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Habu Hacking Toolkit

I'm developing Habu to teach (and learn) some concepts about Python and Network Hacking.

Some techniques implemented in the current version are:

  • ARP Poisoning and Sniffing
  • DHCP Discover and Starvation
  • Subdomains Identification
  • Certificate Cloning
  • TCP Analysis (ISN, Flags)
  • Username check on social networks
  • Web Techonologies Identification
  • and a lot more!

The development of this software is supported by Securetia SRL (https://www.securetia.com/)

Hacking with Habu

Various useful usage scenarios are detailed in https://fportantier.github.io/hacking-with-habu/

Usage Videos

The following Youtube Playlist has videos that shows the installation and usage:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rgp9seLLyqE&list=PL4HZnX8VnFXqSvNw7x-bXOn0dgxNdfnVD

Telegram Group

If you want to discuss some Habu features, possible improvements, etc, you can use the Habu Telegram Group: https://t.me/python_habu

Contributing

Issues and pull requests must be sent to github repo: https://github.com/fportantier/habu

Installation

Recommended way to install:

$ python3 -m pip install --upgrade git+https://github.com/fportantier/habu.git

This must works on any system that has Python 3 installed.

Note: On some systems (like Microsoft Windows) you must adjust the command to point to the correct path of the Python executable.

Upgrade

Now we have a command to upgrade directly from the Git repo and clean any old command that not longer exists or that has been renamed.

$ habu.upgrade

Get Help

All the commands implement the option '--help', that shows the help, arguments, options, and default values.

Verbose Mode

Almost all commands implement the verbose mode with the '-v' option. This can give you some extra info about what habu is doing.

Commands Index

habu.arp.ping

Usage: habu.arp.ping [OPTIONS] IP

  Send ARP packets to check if a host it's alive in the local network.

  Example:

  # habu.arp.ping 192.168.0.1
  Ether / ARP is at a4:08:f5:19:17:a4 says 192.168.0.1 / Padding

Options:
  -i TEXT  Interface to use
  -v       Verbose output
  --help   Show this message and exit.

habu.arp.poison

Usage: habu.arp.poison [OPTIONS] VICTIM1 VICTIM2

  Send ARP 'is-at' packets to each victim, poisoning their ARP tables for
  send the traffic to your system.

  Note: If you want a full working Man In The Middle attack, you need to
  enable the packet forwarding on your operating system to act like a
  router. You can do that using:

  # echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward

  Example:

  # habu.arpoison 192.168.0.1 192.168.0.77
  Ether / ARP is at f4:96:34:e5:ae:1b says 192.168.0.77
  Ether / ARP is at f4:96:34:e5:ae:1b says 192.168.0.70
  Ether / ARP is at f4:96:34:e5:ae:1b says 192.168.0.77
  ...

Options:
  -i TEXT  Interface to use
  -v       Verbose
  --help   Show this message and exit.

habu.arp.sniff

Usage: habu.arp.sniff [OPTIONS]

  Listen for ARP packets and show information for each device.

  Columns: Seconds from last packet | IP | MAC | Vendor

  Example:

  1   192.168.0.1     a4:08:f5:19:17:a4   Sagemcom Broadband SAS
  7   192.168.0.2     64:bc:0c:33:e5:57   LG Electronics (Mobile Communications)
  2   192.168.0.5     00:c2:c6:30:2c:58   Intel Corporate
  6   192.168.0.7     54:f2:01:db:35:58   Samsung Electronics Co.,Ltd

Options:
  -i TEXT  Interface to use
  --help   Show this message and exit.

habu.asydns

Usage: habu.asydns [OPTIONS]

  Requests a DNS domain name based on public and private RSA keys using the
  AsyDNS protocol https://github.com/portantier/asydns

  Example:

  $ habu.asydns -v
  Generating RSA key ...
  Loading RSA key ...
  {
      "ip": "181.31.41.231",
      "name": "07286e90fd6e7e6be61d6a7919967c7cf3bbfb23a36edbc72b6d7c53.a.asydns.org"
  }

  $ dig +short 07286e90fd6e7e6be61d6a7919967c7cf3bbfb23a36edbc72b6d7c53.a.asydns.org
  181.31.41.231

Options:
  -u TEXT  API URL
  -g       Force the generation of a new key pair
  -r       Revoke the public key
  -v       Verbose output
  --help   Show this message and exit.

habu.b64

Usage: habu.b64 [OPTIONS] [F]

  Encodes or decode data in base64, just like the command base64.

  $ echo awesome | habu.b64
  YXdlc29tZQo=

  $ echo YXdlc29tZQo= | habu.b64 -d
  awesome

Options:
  -d      decode instead of encode
  --help  Show this message and exit.

habu.cert.clone

Usage: habu.cert.clone [OPTIONS] HOSTNAME PORT KEYFILE CERTFILE

  Connect to an SSL/TLS server, get the certificate and generate a
  certificate with the same options and field values.

  Note: The generated certificate is invalid, but can be used for social
  engineering attacks

  Example:

  $ habu.certclone www.google.com 443 /tmp/key.pem /tmp/cert.pem

Options:
  --copy-extensions  Copy certificate extensions (default: False)
  --expired          Generate an expired certificate (default: False)
  -v                 Verbose
  --help             Show this message and exit.

habu.cert.crtsh

Usage: habu.cert.crtsh [OPTIONS] DOMAIN

  Downloads the certificate transparency logs for a domain and check with
  DNS queries if each subdomain exists.

  Uses multithreading to improve the performance of the DNS queries.

  Example:

  $ habu.crtsh securetia.com
  alt.securetia.com
  other.securetia.com
  www.securetia.com

Options:
  -c      Disable cache
  -n      Disable DNS subdomain validation
  -v      Verbose output
  --json  Print the output in JSON format
  --help  Show this message and exit.

habu.cert.names

Usage: habu.cert.names [OPTIONS] [NETWORK]

  Connects to each host/port and shows a summary of the certificate names.

  The hosts to connect to are taken from two possible options:

  1. -i option (default: stdin). A file where each line is a host or network

  2. An argument that can be a host or network

  If you use both methods, the hosts and networks are merged into one list.

