pwncat is a raw bind and reverse shell handler. It streamlines common red team operations and all staging code is from your own attacker machine, not the target.
After receiving a connection, pwncat will setup some common configurations when working with remote shells.
- Unset the
HISTFILEenvironment variable to disable command history - Normalize shell prompt
- Locate useful binaries (using
which) - Attempt to spawn a pseudoterminal (pty) for a full interactive session
pwncat knows how to spawn pty's with a few different methods and will
cross-reference the methods with the executables previously enumerated. After
spawning a pty, it will setup the controlling terminal in raw mode, so you can
interact in a similar fashion to ssh.
pwncat will also synchronize the remote pty settings (such as rows, columns,
TERM environment variable) with your local settings to ensure the shell
behaves correctly.
To showcase a little bit of the cool functionality, I have recorded a short asciinema cast.
pwncat documentation is being built out on Read the Docs. Head there for the latest usage and development documentation!
pwncat only depends on a working Python development environment. In order
to install some of the packages required with pip, you will likely need
your distribution's "Python Development" package. On Debian based systems,
this is python-dev. For Arch, the development files are shipped with the
main Python repository. For Enterprise Linux, the package is named
python-devel.
pwncat is configured as a standard python package with distutils. You
can install pwncat directly from GitHub with:
pip install git+https://github.com/calebstewart/pwncat.gitOr, you can install after cloning the repository with:
python setup.py installpwncat depends on a custom fork of both prompt_toolkit and paramiko.
The forks of these repositories simply added some small features which
weren't accessible in published releases. Pull requests have been submitted
upstream, but until they are (hopefully) merged, pwncat will continue to
explicitly reference these forks. As a result, it is recommended to run
pwncat from within a virtual environment in order to not pollute your
system environment with the custom packages. To setup a virtual environment
and install pwncat, you can use:
python3 -m venv pwncat-env
source pwncat-env/bin/activate
python setup.py installIf you would like to develop custom privilege escalation or persistence
modules, we recommend you use the develop target vice the install target
for setup.py. This allows changes to the local repository to immediately
be observed with your installed package.
pwncat provides two main features. At it's core, it's goal is to automatically
setup a remote PseudoTerminal (pty) which allows interaction with the remote
host much like a full SSH session. When operating in a pty, you can use common
features of your remote shell such as history, line editing, and graphical
terminal applications.
The other half of pwncat is a framework which utilizes your remote shell to
perform automated enumeration, persistence and privilege escalation tasks. The
local pwncat prompt provides a number of useful features for standard
penetration tests including:
- File upload and download
- Automated privilege escalation enumeration
- Automated privielge escalation execution
- Automated persistence installation/removal
- Automated tracking of modified/created files
pwncatalso offers the ability to revert these remote "tampers" automatically
The underlying framework for interacting with the remote host aims to abstract away the underlying shell and connection method as much as possible, allowing commands and plugins to interact seamlessly with the remote host.
You can learn more about interacting with pwncat and about the underlying framework
in the documentation. If you have an idea for a
new privilege escalation method or persistence method, please take a look at the
API documentation specifically. Pull requests are welcome!
pwncat would like to be come a red team swiss army knife. Hopefully soon, more features will be added.
- More privilege escalation methods (sudo -u#-1 CVE, LXD containers, etc.)
- Persistence methods (bind shell, cronjobs, SSH access, PAM abuse, etc.)
- Aggression methods (spam randomness to terminals, flush firewall, etc.)
- Meme methods (terminal-parrot, cowsay, wall, etc.)
- Network methods (port forward, internet access through host, etc.)
Because pwncat is trying to abstractly interact with any shell with minimal remote system
dependencies, there are some edge cases we have found. Where we find them, we do
everything we can to account for them and hide them from the user. However, some have
slipped through the cracks and been observed in the wild. When this happens, pwncat
will do whatever it can to preserve your terminal, but you may be greeted with some
peculiar output or command failures.
The Debian shell dash aims to be a very minimalistic shell. It's focus is not on user
interface, but on running scripts quickly and correctly. As a result, some of the features
we expect from an interactive shell simply don't work in dash. pwncat tries not to
depend on a specific shell environment, so if you start your reverse or bind shell with
/bin/sh or /bin/dash, then you may get a weird prompt. dash does not obey the
terminal escape sequences which pwncat adds, so you may get a very long terminal like this:
\[\033[01;31m\](remote)\[\033[00m\] \[\033[01;33m\]\u@\h\[\033[00m\]:\[\033[01;36m\]\w\[\033[00m\]$Currently, the only workaround is to use the prompt command at the local pwncat prompt.
The command allows you to modify the prompt which pwncat will automatically set whenever
resetting the remote terminal. Two options are provided: "basic" and "fancy". The "fancy"
prompt is the default which causes the above output in Dash. To switch to the basic prompt
you can use the following command at the pwncat prompt:
prompt --basicWhile this is inconvenient, it does not affect the behaviour of pwncat. All pwncat
features will continue to function properly no matter what your prompt looks like.
While BSD is a Unix-based kernel, in practice it's userland tools are noticeably
different from their Linux counterparts. Due to this, many of the automated
features of pwncat will not work or outright fail when running against a BSD
based target. I have tried to catch all errors or edge cases, however there are
likely some hiccups which haven't been fully tested against BSD. In any case,
the stabilized shell should function within a BSD environment, but I don't
provide any guarantees.
If I find some time later down the road, I may try to stabilize pwncat on BSD,
but for now my focus is on Linux-based distributions. If you'd like to
contribute to making pwncat behave better on BSD, you are more then welcome to
reach out or just fork the repo. As always, pull requests are welcome!