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This repository contains an example Python API that is vulnerable to several different web API attacks.

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Description

This repository contains an example Python API that is vulnerable to several different web API attacks.

Installation

We will be using docker images and containers to install all the api.

MacOSX

  • Download the latest version of docker toolbox
  • Go through installation steps
  • Start up Kitematic kitematic.
  • In the search box type mkam/vulnerable-api-demo and click create create.
  • On right side you will see an IP:PORT access url ip.
  • Copy it and paste into browser to navigate to the api browser.
  • Jump to Install Burp Proxy

Windows

YOU WILL NEED ADMIN RIGHTS TO INSTALL

  • Download the latest version of docker toolbox
  • Go through installation steps
  • Start up Kitematic kitematic.
  • In the search box type mkam/vulnerable-api-demo and click create create.
  • On right side you will see an IP:PORT access url ip.
  • Copy it and paste into browser to navigate to the api browser.
  • Jump to Install Burp Proxy

Linux

  • Install docker engine and docker client on docker website
  • Run docker run -tid -p 8081:8081 --name api mkam/vulnerable-api-demo
  • You can now test your api curl localhost:8081 -v

Install Burp Proxy

API Details

The example API can be accessed on the system at port 8081.

What is vAPI

vAPI is an API written specifically to illustrate common API vulnerabilities.

vAPI is implemented using the Bottle Python Framework and consists of a user database and a token database.

How is vAPI Used

vAPI Process flow

  1. Request token from /tokens
  • Returns an auth token
  • Returns expiration date of auth token
  • Returns a user id
  1. Request user record from /user/<user_id>
  • Requires the auth token
  • Returns the user record for the user specfied, provided the auth token is not expired and is valid for the user id specified
  • Each user can only access their own record

Test Users

Included with install

Username Password
user{1-9} pass{1-9}
admin1 pass1

API Reference

URL

SYSTEM_IP:8081

POST /tokens

Request an Auth Token for a user

Request Headers
  1. Accept: application/json
  2. Content-Type: application/json or application/xml
Request JSON Object
  1. username (string) - Name of user requesting token
  2. password (string) – Password of user requesting a token
Response JSON Object
  1. token
  • expires (string) – The Auth Token expiration date/time
  • token - id (string) – Auth Token
  • user - id (string) – Unique user ID
  • name (string) – Username
Status Code
  1. 200 OK - Request completed successfullyi
Request
POST /tokens HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/json
Content-Length: 36
Content-Type: application/json
Host: 192.168.13.37:8081

{"auth":
    {"passwordCredentials":
        {"username": "USER_NAME",
          "password":"PASSWORD"}
    }
}

 

or

POST /tokens HTTP/1.1
Accept: */*
Content-Length: 170
Content-Type: application/xml
Host: 192.168.13.37:8081

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<auth>
    <passwordCredentials>
        <username>user1</username>
        <password>pass1</password>
    </passwordCredentials>
</auth>

 
Response
HTTP/1.0 200 OK
Date: Tue, 07 Jul 2015 15:34:01 GMT
Server: WSGIServer/0.1 Python/2.7.6
Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8
 
{
    "access":
        {
            "token":
                {
                    "expires": "Tue Jul  7 15:39:01 2015",
                    "id": "AUTH_TOKEN"
                },
            "user":
                {
                    "id": 10,
                    "name": "USER_NAME"
                }
        }
}
GET /user/USER_ID

Retrieve the user's entry in the user database

Request Headers
  1. Accept: application/json
  2. Content-Type: application/json
  3. X-Auth-Token: <TOKEN_ID> (from /tokens POST)
Request JSON Object
  1. None
Response JSON Object
  1. User
  • id (string) – Unique user ID
  • name (string) – Username
  • password (string) – Password
Status Codes
  1. 200 OK - Request completed successfully
Request
GET /user/1 HTTP/1.1
Host: 192.168.13.37:8081
X-Auth-Token: AUTH_TOKEN
Content-type: application/json
Accept: text/plain
Accept-Language: en-US,en;q=0.5
Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate
Connection: keep-alive
Content-Length: 0


Response
HTTP/1.0 200 OK
Date: Mon, 06 Jul 2015 22:08:56 GMT
Server: WSGIServer/0.1 Python/2.7.9
Content-Length: 73
Content-Type: application/json
 
{
    "response":
        {
            "user":
                {
                    "password": "PASSWORD",
                    "id": USER_ID,
                    "name": "USER_NAME"
                }
        }
}
POST /user

Creates an user with the given username and password. 2 Conditions:

  1. User cannot already exist
  2. Username has to meet strict naming guidlines. The username must be matched by this regular expression: ([a-z]+)*[0-9]. This means that a username has to start with a lowercase letter and end with numbers. So, usernames that look like "user1" or "abc123" will be accepted, but usernames that look like "USER1" or "1user" will not be accepted.
Request Headers
  1. X-Auth-Token - Valid token for the admin user
Request JSON Object
  1. User
  • name (string) – Username that matches above conditions
  • password (string) – Password
Response JSON Object
  1. response
  • user
    • username - the name of the succesfully created user
    • password - the password of the successfully created user
Status Code
  1. 200 OK - Request completed successfullyi
Request
POST /user HTTP/1.1
User-Agent: curl/7.35.0
Host: 127.0.0.1:8081
Accept: */*
x-auth-token: ADMIN TOKEN
Content-type: application/json
Content-Length: 54

{"user":
	{"username": "USERNAME",
	"password": "PASSWORD"}
}


Response
HTTP/1.0 200 OK
Date: Mon, 06 Jul 2015 22:08:56 GMT
Server: WSGIServer/0.1 Python/2.7.9
Content-Length: 68
Content-Type: application/json
 
{
    "response":
        {
            "user":
                {
                    "password": "PASSWORD",
                    "name": "USER_NAME"
                }
        }
}


GET /uptime
GET /uptime/FLAG

Returns the server uptime, and now supports pretty formatting just by passing in command line flags. Super useful for system administrators!

Request JSON Object
  1. None
Response JSON Object
  1. Response
  • Command (string) - The system call you made
  • Output (string) - uptime
Status Codes
  1. 200 OK - Request completed successfully
Request
GET /uptime/s HTTP/1.1
Host: 192.168.13.37:8081
Accept-Language: en-US,en;q=0.5
Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate
Connection: keep-alive
Content-Length: 0


Response
 HTTP/1.0 200 OK
 Date: Wed, 17 Feb 2016 22:44:27 GMT
 Server: WSGIServer/0.1 Python/2.7.6
 Content-Length: 90
 Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8
 
{
  "response": {
    "Command": "uptime -s", 
    "Output": "2016-02-17 09:42:44\n"
  }
}

List of Vulnerabilities

Vulnerability Categories Include:

  1. Transport Layer Security
  2. User enumeration
  3. Information exposure through server headers
  4. Authentication bypass
  5. User input validation
  6. SQL injection
  7. Error handling
  8. Session management
  9. Encryption
  10. AuthN bypass
  11. Command Injection
  12. Regex DDoS

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