  Example:

  $ habu.cert.names 2.18.60.240/29
  2.18.60.241         443 i.s-microsoft.com microsoft.com privacy.microsoft.com
  2.18.60.242         443 aod-ssl.itunes.apple.com aod.itunes.apple.com aodp-ssl.itunes.apple.com
  2.18.60.243         443 *.mlb.com mlb.com
  2.18.60.244         443 [SSL: TLSV1_ALERT_INTERNAL_ERROR] tlsv1 alert internal error (_ssl.c:1056)
  2.18.60.245         443 cert2-cn-public-ubiservices.ubi.com cert2-cn-public-ws-ubiservices.ubi.com
  2.18.60.246         443 *.blog.sina.com.cn *.dmp.sina.cn

  aod.itunes.apple.com
  aodp-ssl.itunes.apple.com
  aod-ssl.itunes.apple.com
  *.blog.sina.com.cn
  cert2-cn-public-ubiservices.ubi.com
  cert2-cn-public-ws-ubiservices.ubi.com
  *.dmp.sina.cn
  i.s-microsoft.com microsoft.com
  *.mlb.com mlb.com
  privacy.microsoft.com

Options:
  -p TEXT      Ports to connect to (comma separated list)
  -i FILENAME  Input file (Default: stdin)
  -t FLOAT     Time to wait for each connection
  -v           Verbose output
  --json       Print the output in JSON format
  --help       Show this message and exit.

habu.config.del

Usage: habu.config.del [OPTIONS] KEY

  Delete a KEY from the configuration.

  Note: By default, KEY is converted to uppercase.

  Example:

  $ habu.config.del DNS_SERVER

Options:
  --help  Show this message and exit.

habu.config.set

Usage: habu.config.set [OPTIONS] KEY VALUE

  Set VALUE to the config KEY.

  Note: By default, KEY is converted to uppercase.

  Example:

  $ habu.config.set DNS_SERVER 8.8.8.8

Options:
  --help  Show this message and exit.

habu.config.show

Usage: habu.config.show [OPTIONS]

  Show the current config.

  Note: By default, the options with 'KEY' in their name are shadowed.

  Example:

  $ habu.config.show
  {
      "DNS_SERVER": "8.8.8.8",
      "FERNET_KEY": "*************"
  }

Options:
  -k, --show-keys   Show also the key values
  --option TEXT...  Write to the config(KEY VALUE)
  --help            Show this message and exit.

habu.crack.luhn

Usage: habu.crack.luhn [OPTIONS] NUMBER

  Having known values for a Luhn validated number, obtain the possible
  unknown numbers.

  Numbers that use the Luhn algorithm for validation are Credit Cards, IMEI,
  National Provider Identifier in the United States, Canadian Social
  Insurance Numbers, Israel ID Numbers and Greek Social Security Numbers
  (ΑΜΚΑ).

  The '-' characters are ignored.

  Define the missing numbers with the 'x' character.

  Reference: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luhn_algorithm

  Example:

  $ habu.crack.luhn 4509-xx08-3160-6445
  4509000831606445
  4509180831606445
  4509260831606445
  4509340831606445
  4509420831606445
  4509590831606445
  4509670831606445
  4509750831606445
  4509830831606445
  4509910831606445

Options:
  --help  Show this message and exit.

habu.crack.snmp

Usage: habu.crack.snmp [OPTIONS] IP

  Launches snmp-get queries against an IP, and tells you when finds a valid
  community string (is a simple SNMP cracker).

  The dictionary used is the distributed with the onesixtyone tool
  https://github.com/trailofbits/onesixtyone

  Example:

  # habu.crack.snmp 179.125.234.210
  Community found: private
  Community found: public

  Note: You can also receive messages like \<UNIVERSAL\> \<class
  'scapy.asn1.asn1.ASN1\_Class\_metaclass'\>, I don't know how to supress
  them for now.

Options:
  -p INTEGER  Port to use
  -c TEXT     Community (default: list of most used)
  -s          Stop after first match
  -v          Verbose
  --help      Show this message and exit.

habu.crypto.fernet

Usage: habu.crypto.fernet [OPTIONS]

  Fernet cipher.

  Uses AES-128-CBC with HMAC

  Note: You must use a key to cipher with Fernet.

  Use the -k paramenter or set the FERNET_KEY configuration value.

  The keys can be generated with the command habu.crypto.fernet.genkey

  Reference: https://github.com/fernet/spec/blob/master/Spec.md

  Example:

  $ "I want to protect this string" | habu.crypto.fernet
  gAAAAABbXnCGoCULLuVNRElYTbEcwnek9iq5jBKq9JAN3wiiBUzPqpUgV5oWvnC6xfIA...

  $ echo gAAAAABbXnCGoCULLuVNRElYTbEcwnek9iq5jBKq9JAN3wiiBUzPqpUgV5oWvnC6xfIA... | habu.crypto.fernet -d
  I want to protect this string

Options:
  -k TEXT        Key
  -d             Decrypt instead of encrypt
  --ttl INTEGER  Time To Live for timestamp verification
  -i FILENAME    Input file (default: stdin)
  -o FILENAME    Output file (default: stdout)
  --help         Show this message and exit.

habu.crypto.fernet.genkey

Usage: habu.crypto.fernet.genkey [OPTIONS]

  Generate a new Fernet Key, optionally write it to ~/.habu.json

  Example:

  $ habu.crypto.fernet.genkey
  xgvWCIvjwe9Uq7NBvwO796iI4dsGD623QOT9GWqnuhg=

Options:
  -w      Write this key to ~/.habu.json
  --help  Show this message and exit.

habu.crypto.gppref

Usage: habu.crypto.gppref [OPTIONS] PASSWORD

  Decrypt the password of local users added via Windows 2008 Group Policy
  Preferences.

  This value is the 'cpassword' attribute embedded in the Groups.xml file,
  stored in the domain controller's Sysvol share.

