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Pig

Pig (which can be understood as Packet intruder generator) is a Linux packet crafting tool. You can use Pig to test your IDS/IPS among other stuffs.

Pig brings a bunch of well-known attack signatures ready to be used and you can expand this collection with more specific things according your requirements.

Until now it is possible to create IPv4 signatures with transport layer based on TCP, UDP and ICMP.

How to build it?

You need to use the Hefesto to build pig. After following the steps to put Hefesto working on your system. Move to the pig subdirectory named as src and run the following command:

hefesto

After this command you should find the pig binary under the path src/bin.

The pigsty files

Pigsty files are plain text files where you can define a set of packet signatures. There is a specific syntax to be followed. Look out an example of a pigsty file:

    [ signature   =      "Hello",
      ip.version  =            4,
      ip.ihl      =            5,
      ip.tos      =            0,
      ip.src      = 192.30.70.10,
      ip.dst      =  192.30.70.3,
      ip.protocol =           17,
      udp.dst     =         1008,
      udp.src     =        32000,
      udp.payload =    "Hello!!" ]

Basically, all signature data must goes between square brackets: [ ... ].

Inside this area the piece of information is supplied by the scheme field = data.

If you have some experience with Computer Networks is sure that the majority of fields listed on Table 1 have strong meaning for you. You must use these fields to create your further signatures.

Table 1: The pig signature fields.

Field Stands for Protocol Data type Sample definition
signature The signature name - string signature = "Udp flood"
ip.version IP version IP number ip.version = 4
ip.ihl Internet Header Len IP number ip.ihl = 5
ip.tos Type of service IP number ip.tos = 0
ip.tlen Total Length IP number ip.tlen = 20
ip.id Packet ID IP number ip.id = 0xbeef
ip.flags IP Flags IP number ip.flags = 4
ip.offset Fragment offset IP number ip.offset = 0
ip.ttl Time to live IP number ip.ttl = 64
ip.protocol Protocol IP number ip.protocol = 6
ip.checksum Checksum IP number ip.checksum = 0
ip.src Source address IP ip address ip.src = 192.30.70.3
ip.dst Dest. address IP ip address ip.dst = 192.30.70.3
ip.payload IP raw payload IP string ip.payload = "\x01\x02"
tcp.src Source port TCP number tcp.src = 80
tcp.dst Dest. port TCP number tcp.dst = 21
tcp.seqno Sequence number TCP number tcp.seqno = 10202
tcp.ackno Acknowledge number TCP number tcp.ackno = 10200
tcp.size TCP Length TCP number tcp.size = 4
tcp.reserv TCP reserv. field TCP number tcp.reserv = 0
tcp.urg TCP urg. flag TCP bit tcp.urg = 0
tcp.ack TCP ack. flag TCP bit tcp.ack = 1
tcp.psh TCP psh. flag TCP bit tcp.psh = 0
tcp.rst TCP psh. flag TCP bit tcp.rst = 0
tcp.syn TCP syn. flag TCP bit tcp.syn = 0
tcp.fin TCP fin. flag TCP bit tcp.fin = 0
tcp.wsize TCP window size TCP number tcp.wsize = 0
tcp.checksum Checksum TCP number tcp.checksum = 0
tcp.urgp Urgent pointer TCP number tcp.urgp = 0
tcp.payload Payload TCP string tcp.payload = "\x01abc"
udp.src Source port UDP number udp.src = 53
udp.dst Dest. port UDP number udp.dst = 7
udp.size UDP Length UDP number udp.size = 8
udp.checksum Checksum UDP number udp.checksum = 0
udp.payload Payload UDP number udp.payload = "boo!"
icmp.type ICMP type ICMP number icmp.type = 0
icmp.code ICMP code ICMP number icmp.code = 0
icmp.checksum Checksum ICMP number icmp.checksum = 0
icmp.payload Payload ICMP string icmp.payload = "ping!"

When creating a signature you do not need specify all data. If you specify only the most relevant packet parts the remaining parts will be filled up with default values. The checksums are always recalculated.

