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AQUATONE

Aquatone is a tool for visual inspection of websites across a large amount of hosts and is convenient for quickly gaining an overview of HTTP-based attack surface.

Installation

  1. Install Google Chrome or Chromium browser -- Note: Google Chrome is currently giving unreliable results when running in headless mode, so it is recommended to install Chromium for the best results.
  2. Download the latest release of Aquatone for your operating system.
  3. Uncompress the zip file and move the aquatone binary to your desired location. You probably want to move it to a location in your $PATH for easier use.

Compiling the source code

If you for some reason don't trust the pre-compiled binaries, you can also compile the code yourself. You are on your own if you want to do this. I do not support compiling problems. Good luck with it!

Usage

Command-line options:

  -chrome-path string
        Full path to the Chrome/Chromium executable to use. By default, aquatone will search for Chrome or Chromium
  -debug
    	Print debugging information
  -http-timeout int
    	Timeout in miliseconds for HTTP requests (default 3000)
  -nmap
        Parse input as Nmap/Masscan XML
  -out string
    	Directory to write files to (default ".")
  -ports string
        Ports to scan on hosts. Supported list aliases: small, medium, large, xlarge (default "80,443,8000,8080,8443")
  -proxy string
    	Proxy to use for HTTP requests
  -resolution string
    	screenshot resolution (default "1440,900")
  -save-body
        Save response bodies to files (default true)
  -scan-timeout int
    	Timeout in miliseconds for port scans (default 100)
  -screenshot-timeout int
    	Timeout in miliseconds for screenshots (default 30000)
  -silent
    	Suppress all output except for errors
  -threads int
    	Number of concurrent threads (default number of logical CPUs)

Giving Aquatone data

Aquatone is designed to be as easy to use as possible and to integrate with your existing toolset with no or minimal glue. Aquatone is started by piping output of a command into the tool. It doesn't really care how the piped data looks as URLs, domains, and IP addresses will be extracted with regular expression pattern matching. This means that you can pretty much give it output of any tool you use for host discovery.

IPs, hostnames and domain names in the data will undergo scanning for ports that are typically used for web services and transformed to URLs with correct scheme. If the data contains URLs, they are assumed to be alive and do not undergo port scanning.

Example:

$ cat targets.txt | aquatone

Output

When Aquatone is done processing the target hosts, it has created a bunch of files and folders in the current directory:

  • aquatone_report.html: An HTML report to open in a browser that displays all the collected screenshots and response headers clustered by similarity.
  • headers/: A folder with files containing raw response headers from processed targets
  • html/: A folder with files containing the raw response bodies from processed targets. If you are processing a large amount of hosts, and don't need this for further analysis, you can disable this with the -save-body=false flag to save some disk space.
  • screenshots/: A folder with PNG screenshots of the processed targets

The output can easily be zipped up and shared with others or archived.

Changing the output destination

If you don't want Aquatone to create files in the current working directory, you can specify a different location with the -out flag:

$ cat hosts.txt | aquatone -out ~/aquatone/example.com

Note: Aquatone requires that the output destination folder exists.

Specifying ports to scan

Be default, Aquatone will scan target hosts with a small list of commonly used HTTP ports: 80, 443, 8000, 8080 and 8443. You can change this to your own list of ports with the -ports flag:

$ cat hosts.txt | aquatone -ports 80,443,3000,3001

Aquatone also supports aliases of built-in port lists to make it easier for you:

  • small: 80, 443
  • medium: 80, 443, 8000, 8080, 8443 (same as default)
  • large: 80, 81, 443, 591, 2082, 2087, 2095, 2096, 3000, 8000, 8001, 8008, 8080, 8083, 8443, 8834, 8888
  • xlarge: 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, 9981, 12443, 16080, 18091, 18092, 20720, 28017

Example:

$ cat hosts.txt | aquatone -ports large

Usage examples

Aquatone is designed to play nicely with all kinds of tools. Here's some examples:

Amass DNS enumeration

Amass is currently my preferred tool for enumerating DNS. It uses a bunch of OSINT sources as well as active brute-forcing and clever permutations to quickly identify hundreds, if not thousands, of subdomains on a domain:

$ amass -active -brute -o hosts.txt -d yahoo.com
alerts.yahoo.com
ads.yahoo.com
am.yahoo.com
- - - SNIP - - -
prd-vipui-01.infra.corp.gq1.yahoo.com
cp103.mail.ir2.yahoo.com
prd-vipui-01.infra.corp.bf1.yahoo.com
$ cat hosts.txt | aquatone

There are plenty of other DNS enumeration tools out there and Aquatone should work just as well with any other tool:

Nmap or Masscan

Aquatone can make a report on hosts scanned with the Nmap or Masscan portscanner. Simply feed Aquatone the XML output and give it the -nmap flag to tell it to parse the input as Nmap/Masscan XML:

$ cat scan.xml | aquatone -nmap

Credits

  • Thanks to EdOverflow for the can-i-take-over-xyz project which Aquatone's domain takeover capability is based on.
  • Thanks to Elbert Alias for the Wappalyzer project's technology fingerprints which Aquatone's technology fingerprinting capability is based on.

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