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telnetlogger.c
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telnetlogger.c
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/******************************************************************************
TELNETLOGGER
A quick and dirty Telnet honeypot for catching Mirai bots.
Tips for reading the code:
- it runs on Windows, Linux, and Mac OS
- it's IPv6 and IPv4 enabled
- I deal with Telnet option negotiation with a state-machine
Contributions:
- Andrew Beard suggested CSV format, to make it more Splunk-able
- Stefan Laudemann pointed out flaw in send() on closed ports
causing a signal.
- Stefan Laudemann pointed out flaw in pthread_create causing
memory leak.
******************************************************************************/
#define _CRT_SECURE_NO_WARNINGS 1
#if defined(WIN32)
#include <WinSock2.h>
#include <WS2tcpip.h>
#include <intrin.h>
#include <process.h>
#define sleep(secs) Sleep(1000*(secs))
#define WSA(err) (WSA##err)
typedef CRITICAL_SECTION pthread_mutex_t;
#define pthread_mutex_lock(p) EnterCriticalSection(p)
#define pthread_mutex_unlock(p) LeaveCriticalSection(p)
#define pthread_mutex_init(p,q) InitializeCriticalSection(p)
#define pthread_create(handle,x,pfn,data) (*(handle)) = _beginthread(pfn,0,data)
typedef uintptr_t pthread_t;
#else
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <netdb.h>
#include <arpa/inet.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <dlfcn.h>
#include <pthread.h>
#define WSAGetLastError() (errno)
#define closesocket(fd) close(fd)
#define WSA(err) (err)
#endif
#if defined(_MSC_VER)
#pragma comment(lib, "ws2_32")
#endif
#include <ctype.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <stdarg.h>
#include <time.h>
/******************************************************************************
* A mutex so multiple threads printing output don't conflict with
* each other
******************************************************************************/
pthread_mutex_t output;
/******************************************************************************
* Arguments pass to each thread. Creating a thread only allows passing in
* a single pointer, so we have to put everything we want passed to the
* thread in a structure like this.
******************************************************************************/
struct ThreadArgs {
pthread_t handle;
int fd;
FILE *fp_passwords;
FILE *fp_ips;
FILE *fp_csv;
struct sockaddr_in6 peer;
socklen_t peerlen;
char peername[256];
};
/******************************************************************************
* Translate sockets error codes to helpful text for printing
******************************************************************************/
static const char *
error_msg(unsigned err)
{
static char buf[256];
switch (err) {
case WSA(ECONNRESET): return "TCP connection reset";
case WSA(ECONNREFUSED): return "Connection refused";
case WSA(ETIMEDOUT): return "Timed out";
case WSA(ECONNABORTED): return "Connection aborted";
case WSA(EACCES): return "Access denied";
case WSA(EADDRINUSE): return "Port already in use";
case 11: return "Timed out";
case 0: return "TCP connection closed";
default:
snprintf(buf, sizeof(buf), "err#%u", err);
return buf;
}
}
/******************************************************************************
* Print to stderr. Right now, it's just a wrapper aroun fprintf(stderr), but
* I do it this way so I can later add different DEBUG levels.
******************************************************************************/
int ERROR_MSG(const char *fmt, ...)
{
va_list marker;
va_start(marker, fmt);
vfprintf(stderr, fmt, marker);
va_end(marker);
return -1;
}
/******************************************************************************
* On modern systems (Win7+, macOS, Linux, etc.), an "anyipv6" socket always
* is backwards compatible with IPv4. So we create an IPv6 socket to handle
* both versions simultaneously. This will inevitably fail on some system,
* so eventually I'll have to write an IPv4 version of this function.
