IPv6Tools – A Robust Modular Framework That Enables The Ability To Visually Audit An IPv6 Enabled Network
The IPv6Tools framework is a robust set of modules and plugins that allow a user to audit an IPv6 enabled network. The built-in modules support enumeration of IPv6 features such as ICMPv6 and Multicast Listener Discovery (MLD). In addition, the framework also supports enumeration of Upper Layer Protocols (ULP) such as multicast DNS (mDNS) and Link-Local Multicast Name Resolution (LLMNR). Users can easily expand the capability of the framework by creating plugins and modules in the Python language.
Requirements
- python 2.7
- pip
- npm [development only]
Installation
Standard
[Optional] Use a virtualenv for installation: virtualenv venv && source venv/bin/activate
git clone http://github.com/apg-intel/ipv6tools.git
sudo pip install -r requirements.txt
Development
git clone http://github.com/apg-intel/ipv6tools.git
git checkout dev
npm run setup
Usage
Standard
sudo python app.py
- Navigate to http://localhost:8080 in a web browser
Development
- Run
$ npm run serve
- In a separate terminal, run
npm run dev
- Navigate to http://localhost:8081 in a web browser
CLI
TODO
Modules
Modules are classes that allow interaction with individual nodes or all nodes. These show up as a right click option on each node, or as a button below the graph.
Included Modules
Included in the project are a couple of modules to help validate your network, as well as use as examples for your own modules.
- poisonLLMNR – Link-Local Multicast Name Resolution is the successor of of NBT-NS, which allows local nodes to resolve names and IP addresses. Enabling this module poisons LLMNR queries to all nodes on the local link.
- CVE-2016-1879 – The following CVE is a vulnerability in SCTP that affects FreeBSD 9.3, 10.1 and 10.2. Enabling this module will launch a crafted ICMPv6 packet and potentially cause a DoS (assertion failure or NULL pointer dereference and kernel panic) to a single node.
Custom Modules
All modules are located in /modules
and are automatically loaded when starting the server. Included in /modules
is a file called template.py
. This file contains the class that all modules must extend in order to display correctly and communicate with the webpage.
Use this template to build a custom module
from template import Template
class IPv6Module(Template):
def __init__(self, socketio, namespace):
super(IPv6Module, self).__init__(socketio, namespace)
self.modname = "CVE-2016-1879"
self.menu_text = "FreeBSD IPv6 DoS"
self.actions = [
{
"title": "FreeBSD IPv6 DoS", #name that's displayed on the buttons/menu
"action": "action", #method name to call
"target": True #set this to true to display it in the right-click menu
}
]
def action(self, target=None):
# send a log msg
self.socket_log('Running DoS on '+target['ip'])
# do stuff, etc
# merge results with main result set
listOfDicts = [{ip: '::1', device_name: 'test'}]
self.module_merge(listOfDicts)
Known Issues
- Untested on large networks
- Any stack traces mentioning
dnet
ordumbnet
– follow the instructions below. - Some operating systems may require the libpcap headers. See notes below.
Installing libdnet
git clone https://github.com/dugsong/libdnet.git
cd libdnet
./configure && make
sudo make install
cd python
python setup.py install
libpcap headers in Ubuntusudo apt install libpcap-dev