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An Internet scale, blazing fast SSL/TLS scanner ( non-blocking, event-driven )

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tls-scan

A program to scan TLS based servers and collect X.509 certificates, ciphers and related information. It produces results in JSON format. tls-scan is a single threaded asynchronous/event-based program (powered by libevent) capable of concurrently scan thousands of TLS servers. It can be combined with other tools such as GNU parallel to vertically scale in multi-core machines.

tls-scan helps developers and security engineers to track/test/debug certificates and TLS configurations of servers within their organization.

Features

  • New: Support for TLSv1.3
  • TLS and StartTLS protocol support: SMTP, IMAP, POP3, FTPS, SIEVE, NNTP, XMPP, LDAP, RDP, POSTGRES, MYSQL
  • Blazing fast - Can operate at scale with the ability to concurrently scan large number of servers (say scan IoT devices at scale)
  • Detect SSLv2, SSLv3, TLSv1, TLSv1.1, TLSv1.2, TLSv1.3 versions and ciphers
  • Cipher and TLS version enumeration
  • Extract X.509 certificate fields from the target server and print it in JSON format
  • Certificate and host name verification checks
  • TLS compression checks
  • Session reuse tests
  • Certificate revocation checks with stapled OCSP response
  • Script friendly output - Can be combined with other tools to analyze the scan results
  • Detailed run time stats for tracking progress and performance/charts

This tool is primarily for collecting TLS cipher and X.509 certificate data. The scan output can be easily combined with related tools to identify TLS misconfigurations.

Installation

You may either use pre-built binary package or build from the source.

Pre-built Binary

Linux and OSX: https://github.com/prbinu/tls-scan/releases/latest

Build From Source

All you need is build-x86-64.sh. This script pulls dependent packages - PeterMosmans openssl, libevent and GnuTLS, and build those from the scratch. Since the openssl we use is different from stock openssl, it is linked statically to tls-scan program. The build can take approximately twenty minutes to complete.

Build Pre-requisites :

On Ubuntu:

% sudo apt-get update
% sudo apt-get install autoconf automake libtool pkg-config gcc unzip -y

Linux

Build :

% git clone https://github.com/prbinu/tls-scan.git
% cd tls-scan
% ./build-x86-64.sh

The newly built tls-scan binary can be found at ./build-root/bin. build-x86-64.sh is a wrapper script that calls ./bootstrap.sh to build all dependent packages. bootstrap.sh also executes the autoreconf -i command to generate configure file. Subsequently it calles the standard ./configure, make && make install.

Test :

% cd build-root/bin
% ./tls-scan --connect=yahoo.com --cacert=../etc/tls-scan/ca-bundle.crt --pretty

OSX

If you do not have the pre-requisite packages, you can easily install those packages by following the links below:

Build :

% git clone https://github.com/prbinu/tls-scan.git
% cd tls-scan
% ./build-x86-64.sh

The tls-scan binary can be found at ./build-root/bin. Another (easy) option is to use our Docker image to build and run tls-scan on OSX.

Docker

Pre-requisite : Docker

Build : Copy the Dockerfile to your machine, and run it:

% docker build -t tls-scan .

Test :