  Example:

  # habu.crypto.gppref AzVJmXh/J9KrU5n0czX1uBPLSUjzFE8j7dOltPD8tLk
  testpassword

Options:
  --help  Show this message and exit.

habu.crypto.hasher

Usage: habu.crypto.hasher [OPTIONS] [F]

  Compute various hashes for the input data, that can be a file or a stream.

  Example:

  $ habu.crypto.hasher README.rst
  md5          992a833cd162047daaa6a236b8ac15ae README.rst
  ripemd160    0566f9141e65e57cae93e0e3b70d1d8c2ccb0623 README.rst
  sha1         d7dbfd2c5e2828eb22f776550c826e4166526253 README.rst
  sha256       6bb22d927e1b6307ced616821a1877b6cc35e... README.rst
  sha512       8743f3eb12a11cf3edcc16e400fb14d599b4a... README.rst
  whirlpool    96bcc083242e796992c0f3462f330811f9e8c... README.rst

  You can also specify which algorithm to use. In such case, the output is
  only the value of the calculated hash:

  $ habu.hasher -a md5 README.rst
  992a833cd162047daaa6a236b8ac15ae README.rst

Options:
  -a [md5|sha1|sha256|sha512|ripemd160|whirlpool]
                                  Only this algorithm (Default: all)
  --help                          Show this message and exit.

habu.crypto.xor

Usage: habu.crypto.xor [OPTIONS]

  XOR cipher.

  Note: XOR is not a 'secure cipher'. If you need strong crypto you must use
  algorithms like AES. You can use habu.fernet for that.

  Example:

  $ habu.xor -k mysecretkey -i /bin/ls > xored
  $ habu.xor -k mysecretkey -i xored > uxored
  $ sha1sum /bin/ls uxored
  $ 6fcf930fcee1395a1c95f87dd38413e02deff4bb  /bin/ls
  $ 6fcf930fcee1395a1c95f87dd38413e02deff4bb  uxored

Options:
  -k TEXT      Encryption key
  -i FILENAME  Input file (default: stdin)
  -o FILENAME  Output file (default: stdout)
  --help       Show this message and exit.

habu.data.enrich

Usage: habu.data.enrich [OPTIONS]

  Enrich data adding interesting information.

  Example:

  $ cat /var/log/auth.log | habu.data.extract.ipv4 | habu.data.enrich
  [
      {
          "asset": "8.8.8.8",
          "family": "IPAddress",
          "asn": "15169",
          "net": "8.8.8.0/24",
          "cc": "US",
          "rir": "ARIN",
          "asname": "GOOGLE - Google LLC, US"
      },
      {
          "asset": "8.8.4.4",
          "family": "IPAddress",
          "asn": "15169",
          "net": "8.8.4.0/24",
          "cc": "US",
          "rir": "ARIN",
          "asname": "GOOGLE - Google LLC, US"
      }
  ]

Options:
  -i FILENAME  Input file (Default: stdin)
  -v           Verbose output
  --help       Show this message and exit.

habu.data.extract.domain

Usage: habu.data.extract.domain [OPTIONS] [INFILE]

  Extract valid domains from a file or stdin.

  Optionally, check each domain for the presence of NS registers.

  Example:

  $ cat /var/log/some.log | habu.data.extract.domain -c
  google.com
  ibm.com
  redhat.com

Options:
  -c      Check if domain has NS servers defined
  -v      Verbose output
  -j      JSON output
  --help  Show this message and exit.

habu.data.extract.email

Usage: habu.data.extract.email [OPTIONS] [INFILE]

  Extract email addresses from a file or stdin.

  Example:

  $ cat /var/log/auth.log | habu.data.extract.email
  john@securetia.com
  raven@acmecorp.net
  nmarks@fimax.com

Options:
  -v      Verbose output
  -j      JSON output
  --help  Show this message and exit.

habu.data.extract.fqdn

Usage: habu.data.extract.fqdn [OPTIONS] [INFILE]

  Extract FQDNs (Fully Qualified Domain Names) from a file or stdin.

  Example:

  $ cat /var/log/some.log | habu.data.extract.fqdn
  www.google.com
  ibm.com
  fileserver.redhat.com

Options:
  -c      Check if hostname resolves
  -v      Verbose output
  -j      JSON output
  --help  Show this message and exit.

habu.data.extract.ipv4

Usage: habu.data.extract.ipv4 [OPTIONS] [INFILE]

  Extract IPv4 addresses from a file or stdin.

  Example:

  $ cat /var/log/auth.log | habu.data.extract.ipv4
  172.217.162.4
  23.52.213.96
  190.210.43.70

Options:
  -j, --json    JSON output
  -u, --unique  Remove duplicates
  -v            Verbose output
  --help        Show this message and exit.

habu.data.filter

Usage: habu.data.filter [OPTIONS] FIELD [gt|lt|eq|ne|ge|le|in|contains|defin
                          ed|undefined|true|false] [VALUE]

  Filter data based on operators.

  Operator Reference:

  gt:         Greater than
  lt:         Lesser than
  eq:         Equal to
  ne:         Not equal to
  ge:         Greather or equal than
  le:         Lesser or equal than
  in:         Inside the list of values (or inside the network)
  contains:   Contains the value (or the network address)
  defined:    The value is defined
  undefined:  The value is not defined
  true:       The value is True
  false:      The value is False

  Example:

  $ cat /var/log/auth.log | habu.data.extract.ipv4 | habu.data.enrich | habu.data.filter cc eq US
  [
      {
          "item": "8.8.8.8",
          "family": "ipv4_address",
          "asn": "15169",
          "net": "8.8.8.0/24",
          "cc": "US",
          "rir": "ARIN",
          "asname": "GOOGLE - Google LLC, US"
      }
  ]

  Docs: https://fportantier.github.io/hacking-with-habu/user/data-manipulation.html#data-enrichment

Options:
  -i FILENAME  Input file (Default: stdin)
  -v           Verbose output
  --not        Negate the comparison
  --help       Show this message and exit.

habu.data.select

Usage: habu.data.select [OPTIONS] FIELD

  Select a field from a JSON input.

