Ghostbuster - Eliminate dangling elastic IPs by performing analysis on your resources within all your AWS accounts

Overview

Table of Contents

Ghostbuster

Eliminate dangling elastic IPs by performing analysis on your resources within all your AWS accounts.

Ghostbuster obtains all the DNS records present in all of your AWS accounts (Route53), and can optionally take in records via CSV input, or via Cloudflare.

After these records are collected, Ghostbuster iterates through all of your AWS Elastic IPs and Network Interface Public IPs and collects this data.

By having a complete picture of the DNS records (from route53, file input or cloudflare) and having a complete picture of the AWS IPs owned by your organization, this tool can detect subdomains that are pointing to dangling elastic IPs (IPs you no longer own).

The problem

When you are deploying infrastructure to AWS, you may spin up EC2 instances which have an IP associated with them. When you create DNS records pointing to these IPs, but forget to remove the DNS records after the EC2 instance has been given a new IP or destroyed, you are susceptible to subdomain takeover attacks.

There has been a great amount of research done on elastic IP takeovers, where it is possible for attackers to continually claim elastic IPs until they obtain an IP associated with a subdomain of the company they are targeting.

While AWS frequently bans accounts that are attempting to perform this attack pattern, no long term fix has been released by AWS.

The impact of dangling elastic IP subdomain takeover attacks are more serious than a typical subdomain takeover where you can only control the content being served. With dangling elastic IP takeovers, it is possible for an attacker to do the following:

  • Claim SSL certificates for the subdomain
  • Listen for traffic on all ports (potentially discovering sensitive information still being sent to the subdomain)
  • Run server-side scripts with the ability to steal HTTPOnly cookies, typically leading to a one-click account takeover attack when cookies are scoped to *.domain.com

Project Features

  • Dynamically iterates through each AWS profile configured in .aws/config
  • Pulls A records from AWS Route53
  • Pulls A records from Cloudflare (optional)
  • Pulls A records from CSV input (optional)
  • Iterate through all regions, a single region, or a comma delimitted list of regions
  • Obtains all Elastic IPs associated with all of your AWS accounts
  • Obtains all Public IPs associated with all of your AWS accounts
  • Cross checks the DNS records, with IPs owned by your organization to detect potential takeovers
  • Slack Webhook support to send notifications of takeovers

Important:

In order for this tool to be effective, it must have a complete picture of your AWS environment. If it does not have a complete picture, it will lead to false positive findings.

Installing Ghostbuster

Installing Ghostbuster is as simple as running: pip install ghostbuster. The CLI tool will then be accessible via the ghostbuster command.

This requires a Python 3.x environment.

Using Ghostbuster

❯ ghostbuster scan aws --help     
Usage: ghostbuster scan aws [OPTIONS]

  Scan for dangling elastic IPs inside your AWS accounts.

Options:
  --skipascii             Skip printing the ASCII art when starting up
                          Ghostbuster.

  --slackwebhook TEXT     Specify a Slack webhook URL to send notifications
                          about potential takeovers.

  --records PATH          Manually specify DNS records to check against.
                          Ghostbuster will check these IPs after checking
                          retrieved DNS records. See records.csv for an
                          example.

  --cloudflaretoken TEXT  Pull DNS records from Cloudflare, provide a CF API
                          token.

  --allregions            Run on all regions.
  --exclude TEXT          Comma delimited list of profile names to exclude.
  --regions TEXT          Comma delimited list of regions to run on.
  --help                  Show this message and exit.

Example Commands

Run Ghostbuster with access to Cloudflare DNS records, send notifications to a Slack webhook, iterate through every AWS profile configured in .aws/config or .aws/credentials for all AWS regions

❯ ghostbuster scan aws --cloudflaretoken APIKEY --slackwebhook https://hooks.slack.com/services/KEY --allregions

Run Ghostbuster with a manually input list of subdomain A records (see records.csv in this repo for example file):

❯ ghostbuster scan aws --records records.csv

You can specify specific regions using --regions set to a comma delimited list of regions i.e. us-east-1,us-west-1.