% docker run --rm tls-scan --connect=example.com:443 --all --pretty

Example

% ./tls-scan -c search.yahoo.com --all --pretty
{
  "host": "search.yahoo.com",
  "ip": "208.71.45.12",
  "port": 443,
  "elapsedTime": 1600,
  "tlsVersion": "TLSv1.2",
  "cipher": "ECDHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256 TLSv1.2 Kx=ECDH     Au=RSA  Enc=AESGCM(128) Mac=AEAD",
  "tempPublicKeyAlg": "ECDH prime256v1",
  "tempPublicKeySize": 256,
  "secureRenego": true,
  "compression": "NONE",
  "expansion": "NONE",
  "sessionLifetimeHint": 100800,
  "tlsVersions": [
    "TLSv1",
    "TLSv1_1",
    "TLSv1_2"
  ],
  "x509ChainDepth": 2,
  "verifyCertResult": true,
  "verifyHostResult": true,
  "ocspStapled": true,
  "verifyOcspResult": true,
  "certificateChain": [
  {
    "version": 3,
    "subject": "CN=*.search.yahoo.com; O=Yahoo! Inc.; L=Sunnyvale; ST=CA; C=US",
    "issuer": "CN=DigiCert SHA2 High Assurance Server CA; OU=www.digicert.com; O=DigiCert Inc; C=US",
    "subjectCN": "*.search.yahoo.com",
    "subjectAltName": "DNS:*.search.yahoo.com, DNS:search.yahoo.com, DNS:search.yahoo.net, ...",
    "signatureAlg": "sha256WithRSAEncryption",
    "notBefore": "Dec  9 00:00:00 2016 GMT",
    "notAfter": "Apr 30 12:00:00 2017 GMT",
    "expired": false,
    "serialNo": "0F:45:73:E3:F5:7A:7D:5B:43:57:64:2A:6C:46:F2:1C",
    "keyUsage": "Digital Signature, Key Encipherment critical",
    "extKeyUsage": "TLS Web Server Authentication, TLS Web Client Authentication",
    "publicKeyAlg": "RSA",
    "publicKeySize": 2048,
    "basicConstraints": "CA:FALSE critical",
    "subjectKeyIdentifier": "63:0F:82:DB:F9:B0:64:78:90:C9:16:69:95:84:24:F1:4B:04:6F:E4",
    "sha1Fingerprint": "F7:35:E5:C9:A3:60:62:07:CB:55:74:7E:0F:09:AD:2A:F3:F3:53:F3"
  },  {
    "version": 3,
    "subject": "CN=DigiCert SHA2 High Assurance Server CA; OU=www.digicert.com; O=DigiCert Inc; C=US",
    "issuer": "CN=DigiCert High Assurance EV Root CA; OU=www.digicert.com; O=DigiCert Inc; C=US",
    "subjectCN": "DigiCert SHA2 High Assurance Server CA",
    "signatureAlg": "sha256WithRSAEncryption",
    "notBefore": "Oct 22 12:00:00 2013 GMT",
    "notAfter": "Oct 22 12:00:00 2028 GMT",
    "expired": false,
    "serialNo": "04:E1:E7:A4:DC:5C:F2:F3:6D:C0:2B:42:B8:5D:15:9F",
    "keyUsage": "Digital Signature, Certificate Sign, CRL Sign critical",
    "extKeyUsage": "TLS Web Server Authentication, TLS Web Client Authentication",
    "publicKeyAlg": "RSA",
    "publicKeySize": 2048,
    "basicConstraints": "CA:TRUE, pathlen:0 critical",
    "subjectKeyIdentifier": "51:68:FF:90:AF:02:07:75:3C:CC:D9:65:64:62:A2:12:B8:59:72:3B",
    "sha1Fingerprint": "A0:31:C4:67:82:E6:E6:C6:62:C2:C8:7C:76:DA:9A:A6:2C:CA:BD:8E"
  } ]
}
Useful Tip: Use --concurrency=<n> option if you want to scan multiple target servers in parallel.

Usage

The scan output can be shoved into tools like Splunk or ELK for analysis.

Command-line Query & Filter

By passing tls-scan output to JSON command-line parser like jq, you can do realtime filtering on the scan results.

Examples:

Command to filter out hosts that passed certificate and host name verifications:

cat input.txt | tls-scan --port=443  2>/dev/null | \
jq-linux64 -r 'select(.verifyHostResult == true and .verifyCertResult == true) | [.host, .ip, .verifyHost, .verifyCert] | @tsv'

Command to find hosts with expired certificates :

cat input.txt | tls-scan --port=443 --concurrency=500 --timeout=5 2>/dev/null | \
jq-linux64 -r  'select(.certificateChain[].expired == true) | [.host, .ip] | @tsv'

Command to find weak RSA keys :

cat tlscerts.out | \
jq-linux64 -r  'select(.certificateChain[0].publicKeyAlg == "RSA" and .certificateChain[0].publicKeySize < 2048) | [.host, .ip]'

Command to find hosts that support SSLv2 or SSLv3 :

tls-scan --infile=domains.txt --port=443 --version-enum --concurrency=250 --timeout=3 2>/dev/null | \
jq-linux64 -r 'if (.tlsVersions[] | contains("SSL")) == true then [.host, .ip, .tlsVersions[]] else empty end | @tsv'

NOTE: Avoid frequent scan + filter; instead save the scan output to a file and use it to run queries.