  Example:

  $ cat /var/log/auth.log | habu.data.extract.ipv4 | habu.data.enrich | habu.data.filter cc eq US | habu.data.select asset
  8.8.8.7
  8.8.8.8
  8.8.8.9

Options:
  -i FILENAME  Input file (Default: stdin)
  -v           Verbose output
  --json       JSON output
  --help       Show this message and exit.

habu.dhcp.discover

Usage: habu.dhcp.discover [OPTIONS]

  Send a DHCP request and show what devices has replied.

  Note: Using '-v' you can see all the options (like DNS servers) included
  on the responses.

  # habu.dhcp_discover
  Ether / IP / UDP 192.168.0.1:bootps > 192.168.0.5:bootpc / BOOTP / DHCP

Options:
  -i TEXT     Interface to use
  -t INTEGER  Time (seconds) to wait for responses
  -v          Verbose output
  --help      Show this message and exit.

habu.dhcp.starvation

Usage: habu.dhcp.starvation [OPTIONS]

  Send multiple DHCP requests from forged MAC addresses to fill the DHCP
  server leases.

  When all the available network addresses are assigned, the DHCP server
  don't send responses.

  So, some attacks, like DHCP spoofing, can be made.

  # habu.dhcp_starvation
  Ether / IP / UDP 192.168.0.1:bootps > 192.168.0.6:bootpc / BOOTP / DHCP
  Ether / IP / UDP 192.168.0.1:bootps > 192.168.0.7:bootpc / BOOTP / DHCP
  Ether / IP / UDP 192.168.0.1:bootps > 192.168.0.8:bootpc / BOOTP / DHCP

Options:
  -i TEXT     Interface to use
  -t INTEGER  Time (seconds) to wait for responses
  -s INTEGER  Time (seconds) between requests
  -v          Verbose output
  --help      Show this message and exit.

habu.dns.lookup.forward

Usage: habu.dns.lookup.forward [OPTIONS] HOSTNAME

  Perform a forward lookup of a given hostname.

  Example:

  $ habu.dns.lookup.forward google.com
  {
      "ipv4": "172.217.168.46",
      "ipv6": "2a00:1450:400a:802::200e"
  }

Options:
  -v      Verbose output
  --help  Show this message and exit.

habu.dns.lookup.reverse

Usage: habu.dns.lookup.reverse [OPTIONS] IP_ADDRESS

  Perform a reverse lookup of a given IP address.

  Example:

  $ $ habu.dns.lookup.reverse 8.8.8.8
  {
      "hostname": "google-public-dns-a.google.com"
  }

Options:
  -v      Verbose output
  --help  Show this message and exit.

habu.eicar

Usage: habu.eicar [OPTIONS]

  Print the EICAR test string that can be used to test antimalware engines.

  More info: http://www.eicar.org/86-0-Intended-use.html

  Example:

  $ habu.eicar
  X5O!P%@AP[4\XZP54(P^)7CC)7}$EICAR-STANDARD-ANTIVIRUS-TEST-FILE!$H+H*

Options:
  --help  Show this message and exit.

habu.forkbomb

Usage: habu.forkbomb [OPTIONS] [bash|batch|c|haskell|perl|php|python|ruby]

  A shortcut to remember how to use fork bombs in different languages.

  Currently supported: bash, batch, c, haskell, perl, php, python, ruby.

  Example:

  $ habu.forkbomb c
  #include <unistd.h>
  int main()
  {
      while(1)
      {
          fork();
      }
      return 0;
  }

Options:
  --help  Show this message and exit.

habu.fqdn.finder

Usage: habu.fqdn.finder [OPTIONS] [DOMAINS]...

  Uses various techniques to obtain valid FQDNs for the specified domains.

  1. Try to all FQDNs with DNS zone transfers
  2. Check for Certificate Transparency Logs
  3. Connect to specified ports, obtain SSL certificates and get FQDNs from them
  4. Connect to websites and get FQDNs based on the website links
  5. DNS Brute Force for common names

  The results are cleaned to remove FQDNs that does not resolve by DNS

  Example:

  $ habu.fqdn.finder educacionit.com
  barometrosalarial.educacionit.com
  blog.educacionit.com
  ci.educacionit.com
  educacionit.com
  intranet.educacionit.com
  lecdev.educacionit.com
  lecweb.educacionit.com
  mail.educacionit.com
  plantillas.educacionit.com
  www.educacionit.com

Options:
  -t FLOAT                  Time to wait for each connection
  -v                        Verbose output
  --debug                   Debug output
  --connect / --no-connect  Get from known FQDNs open ports SSL certificates
  --brute / --no-brute      Run DNS brute force against domains
  --links / --no-links      Extract FQDNs from web site links
  --xfr / --no-xfr          Try to do a DNS zone transfer against domains
  --ctlog / --no-ctlog      Try to get FQDNs from Certificate Transparency
                            Logs

  --json                    Print the output in JSON format
  --help                    Show this message and exit.

habu.gateway.find

Usage: habu.gateway.find [OPTIONS] NETWORK

  Try to reach an external IP using any host has a router.

  Useful to find routers in your network.

  First, uses arping to detect alive hosts and obtain MAC addresses.

  Later, create a network packet and put each MAC address as destination.

  Last, print the devices that forwarded correctly the packets.

  Example:

  # habu.find.gateway 192.168.0.0/24
  192.168.0.1 a4:08:f5:19:17:a4 Sagemcom
  192.168.0.7 b0:98:2b:5d:22:70 Sagemcom
  192.168.0.8 b0:98:2b:5d:1f:e8 Sagemcom

Options:
  -i TEXT                Interface to use
  --host TEXT            Host to reach (default: 8.8.8.8)
  --tcp                  Use TCP instead of ICMP
  --dport INTEGER RANGE  Destination port for TCP (default: 80)
  --timeout INTEGER      Timeout in seconds (default: 5)
  -v                     Verbose output
  --help                 Show this message and exit.

habu.host

Usage: habu.host [OPTIONS]

  Collect information about the host where habu is running.

