3.9 KiB
ssldump - (de-facto repository gathering patches around the cyberspace)
Release and tagging
- Current version of ssldump is v1.4 (released: 2021-04-12) - ChangeLog
- Previous version of ssldump is v1.3 (released: 2021-02-02) - ChangeLog
What about the original ssldump?
This repository is composed of the original SSLDUMP 0.9b3 + a myriad of patches (from Debian and other distributions) + contributions via PR
ssldump is an SSLv3/TLS network protocol analyzer. It identifies TCP connections on the chosen network interface and attempts to interpret them as SSLv3/TLS traffic. When it identifies SSLv3/TLS traffic, it decodes the records and displays them in a textual form to stdout. If provided with the appropriate keying material, it will also decrypt the connections and display the application data traffic. It also includes a JSON output option, supports JA3 and IPv6.
How to do I run ssldump?
./ssldump -j -ANH -n -i any | jq
will run ssldump on all interfaces and output the result in JSON format including ja3 hashes.
For more details, check the man page.
How can I lookup ja3 hashes?
This example will query ja3er.com service to display the known ja3 hashes from the TLS handshaked in the pcap.
ssldump -r yourcapture.pcap -j | jq -r 'select(.ja3_fp != null) | .ja3_fp' | parallel 'curl -s -X GET 'https://ja3er.com/search/{}' | jq .'
Why do you maintain this repository?
Because it's a mess. The software maintenance process for old free (unmaintained) software like ssldump is a complete chaotic process. I do this to ease my pain and this could help other too (but this is just a collateral damage).
Where ssldump is used?
- I used it for a relatively small project called Passive SSL. For more information, Passive SSL Passive Detection and Reconnaissance Techniques, to Find, Track, and Attribute Vulnerable ”Devices”. Additional back-end code available is in the crl-monitor repository.
- ssldump is used in the D4-Project.
Build instructions
On Debian & Ubuntu:
apt install build-essential autoconf libssl-dev libpcap-dev libnet1-dev libjson-c-dev
./autogen.sh
./configure --prefix=/usr/local
make
(optional) make install
On Fedora, Centos & RHEL:
dnf install autoconf automake gcc make openssl-devel libpcap-devel libnet-devel json-c-devel
./autogen.sh
./configure --prefix=/usr/local
make
(optional) make install
Optional configuration features (aka ./configure options):
--disable-optimization disable compiler optimizations (change from -O2 to -O0)
--enable-debug enable debug info (add "-g -DDEBUG" to CFLAGS)
--enable-asan enable AddressSanitizer and other checks
add "-fsanitize=address,undefined,leak -Wformat -Werror=format-security
-Werror=array-bounds" to CFLAGS
use libasan with GCC and embedded ASAN with Clang
Configuration examples:
- Use GCC with libasan, debug info and custom CFLAGS:
./configure CC=/usr/bin/gcc --enable-asan --enable-debug CFLAGS="-Wall"
- Use Clang with ASAN and no optimizations (-O0)
./configure CC=/usr/bin/clang --enable-asan --disable-optimization
Notes
The "save to pcap" (-w) option by @ryabkov, is heavily based on the work of @droe on https://github.com/droe/sslsplit .
Contributing
The contributing policy is simple. If you have a patch to propose, make a pull-request via the interface. If the patch works for me, it's merged.