OWASP OWTF is a project focused on penetration testing efficiency and alignment of security tests to security standards like the OWASP Testing Guide (v3 and v4), the OWASP Top 10, PTES and NIST so that pentesters will have more time to
- See the big picture and think out of the box
- More efficiently find, verify and combine vulnerabilities
- Have time to investigate complex vulnerabilities like business logic/architectural flaws or virtual hosting sessions
- Perform more tactical/targeted fuzzing on seemingly risky areas
- Demonstrate true impact despite the short timeframes we are typically given to test.
The tool is highly configurable and anybody can trivially create simple plugins or add new tests in the configuration files without having any development experience.
Note: This tool is however not a silverbullet and will only be as good as the person using it: Understanding and experience will be required to correctly interpret tool output and decide what to investigate further in order to demonstrate impact.
OWTF is developed on KaliLinux and macOS but it is made for Kali Linux (or other Debian derivatives)
OWTF supports Python3.
Dependencies: Install Homebrew (https://brew.sh/) and follow the steps given below:
python3 -m venv ~/.virtualenvs/owtf
source ~/.virtualenvs/owtf/bin/activate
brew install coreutils gnu-sed openssl
# We need to install 'cryptography' first to avoid issues
pip install cryptography --global-option=build_ext --global-option="-L/usr/local/opt/openssl/lib" --global-option="-I/usr/local/opt/openssl/include"
The recommended way to use OWTF is by building the Docker Image so you will not have to worry about dependencies issues and installing the various pentesting tools.
docker
anddocker-compose
is required. (https://docs.docker.com/compose/install/)
git clone https://github.com/owtf/owtf
cd owtf
make compose-safe
Please make sure you have Docker installed!
Run make startdb
to create and start the PostgreSQL server in a Docker container. In the default configuration, it listens on port 5342 exposed from Docker container.
You can also use a script to this for you - find it in
scripts/db_setup.sh
. You'll need to modify any hardcoded variables if you change the corresponding ones inowtf/settings.py
.
Start the postgreSQL server,
- macOS:
brew install postgresql
andpg_ctl -D /usr/local/var/postgres start
- Kali:
sudo systemctl enable postgresql; sudo systemctl start postgresql or sudo service postgresql start
Create the owtf_db_user
user,
- macOS:
psql postgres -c "CREATE USER $db_user WITH PASSWORD '$db_pass';"
- Kali:
sudo su postgres -c "psql -c \"CREATE USER $db_user WITH PASSWORD '$db_pass'\""
Create the database,
- macOS:
psql postgres -c "CREATE DATABASE $db_name WITH OWNER $db_user ENCODING 'utf-8' TEMPLATE template0;"
- Kali:
sudo su postgres -c "psql -c \"CREATE DATABASE $db_name WITH OWNER $db_user ENCODING 'utf-8' TEMPLATE template0;\""
git clone https://github.com/owtf/owtf
cd owtf
python3 setup.py develop
make startdb
make setup-web
owtf
open `localhost:8019` in the web browser for the OWTF web interface or `owtf --help` for all available commands.
- Resilience: If one tool crashes OWTF, will move on to the next tool/test, saving the partial output of the tool until it crashed.
- Flexible: Pause and resume your work.
- Tests Separation: OWTF separates its traffic to the target
into mainly 3 types of plugins:
- Passive : No traffic goes to the target
- Semi Passive : Normal traffic to target
- Active: Direct vulnerability probing
- Extensive REST API.
- Has almost complete OWASP Testing Guide(v3, v4), Top 10, NIST, CWE coverage.
- Web interface: Easily manage large penetration engagements easily.
- Interactive report:
- Automated plugin rankings from the tool output, fully configurable by the user.
- Configurable risk rankings
- In-line notes editor for each plugin.
Checkout LICENSE
Checkout Code of Conduct
- Project homepage
- IRC
- Wiki
- Slack and join channel
#project-owtf
- User Documentation
- Youtube channel
- Slideshare
- Blog