novahot
is a webshell framework for penetration testers. It implements a
JSON-based API that can communicate with trojans written in any language. By
default, it ships with trojans written in PHP, ruby, and python.
Beyond executing system commands, novahot
is able to emulate interactive
terminals, including mysql
, sqlite3
, and psql
. It additionally implements
"virtual commands" that make it possible to upload, download, edit, and view
remote files locallly using your preferred applications.
Install the executable directly from npm:
[sudo] npm install -g novahot
Then seed a config file:
novahot config > ~/.novahotrc
-
View the available trojans with
novahot trojan list
. -
Select a trojan in a language that is appropriate for your target, then copy its source to a new file. (Ex:
novahot trojan view basic.php > ~/my-trojan.php
) -
Change the control password in the newly-created trojan.
-
Upload the trojan to a web-accessible location on the target.
-
Configure target information in the
targets
property in~/.novahotrc
. -
Run
novahot shell <target>
to open a shell.
Internally, novahot
uses "modes" and "adapters" to emulate various
interactive clients, currently including the mysql
, psql
(postgres), and
sqlite3
clients.
To change novahot
's mode, issue the appropriate "dot command":
.mysql { "username" : "mysql-user", "password" : "the-password", "database" : "the-database" }
(Connection parameters may be specified as JSON while changing modes, or
alternatively saved as target configuration data in ~/.novahotrc
.)
For example, the mysql
mode makes it possible to directly run queries like
the following:
mysql> SELECT ID, user_login, user_email, user_pass FROM wp_users;
There additionally exists a payload
mode that can be used to POST
arbitrary
data to the trojan. See the wiki for more information.
novahot
implements four "virtual commands" that utilize payloads built in
to the trojans to extend the functionality of the shell:
download <remote-filename> [<local-filename>]
Downloads <remote-filename>
to --download-dir
, and optionally renames it to
<local-filename>
if specified.
upload <local-filename> [<remote-filename>]
Uploads <local-filename>
to the shell's cwd
, and optionally renames
<local-filename>
to <remote-filename>
if specified.
view <remote-filename> [<local-filename>]
Downloads <remote-filename>
to --download-dir
, and optionally renames it to
<local-filename>
After downloading, the file will be opened by the "viewer"
application specified in the configs.
edit <remote-filename>
Downloads <remote-filename>
to a temporary file, and then opens that file for
editing using the "editor" specified in the configs.
Afterward, if changes to the file are saved locally, the file will be
re-uploaded to the server automatically.
This repository contains a laboratory environment built on Vagrant, Docker, and the Damn Vulnerable Web Application ("DVWA"). Steps for provisioning the environment vary depending on the capabilities of your physical host.
If you have docker
and docker-compose
installed on your physical host, you
may simply do the following:
- Clone and
cd
to this repository - Run:
docker-compose up
After the docker container starts, the DVWA will be accessible at http://localhost:80.
If docker
is not installed on your physical host, you may use
Vagrant/Virtualbox to access a docker-capable virtual-machine:
- Clone and
cd
to this repository - Provision a virtual machine:
vagrant up
- SSH into the virtual machine:
vagrant ssh
- Start the docker container:
sudo su; cd /vagrant; docker-compose up
The DVWA will be accessible at http://localhost:8000.
Specify the following connection strings in your ~/.novahotrc
file to connect
the novahot
client to the PHP trojan embedded in the DVWA container:
{
"targets": {
"dvwa" : {
"uri" : "http://localhost:8000/novahot.php",
"password" : "the-password",
"mysql" : {
"username": "root",
"password": "vulnerables",
"database": "dvwa"
}
}
}
}
You may then establish a webshell via:
novahot shell dvwa
Additional information can be found in the wiki: