Awesome
Lepus
Lepus is a tool for enumerating subdomains, checking for subdomain takeovers and perform port scans - and boy, is it fast!
Basic Usage
lepus.py yahoo.com
Summary
Enumeration modes
The enumeration modes are different ways lepus uses to identify sudomains for a given domain. These modes are:
Moreover:
- For all methods, lepus checks if the given domain or any generated potential subdomain is a wildcard domain or not.
- After identification, lepus collects ASN and network information for the identified domains that resolve to public IP Addresses.
Collectors
The Collectors mode collects subdomains from the following services:
Service | API Required |
---|---|
Censys | Yes |
CertSpotter | No |
CRT | No |
DNSTrails | Yes |
FOFA | Yes |
Google Transparency | No |
HackerTarget | No |
PassiveTotal | Yes |
Project Discovery Chaos | Yes |
Project Crobat | No |
Project Sonar | No |
Riddler | Yes |
Shodan | Yes |
Spyse | Yes |
ThreatCrowd | No |
ThreatMiner | No |
VirusTotal | Yes |
Wayback Machine | No |
ZoomEye | Yes |
You can add your API keys in the config.ini
file.
The Collectors module will run by default on lepus. If you do not want to use the collectors during a lepus run (so that you don't exhaust your API key limits), you can use the -nc
or --no-collectors
argument.
Dictionary
The dictionary mode can be used when you want to provide lepus a list of subdomains. You can use the -w
or --wordlist
argument followed by the file. A custom list comes with lepus located at lists/subdomains.txt
. An example run would be:
lepus.py -w lists/subdomains.txt yahoo.com
Permutations
The Permutations mode performs changes on the list of subdomains that have been identified. For each subdomain, a number of permutations will take place based on the lists/words.txt
file. You can also provide a custom wordlist for permutations with the -pw
or --permutation-wordlist
argument, followed by the file name.An example run would be:
lepus.py --permutate yahoo.com
or
lepus.py --permutate -pw customsubdomains.txt yahoo.com
ReverseDNS
The ReverseDNS mode will gather all IP addresses that were resolved and perform a reverse DNS on each one in order to detect more subdomains. For example, if www.example.com
resolves to 1.2.3.4
, lepus will perform a reverse DNS for 1.2.3.4
and gather any other subdomains belonging to example.com
, e.g. www2
,internal
or oldsite
.
To run the ReverseDNS module use the --reverse
argument. Additionally, --ripe
(or -ripe
) can be used in order to instruct the module to query the RIPE database using the second level domain for potential network ranges. Moreover, lepus supports the --ranges
(or -r
) argument. You can use it to make reverse DNS resolutions against CIDRs that belong to the target domain.
By default this module will take into account all previously identified IPs, then defined ranges, then ranges identified through the RIPE database. In case you only want to run the module against specific or RIPE identified ranges, and not against all already identified IPs, you can use the --only-ranges
(-or
) argument.
An example run would be:
lepus.py --reverse yahoo.com
or
lepus.py --reverse -ripe -r 172.216.0.0/16,183.177.80.0/23 yahoo.com
or only against the defined or identified from RIPE
lepus.py --reverse -or -ripe -r 172.216.0.0/16,183.177.80.0/23 yahoo.com
Hint: lepus will identify ASNs
and Networks
during enumeration, so you can also use these ranges to identify more subdomains with a subsequent run.
Markov
With this module, Lepus will utilize Markov chains in order to train itself and then generate subdomain based on the already known ones. The bigger the general surface, the better the tool will be able to train itself and subsequently, the better the results will be.
The module can be activated with the --markovify
argument. Parameters also include the Markov state size, the maximum length of the generated candidate addition, and the quantity of generated candidates. Predefined values are 3, 5 and 5 respectively. Those arguments can be changed with -ms
(--markov-state
), -ml
(--markov-length
) and -mq
(--markov-quantity
) to meet your needs. Keep in mind that the larger these values are, the more time Lepus will need to generate the candidates.
It has to be noted that different executions of this module might generate different candidates, so feel free to run it a few times consecutively. Keep in mind that the higher the -ms
, -ml
and -mq
values, the more time will be needed for candidate generation.
lepus.py --markovify yahoo.com
or
lepus.py --markovify -ms 5 -ml 10 -mq 10
Subdomain Takeover
Lepus has a list of signatures in order to identify if a domain can be taken over. You can use it by providing the --takeover
argument. This module also supports Slack notifications, once a potential takeover has been identified, by adding a Slack token in the config.ini
file. The checks are made against the following services:
- Acquia
- Activecampaign
- Aftership
- Aha!
