Autodeauth - A Tool Built To Automatically Deauth Local Networks


A tool built to automatically deauth local networks

Setup

$ chmod +x setup.sh$ sudo ./setup.shReading package lists... DoneBuilding dependency tree... DoneReading state information... Done0 upgraded, 0 newly installed, 0 to remove and 0 not upgraded.Please enter your WiFi interface name e.g: wlan0 ->  wlan1autodeauth installeduse sudo autodeauth or systemctl start autodeauth to edit service setting please edit: service file: /etc/systemd/system/autodeauth.service

Options

$ sudo autodeauth -h        _       _       ___                _   _           /_\ _  _| |_ ___|   \ ___ __ _ _  _| |_| |_        / _ \ || |  _/ _ \ |) / -_) _` | || |  _| ' \      /_/ \_\_,_|\__\___/___/\___\__,_|\_,_|\__|_||_|usage: autodeauth [-h] --interface INTERFACE [--blacklist BLACKLIST] [--whitelist WHITELIST] [--led LED] [--time TIME] [--random] [--ignore] [--count COUNT] [--verbose VERBOSE]Auto Deauth Tooloptions:  -h, --help            show this help message and exit  --interface INTERFACE, -i INTERFACE                        Interface to fetch WiFi networks and send deauth packets (must support packet injection)  --blacklist BLACKLIST, -b BLACKLIST                        List of networks ssids/mac addre   sses to avoid (Comma seperated)  --whitelist WHITELIST, -w WHITELIST                        List of networks ssids/mac addresses to target (Comma seperated)  --led LED, -l LED     Led pin number for led display  --time TIME, -t TIME  Time (in s) between two deauth packets (default 0)  --random, -r          Randomize your MAC address before deauthing each network  --ignore              Ignore errors encountered when randomizing your MAC address  --count COUNT, -c COUNT                        Number of packets to send (default 5000)  --verbose VERBOSE, -v VERBOSE                        Scapy verbosity setting (default: 0)                                                    

Usage

After running the setup you are able to run the script by using autodeauth from any directory

Command line

Networks with spaces can be represented using their mac addresses

$ sudo autodeauth -i wlan0 --blacklist FreeWiFi,E1:DB:12:2F:C1:57 -c 10000

Service

$ sudo systemctl start autodeauth

Loot and Log files

Loot

When a network is detected and fits under the whitelist/blacklist criteria its network information is saved as a json file in /var/log/autodeauth/

{    "ssid": "MyWiFiNetwork",    "mac_address": "10:0B:21:2E:C1:11",    "channel": 1,    "network.frequency": "2.412 GHz",    "mode": "Master",    "bitrates": [        "6 Mb/s",        "9 Mb/s",        "12 Mb/s",        "18 Mb/s",        "24 Mb/s",        "36 Mb/s",        "48 Mb/s",        "54 Mb/s"    ],    "encryption_type": "wpa2",    "encrypted": true,    "quality": "70/70",    "signal": -35} 

Log File

$ cat /var/log/autodeauth/log               2022-08-20 21:01:31 - Scanning for local networks2022-08-20 21:20:29 - Sending 5000 deauth frames to network: A0:63:91:D5:B8:76 -- MyWiFiNetwork2022-08-20 21:21:00 - Exiting/Cleaning up

Edit Service Config

To change the settings of the autodeauth service edit the file /etc/systemd/system/autodeauth.service
Lets say you wanted the following config to be setup as a service

$ sudo autodeauth -i wlan0 --blacklist FreeWiFi,myWifi -c 10000
$ vim /etc/systemd/system/autodeauth.service

Then you would change the ExecStart line to

ExecStart=/usr/bin/python3 /usr/local/bin/autodeauth -i wlan0 --blacklist FreeWiFi,myWifi -c 10000



Source: www.kitploit.com
Autodeauth - A Tool Built To Automatically Deauth Local Networks Autodeauth - A Tool Built To Automatically Deauth Local Networks Reviewed by Zion3R on 5:55 AM Rating: 5