******************************************************************************/
int
create_ipv6_socket(int port)
{
int fd;
int err;
struct sockaddr_in6 localaddr;
/* Create a generic socket. IPv6 includes IPv4 */
fd = socket(AF_INET6, SOCK_STREAM, IPPROTO_TCP);
if (fd <= 0) {
ERROR_MSG("socket(AF_INET6): could not create socket: %s\n",
error_msg(WSAGetLastError()));
return -1;
}
/* Make it a dual stack IPv4/IPv6 socket. This step is unnecessary on
* some operating systems/versions, but necessary on some others */
{
int no = 0;
err = setsockopt(fd, IPPROTO_IPV6, IPV6_V6ONLY, (char*)&no, sizeof(no));
if (err != 0) {
ERROR_MSG("setsockopt(!IPV6_V6ONLY): %s\n",
error_msg(WSAGetLastError()));
closesocket(fd);
return -1;
}
}
#ifndef WIN32
/* Reuse address */
{
int yes = 1;
err = setsockopt(fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_REUSEADDR, (char*)&yes, sizeof(yes));
if (err != 0) {
ERROR_MSG("setsockopt(SO_REUSEADDR): %s\n",
error_msg(WSAGetLastError()));
closesocket(fd);
return -1;
}
}
#endif
/* Bind to local port. Again note that while I"m binding for IPv6, it's
* also setting up a service for IPv4. */
memset(&localaddr, 0, sizeof(localaddr));
localaddr.sin6_family = AF_INET6;
localaddr.sin6_port = htons(port);
localaddr.sin6_addr = in6addr_any;
err = bind(fd, (struct sockaddr*)&localaddr, sizeof(localaddr));
if (err < 0) {
ERROR_MSG("bind(%u): %s\n", port,
error_msg(WSAGetLastError()));
closesocket(fd);
return -1;
}
/* Now the final initializaiton step */
err = listen(fd, 10);
if (err < 0) {
ERROR_MSG("listen(%u): %s\n", port,
error_msg(WSAGetLastError()));
closesocket(fd);
return -1;
}
return fd;
}
/******************************************************************************
* Blacklist some bad characters to avoid the most obvious attempts of
* entering bad passwords designed to hack the system (shell injection,
* HTML injection, SQL injection).
******************************************************************************/
void
print_string(FILE *fp, const char *str, int len)
{
int i;
for (i = 0; i < len; i++) {
char c = str[i];
if (!isprint(c & 0xFF) || c == '\\' || c == '<' || c == '\'' || c == ' ' || c == '\"' || c == ',')
fprintf(fp, "\\x%02x", c & 0xFF);
else
fprintf(fp, "%c", c);
}
}
/******************************************************************************
* Compares two strings, one nul-terminated, the other length encoded
******************************************************************************/
int
matches(const char *rhs, const char *lhs, int len)
{
if (strlen(rhs) == len && memcmp(rhs, lhs, len) == 0)
return 1;
else
return 0;
}
/******************************************************************************
* Print the results.
******************************************************************************/
void
print_passwords(FILE *fp, const char *login, int login_len, const char *password, int password_len)
{
if (fp == NULL)
return;
if (matches("shell", login, login_len) && matches("sh", password, password_len))
return;
if (matches("enable", login, login_len) && matches("system", password, password_len))
return;
/* pretty print the two fields */
pthread_mutex_lock(&output);
print_string(fp, login, login_len);
fprintf(fp, " ");
print_string(fp, password, password_len);
fprintf(fp, "\n");
fflush(fp);
pthread_mutex_unlock(&output);
}
/******************************************************************************
* Print which machines are connecting
******************************************************************************/
void
print_ip(FILE *fp, const char *hostname)
{
if (fp == NULL)
return;
pthread_mutex_lock(&output);
fprintf(fp, "%s\n", hostname);
fflush(fp);
pthread_mutex_unlock(&output);
}
/******************************************************************************
* Create a CSV formatted line with all the information on one line.
******************************************************************************/
void
print_csv(FILE *fp, time_t now, const char *hostname,
const char *login, int login_len,
const char *password, int password_len)
{
struct tm *tm;
char str[128];
if (fp == NULL)
return;
tm = gmtime(&now);
if (tm == NULL) {
perror("gmtime");
return;
}
strftime(str, sizeof(str), "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S", tm);
pthread_mutex_lock(&output);
/* time-integer, time-formatted, username, password*/
fprintf(fp, "%u,%s,%s,",
(unsigned)now,
str,
hostname);
print_string(fp, login, login_len);
fprintf(fp, ",");
print_string(fp, password, password_len);
fprintf(fp, "\n");
fflush(fp);
pthread_mutex_unlock(&output);
}
/******************************************************************************
* Receive a line of NVT text, until the <return> character. While doing this
* we may also have to participate in some NVT option negotiation.
* This is the function that reads a username or password.
