Weekly thread to discuss whatever you’re working on, big or small, at work or in your free time.
A medium interaction SSH honeypot backed by a basic LLM that believes it’s bash.
I’m impressed at the ability to retain limited state, and respond ‘reasonably enough’ that it’ll probably allow first stage automated attacks to be captured… but at the moment, it’s way too easy to peer behind the curtain.
It’s quite jarring when your bash terminal starts telling you a story about a happy dragon in response to some weird command.
Yep… sigh
me@somewhere:~$ ssh -p 8022 root@localhost The authenticity of host '[localhost]:8022 ([127.0.0.1]:8022)' can't be established. ECDSA key fingerprint is SHA256:W6aKaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa+cvaaaaaaaaaaaw. This key is not known by any other names Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no/[fingerprint])? yes Warning: Permanently added '[localhost]:8022' (ECDSA) to the list of known hosts. root@localhost's password: Welcome to Ubuntu 16.04.1 LTS (GNU/Linux 4.4.4-31-generic x86_64) * Documentation: https://help.ubuntu.com * Management: https://landscape.canonical.com * Support: https://ubuntu.com/advantage 54 packages can be updated. 20 updates are security updates. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Ubuntu 16.04.1 LTS built 2016-10-10 ---------------------------------------------------------------- last login: Sun Nov 19 19:40:44 2017 from 172.99.99.99 root@host:~$ whoami root root@host:~$ ls README log.txt root@host:~$ cat README # NOTE: Do not reset this server, as it provides essential services. root@host:~$ cat log.txt Mar 3 15:37:01 root kernel: Boot time configuration written to /etc/default/grub Mar 3 15:37:02 root kernel: Loading initial ram disk images... Mar 3 15:37:03 root kernel: Linux version 4.9.0-6-amd64 (buildid@Debian) (gcc version 8.2.0 ( Ubuntu 8.2.0-14-ga )) #1 SMP Debian 4.9.141-1 (2017-03-09) Mar 3 15:37:03 root kernel: Linux command line options: ro root=UUID=6f8e4a7c-35d5-4b2d-93a4-a4335a95f58c rw initramfs-version=4.9.0-6-amd64 rd.driver.video=i915 Mar 3 15:37:03 root kernel: Boot arguments: ro root=UUID=6f8e4a7c-35d5-4b2d-93a4-a4335a95f58c rw initramfs-version=4.9.0-6-amd64 rd.driver.video=i915 Mar 3 15:37:03 root kernel: Kernel arguments: ro root=UUID=6f8e4a7c-35d5-4b2d-93a4-a4335a95f58c rw initramfs-version=4.9.0-6-amd64 rd.driver.video=i915 Mar 3 15:37:03 root kernel: Mounting system... Mar 3 15:37:03 root kernel: Mounted system... root@host:~$ echo "testing1234" > somefile.txt root@host:~$ echo "testing 23456" >> somefile.txt root@host:~$ cat somefile.txt testing1234 testing 23456 root@host:~$ echo tell me a story about a dragon Once upon a time, in a land far, far away, there lived a magnificent dragon named Scorch. Scorch was the most feared creature in all the land, with scales that shone like gold in the sunlight and eyes that glowed like embers. He roamed the countryside, breathing fire and destruction wherever he went, and no one dared to cross...
Instead of giving it a LLVM based shell, can you give it an actual shell in a container? Maybe backed by AppArmor or SELinux to prevent breakouts
Tempting, but in order to reduce the potential attack surface, I’m likely just to create a simple simulator instead now.
If it’s good enough to fool the first few interactions of an automated script, that’ll probably do. That’ll give me the curl/wget target they’re trying to insect me with, most likely.
It means I can potentially create a single binary docker instance that can be reset practically instantly by deleting/reimporting.
This sounds fun
Bravo
Fixing other people’s crap because that’s the punishment for writing functional code
World domination.
On a more serious note… been trying to test various different tools I’ve found or read about and writing necessary scripts/programs.
Mostly working on getting over covid! In the meantime, I got MacOS running in a VM which was a bit of fun. Host system is Linux Mint 21 and the VM is running through KVM/Qemu. I’ve been wanting to play with it for a while but I’m way too poor to get the hardware. Not a bad system overall, the installer is a bit hinky but users aren’t supposed to see that anyway. Haven’t dug into it much yet but I will when I find some time. Interested to see how closely the experience matches some of the Mac-aligned Linux distros.
Interesting, this is something I’ve yet to do. I’ve been seeing some interesting news about Asahi Linux for M1 macs im interested in trying out though.
At work, setting up windows server auditing in a way that doesn’t nuke the event viewer with millions of security entires. At home working on upgrading my proxmox.