Finds and tracks wifi devices through raw 802.11 monitoring
Project description
Finds and tracks wifi devices through raw 802.11 monitoring.
PyPI page: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/trackerjacker
Install
pip3 install trackerjacker
Usage
Find detailed usage like this:
trackerjacker -h
There are 2 major usage modes for trackerjacker: map mode and track mode:
Map mode example
Map mode is used to find the Access Points and Devices within the range. Think of it like nmap for raw 802.11 mode.
$ trackerjacker --map -i wlan0mon Channels available on wlan0mon: [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 36, 38, 40, 44, 46, 48, 52, 54, 56, 60, 62, 64, 100, 102, 104, 108, 110, 112] Map output file: wifi_map.yaml MAC found: 90:48:9a:29:85:8c, Channel: 1 MAC found: ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff, Channel: 1 SSID found: EDWARDS23, BSSID: 90:48:9a:29:85:8c, Channel: 1 MAC found: 54:e4:bd:8d:a6:b0, Channel: 1 MAC found: 9c:d2:1e:dc:ed:06, Channel: 1 MAC found: 00:00:00:00:00:00, Channel: 1 MAC found: 38:3b:c8:fe:15:3f, Channel: 1 SSID found: Castle Grey Skull, BSSID: 38:3b:c8:fe:15:3f, Channel: 1 MAC found: 38:3b:c8:fe:15:3d, Channel: 1 MAC found: cc:0d:ec:27:de:fb, Channel: 1 SSID found: [NULL][NULL][NULL][NULL][NULL][NULL][NULL], BSSID: cc:0d:ec:27:de:fb, Channel: 1 MAC found: 58:67:1a:f6:80:04, Channel: 1
Map mode outputs wifi_map.yaml, which looks something like this:
# trackerjacker map 1: # channel "38:3b:c8:fe:15:3e": # bssid; 2Wire Inc ssid: "ATT8ais9uw" macs: - "38:3b:c8:fe:15:3d" # 2Wire Inc "38:3b:c8:fe:15:3f": # bssid; 2Wire Inc ssid: "Castle Grey Skull" macs: "44:e1:37:52:d5:20": # bssid; ARRIS Group, Inc. ssid: "ATT760" macs: "90:48:9a:29:85:8c": # bssid; Hon Hai Precision Ind. Co.,Ltd. ssid: "EDWARDS23" macs: - "54:e4:bd:8d:a6:b0" # FN-LINK TECHNOLOGY LIMITED - "9c:d2:1e:dc:ed:06" # Hon Hai Precision Ind. Co.,Ltd. "cc:0d:ec:27:de:fb": # bssid; Cisco SPVTG ssid: "[NULL][NULL][NULL][NULL][NULL][NULL][NULL]" macs: "f8:35:dd:43:1a:25": # bssid; Gemtek Technology Co., Ltd. ssid: "MOTOROLA-903E1" macs: "unassociated": # bssid; macs: - "2c:54:cf:bd:a7:45" # LG Electronics (Mobile Communications) - "58:67:1a:f6:80:04" # Barnes&Noble
Track mode example
Track mode allows you to specify some number of MAC addresses to watch, and if the specified devices exceeds the threshold (in bytes), an alert will be triggered.
$ trackerjacker -i wlan0mon --track -m 7C:70:BC:57:F0:77 -t 450000 --alert-command "/root/trigger_alarm.sh" --channels-to-monitor 11 Channels available on wlan0mon: [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 36, 38, 40, 44, 46, 48, 52, 54, 56, 60, 62, 64, 100, 102, 104, 108, 110, 112] Bytes received in last 10 seconds for 7c:70:bc:57:f0:77: 0 Bytes received in last 10 seconds for 7c:70:bc:57:f0:77: 599 Bytes received in last 10 seconds for 7c:70:bc:57:f0:77: 647 Bytes received in last 10 seconds for 7c:70:bc:57:f0:77: 0 Bytes received in last 10 seconds for 7c:70:bc:57:f0:77: 541386 2017-03-27 22:22:19.155201: Detected 7c:70:bc:57:f0:77 Congratulations! You've fired the alarm_triggered event
Example use-cases
Map out all the nearby wifi devices (and which devices are asspciated with which Access Points)
Track when a particular MAC is seen
Track when a particular MAC sends some threshold of data in some time period
Track when traffic is happening on a particular Access Point
Find/track all connections on a particular Access Point
Example usage
Example: configuring with command-line args
python3 trackerjacker.py -m 8a:23:ab:75:8e:2b --alert-command "date >> /tmp/test.txt"
Notes:
This monitors for the MAC address: 8a:23:ab:75:8e:2b
When detected, the current time is appended to /tmp/test.txt
Example: configuring with config file
python3 trackerjacker.py -c my_config.json
And here’s the example config file called my_config.json:
{ "iface": "wlan0mon", "devices_to_watch": [ {"mac": "5f:cb:53:1c:8a:2c", "name": "Bob's iPhone"}, {"mac": "32:44:1b:d7:a1:5b", "name": "Alice's iPhone"}, {"mac": "f2:43:2b:e5:c3:6d", "name": "Security camera", "threshold": 20000}, "44:61:32:C6:34:8F"], "aps_to_watch": [{"bssid": "c6:23:ef:33:cc:a2"}], "threshold_bytes": 1, "threshold_window": 10, "channels_to_monitor": [1, 6, 11, 52], "channel_switch_scheme": "round_robin" }
A few notes about this:
threshold_bytes is the default threshold of bytes which, if seen, a causes the alert function to be called
threshold_window is the time window in which the threshold_bytes is analyzed.
devices_to_watch is a list which can contain either strings (representing MACs) or dicts (which allow the specification of a name and threshold)
name is simply what a label you want to be printed when this device is seen.
threshold in the “Security camera” is how many bytes must be seen
channels_to_monitor - list of 802.11 wifi channels to monitor. The list of channels your wifi card supports is printed when trackerjacker starts up. By default, all supported channels are monitored.
channel_switch_scheme - either default, round_robin, or traffic_based. traffic_based determines the channels of most traffic, and probabilistically monitors them more.
Example: Enable/Disable monitor mode on interface
Enable monitor mode:
python3 trackerjacker.py --monitor-mode-on -i wlan0
Disable monitor mode:
python3 trackerjacker.py --monitor-mode-off -i wlan0mon
Note that trackerjacker will automatically enable/disable monitor mode if necessary. This functionality is just useful if you want to enable monitor mode on an interface for use with other applications.
Example: Set adapter channel
python3 trackerjacker.py --set-channel 11 -i wlan0
Note that trackerjacker will automatically switch channels as necessary during normal map/track actions. This option is just useful if you want to set the channel on an interface for use with other applications.
Roadmap
[x] Hosted in PyPI
[x] Radio signal strength
[ ] “Jack” mode - deauth attacks
[ ] Mac (OS X) support
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