🏗️ Install
⛏️ Usage
📚 Dependencies
git clone https://github.com/devanshbatham/openredirex
cd openredirex
sudo chmod +x setup.sh
./setup.sh
The script is executed from the command line and has the following usage options:
openredirex [-p payloads] [-k keyword] [-c concurrency]
-p
,--payloads
: File containing a list of payloads. If not specified, a hardcoded list is used.-k
,--keyword
: Keyword in URLs to replace with payload. Default is "FUZZ".-c
,--concurrency
: Number of concurrent tasks. Default is 100.
The script expects a list of URLs as input. Each URL should contain the keyword specified by the -k
option. The script replaces the keyword with each of the payloads, and attempts to fetch the modified URL.
Example usage:
cat list_of_urls.txt | openredirex -p payloads.txt -k "FUZZ" -c 50
List of URLs should look like below:
cat list_of_urls.txt
https://newsroom.example.com/logout?redirect=FUZZ
https://auth.example.com/auth/realms/sonatype/protocol/openid-connect/logout?redirect_uri=test
https://exmaple.com/php?test=baz&foo=bar
This example reads URLs from the file list_of_urls.txt
, replaces all the values of the parameters to FUZZ
(if --keyword
is not supplied), then again replaces the keyword FUZZ
or the supplied keyword with each payload from payloads.txt
, and fetches each URL concurrently, with a maximum of 50 concurrent tasks.
The script uses the following libraries:
argparse
for handling command-line arguments.aiohttp
for making HTTP requests.tqdm
for displaying progress.concurrent.futures
for handling concurrent tasks.asyncio
for managing asynchronous tasks.
You need to install these dependencies before running the script. Most of them are part of the standard Python library. You can install aiohttp
and tqdm
using pip:
pip install aiohttp tqdm
You can use this script to check for open redirects in web applications. However, you should only use it on systems that you have been given explicit permission to test.