  Example:

  $ habu.host
  {
      "kernel": [
          "Linux",
          "demo123",
          "5.0.6-200.fc29.x86_64",
          "#1 SMP Wed Apr 3 15:09:51 UTC 2019",
          "x86_64",
          "x86_64"
      ],
      "distribution": [
          "Fedora",
          "29",
          "Twenty Nine"
      ],
      "libc": [
          "glibc",
          "2.2.5"
      ],
      "arch": "x86_64",
      "python_version": "3.7.3",
      "os_name": "Linux",
      "cpu": "x86_64",
      "static_hostname": "demo123",
      "fqdn": "demo123.lab.sierra"
  }

Options:
  -v      Verbose output.
  --help  Show this message and exit.

habu.http.headers

Usage: habu.http.headers [OPTIONS] SERVER

  Retrieve the HTTP headers of a web server.

  Example:

  $ habu.http.headers http://duckduckgo.com
  {
      "Server": "nginx",
      "Date": "Sun, 14 Apr 2019 00:00:55 GMT",
      "Content-Type": "text/html",
      "Content-Length": "178",
      "Connection": "keep-alive",
      "Location": "https://duckduckgo.com/",
      "X-Frame-Options": "SAMEORIGIN",
      "Content-Security-Policy": "default-src https: blob: data: 'unsafe-inline' 'unsafe-eval'",
      "X-XSS-Protection": "1;mode=block",
      "X-Content-Type-Options": "nosniff",
      "Referrer-Policy": "origin",
      "Expect-CT": "max-age=0",
      "Expires": "Mon, 13 Apr 2020 00:00:55 GMT",
      "Cache-Control": "max-age=31536000"
  }

Options:
  -v      Verbose output
  --help  Show this message and exit.

habu.http.options

Usage: habu.http.options [OPTIONS] SERVER

  Retrieve the available HTTP methods of a web server.

  Example:

  $ habu.http.options -v http://google.com
  {
      "allowed": "GET, HEAD"
  }

Options:
  -v      Verbose output
  --help  Show this message and exit.

habu.http.tech

Usage: habu.http.tech [OPTIONS] URL

  Uses Wappalyzer apps.json database to identify technologies used on a web
  application.

  Reference: https://github.com/AliasIO/Wappalyzer

  Note: This tool only sends one request. So, it's stealth and not
  suspicious.

  $ habu.web.tech https://woocomerce.com
  Google Tag Manager       unknown
  MySQL                    unknown
  Nginx                    unknown
  PHP                      unknown
  Prototype                unknown
  RequireJS                unknown
  WooCommerce              3.8.0
  WordPress                5.2.4
  Yoast SEO                10.0.1

Options:
  --cache / --no-cache
  --format [txt|csv|json]  Output format
  -v                       Verbose output
  --help                   Show this message and exit.

habu.icmp.ping

Usage: habu.icmp.ping [OPTIONS] IP

  The classic ping tool that send ICMP echo requests.

  # habu.icmp.ping 8.8.8.8
  IP / ICMP 8.8.8.8 > 192.168.0.5 echo-reply 0 / Padding
  IP / ICMP 8.8.8.8 > 192.168.0.5 echo-reply 0 / Padding
  IP / ICMP 8.8.8.8 > 192.168.0.5 echo-reply 0 / Padding
  IP / ICMP 8.8.8.8 > 192.168.0.5 echo-reply 0 / Padding

Options:
  -i TEXT     Wich interface to use (default: auto)
  -c INTEGER  How many packets send (default: infinit)
  -t INTEGER  Timeout in seconds (default: 2)
  -w INTEGER  How many seconds between packets (default: 1)
  -v          Verbose
  --help      Show this message and exit.

habu.ip.asn

Usage: habu.ip.asn [OPTIONS] IP

  Use Team Cymru ip2asn service to get information about a public IPv4/IPv6.

  Reference: https://www.team-cymru.com/IP-ASN-mapping.html

  $ habu.ip.asn 8.8.8.8
  {
      "asn": "15169",
      "net": "8.8.8.0/24",
      "cc": "US",
      "rir": "ARIN",
      "asname": "GOOGLE - Google LLC, US",
      "country": "United States"
  }

Options:
  --help  Show this message and exit.

habu.ip.geolocation

Usage: habu.ip.geolocation [OPTIONS] IP_ADDRESS

  Get the geolocation of an IP adddress from https://ipapi.co/.

  Example:

  $ habu.ip.geolocation 8.8.8.8
  {
      "ip": "8.8.8.8",
      "city": "Mountain View",
      ...
      "asn": "AS15169",
      "org": "Google LLC"
  }

Options:
  -v      Verbose output.
  --help  Show this message and exit.

habu.ip.internal

Usage: habu.ip.internal [OPTIONS]

  Get the local IP address(es) of the local interfaces.

  Example:

  $ habu.ip.internal
  {
    "lo": {
      "ipv4": [
        {
          "addr": "127.0.0.1",
          "netmask": "255.0.0.0",
          "peer": "127.0.0.1"
        }
      ],
      "link_layer": [
        {
          "addr": "00:00:00:00:00:00",
          "peer": "00:00:00:00:00:00"
        }
      ],
      "ipv6": [
        {
          "addr": "::1",
          "netmask": "ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff/128"
        }
      ]
    },
  ...

Options:
  -v      Verbose output.
  --help  Show this message and exit.

habu.ip.public

Usage: habu.ip.public [OPTIONS]

  Get the public IP address of the connection from https://api.ipify.org.

  Example:

  $ habu.ip.public
  80.219.53.185

Options:
  -4, --ipv4  Print your public IPv4 address (default)
  -6, --ipv6  Print your public IPv6 address
  -j, --json  Print the output in JSON format
  --help      Show this message and exit.

habu.karma

Usage: habu.karma [OPTIONS] HOST

  Use the Karma service https://karma.securetia.com to check an IP against
  various Threat Intelligence / Reputation lists.

  $ habu.karma www.google.com
  www.google.com -> 64.233.190.99
  [
      "hphosts_fsa",
      "hphosts_psh",
      "hphosts_emd"
  ]

  Note: You can use the hostname or the IP of the host to query.

