Shark Jack network attack tool

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Information
Name Shark Jack network attack tool
Manufacturer Hak5
Link https://lab401.com/products/shark-jack
Specification https://docs.hak5.org/shark-jack/
Technologies Ethernet, USB
Included equipment 1x shark jack, 1x instruction card
assetmodel-image-8EubvbfP6k.png

Description

Portable network attack tool, fast nmap scans. The Shark-Jack is a pen-testing utility developed by the ”Hak5” company and is designed for Ethernet plug and play vulnerability scanning in LANs. In its most basic form, it is essentially a small Linux-machine with a built-in Ethernet plug. The modest, portable physical nature of the device allows for quick and secretive reconnaissance activity. The Shark-Jack consists of following physical components: USB-C charging port, Battery, Status LED, RJ45 Ethernet Jack, MT7628DAN Mikrocontroller, 64 MB RAM, Casing with mode-switch.

Operation

It provides 3 modes of operation: Off, Arming, and Attack. In attack mode, the Shark Jack will execute the payload.sh or payload.txt bash script from the /root/payload directory. In arming mode, the Shark Jack will be configured with a static IP address of 172.16.24.1 and will simply start an SSH server, without automatically executing any script. In this mode, a perpetrator may load and configure scripts, or retrieve output files placed in the loot directory from previous reconnaissance or attack operations. This can be done using the Linux command line utility “scp”. The status LED lights are configurable using appropriate syntax inside the payload script, provided by the Shark-Jack firmware.

Example Usage

The user prepares a payload script which performs basic network auditing. Here, the user obtains an IP address via DHCP. The DHCP flow is initiated using the "NETMODE DHCP\_CLIENT" directive provided by the Shark Jack framework. Once an address is assigned, grep and sed is used to perform text manipulation on the output of the "ip addr" command, in order to filter the subnet. This subnet is then passed as a argument to nmap. A simple nmap with the option "-sn" is performed. This means that port scans and other elaborate scans are skipped. It is a fast way to determine available hosts. Additionally, a traceroute to Google servers is used to gain further insight into the network topology. The outputs of nmap and traceroute are appended to a loot file:


 #!/bin/bash
 LED SETUP
 NMAP_OPTIONS="-sn" LOOT_DIR=/root/loot/net
 mkdir -p $LOOT_DIR
 echo "Obtain IP address..." >> SLOOT_DIR/log.txt
 NETMODE DHCP_CLIENT
 while [ -z "$SUBNET" 1; do
 sleep 1 && SUBNET=$(ip addr

Documentations