Skip to main content

This is a wrapper around CVDAST

Project description

--------- ReadMe:

  1. About ----
  • Python Runtime and Package Installation First of it, it is assumed that python3 and pip3 are installed. And cvdast package is installed by pip3. The python3 command can sometimes just be "python" if your default python installation is version 3 or above. Please run "python --version" to find out. If you are running python 3 or above by default, please simply substitute the "python3" commands in examples provided in the remainder of this document.

To ensure cvdast is up-to-date, please run: pip3 install -U cvdast

  • Test Directory This self-contained package, when decompressed/unzipped, should be the test directory from which you can generate fuzz data based on the specs and then run. Please feel free to rename the test directory. The subdirectory structure is important for the test run. All files generated will be put under the test directory.

  • Config: There will be information such as the URL of your test application (API endpoint), the list of the fuzz attacks to try etc. The runconfig.py file contains all of the custom variables one needs to change. Current values are provided as examples.

After a complete runall.py run(details in sections below), the summary.html file will contain pointers to all the test results. In addition, a file called fordev-apis.csv is generated. This is a highlevel summary for consumption of a dev team. It highlight just the API endpoints that seem to "fail" the test, ie. responding positively instead of rejecting the fuzz calls. Please feel free to import such CSV report to a spreadsheet.

The test results are stored in results results/perapi results/perattack

Test can run for a long time, so one can adjust the spec and the collection of attacks in runall.py to stage each run. Test results of different test will not over-write each other. You can regenerate test report after the test run.

auth.py must be in this directory cv_config_oc.yaml is hardcoded in fuzzallspecs. Must be present

  1. Generate fuzzing test for all the specs ----

With a given cvdast version and a set of specs, you need to only run this once.

python3 fuzzallspecs.py

will fuzz all specs, run it with "--help" will let you know an optional input which is the spec directory, default is "specs".

A successfully run fuzzallspecs will generate as output a list of spec title names (taken from the spec's title) that can be used to update runall.py list for test control (later 4. Control test)

A specs directory containing all .json app spec is used to store the specs for testing.

  1. Running Tests -----------

One can run this script:

python3 runall.py

After fuzzallspecs.py, it will run both runperattack and runperapi to generate two sets of results. It takes a "regen" argument. Regen will tells it not to run the long test, but just run the cloudVectorDAST.generate_fuzz_report to again generate the report (it copies the saved report.json from results directory)

It creates a summary.html in the test. It contains tables allowing convenient access to all the reports

Results are saved in a directory called results

results results/perapi results/perattack

After the runall call, you can find subdirectories with the Spec names under each of these results directories. There are .html files that are the report html pointed to by the summary.

Under the perapi directory there are files that are named after the API name (chopped from the test directory long "for_fuzzing.py" name). The report.json of the test run is saved with -report.json

Same naming convention goes for perattack reports.

python3 runperapi.py python3 runperattack.py

Can be run seperately to test. They will update the test results but they won't update summary.html.

4 Controlling Spec and Attack for testing -------

In runall.py, there are two lists (and two corresponding full list for reference).

The test can take multiple hours, or even a day if the full list is used.

apispeclist=["CpmGateway", "TelemetryGateway"]

fuzzattacklist = ['sql-injection/detect']

fuzzattacklist = ['control-chars', 'string-expansion', 'server-side-include', 'xpath', 'unicode', 'html_js_fuzz', 'disclosure-directory', 'xss', 'os-cmd-execution', 'disclosure-source', 'format-strings', 'xml', 'integer-overflow', 'path-traversal', 'json', 'mimetypes', 'redirect', 'os-dir-indexing', 'no-sql-injection', 'authentication', 'http-protocol', 'business-logic', 'disclosure-localpaths/unix', 'file-upload/malicious-images', 'sql-injection/detect', 'sql-injection/exploit', 'sql-injection/payloads-sql-blind'] '''

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

cvdastwrapper-1.48.3.tar.gz (21.9 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

cvdastwrapper-1.48.3-py3-none-any.whl (26.5 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file cvdastwrapper-1.48.3.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: cvdastwrapper-1.48.3.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 21.9 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/3.3.0 pkginfo/1.7.0 requests/2.25.1 setuptools/51.1.2 requests-toolbelt/0.9.1 tqdm/4.56.2 CPython/3.8.6

File hashes

Hashes for cvdastwrapper-1.48.3.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 ac5061af3d135f985ecd3a12105f24e6b7dab21d0b4a1363128881244e9dd032
MD5 d131d5e85f14972794edb13995581c4d
BLAKE2b-256 15dd864dce5ab4ec4661382e2798232e715c55e49ed756fe8557512a68876fcf

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file cvdastwrapper-1.48.3-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: cvdastwrapper-1.48.3-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 26.5 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/3.3.0 pkginfo/1.7.0 requests/2.25.1 setuptools/51.1.2 requests-toolbelt/0.9.1 tqdm/4.56.2 CPython/3.8.6

File hashes

Hashes for cvdastwrapper-1.48.3-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 9ca8ede4b016ce213ab0d3b516fda52d3f627fbd99085a9326b1ed889f2048c5
MD5 7c9ce9d9cfbf878cf949fcd630ee0e9c
BLAKE2b-256 05cf6669dc3edb268fa51c85f1a7d06047b738b02914d97ccd9e7177baba9163

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page