6.9 KiB
Hetty is an HTTP toolkit for security research. It aims to become an open source alternative to commercial software like Burp Suite Pro, with powerful features tailored to the needs of the infosec and bug bounty community.
Features/to do
- HTTP man-in-the-middle (MITM) proxy and GraphQL server.
- Web interface (Next.js) with proxy log viewer.
- Add scope support to the proxy.
- Full text search (with regex) in proxy log viewer.
- Project management.
- Sender module for sending manual HTTP requests, either from scratch or based off requests from the proxy log.
- Attacker module for automated sending of HTTP requests. Leverage the concurrency
features of Go and its
net/http
package to make it blazingly fast.
Installation
Hetty is packaged on GitHub as a single binary, with the web interface resources embedded.
👉 You can find downloads for Linux, macOS and Windows on the releases page.
Alternatives:
Build from source
$ GO111MODULE=auto go get -u -v github.com/dstotijn/hetty/cmd/hetty
Then export the Next.js frontend app:
$ cd admin
$ yarn install
$ yarn export
This will ensure a folder ./admin/dist
exists.
Then, you can bundle the frontend app using rice
.
The easiest way to do this is via a supplied Makefile
command in the root of
the project:
make build
Docker
Alternatively, you can run Hetty via Docker. See: dstotijn/hetty
on Docker Hub.
$ docker run -v $HOME/.hetty:/root/.hetty -p 127.0.0.1:8080:8080 dstotijn/hetty
Usage
Hetty is packaged as a single binary, with the web interface resources embedded.
When the program is run, it listens by default on :8080
and is accessible via
http://localhost:8080. Depending on incoming HTTP requests, it either acts as a
MITM proxy, or it serves the GraphQL API and web interface (Next.js).
$ hetty -h
Usage of ./hetty:
-addr string
TCP address to listen on, in the form "host:port" (default ":8080")
-adminPath string
File path to admin build
-cert string
CA certificate filepath. Creates a new CA certificate is file doesn't exist (default "~/.hetty/hetty_cert.pem")
-key string
CA private key filepath. Creates a new CA private key if file doesn't exist (default "~/.hetty/hetty_key.pem")
-projects string
Projects directory path (default "~/.hetty/projects")
Certificate Setup and Installation
In order for Hetty to proxy requests going to HTTPS endpoints, a root CA certificate for Hetty will need to be set up. Furthermore, the CA certificate may need to be installed to the host for them to be trusted by your browser. The following steps will cover how you can generate your certificate, provide them to hetty, and how you can install them in your local CA store.
⚠️ This process was done on a Linux machine but should provide guidance on Windows and macOS as well.
Generating CA certificates
You can generate a CA keypair two different ways. The first is bundled directly with Hetty, and simplifies the process immensely. The alternative is using OpenSSL to generate them, which provides more control over expiration time and cryptography used, but requires you install the OpenSSL tooling. The first is suggested for any beginners trying to get started.
Generating CA certificates with hetty
Hetty will generate the default key and certificate on its own if none are supplied
or found in ~/.hetty/
when first running the CLI. To generate a default key and
certificate with hetty, simply run the command with no arguments
hetty
You should now have a key and certificate located at ~/.hetty/hetty_key.pem
and
~/.hetty/hetty_cert.pem
respectively.
Generating CA certificates with OpenSSL
You can start off by generating a new key and CA certificate which will both expire after a month.
mkdir ~/.hetty
openssl req -newkey rsa:2048 -new -nodes -x509 -days 31 -keyout ~/.hetty/hetty_key.pem -out ~/.hetty/hetty_cert.pem
The default location which hetty
will check for the key and CA certificate is under
~/.hetty/
, at hetty_key.pem
and hetty_cert.pem
respectively. You can move them
here and hetty
will detect them automatically. Otherwise, you can specify the
location of these as arguments to hetty
.
hetty -key key.pem -cert cert.pem
Trusting the CA certificate
In order for your browser to allow traffic to the local Hetty proxy, you may need to install these certificates to your local CA store.
On Ubuntu, you can update your local CA store with the certificate by running the following commands:
sudo cp ~/.hetty/hetty_cert.pem /usr/local/share/ca-certificates/hetty.crt
sudo update-ca-certificates
On Windows, you would add your certificate by using the Certificate Manager. You can launch that by running the command:
certmgr.msc
On macOS, you can add your certificate by using the Keychain Access program. This
can be found under Application/Utilities/Keychain Access.app
. After opening this,
drag the certificate into the app. Next, open the certificate in the app, enter the
Trust section, and under When using this certificate select Always Trust.
Note: Various Linux distributions may require other steps or commands for updating their certificate authority. See the documentation relevant to your distribution for more information on how to update the system to trust your self-signed certificate.
Vision and roadmap
The project has just gotten underway, and as such I haven’t had time yet to do a write-up on its mission and roadmap. A short summary/braindump:
- Fast core/engine, built with Go, with a minimal memory footprint.
- GraphQL server to interact with the backend.
- Easy to use web interface, built with Next.js and Material UI.
- Extensibility is top of mind. All modules are written as Go packages, to
be used by the main
hetty
program, but also usable as libraries for other software. Aside from the GraphQL server, it should (eventually) be possible to also use it as a CLI tool. - Pluggable architecture for the MITM proxy and future modules, making it possible for hook into the core engine.
- Talk to the community, and focus on the features that the majority. Less features means less code to maintain.
Status
The project is currently under active development. Please star/follow and check back soon. 🤗
Contributing
Please see the Contribution Guidelines for details.
Acknowledgements
Thanks to the Hacker101 community on Discord for all the encouragement to actually start building this thing!