KubeStalk is a tool to discover Kubernetes and related infrastructure based attack surface from a black-box perspective. This tool is a community version of the tool used to probe for unsecured Kubernetes clusters around the internet during Project Resonance - Wave 9.
The GIF below demonstrates usage of the tool:
KubeStalk is written in Python and requires the requests
library.
To install the tool, you can clone the repository to any directory:
git clone https://github.com/redhuntlabs/kubestalk
Once cloned, you need to install the requests
library using python3 -m pip install requests
or:
python3 -m pip install -r requirements.txt
Everything is setup and you can use the tool directly.
A list of command line arguments supported by the tool can be displayed using the -h
flag.
$ python3 kubestalk.py -h
+---------------------+
| K U B E S T A L K |
+---------------------+ v0.1
[!] KubeStalk by RedHunt Labs - A Modern Attack Surface (ASM) Management Company
[!] Author: 0xInfection (RHL Research Team)
[!] Continuously Track Your Attack Surface using https://redhuntlabs.com/nvadr.
usage: ./kubestalk.py <url(s)>/<cidr>
Required Arguments:
urls List of hosts to scan
Optional Arguments:
-o OUTPUT, --output OUTPUT
Output path to write the CSV file to
-f SIG_FILE, --sig-dir SIG_FILE
Signature directory path to load
-t TIMEOUT, --timeout TIMEOUT
HTTP timeout value in seconds
-ua USER_AGENT, --user-agent USER_AGENT
User agent header to set in HTTP requests
--concurrency CONCURRENCY
No. of hosts to process simultaneously
--verify-ssl Verify SSL certificates
--version Display the version of KubeStalk and exit.
To use the tool, you can pass one or more hosts to the script. All targets passed to the tool must be RFC 3986 complaint, i.e. must contain a scheme and hostname (and port if required).
A basic usage is as below:
$ python3 kubestalk.py https://███.██.██.███:10250
+---------------------+
| K U B E S T A L K |
+---------------------+ v0.1
[!] KubeStalk by RedHunt Labs - A Modern Attack Surface (ASM) Management Company
[!] Author: 0xInfection (RHL Research Team)
[!] Continuously Track Your Attack Surface using https://redhuntlabs.com/nvadr.
[+] Loaded 10 signatures to scan.
[*] Processing host: https://███.██.██.██:10250
[!] Found potential issue on https://███.██.██.██:10250: Kubernetes Pod List Exposure
[*] Writing results to output file.
[+] Done.
HTTP requests can be fine-tuned using the -t
(to mention HTTP timeouts), -ua
(to specify custom user agents) and the --verify-ssl
(to validate SSL certificates while making requests).
You can control the number of hosts to scan simultanously using the --concurrency
flag. The default value is set to 5.
The output is written to a CSV filea and can be controlled by the --output
flag.
A sample of the CSV output rendered in markdown is as belows:
host | path | issue | type | severity |
---|---|---|---|---|
https://█.█.█.█:10250 |
/pods | Kubernetes Pod List Exposure | core-component | vulnerability/misconfiguration |
https://█.█.█.█:443 |
/api/v1/pods | Kubernetes Pod List Exposure | core-component | vulnerability/misconfiguration |
http://█.█.██.█:80 |
/ | etcd Viewer Dashboard Exposure | add-on | vulnerability/exposure |
http://██.██.█.█:80 |
/ | cAdvisor Metrics Web UI Dashboard Exposure | add-on | vulnerability/exposure |
The tool is licensed under the BSD 3 Clause License and is currently at v0.1.
To know more about our Attack Surface Management platform, check out NVADR.