Options:
  --help  Show this message and exit.

habu.karma.bulk

Usage: habu.karma.bulk [OPTIONS] [INFILE]

  Show which IP addresses are inside blacklists using the Karma online
  service.

  Example:

  $ cat /var/log/auth.log | habu.extract.ipv4 | habu.karma.bulk
  172.217.162.4   spamhaus_drop,alienvault_spamming
  23.52.213.96    CLEAN
  190.210.43.70   alienvault_malicious

Options:
  --json  JSON output
  --bad   Show only entries in blacklists
  -v      Verbose output
  --help  Show this message and exit.

habu.land

Usage: habu.land [OPTIONS] IP

  This command implements the LAND attack, that sends packets forging the
  source IP address to be the same that the destination IP. Also uses the
  same source and destination port.

  The attack is very old, and can be used to make a Denial of Service on old
  systems, like Windows NT 4.0. More information here:
  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LAND

  # sudo habu.land 172.16.0.10
  ............

  Note: Each dot (.) is a sent packet. You can specify how many packets send
  with the '-c' option. The default is never stop. Also, you can specify the
  destination port, with the '-p' option.

Options:
  -c INTEGER  How many packets send (default: infinit)
  -p INTEGER  Port to use (default: 135)
  -i TEXT     Interface to use
  -v          Verbose
  --help      Show this message and exit.

habu.nc

Usage: habu.nc [OPTIONS] HOST PORT

  Some kind of netcat/ncat replacement.

  The execution emulates the feeling of this popular tools.

  Example:

  $ habu.nc --crlf www.portantier.com 80
  Connected to 45.77.113.133 80
  HEAD / HTTP/1.0

  HTTP/1.0 301 Moved Permanently
  Date: Thu, 26 Jul 2018 21:10:51 GMT
  Server: OpenBSD httpd
  Connection: close
  Content-Type: text/html
  Content-Length: 443
  Location: https://www.portantier.com/

Options:
  --family [4|6|46]            IP Address Family
  --ssl                        Enable SSL
  --crlf                       Use CRLF for EOL sequence
  --protocol [tcp|udp]         Layer 4 protocol to use
  --source-ip TEXT             Source IP to use
  --source-port INTEGER RANGE  Source port to use
  --help                       Show this message and exit.

habu.net.contest

Usage: habu.net.contest [OPTIONS]

  Try to connect to various services and check if can reach them using your
  internet connection.

  Example:

  $ habu.net.contest
  DNS:   True
  FTP:   True
  SSH:   True
  HTTP:  True
  HTTPS: True

Options:
  --help  Show this message and exit.

habu.net.interfaces

Usage: habu.net.interfaces [OPTIONS]

  Show the network interfaces available on the system.

  Example:

  # habu.interfaces
  #  NAME                            MAC                INET             INET6
  0  eth0                            80:fa:5b:4b:f9:18  None             None
  1  lo                              00:00:00:00:00:00  127.0.0.1        ::1
  2  wlan0                           f4:96:34:e5:ae:1b  192.168.0.6      None
  3  vboxnet0                        0a:00:27:00:00:00  192.168.56.1     fe80::800:27ff:fe00:0

Options:
  -j      Output in JSON format
  --help  Show this message and exit.

habu.nmap.excluded

Usage: habu.nmap.excluded [OPTIONS]

  Prints a random port that is not present on nmap-services file so is not
  scanned automatically by nmap.

  Useful for services like SSH or RDP, that are continuously scanned on
  their default ports.

  Example:

  # habu.nmap.excluded
  58567

Options:
  -l INTEGER RANGE  Lowest port to consider
  -h INTEGER RANGE  Highest port to consider
  --help            Show this message and exit.

habu.nmap.open

Usage: habu.nmap.open [OPTIONS] SCANFILE

  Read an nmap report and print the open ports.

  Print the ports that has been resulted open reading the generated nmap
  output.

  You can use it to rapidly reutilize the port list for the input of other
  tools.

  Supports and detects the 3 output formats (nmap, gnmap and xml)

  Example:

  # habu.nmap.open portantier.nmap
  22,80,443

Options:
  -p [tcp|udp|sctp]  The protocol (default=tcp)
  --help             Show this message and exit.

habu.nmap.ports

Usage: habu.nmap.ports [OPTIONS] SCANFILE

  Read an nmap report and print the tested ports.

  Print the ports that has been tested reading the generated nmap output.

  You can use it to rapidly reutilize the port list for the input of other
  tools.

  Supports and detects the 3 output formats (nmap, gnmap and xml)

  Example:

  # habu.nmap.ports portantier.nmap
  21,22,23,80,443

Options:
  -p [tcp|udp|sctp]  The protocol (default=tcp)
  --help             Show this message and exit.

habu.protoscan

Usage: habu.protoscan [OPTIONS] IP

  Send IP packets with different protocol field content to guess what layer
  4 protocols are available.

  The output shows which protocols doesn't generate a 'protocol-unreachable'
  ICMP response.

  Example:

  $ sudo python cmd_ipscan.py 45.77.113.133
  1   icmp
  2   igmp
  4   ipencap
  6   tcp
  17  udp
  41  ipv6
  47  gre
  50  esp
  51  ah
  58  ipv6_icmp
  97  etherip
  112 vrrp
  115 l2tp
  132 sctp
  137 mpls_in_ip

Options:
  -i TEXT     Interface to use
  -t INTEGER  Timeout for each probe (default: 2 seconds)
  --all       Probe all protocols (default: Defined in /etc/protocols)
  -v          Verbose output
  --help      Show this message and exit.

habu.server.ftp

Usage: habu.server.ftp [OPTIONS]

  Basic fake FTP server, whith the only purpose to steal user credentials.

  Supports SSL/TLS.

  Example:

  # sudo habu.server.ftp --ssl --ssl-cert /tmp/cert.pem --ssl-key /tmp/key.pem
  Listening on port 21
  Accepted connection from ('192.168.0.27', 56832)
  Credentials collected from 192.168.0.27! fabian 123456

Options:
  -a TEXT          Address to bind (default: all)
  -p INTEGER       Which port to use (default: 21)
  --ssl            Enable SSL/TLS (default: False)
  --ssl-cert TEXT  SSL/TLS Cert file
  --ssl-key TEXT   SSL/TLS Key file
  -v               Verbose
  --help           Show this message and exit.

habu.shodan

Usage: habu.shodan [OPTIONS] IP

  Simple shodan API client.

