Infection Monkey - Data center Security Testing Tool
Welcome to the Infection Monkey!
The Infection Monkey is an open source security tool for testing a data center's resiliency to perimeter breaches and internal server infection. The Monkey uses various methods to self propagate across a data center and reports success to a centralized Monkey Island server.
The Infection Monkey is comprised of two parts:
* Monkey - A tool which infects other machines and propagates to them
* Monkey Island - A dedicated server to control and visualize the Infection Monkey's progress inside the data center
To read more about the Monkey, visit Infection Monkey's website
Main Features: The Infection Monkey uses the following techniques and exploits to propagate to other machines.
Multiple propagation techniques:
* Predefined passwords
* Common logical exploits
* Password stealing using Mimikatz
Multiple exploit methods:
* SSH
* SMB
* RDP
* WMI
* Shellshock
* Conficker
* SambaCry
* Elastic Search (CVE-2015-1427)
Install on Windows
The Monkey Island server has been tested on Windows Server 2012, Windows XP, 7, 8.1 and 10
Download Infection Monkey for Windows and open it:
monkey-windows-32.exe (for Windows 32-bit)
monkey-windows-64.exe (for Windows 64-bit)
Install on Debian
The Monkey Island has been tested on Ubuntu 14.04, 15.04 and 16.04. The Linux build has been tested on Ubuntu server and Debian (multiple versions).
Download this Debian package, open and install it with Software
infection_monkey_1.5.2_deb.tgz
Or you can install Infection Monkey with Terminal (After extracting the .tgz file)
sudo dpkg -i infection_monkey_1.5.2_deb
Download orther:
monkey-linux-32 (Linux 32-bit)
monkey-linux-64 (Linux 34-bit)
Setup: Check out the Setup page in the Wiki or a quick getting started guide.
Building the Monkey from source
If you want to build the monkey from source, see Setup and follow the instructions at the readme files under infection_monkey and monkey_island.
License
Copyright (c) Guardicore Ltd
GNU General Public License v3.0
No comments:
Post a Comment