N E M E S I S - Crafting & Injection
The Nemesis Project is designed to be a command line based, portable human IP stack for UNIX-like and Windows systems. The suite is broken down by protocol, and should allow for useful scripting of injected packets from simple shell scripts.
The latest release is always available from GitHub at
Key Features
- ARP/RARP, DNS, ETHERNET, ICMP, IGMP, IP, OSPF, RIP, TCP and UDP protocol support
- Layer 2 or Layer 3 injection on UNIX-like systems
- Layer 2 injection (only) on Windows systems
- Packet payload from file
- IP and TCP options from file
- Tested on OpenBSD, Linux, Solaris, Mac OS X and Windows 2000
Each supported protocol uses its own protocol "injector" which is accompanied by a man page explaining its functionality.
Consult the ChangeLog for release details, and the documentation for each protocol injector for in-depth descriptions of the available functionality.
Examples
-
Inject malformed ICMP redirect
sudo nemesis icmp -S 10.10.10.3 -D 10.10.10.1 -G 10.10.10.3 -i 5
-
DHCP Discover (must use sudo and
-d
to send with source IP 0.0.0.0):sudo nemesis dhcp -d eth0
-
IGMP v2 join for group 239.186.39.5
sudo nemesis igmp -v -p 22 -S 192.168.1.20 -g 239.186.39.5 -D 239.186.39.5
-
IGMP v2 query, max resp. time 10 sec, with Router Alert IP option
echo -ne '\x94\x04\x00\x00' >RA sudo nemesis igmp -v -p 0x11 -c 100 -D 224.0.0.1 -O RA
or
echo -ne '\x94\x04\x00\x00' | sudo nemesis igmp -v -p 0x11 -c 100 -D 224.0.0.1 -O -
-
IGMP v3 query, with Router Alert IP option
echo -ne '\x03\x64\x00\x00' > v3 sudo nemesis igmp -p 0x11 -c 100 -i 0.0.0.0 -P v3 -D 224.0.0.1 -O RA
-
Random TCP packet
sudo nemesis tcp
-
DoS and DDoS testing
sudo nemesis tcp -v -S 192.168.1.1 -D 192.168.2.2 -fSA -y 22 -P foo sudo nemesis udp -v -S 10.11.12.13 -D 10.1.1.2 -x 11111 -y 53 -P bindpkt sudo nemesis icmp redirect -S 10.10.10.3 -D 10.10.10.1 -G 10.10.10.3 -qR sudo nemesis arp -v -d eth0 -H 0:1:2:3:4:5 -S 10.11.30.5 -D 10.10.15.1
Build & Install
Nemesis is built around libnet. Windows platform builds require libpcap as well. Nemesis <= 1.4 was built around libnet 1.0 and Nemesis >= 1.5 require libnet 1.1, or later.
Debian/Ubuntu
curl -sS https://deb.troglobit.com/pubkey.gpg | sudo apt-key add -
echo "deb [arch=amd64] https://deb.troglobit.com/debian stable main" | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/troglobit.list
sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install nemesis
Building from Source
On Debian and Ubuntu derived GNU/Linux systems:
sudo apt install libnet1-dev
This installs the libnet headers and library in a standard location
which the configure
script easily can find. Should your libnet1
installation be in a non-standard location you can provide the paths
like this:
configure LDFLAGS=-L/path/to/lib CPPFLAGS=-I/path/to/header
The GNU Configure & Build system use /usr/local
as the
default install prefix. Usually this is sufficient, the below example
installs to /usr
instead:
tar xf nemesis-1.7.tar.xz
cd nemesis-1.7/
./configure --prefix=/usr
make -j5
sudo make install-strip
Installing on Windows
nemesis.exe can be installed anywhere on a Windows system. The caveat is
that LibnetNT.dll must exist either in the same directory as nemesis.exe or
in any of the directories listed in the %PATH%
variable. On Windows 2000
this would be %SystemRoot%\System32
Note: the windows build has not been tried or tested in over a decade. YYMV
Building from GIT
If you want to contribute, or simply want to try out the latest but still unreleased features, then you need to know a few things about the GNU Configure & Build system:
configure.ac
and a per-directoryMakefile.am
are key filesconfigure
andMakefile.in
are generated fromautogen.sh
, they are not stored in GIT but automatically generated for the release tarballsMakefile
is generated byconfigure
script
To build from GIT you first need to clone the repository and run the
autogen.sh
script. This requires automake
and autoconf
to be
installed on your system.
git clone https://github.com/libnet/nemesis.git
cd nemesis/
./autogen.sh
./configure && make
GIT sources are a moving target and are not recommended for production systems, unless you know what you are doing!
Origin & References
- 1999: Nemesis was created by Mark Grimes
- 2001: Jeff Nathan took over maintainership
- 2018: Project resurrected by Joachim Nilsson
The project is currently maintained at GitHub with the intention to serve as a focal point for new development. If you have patches and/or ideas, please submit them using the issue tracker or as pull requests.