  Prints the JSON result of a shodan query.

  Example:

  $ habu.shodan 216.58.222.36
  asn                      AS15169
  isp                      Google
  hostnames                eze04s06-in-f4.1e100.net, gru09s17-in-f36.1e100.net
  country_code             US
  region_code              CA
  city                     Mountain View
  org                      Google
  open_ports               tcp/443, tcp/80

Options:
  --cache / --no-cache
  -v                            Verbose output
  --format [txt|csv|json|nmap]  Output format
  --help                        Show this message and exit.

habu.shodan.query

Usage: habu.shodan.query [OPTIONS] QUERY

  Simple shodan API client.

  Prints the JSON result of a shodan query.

  Example:

  $ habu.shodan 8.8.8.8
  {
      "hostnames": [
          "google-public-dns-a.google.com"
      ],
      "country_code": "US",
      "org": "Google",
      "data": [
          {
              "isp": "Google",
              "transport": "udp",
              "data": "Recursion: enabled",
              "asn": "AS15169",
              "port": 53,
              "hostnames": [
                  "google-public-dns-a.google.com"
              ]
          }
      ],
      "ports": [
          53
      ]
  }

Options:
  -c           Disable cache
  -v           Verbose output
  -o FILENAME  Output file (default: stdout)
  --help       Show this message and exit.

habu.tcp.flags

Usage: habu.tcp.flags [OPTIONS] IP

  Send TCP packets with different flags and tell what responses receives.

  It can be used to analyze how the different TCP/IP stack implementations
  and configurations responds to packet with various flag combinations.

  Example:

  # habu.tcp_flags www.portantier.com
  S  -> SA
  FS -> SA
  FA -> R
  SA -> R

  By default, the command sends all possible flag combinations. You can
  specify which flags must ever be present (reducing the quantity of
  possible combinations), with the option '-f'.

  Also, you can specify which flags you want to be present on the response
  packets to show, with the option '-r'.

  With the next command, you see all the possible combinations that have the
  FIN (F) flag set and generates a response that contains the RST (R) flag.

  Example:

  # habu.tcp_flags -f F -r R www.portantier.com
  FPA  -> R
  FSPA -> R
  FAU  -> R

Options:
  -p INTEGER  Port to use (default: 80)
  -f TEXT     Flags that must be sent ever (default: fuzz with all flags)
  -r TEXT     Filter by response flags (default: show all responses)
  -v          Verbose
  --first     Stop on first response that matches
  --help      Show this message and exit.

habu.tcp.isn

Usage: habu.tcp.isn [OPTIONS] IP

  Create TCP connections and print the TCP initial sequence numbers for each
  one.

  $ sudo habu.tcp.isn -c 5 www.portantier.com
  1962287220
  1800895007
  589617930
  3393793979
  469428558

  Note: You can get a graphical representation (needs the matplotlib
  package) using the '-g' option to better understand the randomness.

Options:
  -p INTEGER  Port to use (default: 80)
  -c INTEGER  How many packets to send/receive (default: 5)
  -i TEXT     Interface to use
  -g          Graph (requires matplotlib)
  -v          Verbose output
  --help      Show this message and exit.

habu.tcp.scan

Usage: habu.tcp.scan [OPTIONS] IP

  TCP Port Scanner.

  Print the ports that generated a response with the SYN flag or (if show
  use -a) all the ports that generated a response.

  It's really basic compared with nmap, but who is comparing?

  Example:

  # habu.tcp.scan -p 22,23,80,443 -s 1 45.77.113.133
  22 S -> SA
  80 S -> SA
  443 S -> SA

Options:
  -p TEXT     Ports to use (default: 80) example: 20-23,80,135
  -i TEXT     Interface to use
  -f TEXT     Flags to use (default: S)
  -s TEXT     Time between probes (default: send all together)
  -t INTEGER  Timeout for each probe (default: 2 seconds)
  -a          Show all responses (default: Only containing SYN flag)
  -v          Verbose output
  --help      Show this message and exit.

habu.tcp.synflood

Usage: habu.tcp.synflood [OPTIONS] IP

  Launch a lot of TCP connections and keeps them opened.

  Some very old systems can suffer a Denial of Service with this.

  Reference: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SYN_flood

  Example:

  # sudo habu.tcp.synflood 172.16.0.10
  .................

  Each dot is a packet sent.

  You can use the options '-2' and '-3' to forge the layer 2/3 addresses.

  If you use them, each connection will be sent from a random layer2 (MAC)
  and/or layer3 (IP) address.

  You can choose the number of connections to create with the option '-c'.
  The default is never stop creating connections.

  Note: If you send the packets from your real IP address and you want to
  keep the connections half-open, you need to setup for firewall to don't
  send the RST packets.

Options:
  -i TEXT     Wich interface to use (default: auto)
  -c INTEGER  How many packets send (default: infinit)
  -p INTEGER  Port to use (default: 135)
  -2          Forge layer2/MAC address (default: No)
  -3          Forge layer3/IP address (default: No)
  -v          Verbose
  --help      Show this message and exit.

habu.traceroute

Usage: habu.traceroute [OPTIONS] IP

  TCP traceroute.

  Identify the path to a destination getting the ttl-zero-during-transit
  messages.

  Note: On the internet, you can have various valid paths to a device.

  Example:

  # habu.traceroute 45.77.113.133
  IP / ICMP 192.168.0.1 > 192.168.0.5 time-exceeded ttl-zero-during-transit / IPerror / TCPerror
  IP / ICMP 10.242.4.197 > 192.168.0.5 time-exceeded ttl-zero-during-transit / IPerror / TCPerror / Padding
  IP / ICMP 200.32.127.98 > 192.168.0.5 time-exceeded ttl-zero-during-transit / IPerror / TCPerror / Padding
  .
  IP / ICMP 4.16.180.190 > 192.168.0.5 time-exceeded ttl-zero-during-transit / IPerror / TCPerror
  .
  IP / TCP 45.77.113.133:http > 192.168.0.5:ftp_data SA / Padding

  Note: It's better if you use a port that is open on the remote system.