Example Output

❯ ghostbuster scan aws --cloudflaretoken whougonnacall
Obtaining all zone names from Cloudflare.
Obtaining DNS A records for all zones from Cloudflare.
Obtained 33 DNS A records so far.
Obtaining Route53 hosted zones for AWS profile: default.
Obtaining Route53 hosted zones for AWS profile: account-five.
Obtaining Route53 hosted zones for AWS profile: account-four.
Obtaining Route53 hosted zones for AWS profile: account-four-deploy.
Obtaining Route53 hosted zones for AWS profile: account-two-deploy.
Obtaining Route53 hosted zones for AWS profile: account-one-deploy.
Obtaining Route53 hosted zones for AWS profile: account-three-deploy.
Obtaining Route53 hosted zones for AWS profile: account-six.
Obtaining Route53 hosted zones for AWS profile: account-seven.
Obtaining Route53 hosted zones for AWS profile: account-one.
Obtained 124 DNS A records so far.
Obtaining EIPs for region: us-east-1, profile: default
Obtaining IPs for network interfaces for region: us-east-1, profile: default
Obtaining EIPs for region: us-east-1, profile: account-five
Obtaining IPs for network interfaces for region: us-east-1, profile: account-five
Obtaining EIPs for region: us-east-1, profile: account-four
Obtaining IPs for network interfaces for region: us-east-1, profile: account-four
Obtaining EIPs for region: us-east-1, profile: account-four-deploy
Obtaining IPs for network interfaces for region: us-east-1, profile: account-four-deploy
Obtaining EIPs for region: us-east-1, profile: account-two-deploy
Obtaining IPs for network interfaces for region: us-east-1, profile: account-two-deploy
Obtaining EIPs for region: us-east-1, profile: account-one-deploy
Obtaining IPs for network interfaces for region: us-east-1, profile: account-one-deploy
Obtaining EIPs for region: us-east-1, profile: account-three-deploy
Obtaining IPs for network interfaces for region: us-east-1, profile: account-three-deploy
Obtaining EIPs for region: us-east-1, profile: account-six
Obtaining IPs for network interfaces for region: us-east-1, profile: account-six
Obtaining EIPs for region: us-east-1, profile: account-seven
Obtaining IPs for network interfaces for region: us-east-1, profile: account-seven
Obtaining EIPs for region: us-east-1, profile: account-one
Obtaining IPs for network interfaces for region: us-east-1, profile: account-one
Obtained 415 unique elastic IPs from AWS.


Takeover possible: {'name': 'takeover.assetnotecloud.com', 'records': ['52.54.24.193']}

Setting up your AWS accounts

The first step is creating keys or roles in your AWS accounts that grant the privileges necessary to read Route53 records and describe elastic addresses and EC2 network interfaces.

  1. To create a new IAM user in AWS, visit the following URL: https://console.aws.amazon.com/iam/home#/users$new?step=details
  2. Choose Access key - Programmatic access only, and click Next: Permissions.
  3. Click Attach existing policies directly and then click Create policy.
  4. Click JSON and then paste in the following policy:
{
    "Version": "2012-10-17",
    "Statement": [
        {
            "Sid": "GhostbusterPolicy",
            "Effect": "Allow",
            "Action": [
                "ec2:DescribeAddresses",
                "ec2:DescribeNetworkInterfaces",
                "route53:ListResourceRecordSets",
                "route53:ListHostedZonesByName",
                "route53:GetTrafficPolicyInstance",
                "route53:GetTrafficPolicy"
            ],
            "Resource": "*"
        }
    ]
}
  1. Click Next: Tags and then Next: Review.
  2. Set the name of the policy to be GhostbusterPolicy.
  3. Click Create Policy.
  4. Go to https://console.aws.amazon.com/iam/home#/users$new?step=permissions&accessKey&userNames=ghostbuster&permissionType=policies
  5. Select GhostbusterPolicy.
  6. Click Next: Tags and then Next: Review.
  7. Click on Create user and setup the AWS credentials in your .aws/credentials file.

Repeat the above steps for each AWS account you own.

This tool will work with however you've setup your AWS configuration (multiple keys, or cross-account assume role profiles). This is managed by boto3, the library used to interface with AWS.

An example configuration looks like this:

.aws/credentials:

[default]
aws_access_key_id = AKIAIII...
aws_secret_access_key = faAaAaA...

.aws/config:

[default]
output = table
region = us-east-1

[profile account-one]
role_arn = arn:aws:iam::911111111113:role/Ec2Route53Access
source_profile = default
region = us-east-1

[profile account-two]
role_arn = arn:aws:iam::911111111112:role/Ec2Route53Access
source_profile = default
region = us-east-1

[profile account-three]
region = us-east-1
role_arn = arn:aws:iam::911111111111:role/Ec2Route53Access
source_profile = default

Alternatively, instead of having roles which are assumed, you can also configure the .aws/credentials file to have a list of profiles and assocaited keys with scoped access.

Once your AWS configuration has been set with all the accounts in your AWS environment, you can then run the tool using the following command:

Setting up Cloudflare (Optional)

If you want Ghostbuster to pull in all the A records that you have set in Cloudflare, you will have to setup an API token that can read zones.

https://dash.cloudflare.com/profile/api-tokens

Setup a Cloudflare API token like shown in the screenshot below:

Once you have obtained this API token, make a note of it somewhere (password manager). In order to use it with Ghostbuster, pass it in via the cloudflaretoken argument.

Authors

  • Shubham Shah - Initial work - github

See also the list of contributors who participated in this project.

License

GNU Affero General Public License

Owner
Assetnote
Assetnote
A Pancakeswap and Uniswap trading client (and bot) with limit orders, marker orders, stop-loss, custom gas strategies, a GUI and much more.

