Skip to content

Upload, save and run keystroke injection payloads with an ESP8266 + ATMEGA32U4

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

sayak-brm/wifi_ducky

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Wi-Fi Ducky

Upload, save and run keystroke injections remotely with an ESP8266 + ATmega32u4

image of my DIY Wi-Fi Duck

Support me and my projects on Patreon! Support me on Patreon

Contents

Introduction

What it is

It's a Wi-Fi controlled BadUSB device to remotely execute Ducky Scripts.

Using a USB device which act as a keyboard to inject keystrokes is well known these days. The USB Rubber Ducky by Hak5 is THE hacker gadget for this kind of attack. It introduced a simple script language called Ducky Script, which this project uses too.

How it works

The ESP8266 is a popular Wi-Fi chip used in a lot of projects. Because it's cheap, small and has its own file system (SPIFFS), it's perfect for enabling an easy remote connection and holding Ducky Script payloads.

Although the ESP8266 is awesome, it doesn't have native USB, which means it can't act as a keyboard :( (cnlohr made a cool project on this and added a USB stack himself: https://github.com/cnlohr/espusb. The problem with that is, that it isn't compatible with the current SDK version, also I wanted to use Arduino to make it more user friendly.)

Here comes the ATmega32u4 into play! It can act as keyboard and thanks to Seytonic run Ducky Script (link). So what I did is connecting the ATmega to the ESP8266 via serial.

The ESP will open up a Wi-Fi access point and host a web interface from what you can upload and manage your scripts. When you hit run, it will send the script to the ATmega, which then will execute it on the target machine.

The benefits of adding Wi-Fi

But why add Wi-Fi ...you might ask. With Wi-Fi you can upload and run your Ducky Script payloads remotely. You just need to plug the device in, connect to its Wi-Fi network and you have full control over the target machine.

It also gives you one big advantage over other BadUSBs, you can test your scripts live! You don't need to copy them onto a micro-sd card or compile them. You can run them live over the web interface, which makes its super easy for testing and improving your scripts.

It also adds a lot of possibilities for different attacks. You could make the target download executables from the Wi-Fi chip, instead of the internet. Or execute different attacks and send the results back to the Chip. Or open up a reverse shell on the ESP8266s Wi-Fi. And so on... there are so much possibilities!

Disclaimer

Use it only for testing purposes on your own devices! I don't take any responsibility for what you do with this project.

Installation

Short version:

Upload the arduino_wifi_duck sketch to your ATmega32u4 and upload the esp8266_wifi_duck sketch to your ESP8266. Then connect the serial pins (RX and TX (Arduino) to TX and RX (ESP8266)) and GND.


Preparation

What you will need:

  • ESP8266 Wi-Fi chip I recommend using an ESP-12. It's widely used, cheap, tiny and has 4MB of flash memory. However if you're a beginner you should probably start with a developer board like the NodeMCU or a Wemos d1 mini.
  • ATmega32u4 The Arduino Micro and Arduino Leonardo use an ATmega32u4 for example. You could also get a Arduino Pro Micro or other cheap Arduino clones which use the ATmega32u4. I will use an ATmega32u4 CJMCU Beetle.
  • (a 3.3V regulator) I put that in brackets because you will only need this if your ATMega32u4 board doesn't provide 3.3V. The ESP8266 only works with 3.3V, so depending on your board you may need a regulator to get 3.3V out of the 5V.
  • Some skill, knowledge and common sense on this topic That's probably the most important part here. This project is not noob friendly! If you are a beginner, please start with other projects and get some knowledge about how Arduino and its code works, how to handle errors and how to work with the ESP8266. I can't cover every little detail here. Please respect that. Depending on your hardware choices you may need to add or change a bit of the Arduino code.

So make your hardware choices! Also I wouldn't go straight forward and solder everything together. Test it beforehand, otherwise debugging can be hard!

For an easy start, better debugging, further development or if you just wanna test this project, I recommend using a Nodemcu + an Arduino Leonardo: nodemcu with a leonardo as wifi duck This is easy to setup, you don't need any soldering skills and you can still use both the NodeMCU and the Arduino for other cool projects.

But now let's get started!

ESP8266

First you will need to flash your ESP8266. You can either flash the bin file directly or compile it yourself using Arduino.

Note: You will only need to flash it once, every new update can then be done over the possibilities.