- Airee
- Amazon AWS/S3
- Apigee
- Azure
- Bigcartel
- Bitbucket
- Brightcove
- Campaign Monitor
- Cargo Collective
- Desk
- Feedpress
- Fly.io
- Getresponse
- Ghost.io
- Github
- Hatena
- Helpjuice
- Helpscout
- Heroku
- Instapage
- Intercom
- JetBrains
- Kajabi
- Kayako
- Launchrock
- Mashery
- Maxcdn
- Moosend
- Ning
- Pantheon
- Pingdom
- Readme.io
- Simplebooklet
- Smugmug
- Statuspage
- Strikingly
- Surge.sh
- Surveygizmo
- Tave
- Teamwork
- Thinkific
- Tictail
- Tilda
- Tumblr
- Uptime Robot
- UserVoice
- Vend
- Webflow
- Wishpond
- Wordpress
- Zendesk
Port Scan
The port scan module will check open ports against a target and log them in the results. You can use the --portscan
argument which by default will scan ports 80, 443, 8000, 8080, 8443. You can also use custom ports or choose a predefined set of ports.
Ports set | Ports |
---|---|
small | 80, 443 |
medium (default) | 80, 443, 8000, 8080, 8443 |
large | 80, 81, 443, 591, 2082, 2087, 2095, 2096, 3000, 8000, 8001, 8008, 8080, 8083, 8443, 8834, 8888, 9000, 9090, 9443 |
huge | 80, 81, 300, 443, 591, 593, 832, 981, 1010, 1311, 2082, 2087, 2095, 2096, 2480, 3000, 3128, 3333, 4243, 4567, 4711, 4712, 4993, 5000, 5104, 5108, 5800, 6543, 7000, 7396, 7474, 8000, 8001, 8008, 8014, 8042, 8069, 8080, 8081, 8088, 8090, 8091, 8118, 8123, 8172, 8222, 8243, 8280, 8281, 8333, 8443, 8500, 8834, 8880, 8888, 8983, 9000, 9043, 9060, 9080, 9090, 9091, 9200, 9443, 9800, 9943, 9980, 9981, 12443, 16080, 18091, 18092, 20720, 28017 |
An example run would be:
lepus.py --portscan yahoo.com
or
lepus.py --portscan -p huge yahoo.com
or
lepus.py --portscan -p 80,443,8082,65123 yahoo.com
Installation
-
Normal installation:
$ python3.7 -m pip install -r requirements.txt
-
Preferably install in a virtualenv:
$ pyenv virtualenv 3.7.4 lepus $ pyenv activate lepus $ pip install -r requirements.txt
-
Installing latest python on debian:
$ apt install build-essential zlib1g-dev libncurses5-dev libgdbm-dev libnss3-dev libssl-dev libreadline-dev libffi-dev libsqlite3-dev wget $ curl -O https://www.python.org/ftp/python/3.7.4/Python-3.7.4.tar.xz $ tar -xf Python-3.7.4.tar.xz $ cd Python-3.7.4 $ ./configure --enable-optimizations --enable-loadable-sqlite-extensions $ make $ make altinstall
Arguments
usage: lepus.py [-h] [-w WORDLIST] [-hw] [-t THREADS] [-nc] [-zt]
[--permutate] [-pw PERMUTATION_WORDLIST] [--reverse]
[-r RANGES] [--portscan] [-p PORTS] [--takeover] [--markovify]
[-ms MARKOV_STATE] [-ml MARKOV_LENGTH] [-mq MARKOV_QUANTITY]
[-f] [-v]
domain
Infrastructure OSINT
positional arguments:
domain domain to search
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-w WORDLIST, --wordlist WORDLIST
wordlist with subdomains
-hw, --hide-wildcards
hide wildcard resolutions
-t THREADS, --threads THREADS
number of threads [default is 100]
-nc, --no-collectors skip passive subdomain enumeration
-zt, --zone-transfer attempt to zone transfer from identified name servers
--permutate perform permutations on resolved domains
-pw PERMUTATION_WORDLIST, --permutation-wordlist PERMUTATION_WORDLIST
wordlist to perform permutations with [default is
lists/words.txt]
--reverse perform reverse dns lookups on resolved public IP
addresses
-ripe, --ripe query ripe database with the 2nd level domain
for networks to be used for reverse lookups
-r RANGES, --ranges RANGES
comma seperated ip ranges to perform reverse dns
lookups on
-or, --only-ranges use only ranges provided with -r or -ripe and not all
previously identified IPs
--portscan scan resolved public IP addresses for open ports
-p PORTS, --ports PORTS
set of ports to be used by the portscan module
[default is medium]
--takeover check identified hosts for potential subdomain take-
overs
--markovify use markov chains to identify more subdomains
-ms MARKOV_STATE, --markov-state MARKOV_STATE
markov state size [default is 3]
-ml MARKOV_LENGTH, --markov-length MARKOV_LENGTH
max length of markov substitutions [default is 5]
-mq MARKOV_QUANTITY, --markov-quantity MARKOV_QUANTITY
max quantity of markov results per candidate length
[default is 5]
-f, --flush purge all records of the specified domain from the
database
-v, --version show program's version number and exit
Full command example
The following, is an example run with all available active arguments:
./lepus.py python.org --wordlist lists/subdomains.txt --permutate -pw ~/mypermsword.lst --reverse -ripe -r 10.11.12.0/24 --portscan -p huge --takeover --markovify -ms 3 -ml 10 -mq 10
The following command flushes all database entries for a specific domain:
./lepus.py python.org --flush