Cloudfox – Automating Situational Awareness For Cloud Penetration Tests
CloudFox helps you gain situational awareness in unfamiliar cloud environments. It’s an open source
CloudFox is designed to be executed by a principal with limited read-only permissions, but it’s purpose is to help you find attack paths that can be exploited in simulated compromise scenarios (aka, objective based penetration testing).
For the full documentation please refer to our wiki.
Supported Cloud Providers
Provider | CloudFox Commands |
---|---|
AWS | 15 |
Azure | 2 (alpha) |
GCP | Support Planned |
Kubernetes | Support Planned |
Install
Option 1: Download the latest binary release for your platform.
Option 2: Install Go, clone the CloudFox repository and compile from source
# git clone https://github.com/BishopFox/cloudfox.git
...omitted for brevity...
# cd ./cloudfox
# go build .
# ./cloudfox
Prerequisites
AWS
- AWS CLI installed
- Supports AWS profiles, AWS environment variables, or metadata retrieval (on an ec2 instance)
- A principal with one recommended policies attached (described below)
- Recommended attached policies:
SecurityAudit
+ CloudFox custom policy
Additional policy notes (as of 09/2022):
Policy | Notes |
---|---|
CloudFox custom policy | Has a complete list of every permission cloudfox uses and nothing else |
arn:aws:iam::aws:policy/SecurityAudit |
Covers most cloudfox checks but is missing newer services or permissions like apprunner:*, grafana:*, lambda:GetFunctionURL, lightsail:GetContainerServices |
arn:aws:iam::aws:policy/job-function/ViewOnlyAccess |
Covers most cloudfox checks but is missing newer services or permissions like AppRunner:*, grafana:*, lambda:GetFunctionURL, lightsail:GetContainerServices – and is also missing iam:SimulatePrincipalPolicy. |
arn:aws:iam::aws:policy/ReadOnlyAccess |
Only missing AppRunner, but also grants things like “s3:Get*” which can be overly permissive. |
arn:aws:iam::aws:policy/AdministratorAccess |
This will work just fine with CloudFox, but if you were handed this level of access as a penetration tester, that should probably be a finding in itself 🙂 |
Azure
- Viewer or similar permissions applied.
Supported Commands
Provider | Command Name | Description |
---|---|---|
AWS | all-checks | Run all of the other commands using reasonable defaults. You’ll still want to check out the non-default options of each command, but this is a great place to start. |
AWS | access-keys | Lists active access keys for all users. Useful for cross referencing a key you found with which in-scope account it belongs to. |
AWS | buckets | Lists the buckets in the account and gives you handy commands for inspecting them further. |
AWS | ecr | List the most recently pushed image URI from all repositories. Use the loot file to pull selected images down with docker/nerdctl for inspection. |
AWS | endpoints | Enumerates endpoints from various services. Scan these endpoints from both an internal and external position to look for things that don’t require authentication, are misconfigured, etc. |
AWS | env-vars | Grabs the environment variables from services that have them (App Runner, ECS, Lambda, Lightsail containers, Sagemaker are supported. If you find a sensitive secret, use cloudfox iam-simulator AND pmapper to see who has access to them. |
AWS | filesystems | Enumerate the EFS and FSx filesystems that you might be able to mount without creds (if you have the right network access). For example, this is useful when you have ec:RunInstance but not iam:PassRole . |
AWS | iam-simulator | Like pmapper, but uses the IAM policy simulator. It uses AWS’s evaluation logic, but notably, it doesn’t consider transitive access via privesc, which is why you should also always also use pmapper. |
AWS | instances | Enumerates useful information for EC2 Instances in all regions like name, public/private IPs, and instance profiles. Generates loot files you can feed to nmap and other tools for service enumeration. |
AWS | inventory | Gain a rough understanding of size of the account and preferred regions. |
AWS | outbound-assumed-roles | List the roles that have been assumed by principals in this account. This is an excellent way to find outbound attack paths that lead into other accounts. |
AWS | permissions | Enumerates IAM permissions associated with all users and roles. Grep this output to figure out what permissions a particular principal has rather than logging into the AWS console and painstakingly expanding each policy attached to the principal you are investigating. |
AWS | principals | Enumerates IAM users and Roles so you have the data at your fingertips. |
AWS | role-trusts | Enumerates IAM role trust policies so you can look for overly permissive role trusts or find roles that trust a specific service. |
AWS | route53 | Enumerate all records from all route53 managed zones. Use this for application and service enumeration. |
AWS | secrets | List secrets from SecretsManager and SSM. Look for interesting secrets in the list and then see who has access to them using use cloudfox iam-simulator and/or pmapper . |
Azure | instances-map | Enumerates useful information for Compute instances in all available resource groups and subscriptions |
Azure | rbac-map | Enumerates Role Assignments for all tenants |
Authors
- Carlos Vendramini
- Seth Art (@sethsec)
Contributing
Wiki – How to Contribute
TODO
- AWS – Add support for GovCloud and China regions
- AWS – Add support for hardcoded region (which would override the default of looking in every region)
FAQ
How does CloudFox compare with ScoutSuite, Prowler, Steampipe’s AWS Compliance Module, AWS Security Hub, etc.
CloudFox doesn’t create any alerts or findings, and doesn’t check your environment for compliance to a baseline or benchmark. Instead, it simply enables you to be more efficient during your manual penetration testing activities. If gives you the information you’ll likely need to validate whether an attack path is possible or not.
Why do I see errors in some CloudFox commands?
- Services that don’t exist in all regions – CloudFox currently makes the same API calls to every region. However, not all regions support all services. For instance, services like Appstream and AWS Grafana are only supported in a subset of the total regions. In the future, we plan to make CloudFox aware of which services run in each region.
- You don’t have permission – Another reason you might see errors if you don’t have permissions to make calls that CloudFox is making. Either because the policy doesn’t allow it (e.g., SecurityAudit doesn’t allow all of the permissions CloudFox needs. Or, it might be an SCP that is blocking you.
You can always look in the ~/.cloudfox/cloudfox-error.log file to get more information on errors.
Prior work and other related projects
- SmogCloud – Inspiration for the
endpoints
command - SummitRoute’s AWS Exposable Resources – Inspiration for the
endpoints
command - Steampipe – We used steampipe to prototype many cloudfox commands. While CloudFox is laser focused on helping cloud penetration testers, steampipe is an easy way to query any and all of your cloud resources.
- Principal Mapper – Inspiration for, and a strongly recommended partner to the
iam-simulator
command - Cloudsplaining – Inspiration for the
permissions
command - ScoutSuite – Excellent cloud security benchmark tool. Provided inspiration for the
--userdata
functionality in theinstances
command, thepermissions
command, and many others - Prowler – Another excellent cloud security benchmark tool.
- Pacu – Excellent cloud penetration testing tool. PACU has quite a few enumeration commands similar to CloudFox, and lots of other commands that automate exploitation tasks (something that CloudFox avoids by design)
- CloudMapper – Inspiration for the
inventory
command and just generally CloudFox as a whole
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