******************************************************************************/
int
recv_nvt_line(int fd, char *buf, int sizeof_buf, int flags, int *in_state)
{
int offset = 0;
int state = *in_state;
int done = 0;
while (!done) {
unsigned char c;
int len;
/* Receivine ONE byte at a time and process it. This is rather
* slow, but we don't care about speed */
len = recv(fd, (char*)&c, 1, flags);
if (len < 0) {
return -1;
}
if (len <= 0) {
if (offset == 0) {
*in_state = state;
return len;
} else
break;
}
/* Handle the NVT state-machine */
switch (state) {
case 0:
case 1:
if (c == 0xFF) {
state = 2;
} else if (c == 0) {
} else if (c == '\n') {
} else if (c == '\r') {
done = 1;
break;
} else if (c == '\x7f') {
if (offset) {
offset--;
if (state == 0)
send(fd, "\b \b", 3, flags);
}
break;
} else {
/************************************************************
* This is where we append the byte onto our username/password
************************************************************/
if (offset + 1 < sizeof_buf)
buf[offset++] = c;
else
done = 1;
if (state == 0) {
if (c <= 26) {
char zz[16];
zz[0] = '^';
zz[1] = c + 'A' - 1;
send(fd, zz, 2, flags);
} else
send(fd, &c, 1, flags);
}
if (c == 3 /*ctrl-c*/ || c == 4 /*ctrl-d*/)
done = 1;
}
break;
case 2: /* IAC escape */
switch (c) {
case 250: /* subneg */
state = 20;
break;
case 251: /* will */
state = 3;
break;
case 252: /* won't */
state = 4;
break;
case 253: /* do */
state = 5;
break;
case 254: /* don't */
state = 6;
break;
case 255:
if (offset + 1 < sizeof_buf)
buf[offset++] = 0xFF;
state = 0;
break;
default:
state = 0;
break;
}
break;
case 20: /*sub neg start */
switch (c) {
case 0xff: /*iac*/
state = 21;
break;
default:
/* do nothing */
break;
}
break;
case 21:
switch (c) {
case 240:
state = 0;
break;
default:
state = 20; /* go back to subnegotiation */
break;
}
break;
case 3: /* will */
case 4: /* won't */
case 5: /* do */
case 6: /* don't */
state = 0;
break;
default:
fprintf(stderr, "[internalo error: unknown state");
state = 0;
break;
}
}
/* save the state across multiple calls */
*in_state = state;
return offset;
}
/******************************************************************************
* This is a thread created whenever a connection is accepted, which is then
* responsible for handling the connection with blocking calls, and eventually
* cleanup when the connection ends. We set a recv timeout so that the
* connection won't stay alive indefinitely.
******************************************************************************/
void *handle_connection(void *v_args)
{
struct ThreadArgs *args = (struct ThreadArgs *)v_args;
int fd = args->fd;
char login[256];
int login_length;
char password[256];
int password_length;
int state = 0;
char *hello;
int tries = 0;
int flags = 0;
#ifdef MSG_NOSIGNAL
flags |= MSG_NOSIGNAL;
#endif
/* Set receive timeout of 1 minute. Windows can go suck an egg by deciding
* to be different here. */
#ifdef WIN32
{
DWORD tv;
int err;
tv = 60000;
err = setsockopt(fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_RCVTIMEO, (char*)&tv, sizeof(tv));
if (err) {
ERROR_MSG("setsockopt(SO_RECVTIMEO): %s\n",
error_msg(WSAGetLastError()));
}
}
#else
{
struct timeval tv;
int err;
tv.tv_sec = 60;
tv.tv_usec = 0;
err = setsockopt(fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_RCVTIMEO, (char*)&tv, sizeof(tv));
if (err) {
ERROR_MSG("setsockopt(SO_RECVTIMEO): %s\n",
error_msg(WSAGetLastError()));
}
}
#endif
/* The initial hello, which also includes some basic negotiation.
* Apparently, the Mirai won't continue unless the right negotiation
* happens. I haven't figured out exactly what that is, but this seems
* adequate to make the bot continue */
hello = "\xff\xfb\x03" /* Will Suppress Go Ahead */
"\xff\xfb\x01" /* Will Echo */
"\xff\xfd\x1f" /* Do Negotiate Window Size */
"\xff\xfd\x18" /* Do Negotiate Terminal Type */
"\r\nlogin: ";
again:
/* LOGIN: send the "login: " string, then wait for response */
send(fd, hello, strlen(hello), flags);
login_length = recv_nvt_line(fd, login, sizeof(login), flags, &state);
if (login_length <= 0)
goto error;
/* PASSWORD: send the "password: " string, then wait for response */
send(fd, "\r\nPassword: ", 12, flags);
if (state == 0)
state = 1;
password_length = recv_nvt_line(fd, password, sizeof(password), flags, &state);
if (password_length <= 0)
goto error;
/* Print the resulting username/password combination */
print_passwords(args->fp_passwords, login, login_length, password, password_length);
