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moonwalk

Cover your tracks during Linux Exploitation / Penetration Testing by leaving zero traces on system logs and filesystem timestamps.


📖 Table of Contents

ℹ️ Introduction

moonwalk is a 400 KB single-binary executable that can clear your traces while penetration testing a Unix machine. It saves the state of system logs pre-exploitation and reverts that state including the filesystem timestamps post-exploitation leaving zero traces of a ghost in the shell.

⚠️ NOTE: This tool is open-sourced to assist solely in Red Team operations and in no means is the author liable for repercussions caused by any prohibited use of this tool. Only make use of this in a machine you have permission to test.

Features

  • Small Executable: Get started quickly with a curl fetch to your target machine.
  • Fast: Performs all session commands including logging, trace clearing, and filesystem operations in under 5 milliseconds.
  • Reconnaissance: To save the state of system logs, moonwalk finds a world-writable path and saves the session under a dot directory which is removed upon ending the session.
  • Shell History: Instead of clearing the whole history file, moonwalk reverts it back to how it was including the invokation of moonwalk.
  • Filesystem Timestamps: Hide from the Blue Team by reverting the access/modify timestamps of files back to how it was using the GET command.

Installation

$ curl -L https://github.com/mufeedvh/moonwalk/releases/download/v1.0.0/moonwalk_linux -o moonwalk

(AMD x86-64)

OR

Download the executable from Releases OR Install with cargo:

$ cargo install --git https://github.com/mufeedvh/moonwalk.git

Install Rust/Cargo

Build From Source

Prerequisites:

  • Git
  • Rust
  • Cargo (Automatically installed when installing Rust)
  • A C linker (Only for Linux, generally comes pre-installed)
$ git clone https://github.com/mufeedvh/moonwalk.git
$ cd moonwalk/
$ cargo build --release

The first command clones this repository into your local machine and the last two commands enters the directory and builds the source in release mode.

Usage

Once you get a shell into the target Unix machine, start a moonwalk session by running this command:

$ moonwalk start

While you're doing recon/exploitation and messing with any files, get the touch timestamp command of a file beforehand to revert it back after you've accessed/modified it:

$ moonwalk get ~/.bash_history

Post-exploitation, clear your traces and close the session with this command:

$ moonwalk finish

That's it!

Contribution

Ways to contribute:

  • Suggest a feature
  • Report a bug
  • Fix something and open a pull request
  • Help me document the code
  • Spread the word
  • Find something I missed which leaves any trace!

License

Licensed under the MIT License, see LICENSE for more information.