If don't use a USB dev board and don't know how to flash your plain ESP8266, I recommend you to have a look at this instructable: http://www.instructables.com/id/Getting-Started-with-the-ESP8266-ESP-12/?ALLSTEPS

You could also use your Arduino to flash it: https://gist.github.com/spacehuhn/b2b7d897550bc07b26da8464fa7f4b36 (The connections are the same for this project, the only difference is that you need to set GPIO-0 to LOW to enabling a firmware update).

Flash the .bin File Go to releases and download the right bin file for your ESP8266. You can flash it with the esptool or the nodemcu-flasher.

Upload using Arduino Open the esp8266_wifi_duck sketch with Arduino. You need to install the following libraries:

Then compile and upload it to your ESP8266 (check if your settings are right).

Arduino ATmega32u4

Open the arduino_wifi_duck sketch in Arduino and upload it to your Arduino.

Wire everything up

Ok so now you need to connect the ESP8266 with the Arduino. Connect these pins:

Arduino ESP82666
TX RX
RX TX
GND GND
VCC (3.3V) VCC (3.3V)

Like I mentioned before, you'll need a 3.3V regulator if your Arduino only provides 5V. Don't connect the ESP8266 to 5V!

If you use a plain ESP-12 like me, you also have to set the enable pin and to HIGH and GPIO15 to LOW:

PIN Mode
GPIO15 LOW (GND)
CH_PD (EN) HIGH (3.3V)

Update ESP8266 over the Web interface

Once you flashed the software, you can update it over the web interface. Go to 192.168.4.1/update and upload the new .bin file. (In Arduino go to Sketch->Export compiled Binary to compile your own .bin file)

How to use it

Plug your Wi-Fi Ducky in and connect to the new Wi-Fi network WiFi Duck. The password is quackquack. Open your browser and go to 192.168.4.1.

screenshot of the webinterface

There you can now upload, view, delete and run new Ducky Scripts.

PLEASE NOTE that the max length per row for a script is 600 chars.

How to write Ducky Scripts: https://github.com/hak5darren/USB-Rubber-Ducky/wiki/Duckyscript

Happy hacking :)

Improvements

My wishlist:

  • add support for Digispark (ATtiny85) as alternative for the ATmega32u4 Arduino
  • change settings within the web interface (Wi-Fi SSID, password etc.)
  • full support of all Ducky Script commands (DEFAULTDELAY is missing)
  • auto execute scripts
  • add mouse
  • control over the internet

License

This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the license file file for details

Sources and additional Links

The USB Rubber Ducky: https://hakshop.com/products/usb-rubber-ducky-deluxe

The Malduino (a BadUSB-Arduino/Rubber-Ducky-alternative by Seytonic): https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/malduino-badusb-arduino-usb#/

Seytonic: http://youtube.com/seytonic https://github.com/seytonic

Arduino Ducky Script interpreter: https://github.com/Seytonic/Duckduino-microSD

Cnlohrs ESP8266 USB Software Driver: https://github.com/cnlohr/espusb

Additional credit

Some of the features/changes applied were sourced from various other forks of the project. Cherry-picking proved complicated, so I am giving credit here.

  • @gloglas - https://github.com/gloglas/WifiDuckV2
    • Did a rewrite/hard fork of the spacehuhn/wifi_ducky project
    • Added mouse control
    • Added ASCII characters
    • Added OS Detection (unused here)
    • ...and more.
  • @mvojacek - https://github.com/mvojacek/wifi_ducky
    • Ported changes made by @gloglas back into a fork of the original project
  • @BlueArduino20 - https://github.com/BlueArduino20/super_wifi_ducky
    • Partially fixed the payload corruption issue
    • Added "STRING." command (here, renamed to STRINGER)
    • Added various missing key string/ids, new HID keys
  • @Brayyy - https://github.com/Brayyy/wifi_ducky
    • Brought various forks together
    • Fixed payload corruption issue, added payload verification bytes
    • Fixed baud issues
    • Improved payload speed
    • Standardized project line-endings, indention, and formatting
    • Fixed REPLAY command
    • Other minor code refactoring

About

Upload, save and run keystroke injection payloads with an ESP8266 + ATMEGA32U4

Topics

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • C 75.8%
  • C++ 12.6%
  • HTML 10.9%
  • Other 0.7%