Help

Option Description
-H --help Print a usage message briefly summarizing these command-line options and the bug-reporting address, then exit.
-c --connect=<arg> target[:port] to scan. target = {hostname, IPv4, [IPv6] }. IPv6 example: [::1]:443 (default port 443).
--starttls=<protocol> Supported protocols: smtp, imap, pop3, ftp, sieve, nntp, xmpp, ldap, rdp, postgres, mysql, tls (default)
-c --cacert=<file> Root CA file for certificate validation. By default the program attempts to load ca-bundle.crt file from current directory.
-C --ciphers=<arg> Ciphers to use; try openssl ciphers to see all ciphers. Note that this option will be overwritten by --ssl2, --ssl3, --tls1, --tls1_1, --tls1_2 options, if provided. Example: "ECDHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384:ECDHE-ECDSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384"
-e --cipher-enum Enumerate supported ciphers. Currently use --tls-old ciphers. Try --meta-info to find predefined cipher suite options.
--show-unsupported-ciphers Include unsupported ciphers in the cipher list to JSON output.
-V --version-enum Enumerate supported TLS versions.
-v --version Print tls-scan version and build information.
-r --session-reuse Enable ssl session reuse.
-u --session-print Print SSL session in PEM format to stderr. This is currently not included in the JSON output, but print seperately. This flag woould be useful if you wanted to pass SSL session to --session-file to test session reuse.
-T --session-file=<file> File that contains SSL session in PEM format.
-a --all Shortcut for --version-enum, --cipher-enum and --session-reuse options. This scan can take longer time to complete. Also note if the server employs some form of rate-limiting, your scan may fail.
-s --sni=<host> Set TLS extension servername in ClientHello. Defaults to input hostname and applied to TLSv1+ only.
-b --concurrency=<number> Number of concurrent requests. The default is 1. This option specify the number of worker objects. Concurrency should be set based on your system capacity (memory, cpu, network) etc. Default: 1.
-t --timeout=<number> Timeout per connection (in seconds). Note that is is per connection and for cipher scans, tls-scan makes several connections to the same server. Default: 10.
-S --sleep=<number> Add milliseconds delay between the connection. Only for --cipher-enum and --version-enum options. Useful to manage server rate-limits. The max sleep value is 60000 (1 minute). Default: 0.
-f --infile=<file> Input file with domains or IPs. This is optional and by default the program accepts input from standard input (stdin).
-o --outfile=<file> Output file where the result in JSON format is stored. The default is standard output (stdout).
-n --pretty Pretty print; add newline (\n) between record fields.
-N --nameserver=<ip> DNS resolver IPs to use and is an optional field. Multiple Namespace IP address can be passed. Format: -N <ip1> -N <ip2> -N <ip3>.. In practice, DNS servers may have tight rate-limit in place.
--ssl2 Use only SSLv2 ciphers.
--ssl3 Use only SSLv3 ciphers.
--tls1 Use only TLSv1 ciphers.
--tls1_1 Use only TLSv1_1 ciphers.
--tls1_2 Use only TLSv1_2 ciphers.
--tls-modern Mozilla's modern cipher list. See: https://wiki.mozilla.org/Security/Server_Side_TLS.
--tls-interm Mozilla's intermediate cipher list.
--tls-old Mozilla's old (backward compatible cipher list).
--no-parallel-enum Disable parallel cipher and tls version enumeration. Parallel scan is performed only with '--connect' option.
--meta-info Print program meta information and exit. Useful if you wanted to see predefined cipher options.
--stats-outfile=<file> Enable run-time scan stats and save it to a file

Caveats

  • The following ciphers are currently disabled: SRP:PSK
  • Instead of escaping JSON special chars (eg. double quotes), those characters are currently removed from the JSON output. (issue #2).

TLS 1.3 Support

To support old, insecure cipher scans, we are using an old openssl version that doesn't have support for TLS 1.3. So to support TLS 1.3, we need a newer openssl version (v1.1.1+). Since linking two openssl libraries to the same process space doesn't work out of box (duplicate symbols), we chose to use GnuTLS library for TLS 1.3+ support. In short, openssl is used for scanning SSLv2, SSLv3, TLSv1, TLSv1.1 and TLSv1.2 and GnuTLS is used for TLSv1.3.

Contributions

Collaborators and pull requests are welcome!

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An Internet scale, blazing fast SSL/TLS scanner ( non-blocking, event-driven )

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