extended-ssrf-search: Smart Server-Side Request Forgery scanner
Extended ssrf search
This tool search for Server-Side Request Forgery (SSRF) using predefined settings in different parts of a request (path, host, headers, post and get parameters).
Download
git clone https://github.com/Damian89/extended-ssrf-search.git
Use
First step
Rename example.app-settings.conf to app-settings.conf and adjust settings. The most important setting is the callback url. I recommend to use burp collaborator. Then you can add your urls to config/url-to-test.txt. Here the script accepts domains as well as urls with path and queryparameters. If you like you can add your own cookies to config/cookie-jar.txt and add additional headers for your requests. The brute force list which is used in post and get requests is currently small, I dont think adding 2000 parameters is smart. We should focus on those which have the highest possibility to be vulnerable. If you don’t think so: just add your own!
Configuration
It’s possible to set a lot of options and settings, so here are some explanations.
Files
The main config file is the “app-settings.conf”, everything has to be done in that file! Besides that, there are some other files that allow setting more complex data like headers, urls, and cookies.
config/cookie-jar.txt
Use this file to add a cookie string. I usually copy the one which you can see in every burp request. Please just copy the value of the “Cookie:”-header. The sample input is in the default file.
config/http-headers.txt
This file defines the http headers which are added to the request and manipulated (payload is added to each one). The most important ones are already in the file. But feel free to add more.
config/parameters.txt
The tool has the option to brute force get and post parameters. In that case, those parameters (+ those in the query string) will be used. Each parameter gets the payload as value. Most important are already in that file.
config/static-request-headers.txt
Those headers are added to every request, but they won’t get manipulated. They are static. That’s the best place to add authorization or bearer cookies. One (Key: Value) per line!
config/urls-to-test.txt
That’s the file you need! Please add here your links to scan. The following formats are allowed:
- https://domain.com
- https://domain.com/path
- https://domain.com/path?param=value¶m1=value1
- domain.com
When the last case is detected an “http://” is prepended. This tool is intended to work with a good list of urls. A good way to get one is to just export it using burp. Then you have a valid list of urls. All you need to do ist to just add your cookies.
Settings
The app-settings.conf defines the program workflow. Its the most important file, you can activate/deactivate different modules there.
Basic settings
CallbackHost
The url/host which all dns and http requests are sent back – I mostly use burp collaborator here, but DNSBin or you own server is also perfect.
HTTPMethod
Defines the request method. Valid options are: GET, POST, PUT, DELETE, PATCH, GET, OPTIONS Invalid values will produce massive errors since http.client disallows other methods! I dont check if you did something wrong here 😉
HTTPTimeout
Some requests can take longer. Here you can define the max. execution time of one request. I recommend the values between 2 and 6 seconds.
MaxThreads
The more threads, the faster the script is – but since we are dealing with a lot of connections I usually keep this below 10 on my personal computer and around 30 on my VPS.
ShuffleTests
Especially when dealing with a BIG list of urls having this set to “true” will shuffle all created tests. That way the same host will not get hit that much. If you scan just one host than it doesn’t matter.
GetChunkSize
When working with bigger param lists this might be handy and prevent 400 too large entity errors.
Insertion points
Each insertion point can be activated (set to true/1) or deactivated (set to false/0)
InPath
The example shows a GET request, but depending on your settings, this could also be POST, PUT, DELETE, …
GET [INJECT HERE PAYLOAD] HTTP/1.1 ...
InHost
The example shows a GET request, but depending on your settings, this could also be POST, PUT, DELETE, …
GET /path HTTP/1.1 Host: [INJECT HERE PAYLOAD] ...
InAdditionalHeaders
The example shows a GET request, but depending on your settings, this could also be POST, PUT, DELETE, …
GET /path HTTP/1.1 ... X-Forwarded-For: [INJECT HERE PAYLOAD]
InParamsGet
Here the Method is fixed to GET.
GET /path?[INJECT HERE PAYLOAD] HTTP/1.1 ...
InParamsPost
Here the Method is fixed to POST.
POST /path HTTP/1.1
…
Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded
Content-Length: ZZZ[INJECT HERE PAYLOAD]
InParamsPostAsJson
Here the Method is fixed to POST.
POST /path HTTP/1.1
…
Content-Type: application/json
Content-Length: ZZZ[INJECT HERE JSON-PAYLOAD]
Attacks
In the default settings, this tool just tries to trigger http requests via SSRF. But its also possible to exfiltrate data using DNS, when an OS command is injected. The most common payload is “$(hostname)”. There are some options which allow to use this kind of attack additionally.
UseExecPayload
Using this setting you can activate/deactivate that behavior.
ExecPayload
Here you can define your own payload, e.g. $(uname -a)
Identifier
To make the identification a little bit easier a combination of current host and method (in short form, see Tests.py) is appended or prepended to the payload.
Position
Valid options are “append” and “prepend”!
If “append” is chosen, the payloads look like this:
....burpcollaborator.net/www.attacked-domain.com-testmethod http://....burpcollaborator.net/www.attacked-domain.com-testmethod
If “prepend” is chosen, the payloads look like this:
www.attacked-domain.com-testmethod.burpcollaborator.net http://www.attacked-domain.com-testmethod.burpcollaborator.net/
Tunneling
Its also possible to use a tunnel, e.g. “127.0.0.1:8080” (Burp Proxy), to monitor all traffic within Burp.
Active
Setting this to “true” will force the script to use a tunneled connection.
Tunnel
Set here your proxy server “ip:port”.
The result is the following one when you open Burp you can watch your http history:
Execution
python3 extended-ssrf-search.py
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Source: https://github.com/Damian89/