Tip: take a look in subdirectory pigsty. You will find lots of signature files and you will see that is pretty simple define new ones.

Specifying IP addresses geographically

Yes, this is possible. In order to use this feature you just need to specify the values listed on Table 2 in ip adddress typed fields.

Table 2: IPs by geographic area.

Value to use Stands for
north-american-ip IP addresses from North America
south-american-ip IP addresses from South America
asian-ip IP addresses from Asia
european-ip IP addresses from Europe

Specifying my own addresses

You should in any ip address typed field use user-defined-ip as value. Note that you need to use the command line option --targets in this case. See section "Using pig" for more information.

Contribute sending more packet signatures

If you create pigsty files that you judge be relevant beyond your own environment open a pull request in order to include these useful files here. Thank you in advance!

Using pig

The Pig usage is very straightforward being necessary to supply four basic options which are: --signatures, --gateway, --net-mask, --lo-iface.

Do you want to know more about each option, huh?... So let's go:

  • The option --signatures receives a list of file paths to pigsty files.
  • The option --gateway is where you specify your gateway address. Be aware that pig generates or at least try to generate the ethernet frames too. Due to it the gateway address is rather important in order to right composition of the layer-1 data.
  • The option --net-mask for routing issues must receive your network mask.
  • The option --lo-iface is the place where you should inform the name of the local network interface you will use to "drain out" the generated packets.

Supposing that we want to generate DDos based traffic:

pig --signatures=pigsty/ddos.pigsty --gateway=10.0.2.2 --net-mask=255.255.255.0 --lo-iface=eth0

Now we want to messing around with everything:

pig --signatures=pigsty/ddos.pigsty,pigsty/attackresponses.pigsty,pigsty/badtraffic.pigsty,pigsty/backdoors.pigsty --gateway=10.0.2.2 --net-mask=255.255.255.0 --lo-iface=eth0

Extra options

Defining timeouts between the signature sendings

For it use the option --timeout=<millisecs>

Echo suppressing

Use the --no-echo option.

Defining targets

Use the --targets option. You can specify a list based on exact IPs, IP masks and CIDRs.

Look this:

pig --signatures=pigsty/local-mess.pigsty --targets=192.30.70.3,192.30.70.*,192.30.70.0/9 --gateway=10.0.2.2 --net-mask=255.255.255.0 --lo-iface=eth0

Sending only one signature and going back

Maybe you need to send only one signature and so return to the caller in order to check what happened after. This kind of requirement is common when you use this application as support for system tests or unit tests. So, if you need to do this you should try to use the option --single-test:

pig --signature=pigsty/syn-scan.pigsty --targets=127.0.0.1 --single-test --gateway=10.0.2.2 --net-mask=255.255.255.0 --lo-iface=eth0

After run this command pig will select only one signature from the file syn-scan.pigsty and try to send it and then exit. If some error has occurred during the process pig will exit with exit-code equals to 1 otherwise pig will exit with exit-code equals to 0.

Testing from scratch

Save the following data as "oink.pigsty":

    [ signature   =           "oink",
      ip.version  =                4,
      ip.ihl      =                5,
      ip.tos      =                0,
      ip.src      =        127.0.0.1,
      ip.dst      =  user-defined-ip,
      ip.protocol =               17,
      udp.dst     =             1008,
      udp.src     =            32000,
      udp.payload =        "Oink!!\n" ]

On another tty run the netcat in UDP mode listen for connections on port 1008:

nc -u -l -p 1008

Now run pig using this pigsty file and informing as target the loopback:

pig --signatures=oink.pigsty --targets=127.0.0.1 --gateway=10.0.2.2 --net-mask=255.255.255.0 --lo-iface=eth0

The netcat should start receive several oinks and... yes, congrats!! pig is up and running on your system! ;)

Try to sniff your Network to get more information about these UDP packets that are flowing around your interfaces... Have fun!

Santiago.

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A Linux packet crafting tool

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