Options:
  -p INTEGER  Port to use (default: 80)
  -i TEXT     Interface to use
  --help      Show this message and exit.

habu.upgrade

Usage: habu.upgrade [OPTIONS]

  Upgrade habu (from https://github.com/fportantier/habu)

Options:
  --help  Show this message and exit.

habu.usercheck

Usage: habu.usercheck [OPTIONS] USERNAME

  Check if the given username exists on various social networks and other
  popular sites.

  $ habu.usercheck portantier
  {
      "aboutme": "https://about.me/portantier",
      "disqus": "https://disqus.com/by/portantier/",
      "github": "https://github.com/portantier/",
      "ifttt": "https://ifttt.com/p/portantier",
      "lastfm": "https://www.last.fm/user/portantier",
      "medium": "https://medium.com/@portantier",
      "pastebin": "https://pastebin.com/u/portantier",
      "pinterest": "https://in.pinterest.com/portantier/",
      "twitter": "https://twitter.com/portantier",
      "vimeo": "https://vimeo.com/portantier"
  }

Options:
  -c      Disable cache
  -v      Verbose output
  -w      Open each valid url in a webbrowser
  --help  Show this message and exit.

habu.version

Usage: habu.version [OPTIONS]

Options:
  --help  Show this message and exit.

habu.vhosts

Usage: habu.vhosts [OPTIONS] HOST

  Use Bing to query the websites hosted on the same IP address.

  $ habu.vhosts www.telefonica.com
  www.telefonica.com -> 212.170.36.79
  [
      'www.telefonica.es',
      'universitas.telefonica.com',
      'www.telefonica.com',
  ]

Options:
  -c          Disable cache
  -p INTEGER  Pages count (Default: 10)
  -f INTEGER  First result to get (Default: 1)
  --help      Show this message and exit.

habu.virustotal

Usage: habu.virustotal [OPTIONS] INPUT

  Send a file to VirusTotal https://www.virustotal.com/ and print the report
  in JSON format.

  Note: Before send a file, will check if the file has been analyzed before
  (sending the sha256 of the file), if a report exists, no submission will
  be made, and you will see the last report.

  $ habu.virustotal meterpreter.exe
  Verifying if hash already submitted: f4826b219aed3ffdaa23db26cfae611979bf215984fc71a1c12f6397900cb70d
  Sending file for analysis
  Waiting/retrieving the report...
  {
      "md5": "0ddb015b5328eb4d0cc2b87c39c49686",
      "permalink": "https://www.virustotal.com/file/c9a2252b491641e15753a4d0c4bb30b1f9bd26ecff2c74f20a3c7890f3a1ea23/analysis/1526850717/",
      "positives": 49,
      "resource": "c9a2252b491641e15753a4d0c4bb30b1f9bd26ecff2c74f20a3c7890f3a1ea23",
      "response_code": 1,
      "scan_date": "2018-05-20 21:11:57",
      "scan_id": "c9a2252b491641e15753a4d0c4bb30b1f9bd26ecff2c74f20a3c7890f3a1ea23-1526850717",
      "scans": {
          "ALYac": {
              "detected": true,
              "result": "Trojan.CryptZ.Gen",
              "update": "20180520",
              "version": "1.1.1.5"
          },
          ... The other scanners ...
      },
      "sha1": "5fa33cab1729480dd023b08f7b91a945c16d0a9e",
      "sha256": "c9a2252b491641e15753a4d0c4bb30b1f9bd26ecff2c74f20a3c7890f3a1ea23",
      "total": 67,
      "verbose_msg": "Scan finished, information embedded"
  }

Options:
  -v      Verbose output
  --help  Show this message and exit.

habu.web.report

Usage: habu.web.report [OPTIONS] [INPUT_FILE]

  Makes a report that includes HTTP headers of websites.

  Optionally, uses Firefox or Chromium to take a screenshot of the websites.

  The expected format is one url per line.

  Creates a directory called 'report' with the content inside.

  $ echo https://www.portantier.com | habu.web.report

Options:
  -v                             Verbose output
  -s                             Take a screenshot for each website
  -b [firefox|chromium-browser]  Browser to use for screenshot.
  --help                         Show this message and exit.

habu.web.screenshot

Usage: habu.web.screenshot [OPTIONS] URL

  Uses Firefox or Chromium to take a screenshot of the website.

  $ habu.web.screenshot https://www.portantier.com

Options:
  -b [firefox|chromium-browser]  Browser to use for screenshot.
  -o TEXT                        Output file. (default: screenshot.png)
  --help                         Show this message and exit.

habu.whois.domain

Usage: habu.whois.domain [OPTIONS] DOMAIN

  Simple whois client to check domain names.

  Example:

  $ habu.whois.domain google.com
  registrar                MarkMonitor, Inc.
  whois_server             whois.markmonitor.com
  creation_date            1997-09-15 04:00:00
  expiration_date          2028-09-14 04:00:00
  name_servers             ns1.google.com, ns2.google.com, ns3.google.com, ns4.google.com
  emails                   abusecomplaints@markmonitor.com, whoisrequest@markmonitor.com
  dnssec                   unsigned
  org                      Google LLC
  country                  US
  state                    CA

Options:
  --json  Print the output in JSON format
  --csv   Print the output in CSV format
  --help  Show this message and exit.

habu.whois.ip

Usage: habu.whois.ip [OPTIONS] IP

  Simple whois client to check IP addresses (IPv4 and IPv6).

  Example:

  $ habu.whois.ip 8.8.4.4
  asn                      15169
  asn_registry             arin
  asn_cidr                 8.8.4.0/24
  asn_country_code         US
  asn_description          GOOGLE - Google LLC, US
  asn_date                 1992-12-01

Options:
  --json  Print the output in JSON format
  --csv   Print the output in CSV format
  --help  Show this message and exit.