Pancakeswap and Uniswap trading client Adam A A Pancakeswap and Uniswap trading client (and bot) with market orders, limit orders, stop-loss, custom g

570 Mar 09, 2022
The most fresh and updateable Telegram userbot. By one of the most active contibutors to GeekTG

Installation Script installation: Simply run this command out of root: . (wget -qO- http://gg.gg/get_hikka) Manual installation: apt update && apt in

Dan Gazizullin 150 Jan 04, 2023
Scrapping malaysianpaygap & Extracting data from the Instagram posts

Scrapping malaysianpaygap & Extracting data from the posts Recently @malaysianpaygap has gotten quite famous as a platform that enables workers throug

Yudhiesh Ravindranath 65 Nov 09, 2022
A simple Discord bot wrote with Python. Kizmeow let you track your NFT project and display some useful information

Kizmeow-OpenSea-and-Etherscan-Discord-Bot 中文版 | English Ver A Discord bot wrote with Python. Kizmeow let you track your NFT project and display some u

Xeift 93 Dec 31, 2022
A Discord bot that generates inspirational quotes & motivating messages whenever a user is sad

Encourage bot is a discord bot that allows users to randomly get Inspirational quotes messages and gives motivational encouragements whenever someone says that he's sad/depressed.

1 Nov 25, 2021
An API wrapper for convertio.co written in Python.

An API wrapper for convertio.co written in Python.

Moonrise 9 Sep 27, 2022
Using Streamlit to build a simple UI on top of the OpenSea API

OpenSea API Explorer Using Streamlit to build a simple UI on top of the OpenSea API. 🤝 Contributing Contributions, issues and feature requests are we

Gavin Capriola 1 Jan 04, 2022
DongTai API SDK For Python

DongTai-SDK-Python Quick start You need a config file config.json { "DongTai":{ "token":"your token", "url":"http://127.0.0.1:90"

huoxian 50 Nov 24, 2022
Google Search Results via SERP API pip Python Package

Google Search Results in Python This Python package is meant to scrape and parse search results from Google, Bing, Baidu, Yandex, Yahoo, Home depot, E

SerpApi 254 Jan 05, 2023
A Telegram mirror bot which can be deployed using Heroku.

Slam Mirror Bot This is a telegram bot writen in python for mirroring files on the internet to our beloved Google Drive. Getting Google OAuth API cred

Hafitz Setya 1.2k Jan 01, 2023
Translator based on Google API

Yakusu Toshiko Translator based on Google API. Instance of this bot is running as @yakusubot. Features Add a plus to a language's name to show an orig

Arisu W. 2 Sep 21, 2022
Demonstrate how GitHub OIDC token getting should be included in boto3

boto3 should add direct support for AssumeRoleWithWebIdentity for GitHub Actions There is a aws-actions/configure-aws-credentials action that will get

Ben Kehoe 11 Aug 29, 2022
A small package to markdownify Notion blocks.

markdownify-notion A small package to markdownify notion blocks. Installation Install this library using pip: $ pip install markdownify-notion Usage

Sergio Sánchez Zavala 2 Oct 29, 2022
Video Stream: an Advanced Telegram Bot that's allow you to play Video & Music on Telegram Group Video Chat

Video Stream is an Advanced Telegram Bot that's allow you to play Video & Music

SHU KURENAI TEAM 4 Nov 05, 2022
File-sharing-Bot: Telegram Bot to store Posts and Documents and it can Access by Special Links.

Bromélia HSS bromelia-hss is the second official implementation of a Diameter-based protocol application by using the Python micro framework Bromélia.

1 Dec 17, 2021
RChecker - Checker for minecraft servers

🔎 RChecker v1.0 Checker for Minecraft Servers 💻 Supported operating systems: ✅

Pedro Vega 1 Aug 30, 2022
A telegram user and chat info extractor with pyrogram python module

Made with Python3 (C) @FayasNoushad Copyright permission under MIT License License - https://github.com/FayasNoushad/Telegram-Info/blob/main/LICENSE

Fayas Noushad 8 Dec 22, 2021
Telegram Radio - A User-bot who continuously play random audio files (from the famous telegram music channel @mveargasm) in the intended voice chat.

MvEargasmDJ: This is my submission for the Telegram Radio Project of Baivaru. Which required a userbot to continiously play random audio files from th

eyaadh 24 Nov 12, 2022
A simple tool that lets you know when you are out of Lost Ark's queues

Overview A simple tool that lets you know when you are out of Lost Ark's queues. You can be notified via: Sound: the app will play a sound Discord web

Nelson 3 Feb 15, 2022
Get random jokes bapack2 from jokes-bapack2-api

Random Jokes Bapack2 Get random jokes bapack2 from jokes-bapack2-api Requirements Python Requests HTTP library How to Run py random-jokes-bapack2.py T

Miftah Afina 1 Nov 18, 2021