2.0 KiB
Laika
Laika is a simple botnet stack for red teaming. It allows authenticated communication across a custom protocol with generated key pairs which are embedded into the executable (only the public key is embedded in the bot client ofc).
Some notable features thus far:
- Lightweight, the bot alone is 270kb (22kb if not statically linked with LibSodium) and uses very little resources.
- Uses obfuscation techniques also seen in the wild (string obfuscation, tiny VMs executing sensitive operations, etc.)
- Simple configuration using CMake
- Setting keypairs (
-DLAIKA_PUBKEY=? -DLAIKA_PRIVKEY=?
) - Obfuscation modes
- Setting keypairs (
Why?
It's a fun project :)
Would this work in real world scenarios?
My hope is that this becomes complete enough to be accurate to real botnet sources seen in the wild. However since Laika uses a binary protocol, the traffic the bot/CNC create would look very suspect and scream to sysadmins. This is why most botnets nowadays use an HTTP-based protocol, not only to 'blend in' with traffic, but it also scales well with large networks of bots where the CNC can be deployed across multiple servers and have a generic HTTP load balancer.
I could add some padding to each packet to make it look pseudo-HTTP-like, however I haven't given much thought to this.
Configuration and compilation
Make sure you have the following libraries and tools installed:
- CMake (>=3.10)
- LibSodium (static library)
- NCurses
First, compile the target normally
$ cmake -B build && cmake --build build
Now, generate your custom key pair using genKey
$ ./bin/genKey
Next, rerun cmake, but passing your public and private keypairs
$ rm -rf build &&\
cmake -B build -DLAIKA_PUBKEY=997d026d1c65deb6c30468525132be4ea44116d6f194c142347b67ee73d18814 -DLAIKA_PRIVKEY=1dbd33962f1e170d1e745c6d3e19175049b5616822fac2fa3535d7477957a841 -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=MinSizeRel &&\
cmake --build build
Output binaries are put in the ./bin
folder