0.bbr1.SanJose1.Level3.net (64.159.1.133) ... 15 ae-12-53.car2.SanJose1.Level3.net (4.68.123.80) ... 16 * * * 17 * * * 18 * * * Let's do the same using 0trace: we first manually telnet to 66.135.192.124 to port 80, then execute: './0trace.sh eth0 66.135.192.124', and finally enter 'GET / HTTP/1.0' (followed by a single, not two newlines) to solicit some client-server traffic but keep the session alive for the couple of seconds 0trace needs to complete the probe. The output is as follows: 10 80.91.249.14 11 213.248.65.210 12 213.248.83.66 13 4.68.110.81 14 4.68.97.33 15 64.159.1.130 16 4.68.123.48 17 166.90.140.134 <--- 18 10.6.1.166 <--- new data 19 10.6.1.70 <--- Target reached. The last three lines reveal firewalled infrastructure, including private addresses used on the inside of the company. This is obviously an important piece of information as far as penetration testing is concerned. Of course, 0trace won't work everywhere and all the time. The tool will not produce interesting results in the following situations: - Target's firewall drops all outgoing ICMP messages, - Target's firewall does TTL or full-packet rewriting, - There's an application layer proxy / load balancer in the way (Akamai, in-house LBs, etc), - There's no notable layer 3 infrastructure behind the firewall. The tool also has a fairly distinctive TCP signature, and as such, it can be detected by IDS/IPS systems. Enough chatter - the tool is available here (Linux version): http://lcamtuf.coredump.cx/soft/0trace.tgz Note: this is a 30-minute hack that involves C code coupled with a cheesy shellscript. It may not work on non-Linux systems, and may fail on some Linuxes, too. It could be improved in a number of ways - so if you like it, rewrite it. Many thanks for Robert Swiecki (www.swiecki.net) for forcing me to finally give this idea some thought and develop this piece. Cheers, /mz _______________________________________________ Full-Disclosure - We believe in it. Charter: http://lists.grok.org.uk/full-disclosure-charter.html Hosted and sponsored by Secunia - http://secunia.com/_______________________________________________ Full-Disclosure - We believe in it. Charter: http://lists.grok.org.uk/full-disclosure-charter.html Hosted and sponsored by Secunia - http://secunia.com/
-- Jon Oberheide <jon@oberheide.org> GnuPG Key: 1024D/F47C17FE Fingerprint: B716 DA66 8173 6EDD 28F6 F184 5842 1C89 F47C 17FE _______________________________________________ Full-Disclosure - We believe in it. Charter: http://lists.grok.org.uk/full-disclosure-charter.html Hosted and sponsored by Secunia - http://secunia.com/
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