FIKED(1)FIKED(1)NAMEfiked - a fake IKE PSK+XAUTH daemon based on vpnc
SYNOPSISfiked [-rdqhV] -g gateway -k id:secret [-u user] [-l file] [-L file]
DESCRIPTION
Fiked impersonates a VPN gateway's IKE responder in order to capture
XAUTH login credentials in insecure PSK+XAUTH setups, such as commonly
found in Cisco based VPN sites.
Fiked supports IKEv1 in aggressive mode, using pre-shared keys and
XAUTH. Supported algorithms are DES, 3DES, AES-128, AES-192, AES-256;
MD5, SHA1; and DH groups 1, 2 and 5. IKE main mode is not supported.
To actually implement an attack against a VPN site, you have to inter‐
cept the IKE traffic to the VPN gateway and redirect it to fiked. Your
options include hostap or ARP poisoning, and usually will require some
(eg.) pf(4) redirection magic, depending on the situation.
Opening a socket on 500/udp requires root privileges on most systems.
OPTIONS-d Detach from TTY and run as a daemon.
-g Impersonate gateway. This IP address is used in the responder
ID payload, and as a source address if -r is used.
-h Display help and exit.
-k Use secret with key/group id id as pre-shared key in phase 1
authentication. This option may be used multiple times, each
time specifying a different id, secret pair. Fiked will use the
key id specified by a client to choose a matching secret, or the
first one if none matches.
Note that specifying secret's on the command line exposes them
to other users on the system.
-u Drop privileges after opening sockets and files by setting the
real, effective and stored user IDs to user and loading the
appropriate primary and anxillary groups. This potentially
reduces the impact of security vulnerabilities in fiked, because
the ISAKMP / IKE handling code, which is most likely to be vul‐
nerable, will not be running with super user privileges.
If -u is not given, fiked will drop privileges only if the real
user ID is different from the effective user ID (i.e. when
installed set-user-ID root and run as a non-root user), in which
case the real user ID will be the new effective and stored user
ID, and the group list will be left untouched.
-l Append captured XAUTH user credentials to file using a grep
friendly format, including the secret, group id, and gateway
address.
-L Append verbous logging to file instead of just standard output.
If -q is also given, log to file only.
-q Be quiet and do not log to standard output.
-r Forge the source address on sent packets to match gateway. This
uses a raw socket to send the packets. Use this option if your
particular attack setup does not rewrite the packets travelling
from fiked back to clients.
Note that using -r prevents dropping privileges if fiked is
installed set-user-ID root, since libnet requires root privi‐
leges to send packets through a raw socket.
This option is not available if fiked was built without libnet
support.
-V Display version information and exit.
EXAMPLES
To impersonate gateway 10.0.0.1 using secrets for group ids group1 and
group2, writing results to file account.log:
fiked-g 10.0.0.1 -k group1:g3h31m -k group2:s3kr3t -l account.log
The same with only one key, and running as a daemon logging to file
fiked.log:
fiked-g 10.0.0.1 -k group1:g3h31m -l account.log -d -L fiked.log
SEE ALSOarpspoof(8), ath(4), wi(4), pf(4), iptables(8), vpnc(8)AUTHORS
Fiked was written by Daniel Roethlisberger <daniel@roe.ch>, based in
part on vpnc by Maurice Massar, Geoffrey Keating and contributors.
BUGS
IKE protocol compliance is just good enough to attack Cisco VPN clients
and clones like vpnc, but nowhere near complete, secure, or error free.
Main mode is not supported.
Only a single gateway address can be specified.
Secrets can only be specified as command line arguments, which poten‐
tially exposes them to other users on the system, especially on systems
which do not have setproctitle(3), such as Linux.
4 August 2009 FIKED(1)