print_ip(args->fp_ips, args->peername);
print_csv(args->fp_csv, time(0), args->peername, login, login_length, password, password_length);
/* Print error and loop around to do it again */
if (state == 1)
state = 0;
send(fd, "\r\nLogin incorrect\r\n", 19, flags);
if (tries++ < 5) {
sleep(2);
hello = "\r\nlogin: ";
goto again;
}
end:
closesocket(fd);
ERROR_MSG("[-] %s: close()\n", args->peername);
free(args);
return NULL;
error:
ERROR_MSG("[-] %s: recv(): %s\n", args->peername,
error_msg(WSAGetLastError()));
goto end;
}
/******************************************************************************
******************************************************************************/
void
daemon_thread(int port, FILE *fp_passwords, FILE *fp_ips, FILE *fp_csv)
{
int fd;
fd = create_ipv6_socket(port);
if (fd <= 0)
return;
for (;;) {
int newfd;
struct ThreadArgs *args;
/* accept a new connection */
newfd = accept(fd, 0, 0);
if (newfd <= 0) {
ERROR_MSG("accept(%u): %s\n", port,
error_msg(WSAGetLastError()));
break;
}
/* Create new structure to hold per-thread-dat */
args = malloc(sizeof(*args));
memset(args, 0, sizeof(*args));
args->fd = newfd;
args->fp_passwords = fp_passwords;
args->fp_ips = fp_ips;
args->fp_csv = fp_csv;
args->peerlen = sizeof(args->peer);
getpeername(args->fd, (struct sockaddr*)&args->peer, &args->peerlen);
getnameinfo((struct sockaddr*)&args->peer, args->peerlen, args->peername, sizeof(args->peername), NULL, 0, NI_NUMERICHOST| NI_NUMERICSERV);
if (memcmp(args->peername, "::ffff:", 7) == 0)
memmove(args->peername, args->peername + 7, strlen(args->peername + 7) + 1);
fprintf(stderr, "[+] %s: connect\n", args->peername);
pthread_create(&args->handle, 0, handle_connection, args);
#ifndef WIN32
/* clean up the thread handle, otherwise we have a small memory
* leak of handles. Thanks to Stefan Laudemann for pointing
* this out. I suspect it's more than just 8 bytes for the handle,
* but that there are kernel resources that we'll run out of
* too. */
pthread_detach(args->handle);
#endif
}
closesocket(fd);
}
/******************************************************************************
******************************************************************************/
FILE *
open_output(int *in_i, char *argv[], int argc)
{
int i = *in_i;
const char *filename = NULL;
/* Allow either with/without space:
* -cfilename.txt
* or
* -c filename.txt
*/
if (argv[i][2] == '\0') {
i = ++(*in_i);
if (i >= argc) {
fprintf(stderr, "expected parameter after -%c\n", argv[i][1]);
exit(1);
}
filename = argv[i];
}
else
filename = argv[i] + 2;
/* If the filename is a dash, then redirect to console output*/
if (strcmp(filename, "-") == 0)
return stdout;
/* If the filename is "NULL", then don't output anything */
else if (strcmp(filename, "null") == 0)
return NULL;
/* Create a file to output to*/
else {
FILE *fp;
fp = fopen(filename, "wt");
if (fp == NULL) {
perror(filename);
exit(1);
return NULL;
}
else
return fp;
}
}
/******************************************************************************
******************************************************************************/
int
main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
FILE *fp_passwords = stdout;
FILE *fp_ips = stdout;
FILE *fp_csv = NULL;
int i;
int port = 23;
/*
* One-time program startup stuff for legacy Windows.
*/
#if defined(WIN32)
{WSADATA x; WSAStartup(0x101, &x);}
#endif
pthread_mutex_init(&output, 0);
fprintf(stderr, "\n--- telnetlogger/0.2 ---\n");
fprintf(stderr, "https://github.com/robertdavidgraham/telnetlogger\n");
/* Read configuration parameters */
for (i = 1; i < argc; i++) {
if (argv[i][0] != '-') {
fprintf(stderr, "unknown parameter: %s\n", argv[i]);
exit(1);
}
switch (argv[i][1]) {
case 'c':
fp_csv = open_output(&i, argv, argc);
break;
case 'p':
fp_passwords = open_output(&i, argv, argc);
break;
case 'i':
fp_ips = open_output(&i, argv, argc);
break;
case 'l':
{
char *arg;
if (isdigit(argv[i][2])) {
arg = &argv[i][2];
} else {
if (++i >= argc) {
fprintf(stderr, "expected parameter after -%c\n", 'i');
exit(1);
}
arg = argv[i];
}
if (strtoul(arg, 0, 0) < 1 || strtoul(arg, 0, 0) > 65535) {
fprintf(stderr, "expected port number between 1..65535\n");
exit(1);
}
port = strtoul(arg, 0, 0);
}
break;
case 'h':
case '?':
case 'H':
fprintf(stderr, "usage:\n telnetlogger [-p passwords.txt] [-i ips.txt] [-c telnetlog.csv] [-l port]\n");
exit(1);
break;
}
}
daemon_thread(port, fp_passwords, fp_ips, fp_csv);
return 0;
}